Nothing is preventing the water from becoming colder besides relative humidity. The humidity saturation is variable depending on a) the temperature of the liquid, and b) the temperature of the ambient air.
If you ran a dehumidifier, you'd be able to drop further below ambient because it would allow more water to evaporate during the cascade from the shower head.
Keeping the atmosphere above the water in a vacuum will result in massive evaporatiion and massive water chilling to temps far below ambient.
This effect is why these work better in dry environments, and why by and large (w/o a dehumidifier) you'll get better results running it outside where you cannot appreciably change ambient humidity with your bong.
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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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