Camping with CPAP - Printable Version +- Apnea Board Forum - CPAP | Sleep Apnea (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums) +-- Forum: Public Area (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Forum-Public-Area) +--- Forum: Main Apnea Board Forum (https://www.apneaboard.com/forums/Forum-Main-Apnea-Board-Forum) +--- Thread: Camping with CPAP (/Thread-Camping-with-CPAP) |
Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 [parts of this thread were copied from our old forum] Silellak Wrote:Hey all, RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 Hi Silellak... welcome to Apnea Board! I have a 12 volt system for my Remstar Pro and my system will work with a Remstar Plus as well. I have used this system for a solid 2 nights of sleep with no recharge (about 16 hours total); It might go longer than that, but I haven't tested it past 2 nights without charging the battery. With this system, you don't need a power inverter. Your Remstar has a 12-volt in hole in the back that will allow you to use 12 volt power directly, using the adapter below. I purchased a heavy duty 650 amp, 12-volt deep cycle marine battery (Walmart or Kmart) for about $50 and a cheap trickle charger for about $25. Then I bought the following items that are designed for Respironics' equipment: I bought this for $25. And this: for $25 also. Altogether, I spent about $125 for a system that will keep me going for quite a while. I don't do a lot of camping, but we do have power outages here quite often. My 2-day testing period happened during one of those "extended" outages. Hope this helps, if have any questions, just ask. RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 Silellak Wrote:Thanks for the help! RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 I got that from Supplier #1 on our Supplier List. They deliver pretty fast, but I'd order today just in case. They have excellent customer service also. One of their sales people used to hang out here on Apnea Board (under the name Titrator), back when we were on ezboard.com, before our board "crashed & burned". I was impressed with both him and the company. Of course use your own discretion and you may want to check out other sites. All I can tell you is that I've used them several times and been completely satisfied. If you have any trouble, just call up their customer service number and ask for Ted (Titrator) and tell him SuperSleeper on ApneaBoard.com sent you. {I don't get any kickbacks from him, I just think it's a good company} Edit: Titrator no longer works for that supplier, sorry, but they are still a good site to buy stuff from. RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 kevin Wrote:How rough of camping are you planning on ? kevin Wrote:Forgot to comment on your DieHard Portable Power 1150 idea. RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 BSirius Wrote:Travel and cpap don't mix. As someone who travels 7 - 10 days a month, it just wasn't feasible to haul my cpap around with me so I invested in a dental mouthpiece. Fits in my pocket and doesn't require a power source. I say invested because it took four visits to the dentist to get it fitted properly and it isn't cheap, but insurance picked up some of the tab. It's not as effective as the cpap but they claim 85% success rate and I seem to do very well with it. The follow-up PSG with the appliance showed a reduction from an AHI of 63 to 14. RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-27-2012 FYI, we have some information on Traveling with CPAP on our Wiki, here: http://www.apneaboard.com/wiki/index.php?title=Travel_with_CPAP RE: Camping with CPAP - DCwom - 02-28-2012 I've simply skipped the CPAP the two nights when I had no power, as my Dr said "you lived without the CPAP for years, two nights isn't going to hurt you". I was apprehensive at first but it worked out and I was no worse for wear, your experience may be different, but it worked for me and now I don't worry about it. I do however carry the thing along when I have power. RE: Camping with CPAP - SuperSleeper - 02-28-2012 (02-28-2012, 02:18 PM)DCwom Wrote: I've simply skipped the CPAP the two nights when I had no power, as my Dr said "you lived without the CPAP for years, two nights isn't going to hurt you". I was apprehensive at first but it worked out and I was no worse for wear, your experience may be different, but it worked for me and now I don't worry about it. I do however carry the thing along when I have power. Howdy, DCwom, welcome to the new forum! What average pressure do you have on your APAP? My 80 year old father seems to be like you - able to sleep without his CPAP, but his average pressure is only about 9.5 cmH2O. I can't seem to sleep without it now... and my average pressure is probably closer to 13.5. I would suppose that doing without wouldn't harm someone with moderate sleep apnea, but might be worse for those with severe OSA. RE: Camping with CPAP - zonk - 02-28-2012 I don,t think pressure is an indication of the severity of sleep apnea, Some people might need 14 with moderate sleep apnea while others might need 9 with severe sleep apnea. It,s to do how much pressure needed to splint the airways open. It,s not worth taking the risk, Apnea takes NO holidays... |