I "flew" the FAA PROTE chamber at KFRG - Republic two years back. A chamber where O2 is reduced to higher than 29,900ft equivalent - pressure is not reduced - that would make things worse but in the short training time available would also give you the bends. So they stick with just reducing the oxygen. It's a convincing enough demonstration. During the training I was invincibly and absolutely AOK - carrying out the required tasks - till the trainer slapped the O2 mask on me. I was extremely annoyed with him. I was doing fine. However the video showed that actually after 150 secs - I was barely functioning. At 165 seconds despite a trainer standing over me and yelling at me to put on the Oxygen mask - I never heard him or could do so. He had to assist me. While in the environment - we were given tasks. My math skills made complete sense to me and were a garbage doodle on the page. I solved a simple maze perfectly - another scrawl on the paper. Hand flying bank angles as requested - I was awesome - but actually was doing someone else's task and I wasn't awesome either! Color vision - forget it. The world was grey and white.
The fit young CFI who arrived hung over - he didn't last 15 seconds.
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The acceptable standard in certificated aircraft is a maximum of 50ppm.
More modern medical thinking puts that in a danger range when some people have an O2 saturation level down at 80% as low as 5,000ft Pressure Altitude. An added risk being if they are smokers. You could suffer nagging slight headache and impaired judgement at 5,000ft or so with 50ppm.
So after the training - my personal standard for the aircraft is ZERO.
And you are not going to find that out with one of those "orange dots" stuck to the panel. A home CO alarm though it offers PPM readings will not tell you sufficient as most are tuned to 80-135ppm before they will alarm - to allow for cooking and smokers in the house. You need something like one of these:
https://smile.amazon.com/Carbon-Monoxid ... ref=sr_1_3A recent alarm on the Sonex - I traced back to a pinhole in the recently changed No 3 exhaust gasket on the AeroVee. I left it leaking while I ran down how it was getting into the cabin.
Number 1 - holes in the firewall. Where cabling and control cables penetrated the firewall. And in the bottom corners where despite nice tight build tolerances - the corners of the gear leg support webs go through the firewall. Neat application of heatproof RTV to seal all these holes made a dramatic difference.
Number 2 - Front bottom corners of the canopy. Small gaps here were leaking CO. Which would seem unlikely - the exhaust pipes are below the wing and slightly after of those corners. So I'll put it down to some kind of propeller swirling - especially on the ground. Sealed with carefully trimmed window seal gasket.
And that basically solved the problem.
My upholstery does not seal the wings and the air coming in from the wings was not a source of CO.
Similarly the pilot side fresh air scoop was not a problem.
With CO down to zero - I repaired the exhaust gasket.
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Another source on many aircraft is air entering from the tail of the aircraft and travelling forward inside the empennage. But this was not a source for me.
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Rynoth wrote:I don't have any idea what PPM of CO is safe so I went to the internet. Seems like the levels you are seeing aren't too alarming? Runup is a very short phase of flight.
"The health effects of CO depend on the CO concentration and length of exposure, as well as each individual's health condition. CO concentration is measured in parts per million (ppm). Most people will not experience any symptoms from prolonged exposure to CO levels of approximately 1 to 70 ppm but some heart patients might experience an increase in chest pain. As CO levels increase and remain above 70 ppm, symptoms become more noticeable and can include headache, fatigue and nausea. At sustained CO concentrations above 150 to 200 ppm, disorientation, unconsciousness, and death are possible."
That might be true at sea level. But even a little altitude makes a huge difference. At night I have a personal minimum of wearing an O2 mask above 5000ft pressure altitude. I can attest to the DRAMATIC improvement in color vision and acuity that takes place as you take just a couple of breaths of O2. The same point is made in the training video below.
YMMV
Sources:
FAA Outline
https://www.faa.gov/pilots/training/air ... t/hypoxia/PROTE training session recorded at Sun N Fun
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=saq8u-APDPU