Hey Guys,
   Just to let folks know --- At SNF back in maybe 2006 I talked to the AEROX 
owner. All his stuff was just to big for KR kind of baggage. He said he 
understood and would look into it. I think in 2007 I stopped by his booth At 
OSH. I asked if he remembered me and he did and pulled a bottle kit from under 
his table that was exactly what I had been looking for. It was a small alum. 
bottle with all the attachments for 2 people,hoses, regulator, one canal and 
one mask. I bought the kit on the spot and I think Mark L. bought it right 
there also. Since then I have done a bit of checking and found there is no 
difference between med O2 and the bottles from the welding supply except the 
paper trail. Aero-Ox also has a adapter available that I purchased at OSH a few 
years ago to fill yourself from a standard OX bottle. As a construction company 
we have several ox bottles around all the time. So this works great for me. The 
bottle last me about 8 hours total when set to feed at 12500 feet. He does have 
a smaller version now also i believe. The kits may be a bit pricey for some 
folks but I prefer to think that my life is worth it. 
   As a side story I became convinced that i needed the O2 in the plane all the 
time when I was coming back from OSH one year at 13500 and while having the 
proverbial perfect flight and doing routine cockpit things I turned the master 
switch off and things got really quite for the second it took to flip it back 
on. I live to fly again because I choose to.
May all your decisions be the right ones,
Joe Horton,
N357CJ


----- Original Message -----
From: "KRnet" <krnet@list.krnet.org>
To: "KRnet" <krnet@list.krnet.org>
Cc: "Larry Flesner" <fles...@frontier.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 5, 2018 7:25:17 PM
Subject: Re: KR> Oxygen

On 7/5/2018 12:16 PM, Mike Stirewalt via KRnet wrote:
> For just putzing around to find out ones service ceiling we can all get
> by without oxygen.  Everest has been climbed, after all, without oxygen.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

And many get "mountain sickness" and have to acclimate to altitude and 
some have died at very high levels.

I'd recommend not approaching the subject with too cavalier an attitude 
until you know how altitude affects you personally.  Each of us are like 
our KRs, every one is different.  Do you have other health issues, are 
you a smoker, do you take medication, what's your age, and the many 
other variables that could affect you at lower oxygen levels.  Don't 
just hop in your kr, climb to 12,501feet for 29 minutes to see if you 
need oxygen.  You might miss the Gathering.

Larry Flesner


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