Real world: the kind of plane makes zero difference, 172 or whatever faster more powerful plane, it’s the pilot sucking on thinner air that matters.
Real world: 182 pilot here. My O2 can get low at 7k and higher, I’m older, and my brain is foggy after a long flight, let alone the thinner air. I’ve spent days at 9,500 (elk hunt), and I was miserable. Just like medications, food, alcohol, chemicals, etc affect different humans differently, so to does altitude. I use O2 at 7k and higher. I’m trying to be at the top of my game, no compromises.
Real world: Craigslist used medical O2 bottles. Amazon new regular ol’ cannulas (tubing, up your nose). FB market place used regulators. New O2 monitor from CVS. I experimented with the monitor and found my own altitude limitations.
Real world: I used a “regular” regulator that dumps __ liters of O2 based on the setting. I ran a small piece of tubing into a T to split the flow to share with pax/co-pilot. Worked fine. Uses a lot of O2. Bottles don’t last long enough to be practical for weekly flight use. Burn through a small bottle in 2-3 hrs at lower flows.
Real world: I found a demand regulator by accident. It came in the box of regular ones, but was bulky, so I dismissed it for use outright. I was swapping regulators one day and decided to see if it even worked. When I turned it on, it didn’t flow. But something about the label made me try something - I put the cannula on to try it and lo and behold, it only flowed on inhaling. It only used 25% of one of my big bottles over a 5 hour period. Not sure if and how it would work with a T, but most of my flights are solo. I could always get more of these regs for pax/copilot.
Mounting and bottle sizes are too much to type this morning. PM and I send you my number, I’ll talk you thru what I do.