by skipsouthernsky » Sat Apr 21, 2012 6:57 pm
Dear Mark,
I was wondering if you are setting up your flow properly when you say that you are using up all the oxygen fairly rapidly. If you look at the flow meter on the Aerox portable system, there are two scales on it. One scale is for a face mask and the other is for the oxysaver. If you are using oxysavers and use the scale for the face mask, you will suck up oxygen (waste most of it) at a rapid pace. You need to look carefully at the flow meters. That is a little glass/plastic tube with a ball that rides on the oxygen flowing through it when held vertical. I think a full 22 cu/ft tank should last 4 people 6 hours and one person 25 hours at 15,000 feet if set up properly. A lot more hours at 8000 feet. I'm pretty sure the tank I use is a 13 cu/ft tank. It works fine for two people.
I think medical oxygen has some small amount of moisture (water vapor) in it. Although that makes the breathing of oxygen more comfortable, it tends to have the chance of freezing at the valve where the high pressure turns to low pressure (sometimes called the expansion valve). This is a principle used in air conditioning. That is also why most built in systems have an oxygen heater so that this freeze up won't occur, especially if the tank is in the tail section where it is exposed to lower non-heated temperatures. This valve freezing up has probably been the cause of many accidents over the years, but can't be proved because by the time the investigation takes place, the valve is defrosted and appears normal. Kind of like carb ice. At any rate, if you use a portable system and keep it in the passenger compartment (where it is relatively warm) this freeze up is less likely to occur. Also by not using medical oxygen, you are probably getting oxygen with little to no moisture content and that much reduces the chance of freezing the valve. Of course breathing dry oxygen is a little coarser on your throat and inside your nose and bringing along some water to drink occasionally will help at least with your throat.
Sincerely,
Skip Dykema
Skip Dykema, ICS #3062
Comanche 180, Commercial-Instrument, SEL, MEL, A&P