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is that 49 wet bulb or 49 normal?
The highest wet-bulb temperature ever recorded was 36.3C according to wikipedia. So very likely not that.
To clarify, that’s outdoors. If you buy a steam combi-oven (fancy tech for food nerds), it has a wet bulb thermometer in it for cooking with steam. You can easily hit wet bulb temperatures in the 90C+ range (100C just does not work due to the lack of pressure seals).
Instant Pot could do wet bulb temps above 100C if they actually had a temperature probe inside the pot itself. They tend not to bother, for cost reasons.
I can cook 230C low steam, 130C medium steam, 100C high steam in my oven
At 230C without a sealed pressure vessel there’s no way the temperature probe is still functioning as a wet bulb thermometer. That temperature in your oven is going to be dry bulb.
A wet bulb thermometer measures the temperature with the probe completely immersed in liquid water. At 230C there won’t be any liquid water at anywhere near atmospheric pressure. 230C corresponds to a saturated steam pressure of 27 bar or 2.7MPa (391 PSI). That’s nearly 10 times the pressure in a pressure cooker at max temperature.
Well it's EOB9S31WX I believe it's pressure sealed because if I make fries and leave water steam is only going out when I open oven. The manual is here https://media.flixcar.com/webp/synd-asset/Electrolux-271175672-8ffb5481-853f-4c96-978a-e9d79845e09d.pdf page 16 if you're interested.
Just for further reference, 27 bar of pressure is equivalent to 268 meters depth under the ocean. There’s no way a home oven can be built to contain that amount of pressure.
You may set your oven to 230C and put a dish of water in there, but if you placed a wireless temperature probe in the water the temperature would be at or below 100C until the water boiled away and the probe was exposed directly to air and steam. No matter how hard you tried you could not get a reading much above 100C with the probe immersed in liquid water.
Looks like those ovens have steam pump and drain pump. Interesting, how big would be device that would sustain 27 bar pressure ?
Depends on the capacity, but in general it would have really heavy reinforced walls, like a really high pressure boiler.
I have an instant pot and an espresso machine. The instant pot can manage maybe 2 bar, the espresso machine up to 4 (in its boiler). Both are pretty heavy construction.
I figured out so far that Locomotive engine have 200-250 psi that is 13-17 bar. Maximum implemented boiler pressure so far is around 350 psi 24 bar. So it probably would be a world record machine. :)
Yes I think we’re approaching the territory of submarines that can visit the bottom of the ocean!