Having a high performance plane I too flight plan the winds. Eastbound I'll climb as high as beneficial for the winds, westbound I rarely climb over 6-8k or what ever I need for terrain clearance. Usually the winds aloft from 15-25k don't increase enough to justify the climbing time or the switch from canula to mask. On nice days I usually stay below 18k so I can go direct as needed around busy areas like Chicago. For the casual nature of my flying if the weather is sketchy enough that I feel the need to climb into the 20's I will probably elect to stay put. Being able to climb above the ice is nice but eventually you have to be able to descend back through it or deal with it during an approach. I get the allure of it and the speed potential to be gained but depending on the plane the tank capacity might not be enough to capitalize on that speed.I fly into the teens for anything over a couple of hours. Depending on conditions, maybe even a shorter trip. Less traffic, less weather, smoother, less frequency changes.
I don't mind a cannula. And a boom cannula is even nicer.
Mountain High O2D2 and 115 cf built in bottle means few fills. And an oxygen concentrator means even fewer fills.
Then again, the early unpressurized airliners had forced induction. Did DC-3 pilots stay below 15,000 or did they offer oxygen masks to passengers on routine cross-country flights?
I read somewhere that the altitudes for oxygen requirements (12,500, 14,000, and 15,000) were primarily based on enabling travel throughout the continental United States. I don't know how much truth there is to that or when the oxygen regulations were written. But I do know that the regulations applied differently in the cockpit than on the ground in many cases.Keep in mind that sometimes you have forced induction just for more horsepower over what you could get naturally aspirated. I think that's more what you found on those aircraft.
Things were also different back then regulation wise...
I read somewhere that the altitudes for oxygen requirements (12,500, 14,000, and 15,000) were primarily based on enabling travel throughout the continental United States. I don't know how much truth there is to that or when the oxygen regulations were written. But I do know that the regulations applied differently in the cockpit than on the ground in many cases.
You didn't really state what your load carrying requirements are but I agree with some others in the fact you just need a higher performance airplane, not necessarily a turbo. RV10, Bellanca Viking, 520 Bonanza, Big engine mooney. Keep the arrow and get a 2 place experimental for the NY trip.
What I meant is that an airline pilot in the air in 1935 may have done things differently from whatever the 1935 rulebook back at the home office suggested.They still do apply differentily for cockpit vs. passengers, and also for 91 vs. 135/121.
Point is, I wouldn't read the current FAR/AIM and try to apply that to a DC-3 when it was new.