If someone asked me to film a test of a sublimator, my first question would be "Why?" It just sits there.
Indeed. I can see some value in video documents of a bench test where, conceivably, you might use the video to measure the rate of ice formation or some such thing. But that would only be a shorthand to other forms of data collection. A sublimator literally just sits there.
Besides, Baker insists that he has to see an all-up test: an astronaut in a sublimation-cooled space suit, demonstrably in a vacuum. But the sublimator is necessarily inside the PLSS out of sight -- in vacuum, but also in shade. As we have seen, Baker nit-picks all the video evidence shown to him. The video he demands as ultimate proof is ripe for exactly the kind of solipsist nit-picking he uses to sidestep all the other evidence.
It's like proving software works by filming a microprocessor.
Not quite the same, but I've actually imaged microprocessors in the infrared while they were running certain specific code. When you build a supercomputer to run a particular software package (custom finite-element analysis) there is actual value in determining how to cool the apparatus for that particular application.
Moreover, only an ignoramus who is determined to remain ignorant...
Or alternatively, an ignoramus determined to portray to the equally ignorant public that there is a legitimate controversy when, in fact, there isn't.