FoxMike Posted July 29, 2019 Report Posted July 29, 2019 I had my altitude compensator get out of calibration between the altitudes of 7K to 16K. In my case the flow was lower than standard by 3000'. I took it out and sent it to C&L Aero in Redding. They checked it out and recalibrated it. Since it is hard to tell the calibration is slipping having an oximeter on board and in use is a really good practice. You might consider using an in line flow meter to make sure your system is calibrated properly. 1 Quote
carusoam Posted August 12, 2019 Report Posted August 12, 2019 O2 system calibration! O2 system getting out of calibration! +1 for measuring O2 saturation. Great reminder FM! Nobody likes it when the PIC is a sleep behind the yoke. Best regards, -a- Quote
alextstone Posted August 12, 2019 Report Posted August 12, 2019 Yep, I fly with high with an O2 saturation meter all of the time. I have a history of severe pneumonia and scarring as a result. I find that I must push more volume of O2 than the "standard" to get my O2 saturation to safe levels and I have to wear a mask starting at 17K feet. 1 Quote
tgardnerh Posted August 12, 2019 Report Posted August 12, 2019 +1 for the pulse-ox AND knowing your personal O2 requirements. I titrate to 93% or higher, usually that means I'm on oxygen above 5k, and just this weekend my pulse-ox caught an O2 system malfunction (I had left the main valve on my portable O2 bottle was closed). 1 Quote
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