Try this link and see if it will do what you want it to;
For sure you have to up-size that piping. Guaranteed you are going to get the flashing and have the two phase flow.
You should take that into consideration in your piping orientation with respect to bends (Long radius) and potential dips or low spots in the line.
You need to read up on two phase flow, because there are regions that you want to avoid. I would have to do some reading to refresh my memory, but I you can do that as easily as I can. Lots of stuff on the net. I had a problem with it 3-4 years ago and found lots of help on the net, and I think on this site. Do a search on Eng-tips as well.
Secondly, you are going to have to be careful where you put the nozzle into the condenser. This is a high energy stream and it can cause a lot of damage if it impinges on condenser tubing or critical support pieces. Use a sparger pipe or STRONG impingement plate. Then bring it in in a location such that if those fail, you still won't hit precious metal.
Make double sure that the maximum flow that you calculate is accurate, and then over size your piping for safety sakes. Valve seats have a way of wearing and passing more than what was the original intention.
I would assume that by level control you mean 'excess' level control and that this is not the primary level control in the heater, but the high level dump. Normally the heater level control valve would cascade the drains to the next lowest heater, and at 250 psig, there ought to be several heaters in the string between this one and the DA or the condenser as the case might be.
If it is the high level dump, take into account that whatever upset that caused the high level might also cause the operating pressure to be higher than 250 psig and size your valve and piping accordingly. If it is due to a burst tube or tubes, burst or even sheared tube or tubes, lots of HP BFW can run the pressure in this heater up real fast.
I have seen lots of condenser damage caused by high energy drains that ended up passing more flow than the designers wrote down on the drawings. I have seen heater drains from heaters much in the same range as your pressure peel 3/4"-1" thick full pen welded impingement baffles back like tuna can lids.
Be careful and post back if you still need help.
rmw