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#21
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Also, many of the high-altitude climbers who do not
use oxygen have shown significant brain damage when cat-scanned. At 14:00 15 August 2005, Stefan wrote: John Kirksey wrote: How, then, can someone like Ed Viesturs repeatedly climb the tallest mountain peaks in the world without supplemental oxygen? Is it because of the slower ascent and the time spent acclimating to the higher altitudes? First, acclimatisation. Second, walking (and climbing) is different from flying. You don't need much brain to walk. When piloting, however, everything is about thinking. And it's the brain which needs the most oxygen. And maybe a third reason: There are exceptional people who are just better suited for such things than you and me. Stefan |
#22
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Peter Duniho wrote:
"Bucky" wrote in message oups.com... I don't get it. Can't a person stay conscious for longer than 30 seconds without breathing? Most people can hold their breath for over a minute. When they do that, they are using up a small reserve of oxygen-filled air contained in their lungs. Exhale as much air from your lungs as you can, and THEN see how long you can hold your breath. At high altitude you breath out the oxygen bound to the hemoglobin in your blood. Your blood gives up its O2 to the air. Hold your breath or just stop breathing and you may last longer (never done the experiment though ;-) ). Shawn |
#23
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![]() "John Kirksey" wrote in message news:cZ0Me.4596$H_4.4209@trnddc07... Tlme of useful consciousness Altitude (ft) without oxygen 40,000 15 seconds 35.000 20 seconds 30,000 30 seconds 28,000 1 minute How, then, can someone like Ed Viesturs repeatedly climb the tallest mountain peaks in the world without supplemental oxygen? Is it because of the slower ascent and the time spent acclimating to the higher altitudes? That and by breathing like he's running a marathon. Sleep and you die. mo |
#24
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#25
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Happy Dog wrote:
That and by breathing like he's running a marathon. Sleep and you die. This is just plain bull****. It's all about partial pressure. Stefan |
#26
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Ash Wyllie wrote:
Seems to me that astronauts use 3psi of pure O2 during EVAs. -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? Correct and 3psi of pure O2 is about the same as the ppO2 in Air at Sea Level. -- -------------------- Scott F. Migaldi CP-ASEL-IA N8116B PADI MI-150972 Join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/ -------------------- |
#27
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![]() "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... If the pressure drop is rapid, they need to exhale, otherwise their lungs will burst. Just like surfacing in scuba diving. I don't believe there's ever been a case of pulmonary barotrauma (absent of prior lung pathology) from decompression in commercial aviation. The differential between 50,000' and 8,000' is less than that typically involved in scuba incidents. May be possible though. moo |
#28
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"Stefan" wrote in message
... Happy Dog wrote: That and by breathing like he's running a marathon. Sleep and you die. This is just plain bull****. It's all about partial pressure. Breathing technique is crucial to high altitude activity. The technique is very similar to that used by joggers. moo |
#29
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Bucky wrote:
I don't get it. Can't a person stay conscious for longer than 30 seconds without breathing? Most people can hold their breath for over a minute. If the aircraft loses pressure at 35,000', you cannot hold your breath. The pressure difference will force you to exhale. Nothing you can do about it. But that's not the biggest deal. The biggest problem is the fact that the ambient pressure at that altitude is too low to keep oxygen in your bloodstream. All the oxygen immediately begins to flow out of your bloodstream into your lungs and out into the surrounding air. It doesn't matter whether you breathe or not. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
#30
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O2 and Cypriot airliner crash | [email protected] | Piloting | 68 | August 25th 05 12:07 PM |