As I understand the original question, your duct is flowing to the main condenser which has the normal air removal (vacuum) equipment. If so, during the start up process the condenser has lots more surface area than is required for the reduced steam loads at start up and even the drains. For some large turbines there are VERY many drains and some of them come from areas of the turbine where the steam is very very hot.
The superheated steam will heat up the saturated steam to some value above saturation, but the massive area of the condenser can handle that at that point.
It is when the turbine is at full load and there are leaky valves on those drain circuits that bring excessive drains and drips into the turbine that hurt.
For the record, the vacuum equipment doesn't create the vacuum, it just removes the non condensables, mainly air. The condensation of the steam and the change of state of the steam from a vapor to water is what creates the vacuum. As long as there is enough condenser surface area to condense the steam, the vacuum will be created and maintained. The superheated steam, that heated above saturation by the drain inlet flow will have to be cooled to the saturation point for the condenser pressure by sensible heat transfer at which time it will then condense and contribute to the vacuum creation.
So as long as this happens during the warm up/start up part of the cycle, when the steam flows are light, you should be OK. Remember too that depending on lots of factors in your turbine it is possible that the steam from the turbine is entering the condenser with moisture in it. Some of the superheated steam that you are admitting via the drains flow will just bake some of that moisture off. If there is enough moisture present to balance the added heat of the SH drain steam, you won't raise the condenser pressure.
I hope this helps answer what you are looking for.
I have seen leaky drains that were so hot that they warped the walls of the condenser adjacent to the point at which the drain connection was connected. Often drains of this nature are located under the water level of the hotwell and others are located under the condenser bundles so that the SH steam can be quenched by the water droplets falling from the bundle. That helps with the process of raising the condensate temperature to prevent condensate sub cooling.
rmw