Bob,
I would like to see the proof that welder's O2 is any less viable than that
available from the local FBO. BTW, my cockpit located O2 bottle will not fall
below freezing while I'm inside. OK, I do keep my plane in a heated
hangar. If there was water in welders O2, their regulator would also
corrode, mess up the regulator and probably screw up the weld job, too.
Pulse Oximeters are worth your life. Creeping hypoxia may not be
self-recognizable. The reading are reliable enough to set your own danger
limit. Mine reads 96% at 700 MSL and it is not allowed to go below 89% in
flight. Sensitivity to O2 absorption varies with age, weight, sleep,
Density altitude, etc. and may vary from day to day.
Recently, there was an article written about how deep breathing can
indeed keep your O2 saturation level up - but, it required conscious effort and
the saturation level dropped rapidly when the deep breathing ceased..
BTW, CO will also raise the reading of an Oximeter. There should be a
digital CO detector in the cockpit, too.
Scott Krueger
AKA Grayhawk
LNC2 N92EX IO 320 SB 89/96
In a message dated 11/26/2008 6:22:53 P.M. Central Standard Time,
rmitch1@hughes.net writes:
Hi
Stuart,
I’ve used welder’s
oxygen in the past also. It does cost about $10.00 a fill vs. aviation
oxygen @ $80.00 for my last fill. But, don’t do it, welder’s oxygen
contains too much water, and other impurities. It will freeze at high
altitudes, more importantly it can corrode the regulator and gauge and will
void any warranty.
Pulse oximetry is a
nice cross check at high altitudes but should not be relied upon for various
reasons, a prime one being that a little hyperventilation will artificially
raise the oxygen saturation curve, giving a false sense of security.
Bob
Mitchell
L-320
Senior
AME
From:
Lancair Mailing List
[mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of
Stuart Seffern
Sent: Monday, November 24, 2008 10:01
PM
To:
lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: [LML] Re: 360s at high
altitudes
I use a Standard
welding Oxygen bottle which can be exchanged anywhere in the
US for less than $10 and a nose
cannula in a O-360. Don’t necessarily try this yourself.
I’ve taken AF high altitude training twice at Wright Patterson and know
well my personal limits. At 22,000, for just under 1 hour over the
Rockies heading east with a 80 knot tailwind wearing a pulse oxcimeter on my
finger I was above the nasty turbulence and bad WX singing my semi-hypoxic
rendition of Stormy Weather and getting a suntan in smooth air. O2 stats
never dropped below 90%. I saw fuel economy rates as high as 47
MPG!
Lancairs are
amazing airplanes….