by expat » Fri Feb 29, 2008 4:28 pm
the oxygen bottle used was a portable oxygen bottle, it is required to contain enough oxygen pressure for the flight attendant to breath normally for a short period of time while performing cabin duties in the event of an emergency decompression descent. (i dont recall the exact numbers) but this oxygen bottle is not the same as the oxygen bottle that supplies passenger oxygen through the overhead masks. there are in fact several oxygen bottles throughout the aircraft.
I'd be very surprised if they didn't have to carry seperate (different types) bottles, one type for crew emergency use and the other purely as an emergency theraputic source for medical use (purely based on the fact that the oxygen requirements of the two situations are very different).
I only say that as we have to.
I would think that a stressed/ill pax (as in this example) on a flight would have the same, if not less O2 requirement than that of a flight attendant who is working to save her/his life and that of pax or deal with a intense emergency situation that required then to use O2. Training is training, real life is very often different.
Matt
"A bit of a pickle" - British translation: A catastrophically bad situation with potentially fatal consequences.
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B1 (Cat C) licenced engineer, Boeing 737NG 600/700/800/900 Airbus A318/19/20/21 and Dash8 Q-400
1. Captain, if the problem is not entered into the technical logbook.........then the aircraft does not have a problem.
2. And, if you have time to write the fault on a napkin and attach to it to the yoke.........you have time to write it in the tech log....see point 1.