flightco wrote:they are not designing anything; this is all about a school project and what they need to do to get a grade. They sit around in a group, through a bunch of shit against the wall until they come up with a thesis which they think is brilliant, but in actuality will probably never work. They then do their research (that is us) and come up with a design that has not been tried before. Doesn't matter that it wont work, in only has to impress the professor.PoolQ wrote:So I just took your survey and by the questions you asked and the choices you offered I can see that you have not read enough forums to be anywhere close to designing a mask (along with some information in the posts above). You need to define the problem, not only what are people looking for in a mask, but what problems do they have with the current masks. I will discover these yourselves if you try sleeping with one. Read posts and keep track of what people are complaining about, what you think their compliant is really caused by, and what you are going to try and solve.
You also have missed one type of CPAP machine.
Don't give up, but everything you need to know is stuck in the middle of a bunch of boring text on forums concerning something that you don't suffer from.
If you do get a machine set it to 20-25 cm of H2O, put the mask on (any mask) and turn the machine on. Some people sleep like that.
I really have no problem with this if they were honest up front. Hi, I am in college and for our term paper, project, whatever we are exploring what the next cpap mask might look like and I would really appreciate it if you would share your experience and knowledge with us so we can get a good grade. Rather we get some self important college kid trying to dupe us by telling how great he is going to make our lives.
You have a point. But hey, we all started someplace.
I prefer to take a little more positive approach. You never know, one of this group students might come up with a solution that can benefit us all - if and when it comes to market. A nudge in the right direction from any of us could be the creative spark needed to make it happen.