I figured it out on the way home.
Honestly. some days I think that my brain has taken a sabbatical.
We had the effect of pressure reversed. The effect of increasing pressure is to REDUCE the humidity at which saturation occurs (or increase the RH).
However the other key factor is that the effect of temperature on saturation is MUCH more pronounced than the effect of pressure and this is important.
So when we compress air in the compressor, it wants to reject moisture. But it doesn't happen immediately because the increased temperature overrides it. So it's pretty much as you said and the water is squeezed out in the receiver when the air cools.
Well, how do we get condensation in the LOW pressure area behind the shockwave (a la Ranty Dave)? If the pressure is reduced, then it should hold MORE water, not less.
Again it's the temperature effect overriding the pressure effect.
A shock wave has some pretty vigorous pressure changes, and I will bet my left bollock (I've had the sports model conversion, so that's not as big a wager as you might think), that if we could put a thermometer in the low pressure area behind the shock wave, that we would find that the temperature momentarily drops low enough that the air goes below its dewpoint, despite the pressure change pulling it the other way.
The clues were all there. Terbang mentioned the temperature drop with pressure. I said that the saturation humidity changed rapidly with temperature and you suggested that the higher air pressure effectively squeezed the water out.
Just took a while to put it together.
Sorry about that.
Just to complete the picture, it also explains why I only see condensation trails off flap tips when the RH is really close to 100%. It also means that you need drains around your compressed air reticulation because the air is cooling, not because the pressure is dropping.
PS Just looked at your web reference, only to discover that I've largely repeated what he said.
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Here is what Meteorologists and Aviation people refer to as the Adiabatic process to explain a lot of what happens in the atmosphere.
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So correct me if i'm wrong but velocity of the air is irrelevant of the pressure? As i thought the 2 were linked when you involve a surface.
Also what about the roll off effect of the air curling back on itself after it hits the jet? does this condense all the air around the jet.....hense the big halo?
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Well it's nice to know that the geeks have a bit of competition.
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