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On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 12:49:41 -0600, "Jim Burns"
wrote: Do you own/rent/borrow a portable oxygen system? Which brand? Likes/dislikes regarding the particular brand? System features? Size/capacity? Typical altitude flown when in use? Comments please. Thanks! Jim I fly a Grumman Traveler with a handful of mods, including a Powerflow exhaust system. I bought an Aerox system after the Powerflow installation and use it any time I'm flying above 12,500, which is more frequent than you might imagine. A few years back I remember telling someone I was flying from Dallas to L.A. for a few days. They asked what "pass" I was flying through. I thought it was a weird question. I said I'd cross the mountains at 16,500 and fly back at 15,500, what pass did I need? With the conserving cannula on me and my son I did exactly that, although I didn't watch my altitude for a while and accidentally got up to 16,800 at one point. This was in the middle of the summer, by the way, so DA was probably a bit higher. Gotta love the high compression stc, landing gear cleanup, Sensenic prop STC and that Powerflow! I have an aluminum E cylinder, 22 or 24 cu ft., can't recall. It is a two-person systemm and I get 15 hours of dual use out of that on average when fully charged, but I plan on about 10-12 to allow for imprecise metering. Unless you have a plane that can really haul more than two people and still make it up over 11,000 I would say save money and get a two person system. I would also not get anything smaller than 22 cu ft. Main reason is that it allows you to fill it up cheaply at home or at the cheapest place on your route, rather than have a system that is costing $50-$100 to fill every 5-7 hours along your route. Also, strap on the cannula before takeoff and get EVERYTHING configured beforehand so all you have to do is start the flow of oxygen before 11-12k. Bill Strahan ------------ Find a new reason to fly www.adventurepilot.com ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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#2
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How old is your son?
I have a 5 year old and I'm wondering if he'll tolerate the cannula. "Bill" wrote in message ... On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 12:49:41 -0600, "Jim Burns" wrote: Do you own/rent/borrow a portable oxygen system? Which brand? Likes/dislikes regarding the particular brand? System features? Size/capacity? Typical altitude flown when in use? Comments please. Thanks! Jim I fly a Grumman Traveler with a handful of mods, including a Powerflow exhaust system. I bought an Aerox system after the Powerflow installation and use it any time I'm flying above 12,500, which is more frequent than you might imagine. A few years back I remember telling someone I was flying from Dallas to L.A. for a few days. They asked what "pass" I was flying through. I thought it was a weird question. I said I'd cross the mountains at 16,500 and fly back at 15,500, what pass did I need? With the conserving cannula on me and my son I did exactly that, although I didn't watch my altitude for a while and accidentally got up to 16,800 at one point. This was in the middle of the summer, by the way, so DA was probably a bit higher. Gotta love the high compression stc, landing gear cleanup, Sensenic prop STC and that Powerflow! I have an aluminum E cylinder, 22 or 24 cu ft., can't recall. It is a two-person systemm and I get 15 hours of dual use out of that on average when fully charged, but I plan on about 10-12 to allow for imprecise metering. Unless you have a plane that can really haul more than two people and still make it up over 11,000 I would say save money and get a two person system. I would also not get anything smaller than 22 cu ft. Main reason is that it allows you to fill it up cheaply at home or at the cheapest place on your route, rather than have a system that is costing $50-$100 to fill every 5-7 hours along your route. Also, strap on the cannula before takeoff and get EVERYTHING configured beforehand so all you have to do is start the flow of oxygen before 11-12k. Bill Strahan ------------ Find a new reason to fly www.adventurepilot.com ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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