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#11
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GeorgeB wrote:
What would have been the effect if the O2 bottle for the cockpit had been inadvertently filled with breathing air rather than O2? They would have tested the system before the flight and found it working. They would have put on their mask in flight and thought it worked, slowly fading away without recognizing it. You may or may not recognize hypoxia when you suspect it and really watch your body, you definitely don't recognize it when you're unwary. Stefan |
#12
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... GeorgeB wrote: What would have been the effect if the O2 bottle for the cockpit had been inadvertently filled with breathing air rather than O2? They would have tested the system before the flight and found it working. They would have put on their mask in flight and thought it worked, slowly fading away without recognizing it. You may or may not recognize hypoxia when you suspect it and really watch your body, you definitely don't recognize it when you're unwary. The question was what happens when breathing air from the mask rather than O2 and the answer is nothing at all at a cabin pressure of 10K feet. |
#13
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fred wrote:
The question was what happens when breathing air from the mask rather than O2 and the answer is nothing at all at a cabin pressure of 10K feet. Got me :-). On the other hand, if the bottels were filled with say N2 instead of O2, they would still have faded away even at 10 kft. Further speculations? Stefan |
#14
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... fred wrote: The question was what happens when breathing air from the mask rather than O2 and the answer is nothing at all at a cabin pressure of 10K feet. Got me :-). On the other hand, if the bottels were filled with say N2 instead of O2, they would still have faded away even at 10 kft. Further speculations? Yes and pure N2 is faster than air at 35,000. |
#15
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On 2005-08-15, Dave S wrote:
I flew on an air ambulance Lear 25 for a while.. and I can say I NEVER saw the cockpit crew remove the masks from the hangars and place them in "the ready position" even though we routinely went to FL 450-490. I am On our 25D the position of the hangers for the masks were considered in the 'ready' position, so you just made sure they were there. Believe it was a 5-sec operation (required time) to get them on your head, for the quick-doning masks. The old joke, before the quick-doning type masks, was that the Learjet pilots always squeezed their noses before de-boarding to make it look like they had been wearing their masks. ....Edwin -- __________________________________________________ _____ "Once you have flown, you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, there you long to return."-- da Vinci ... www.shreve.net/~elj |
#16
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fred wrote:
The question was what happens when breathing air from the mask rather than O2 and the answer is nothing at all at a cabin pressure of 10K feet. But the question was asked about pilots that were at 35,000'. I believe that George B. is correct that the partial pressure would be too low and the pilots would pass out. 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. |
#17
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![]() "GeorgeB" wrote in message ... What would have been the effect if the O2 bottle for the cockpit had been inadvertently filled with breathing air rather than O2? From what would the oxygen system be serviced in your scenario? A compressor? |
#18
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On Thu, 18 Aug 2005 18:50:06 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote: "GeorgeB" wrote in message .. . What would have been the effect if the O2 bottle for the cockpit had been inadvertently filled with breathing air rather than O2? From what would the oxygen system be serviced in your scenario? A compressor? I've far more experience with industrial compressed gasses than with aircraft oxygen, and see much more "compressed breathing air" than BREATHING compressed O2. (Oxygen for oxyacetelyne is to different standards, but I think it is just as good; several college buddies would spend some time breathing it after having too much to drink the night before. Ah, the REAL hangover cure. Firefighters and scuba divers use it in large quantiies. Bottles are common with gas suppliers. What I don't know is how the fittings compare. Nor do I know how a plane's bottles are filled; via compressor from low pressure sources, high pressure via cascade bottles, or ??? I do know that the fittings need to be clean of oxydizable materials; storoes of a little oil on gauge threads, if true, keep one careful. |
#19
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"GeorgeB" wrote in
I've far more experience with industrial compressed gasses than with aircraft oxygen, and see much more "compressed breathing air" than BREATHING compressed O2. (Oxygen for oxyacetelyne is to different standards, but I think it is just as good; Correct. It's just as good now. moo |
#20
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![]() "GeorgeB" wrote in message ... I've far more experience with industrial compressed gasses than with aircraft oxygen, and see much more "compressed breathing air" than BREATHING compressed O2. (Oxygen for oxyacetelyne is to different standards, but I think it is just as good; several college buddies would spend some time breathing it after having too much to drink the night before. Ah, the REAL hangover cure. Firefighters and scuba divers use it in large quantiies. Bottles are common with gas suppliers. What I don't know is how the fittings compare. Nor do I know how a plane's bottles are filled; via compressor from low pressure sources, high pressure via cascade bottles, or ??? I do know that the fittings need to be clean of oxydizable materials; storoes of a little oil on gauge threads, if true, keep one careful. In a previous life I was in aircraft maintenance. Aviator's breathing oxygen systems were serviced from just two sources; compressed oxygen bottles or liquid oxygen carts. The only other compressed gas bottle used for servicing aircraft was nitrogen. I don't recall what measures were taken to prevent servicing oxygen systems with nitrogen, other than colors and markings on the bottles, but servicing oxygen systems with nitrogen would be a very bad thing. |
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