I should have mentioned that cheap evaporators like that cost hundreds of dollars. This is not a cheap way of doing this, just an effective one. This also assumes that the evaporation in the chamber cools the remaining water, which I'm not sure of since this is pressure related evaporation (anybody know?). I wouldn't just up and build one unless you have a ton of money handy.
I imagine anyone in a college lab environment can hijack the lab's evaporator to do a quick check on the cooling aspect of this. Unfortunately, I'm not able to access one ... though I may be able to hook up with a prof willing to share his wisdom, being that I'm in twin University towns.
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#!/bin/sh {who;} {last;} {pause;} {grep;} {touch;} {unzip;} mount /dev/girl -t {wet;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} echo yes yes yes {yes;} umount {/dev/girl;zip;} rm -rf {wet.spot;} {sleep;} finger: permission denied
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