![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 15:20 03 October 2019, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
On Wednesday, October 2, 2019 at 11:59:20 PM UTC-7, John Foster wrote: On Wednesday, October 2, 2019 at 9:38:10 AM UTC-6, Dan Marotta wrote: You are correct.=C2=A0 Oxygen doesn't burn.=C2=A0 But it really support= s combustion! =20 When I was in AF flight school (early 70s, so everyone smoked), they=20 warned us about smoking with a mask dangling along side one's face.=20 Seems one fighter jock had his mask catch fire (maybe while lighting up= ,=20 maybe due to a cabin depressurization causing the O2 system to go into= =20 pressure mode, who knows?).=C2=A0 The point was that he suffered seriou= s=20 burns to his face. =20 Personally I never felt the need to smoke during a 2-hour flight with a= =20 pressure demand mask and regulator. =20 On 10/2/2019 12:09 AM, wrote: Many moons ago when I was a junior hospital doctor in a chest ward th= e preferred oxygen mask for low concentration O2 was the "Edinburgh mask" w= hich had a circular hole in the front with the O2 nozzle entering at its lo= wer circumference. Some of the chest patients loved it because they could = smoke through the hole. As was demonstrated to me by a marginally less jun= ior doctor, if you held the lit cig tip directly in the O2 outlet flow it j= ust glowed brighter. Oxygen doesn't burn, it burns. =20 --=20 Dan, 5J =20 I've seen this twice in my career so far. Both times the person was smok= ing while oxygen was being administered through a nasal cannula. In one ca= se, the cigarette actually exploded, sending the person the the ICU burn wa= rd with 3rd degree burns to the face. NOT PRETTY!!! =20 The oxygen causes accelerated combustion of the tobacco, resulting in a f= lash of flame that can cause serious injury. I imagine this happens while = they are taking a drag, and not just having it passively smolder in the pre= sence of higher oxygen concentration though. Natural selection at work. =20 I have been using a Dive type cylinder because they are easier to get re filled. Last Saturday I was flying with the bottle on but the regulator off above a ridge trying to connect to the wave system. About 1 hour in and 2700ft asl there was a loud pop and bottle pressure O2 started blowing into the cockpit . I could not turn the bottle off so I opened the DV window put a Pan call out and got it back on the glider field in about 3 minuets . I have never been so scared ,and I have loads of field landings and thousands of hours in gliders. I blame it on lack of maintenance and use, the cylinders has been sitting in the glider since March turned off while I flew thermals in the UK. My bad just need the bottle re-filling and probably a new O ring. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
LXNav V7 Setup | svelusive | Soaring | 9 | February 22nd 15 04:29 PM |
A-37 Dragonfly smoke setup | Glenn[_4_] | Aviation Photos | 0 | December 27th 12 03:00 AM |
Vario setup | brianDG303 | Soaring | 1 | April 3rd 08 05:20 PM |
FS 2004 setup | Dave Hetteen | Simulators | 4 | June 25th 04 10:40 PM |
WX Works setup | Paul Tomblin | Piloting | 16 | December 8th 03 04:23 AM |