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davidjoyce(at)doctors.org Guest
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Posted: Thu Apr 11, 2013 2:22 am Post subject: Mountain Flying |
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I have just come across a superb NZ Safety publication on
mountain flying (courtesy of the Highlands Strut
newsletter) at :
www.caa.govt.nz/safety_info/GAPs/Mountain_Flying.pdf
Highly recommended. I will put the reference on the club
website in theflying section.
Regards, David Joyce, G-XSDJ
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pestar

Joined: 11 Apr 2007 Posts: 61 Location: Auckland, New Zealand
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Roland
Joined: 30 Nov 2009 Posts: 334 Location: EDLE
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Posted: Thu Apr 11, 2013 11:56 pm Post subject: Re: Mountain Flying |
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Hi,
I'm planning for a trip to the Alps this summer and go up there to about 15.000 ft. I wonder about the necessity to use oxygen. Is there anyone who regularly flies high altitude and which system do you use? I'm thinking about the Mountain High O2D2 with cannulas which is also quite popular in the sailplane community. There are also little emergency oxygen cans available but their intended use is for an emergency descent in case of a malfunction in the regular O2-system.
I've heard of some who fly even at FL 200 without O2, but also heard of few who cannot share their experiences about that any longer.
I know the rules and wouldn't myself encourage anyone to break them. I only want to assess risks and maybe get tips about O2-systems.
Btw: I'm a nonesmoker.
Thanks
Roland
XS Trigear 914
PH-ZTI
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pete(at)lawless.info Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2013 1:02 am Post subject: Mountain Flying |
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Hi Roland
I always used to use oxygen above 10,000 feet when I had my Twin Com. When
doing my initial pilot training we went in a depressurization chamber to
demonstrate the effects of lack of oxygen. I was the member of the group
who had my oxygen turned off by the instructor on the way up. I passed out
just above 15,000 feet. At the time I was 19 years of age, very fit and a
non smoker so it just depends on your physiology.
Since then I have skied at 15,000 feet but obviously I had had time to
acclimatize to he altitude.
Can't advise on portable oxygen systems never used one.
Personally I would not take the risk of high altitude without oxygen. The
biggest danger is that you don't realize hypoxia is happening to you.
Regards
Pete
--
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davidjoyce(at)doctors.org Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2013 1:02 am Post subject: Mountain Flying |
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Roland, When I researched the question a few years back
(whilst planning to fly to Australia at 10,000ft - which
was abandoned in the end) the Mountain High system seemed
the clear best bet. It is not cheap but you can (at least
in this country) hire them or possibly borrow one from a
gliding friend. If you are just planning to fly through
the Alps then none of the passes are significantly more
than 10,000ft and you can get away without oxygen. I ski
comfortably at 10,000ft along with several friends the
wrong side of 70. Historically lots of glider pilots have
been up to 17,000ft without oxygen and only a few of them
fell out of the sky!
One thing I would reccomend is a pulse oximeter
which can be bought online for 50 euros or less and can
give you some way of checking you are not going hypoxic,
although speaking as a doctor, knowing quite what % oxygen
saturation to accept is not easy! None of my anaesthetic
friends who use them all the time could give me a sensible
answer about what level is acceptable & compatible with
normal brain function in a conscious healthy person. I had
planned an experimental sortie going up with another pilot
with him using oxygen and me not to record oxygen
saturation, mental agility and flying correctness at
various density altitudes, and also checking whether
things deteriorated when staying at the same altitude for
a length of time. My Oz trip was abandoned before I got to
that - a pity really!
Regards, David Joyce, G-XSDJ
On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 00:56:35 -0700
"Roland" <schmidtroland(at)web.de> wrote:
Quote: |
<schmidtroland(at)web.de>
Hi,
I'm planning for a trip to the Alps this summer and go
up there to about 15.000 ft. I wonder about the necessity
to use oxygen. Is there anyone who regularly flies high
altitude and which system do you use? I'm thinking about
the Mountain High O2D2 with cannulas which is also quite
popular in the sailplane community. There are also little
emergency oxygen cans available but their intended use is
for an emergency descent in case of a malfunction in the
O2-system.
I've heard of some who fly even at FL 200 without O2,
but also heard of few who cannot share their experiences
about that
I know the rules and wouldn't encourage anyone to break
them. I only want to assess risks and maybe get tips
about O2-systems.
Btw: I'm a nonesmoker.
Thanks
Roland
XS Trigear 914
PH-ZTI
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craigb(at)onthenet.com.au Guest
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Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2013 5:27 pm Post subject: Mountain Flying |
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If your interested, you can buy the finger size pulse ox machines online,
they are small
Light and give you sats for oxygen in your blood as well as pulse rate, they
are normally
Around $100 or so, could be a good investment even if you are ON oxygen,
should the system fail
You would have an early warning your blood oxygen levels are dropping
Good flying
craig
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Mark Burton
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 74
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Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2013 10:33 pm Post subject: Re: Mountain Flying |
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Hi,
Normals sats for a healthy (and non-COPD) person are 94-98%. Below 88% is considered poor and would warrant high flow oxygen (15 LPM) through a non-rebreathing mask in the emergency situation.
Cheers,
Mark
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davidjoyce(at)doctors.org Guest
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Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2013 2:34 am Post subject: Mountain Flying |
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Mark, I realise I was being idle in not doing a bit more
research before mentioning pulse oximeters. There is a
good article at :
www.avweb.com/news/aeromedical/181896-1.html
That gives normal (ie average in healthy people) O2
saturations as follows:
10k ft - 88-93%
13k. - 83-88%
16k - 75-80 %
20k. - 70-75%
The authors point out that some people without
acclimatisation wil be fully functional at 20,000 ft
whereas others will be unconscious, and that here is no
critical level appropriate for everyone. That means to me
that if anyone is contemplating flying at a level
appreciably above 10k without O2 they would be well
advised to carry out experiments with an oximeters and a
safety pilot on oxygen.
Regards, David Joyce, G-XSDJ
On Fri, 12 Apr 2013 23:33:25 -0700
"Mark Burton" <markb(at)ordern.com> wrote:
Quote: |
<markb(at)ordern.com>
Hi,
Normals sats for a healthy (and non-COPD) person are
94-98%. Below 88% is considered poor and would warrant
high flow oxygen (15 LPM) through a non-rebreathing mask
in the emergency situation.
Cheers,
Mark
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Mark Burton
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 74
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Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2013 4:44 am Post subject: Re: Mountain Flying |
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Hi David,
That's useful sats/alt info.
The figures I quoted are, of course, only good for low-altitude.
Cheers,
Mark
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f.kyle(at)sympatico.ca Guest
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Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2013 7:33 am Post subject: Mountain flying |
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- and ancillary considerations:
In early days, O2 was dispensed as a free gas. This was Ok until the altitude produced a pressure lower than the partial pressure of O2. ** We were wearing soft leather gloves to offset burnt skin in a cockpit fire.
Down came the order - be prepared to doff one glove when you begin to feel even slightly strange - it may be your oxygen system is defunct and you haven’t seen the breath gauge if installed.
With the glove off, press down the thumb nail on the bare hand with your first finger. The nail should go white (blood pressed out of it). WHEN you let go, it should immediately go red (blood resumed). If it doesn’t, you’re in the preliminary stages of oxygen starvation. Descend, descend, descend.
Alcohol, smoking and several other endeavours arrange to starve you partially of O2 - (that’s where the fun is). Familiarity with this state conditions your body to accept lower O2 levels and so some can suspect loss later than others.
Drink less, smoke less and poke your thumbnail more often and save money. That’s what opposing digits are for.
Ferg
**Of course with the advanced fighters, O2 came pressurised above 36,000 or so and the gloves came back on because you had to physically breathe OUT and loss was evident instantly.
[quote][b]
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rparigoris
Joined: 24 Nov 2009 Posts: 804
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Posted: Sat Apr 13, 2013 9:01 am Post subject: Mountain flying |
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Hi Group
All this talk of supplemental oxygen raises a question:
Has anyone used or flown at altitude with an oxygen concentrator instead of an oxygen bottle? Please share details (cost, what model, where it was purchased, size, weight and power consumption).
Thx.
Ron Parigoris [quote][b]
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Roland
Joined: 30 Nov 2009 Posts: 334 Location: EDLE
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Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2013 9:12 pm Post subject: Re: Mountain Flying |
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Thank you very much to all those who respondet to my questions, also by e-mail and even offered me to lend their Mountain High for testing (nochmals Danke, Alfred)! I got some valuable tips (especially the one with the pulse oxymeter, which I've ordered already) and I know now for sure that I'm right to take hypoxia very serious.
Roland
XS Trigear 914
PH-ZTI
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