What route do you guys like for getting over to Glenwood Springs? Never flew in there. I was thinking Rawlins, Granby, Kremling, Glenwood.
Let me know what you guy's like best, I won't have O2.
Thanks!
Jim
Spdcrazy wrote:very new to flying here, but per the regs, you aren't required to have 02 below 12,5 right? and Rollins pass is at 11,6. Loveland at 11,9. this is doable right? or was your comment or more saying you would have to stay low, so passes would be a must?
was just planning a trip from BJC to Kremmling recently to scout my hunting unit.
also, Coloradokevbot, I would love to check out your pacer one day if we could meet up, I've been dreaming of buying one for a while now. Just can't quite make funds work yet.
Cary wrote:Just because the FAA says 12,500', 14,000', and 15,000 are the magic altitudes for oxygen, per Kev's post, that doesn't mean that your oxygen needs are at those levels. I have no idea how they (the FAA) arrived at those levels, and I used to think that they were plenty adequate--after all, I've spent a goodly part of my life at high elevation homes (Fort Collins now at 5,000' and previously Laramie at 7200'), so I should be acclimated, right? Wrong!
Before it became fashionable, I decided to buy a pulse oximeter, largely because someone (my doc, maybe?) told me that as I got older, I'd have need for oxygen at a lower altitude--and whoever that was, was right. I now go on oxygen any time I'll be over 10,000' for even a few minutes--and that's necessary because without it, my oxygen saturation percentage falls below 90%. That magic number is what the "experts" say is where cognitive abilities start to diminish as the percentage falls below 90.
You can't determine our oxygen needs by how you "feel", because that simply doesn't work. In fact, the better you feel at high altitudes, the more likely you're deprived of oxygen, because one of the most common responses is euphoria. Different people react in different ways to lack of oxygen--some act drunk, some just get stupid, some get horrible headaches--there are a variety of inconsistent symptoms. You can be totally legal, and yet totally out of it.
So the only way you'll know what your own oxygen requirements are is to use a pulse oximeter. There are cheapie versions for $50, but if I'm going to rely on something that is really needed, I'd rather spend a little more and get better. When I bought mine, that meant about $300 for a Nonin (makers of medical versions that most hospitals use), but now you can get a pretty good Nonin for between $125 and $150. It's worth every penny.
Cary
Users browsing this forum: Jaredwhamm66 and 22 guests