Travelling with cpap to france
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judy sawhney
Travelling with cpap to france
Any challenges traveling with cpap, ie access and distilled water?
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
Just use bottled drinking water and you will be fine.
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| Machine: ResMed AirSense™ 10 AutoSet™ CPAP Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
| Mask: AirFit™ N10 Nasal CPAP Mask with Headgear |
| Additional Comments: S8 Autoset II for travel |
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
Distilled water can be either found in pharmacies (look for green cross outside storefront) or in any "drogherie" or market where the laundry detergents are sold. Everyone there uses it for their irons.
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| Mask: AirFit™ P10 Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
| Additional Comments: Backup & Travel Machines: PR System One Bipap Auto, S9 VPAP Auto, S9 Autoset, Oximeter CMS-50E |
Diagnosed March 2011, using APAP 14 - 16.5 cm, AFlex+ 2
Alt masks Swift FX pillows, Mirage FX nasal mask, Mirage Quattro full face mask
Alt masks Swift FX pillows, Mirage FX nasal mask, Mirage Quattro full face mask
- hueyville
- Posts: 255
- Joined: Sun Sep 01, 2013 8:37 pm
- Location: Foothills of Blue Ridge Mountains
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Re: Travelling with cpap to france
Remember the plug converter so you can plug into European electrical outlet. My machine runs off 120V or 220V but check yours. If it is 120 only you will want a voltage converter. About 20 bucks at Radio Shack. I always have at least one device in my travel kit that needs 120V.
For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; and they will turn their ears away from the truth
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judy sawhney
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
Thanks all. Last year I could barely walk, very severe sleep apnea undiagnosed for years. Lost my job, income, but now with a new lease on life am out to see the world. I am one of the lucky ones to rediscover an improved health and outlook!
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
I would warn against any $20 power inverter with sufficient current to power a CPAP machine. That would be a square-wave inverter, but even a modified sine wave inverter could be harmful to the machine. There are plenty of discussions here about inverters for CPAP machines; a search would reveal them easily.hueyville wrote:Remember the plug converter so you can plug into European electrical outlet. My machine runs off 120V or 220V but check yours. If it is 120 only you will want a voltage converter. About 20 bucks at Radio Shack. I always have at least one device in my travel kit that needs 120V.
I only needed a plug adapter for my machine (and the flat kind - in France they have a prong in the middle that prevents some other 220V plugs from being used).
McSleepy
_________________
| Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
| Additional Comments: Previous machine: ResMed S9 VPAP Auto 25 BiLevel. Mask: Breeze with dilator pillows. Software: ResScan ver. 5.1 |
ResMed AirCurve 10 VAuto; Puritan-Bennett Breeze nasal pillow mask; healthy, active, middle-aged man; tall, athletic build; stomach sleeper; on CPAP since 2003; lives @ 5000 ft; surgically-corrected deviated septum and turbinates; regular nasal washes
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
220 to 120 volt uses a transformer which by nature is sine wave.McSleepy wrote: I would warn against any $20 power inverter with sufficient current to power a CPAP machine. That would be a square-wave inverter, but even a modified sine wave inverter could be harmful to the machine. There are plenty of discussions here about inverters for CPAP machines; a search would reveal them easily.
I only needed a plug adapter for my machine (and the flat kind - in France they have a prong in the middle that prevents some other 220V plugs from being used).
McSleepy
_________________
| Mask: AirFit™ P10 Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
| Humidifier: S9™ Series H5i™ Heated Humidifier with Climate Control |
| Additional Comments: Hose management - rubber band tied to casement window crank handle! Hey, it works! S/W is 3.13, not 3.7 |
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
"$20 at RadioShack" is not an inductive-coupling transformer, nor would you want one, which at ~150-200W would weigh too much to want to want to lug around, anyway.idamtnboy wrote: 220 to 120 volt uses a transformer which by nature is sine wave.
McSleepy
_________________
| Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
| Additional Comments: Previous machine: ResMed S9 VPAP Auto 25 BiLevel. Mask: Breeze with dilator pillows. Software: ResScan ver. 5.1 |
ResMed AirCurve 10 VAuto; Puritan-Bennett Breeze nasal pillow mask; healthy, active, middle-aged man; tall, athletic build; stomach sleeper; on CPAP since 2003; lives @ 5000 ft; surgically-corrected deviated septum and turbinates; regular nasal washes
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
This one at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Simran-200-Conver ... =de_a_smtd for $13.49 has a user photo with the unit opened up. Sure looks like a transformer to me. It's rated at 200 watts, but that may be optimistic based on the user comment. Still big enough for a 90 watt CPAP. It weighs two pounds. Is that too heavy to lug around? Depends on who's doing the lugging I suppose.McSleepy wrote:"$20 at RadioShack" is not an inductive-coupling transformer, nor would you want one, which at ~150-200W would weigh too much to want to want to lug around, anyway.idamtnboy wrote: 220 to 120 volt uses a transformer which by nature is sine wave.
McSleepy
_________________
| Mask: AirFit™ P10 Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
| Humidifier: S9™ Series H5i™ Heated Humidifier with Climate Control |
| Additional Comments: Hose management - rubber band tied to casement window crank handle! Hey, it works! S/W is 3.13, not 3.7 |
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judy sawhney
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
I've got a res med 36013 elite with humidifier
Purchased 2012 general specs input range 100-240v, 50-60hz, 110 v
Wouldn't a plug adaptor purchased at caa be sufficient as I did not get the voltage converter
Thanks
Purchased 2012 general specs input range 100-240v, 50-60hz, 110 v
Wouldn't a plug adaptor purchased at caa be sufficient as I did not get the voltage converter
Thanks
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
That means you are in business with just the plug adapter, no worries.input range 100-240v, 50-60hz
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| Machine: AirSense 11 Autoset |
| Mask: ResMed AirFit™ F20 Full Face CPAP Mask with Headgear |
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
I saw the cone head family on Saturday Night Live. They were from France. I highly recommend you rent the tapes of the early years and watch the cone heads to properly prepare yourself for the trip.
- chunkyfrog
- Posts: 34544
- Joined: Mon Jul 12, 2010 5:10 pm
- Location: Nowhere special--this year in particular.
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
I spoke with Beldar this afternoon.
He says everything is going to be all right.
Be sure to tip the hotel maid.
He says everything is going to be all right.
Be sure to tip the hotel maid.
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| Mask: AirFit™ P10 For Her Nasal Pillow CPAP Mask with Headgear |
| Additional Comments: Airsense 10 Autoset for Her |
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
First, the reference was about the ones at RadioShack. Second, the one at Amazon (a very shady design) is very doubtful to be able to continuously sustain anywhere near 200W. That looks like a peak input rating, and 150W is what you need for a CPAP (200W with humidifier). Third, not heavy??? Two pounds is heavier than some CPAP machines (my VPAP is 2.9 pounds), no one wants to double their bag's weight.idamtnboy wrote:This one at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Simran-200-Conver ... =de_a_smtd for $13.49 has a user photo with the unit opened up. Sure looks like a transformer to me. It's rated at 200 watts, but that may be optimistic based on the user comment. Still big enough for a 90 watt CPAP. It weighs two pounds. Is that too heavy to lug around? Depends on who's doing the lugging I suppose.McSleepy wrote:"$20 at RadioShack" is not an inductive-coupling transformer, nor would you want one, which at ~150-200W would weigh too much to want to want to lug around, anyway.idamtnboy wrote: 220 to 120 volt uses a transformer which by nature is sine wave.
McSleepy
McSleepy
_________________
| Machine: AirCurve™ 10 VAuto BiLevel Machine with HumidAir™ Heated Humidifier |
| Additional Comments: Previous machine: ResMed S9 VPAP Auto 25 BiLevel. Mask: Breeze with dilator pillows. Software: ResScan ver. 5.1 |
ResMed AirCurve 10 VAuto; Puritan-Bennett Breeze nasal pillow mask; healthy, active, middle-aged man; tall, athletic build; stomach sleeper; on CPAP since 2003; lives @ 5000 ft; surgically-corrected deviated septum and turbinates; regular nasal washes
Re: Travelling with cpap to france
Thought I might add to this thread. I have been travelling to France with my CPAP for a couple of years now. The first year I searched everyway and couldn't find distilled water (eau distille), but finally found eau demineralize (in a garden supplies centre! but have since seen it elsewhere). Don't expect to find it in the water section of a grocery store. Then this past year, I read on another thread on this website advice that said that demineralized water was not the same as distilled water and should not be used because the chemicals used to demineralize should not be inhaled, and distilled water could be found at the pharmacy. So this year, once in France, I went to the pharmacy and after much explanation they said they could get it for me. It was obviously not something they were used to providing, and I discovered that not all pharmacies could even get it for me. Anyway, the distilled water from the pharmacy cost me 5 euros a litre!! Not sure if it was because they thought it needed to be sterilized but there was nothing on the labelling indicating it was sterilized so can't say that is the reason it cost so much. I paid it, but really wonder why the water they use for their irons etc would be any different from the distilled water here that many people use for irons as well. The price of demineralized water in France was comparable to the price I pay for distilled water in Canada. Can anyone confirm whether demineralized water is harmful or not, for my next trip? Thanks for your help





