The high-oxygen "waste" from the hypoxic air generators is discharged in a way that it is immediately diluted by the surrounding air, and also by the hypoxic air that is pushed out of the altitude enclosure. The oxygen and nitrogen molecules are only temporarily separated, soon remixing back to normal air. There is no fire risk.
UL is not required by law, CSA certification is pretty much the same from what i understand.
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the only problem with this is that the output from this is pure oxygen. Therefor, if you have a spark....BOOM.
Also not UL approved so be careful....
lorocat 3 years ago
No it's not. They have reduced oxygen, rather than low air pressure to work. They usually pump oxygen in at around 12% instead of air's normal 20.9%
theepicurean 3 years ago 3
The high-oxygen "waste" from the hypoxic air generators is discharged in a way that it is immediately diluted by the surrounding air, and also by the hypoxic air that is pushed out of the altitude enclosure. The oxygen and nitrogen molecules are only temporarily separated, soon remixing back to normal air. There is no fire risk.
UL is not required by law, CSA certification is pretty much the same from what i understand.
gbshaun 3 years ago
I want one of those!
svscared 3 years ago 9
I wanna sleep there for a year too :)
riotstarter1111 3 years ago 10
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more like steroids
KingElessar999 3 years ago