Seriously. But if the headache is not from the noise, see an ENT and try a script for something like Singulair. I got it for scuba, and I didn't really how congested I am most of the time until I experienced being not congested.That would give me a headache at any altitude.
Man, if I had to use oxygen above 6000' I'd need to put it on before I hit pattern altitude and wear it constantly here.
I hear ya, my house is a little over 6700 feet....
Have you experimented with o2 yet?
Thats only for the synthetic stuff...Im laughing about "experimented". Careful. Nobody in their right mind uses that stuff!
Thats only for the synthetic stuff...
Hey, if you had a few million dollars and no ability to pass a drug test where would you be?That's John McAfee's gig. You see someone tried to kill him and his wife threatened them that he would be coming for them, on Twitter? LOL. Dude's a lunatic.
Hey, if you had a few million dollars and no ability to pass a drug test where would you be?
Better off with a C90A few million... hmmm... can you make it about 10 million? I kinda want an Aerostar and a way to feed it fuel and engines and not care. Then go some places.
10 million should do it without touching the principal.
Better off with a C90
It's not an O2/CO2 problem. And it's not a rate of climb/descent issue. (Already ruled those out by experimentation.) Same thing happens to her on commercial flights as well. We will try the Naprosyn idea next. If that doesn't work then I'm going to get started on my MEL.
Are you sure this is a pressure headache? or hypoxia?After a number of flights, we have concluded that any altitude over 7,000 ft gives her a pressure headache that takes until the next day to clear. It can take only 15 minutes at altitudes above that for this to occur. Now, I've been milking that as an excuse to purchase a pressurized aircraft, but she doesn't seem to be taking the bait just yet.
Anybody have any ideas how to increase her service ceiling?