Are you using a cooldown period? I wrote the procedure at
https://wooddrying.org/drying-tips/uncategorized/ . See also Denig's book "Drying Hardwood Lumber". It's available on line.
Denig will recommend 170F wet-bulb for conditioning. He indicates the risk of darkening the wood is low for the short time (6-12 hours) and when the wood is at a low moisture content (6-9%). Using freshly sawn wood from freshly cut logs also minimizes the risk of darkening.
Other things to prevent the rise in Tdry during conditioning
Desuperheat the steam spray
Shut off the steam heat valves manually if the control valves are leaking.
Reduce the fan speed to the minimum that can be used on your system. This will put less heat from the work done by the fans and reduce leakage from the kiln (which means you need less spray). Reduce to 25%, if you can. You don't need much air circulation during conditioning.
Most of the temperature rise comes from the vapor water entering the wood and becoming bound water in the cell wall. About 900 to 950 BTUs are given off for each pound of water vapor entering the wood.