Steam jets are very sensitive to inlet steam pressure/temperature while in power plants, steam pressures and temperatures along the expansion line of the turbine vary as unit load and heat sink conditions (temperatures) change.
Therefore it is difficult to pick a "point" at which the steam pressure and temperature will be constant enough to be the "right point" to operate the jets successfully. To operate the jets, then a higher pressure/temperature point must be picked and then the pressure reduced steam to the jets pressure controlled at a designed point and as is often necessary, desuperheated as well. Jets like saturated steam, can operate on SH steam - if it is constant SH, but hate wet steam. Another operating cunumdrum - getting operating steam to the jet nozzles "just right". Not doing so varies their performance and life significantly. Not too hard to do in an Industrial Plant which has fixed steam header pressure/temperatures.
Liquid rings bypass all that fun and are affected mostly only by the temperature of the heat sink for the LRVP seal water. Most LRVP's in my experience are isolated from the raw cooling water by a Hx, typically a PHE in order to get the closer approaches. In such cases, the recirculated water in the LRVP's is just that, recirculated water, made up as needed with fairly good quality plant water to account for evaporation losses. I'd shudder at the thought of putting any of the raw cooling water that I am familiar with into the LRVP's I have operated.
But, in the case of water based LR's, inadequate cooling of the LR cooling water will result in the LRVP 'consuming' much of its own cooling water as part of its load due to the heat addition of the driver HP.
Much different world than the oil cooled LRVP world.
LRVP designers will tell you that they don't pump SCFM, they pump what is actually there, ACFM. Not defending them, just saying.....
And in the water world, the ACFM consists of non condensables and water vapor, all of which varies as CCFowler has noted with respect to a wide variety of non-condensable gases coming off the make up water, and coming from the boiler itself as well as the water vapor content which varies with the condenser cooling water temperature (the colder the CW, the more water vapor is 'wrung' out of the non-condensable stream). Lots of partial pressure relationships going on all at once in a stream to a LRVP in a power plant.
rmw