View Full Version : Oxygen
Jim[_18_]
September 28th 11, 12:49 AM
http://www.inogenaviator.com/products.html
This oxygen system looks interesting but is only certified to 15k and
battery life is only 6 hours. It would be nice to do away with filling
bottles. Does anybody know of any other systems available or on the
horizon that would be more useful to glider pilots?
Jim
vaughn[_3_]
September 28th 11, 01:29 AM
"Jim" > wrote in message 
...
> http://www.inogenaviator.com/products.html
>
> This oxygen system looks interesting but is only certified to 15k and
> battery life is only 6 hours. It would be nice to do away with filling
> bottles. Does anybody know of any other systems available or on the
> horizon that would be more useful to glider pilots?
This is the first time that I have seen POCs (Portable Oxygen Concentrators) 
pitched to the general aviation market.  I believe Inogen was the first to 
market POCs in the medical field.  I am familiar with Inogen equipment, but not 
this particular unit.  In my opinion, they make good stuff.  In the medical 
world, Inogen now has a few competitors who also make good POCs.   I believe 
that GA is a tiny market compared to medical oxygen, so it will be interesting 
to see if any other manufacturers jump into the GA game.
Eric Greenwell[_4_]
September 28th 11, 01:58 AM
On 9/27/2011 3:49 PM, Jim wrote:
> http://www.inogenaviator.com/products.html
>
> This oxygen system looks interesting but is only certified to 15k and
> battery life is only 6 hours. It would be nice to do away with filling
> bottles. Does anybody know of any other systems available or on the
> horizon that would be more useful to glider pilots?
I could see an advantage for unassisted safaris of several days 
duration, where getting refills could be real hassle, or trying to stuff 
more or bigger bottles into the glider.
You can use an external battery, but at the nominal 40W power draw, 
that's 3 amps out of a 12 volt battery. $2700 seems pricey, too.
For people that return to their trailer/hangar/motorhome after a flight, 
it might be better to own several glider bottles and one large oxygen 
cylinder for transfilling. I can get 15-20 hours out of my 14 CF bottle, 
using an EDS, so that's enough for two days of flying, which could 
include an overnight stop away from the home airport.
-- 
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to 
email me)
Phil
September 28th 11, 06:18 AM
On Sep 28, 11:49*am, Jim > wrote:
> http://www.inogenaviator.com/products.html
>
> This oxygen system looks interesting but is only certified to 15k and
> battery life is only 6 hours. It would be nice to do away with filling
> bottles. Does anybody know of any other systems available or on the
> horizon that would be more useful to glider pilots?
>
> Jim
And worst of all, the operating temperature is 5C to 40C, which isn't
much use at 15,000ft if the temperature is 0.
--
Philip Plane
ContestID67[_2_]
September 28th 11, 07:00 PM
On Sep 27, 11:18*pm, Phil > wrote:
>
> And worst of all, the operating temperature is 5C to 40C, which isn't
> much use at 15,000ft if the temperature is 0.
>
> --
> Philip Plane
Would the temperature be zero inside the cockpit where the POC will
reside?
Darryl Ramm
September 29th 11, 12:59 AM
No worse of all is above around 15,000 feet there is not enough O2
partial pressure to let this already power hungry, expensive and
cumbersome (for our needs) product work.
It is a solution looking for a problem. Maybe in GA where there is no
local FBO/refill station but even then it'snot hard to maintain your own
O2 refill cylinders. I am seriously surprised the manufacturer is
marketing this to the aviation market.
Darryl
Phil > wrote:
> On Sep 28, 11:49 am, Jim > wrote:
> > http://www.inogenaviator.com/products.html
> >
> > This oxygen system looks interesting but is only certified to 15k
> > and
> > battery life is only 6 hours. It would be nice to do away with
> > filling
> > bottles. Does anybody know of any other systems available or on the
> > horizon that would be more useful to glider pilots?
> >
> > Jim
> 
> And worst of all, the operating temperature is 5C to 40C, which isn't
> much use at 15,000ft if the temperature is 0.
> 
> --
> Philip Plane
>
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