Yeah it’s fine. Just pointing out how much it drops off. It’ll do over 30” at sea level. Normally aspirated just poops out up there. But it trues out higher so it’s about the same as at 9000-10000 which is kinda the cruising sweet spot for fuel consumption and going somewhere at the same time.
Most humans poop put up there too. Living at 6800’ I don’t have much problem going skiing or hiking or flying up above the rocks at 13,500’ but for most folks visiting, I highly recommend they don’t do the “30 minute” thing above 12,500 without supplemental O2. They’ll at least usually end up with a headache later as a minimum and can be worse. Staying hydrated helps a lot.
I found a way to have coffee service on board like
@Clark1961 has with his fancy autopilot though. Just trim it and then open a can of iced coffee so the backseater who isn’t there, doesn’t have to pour. Hahaha.
Note: Coffee is not great for staying hydrated but for those of us acclimatized to the altitude it’s just like having a cup while driving west of town. Heh.
Second note: Iced Coffee is tasty when mountain flying.
Learned today that our strobes make noise right at 124.0 (KCOS Approach) and so does my OBS Light rheostat when turned to full brightness.
Hey
@jesse was that the Lincoln Approach frequency that we kept hearing crap on in my airplane a few years ago, too? Guess I’ve finally figured out what it is. Sounded the same. Bothers both the Garmin and the King.
Turn the lighting rheostat down it gets weaker and both squelch it successfully. The strobes just pop the squelch open every time either the left or right one fire.
Psscht. Psssscht. Psscht-****sht.