archangle wrote:IMPORTANT:
Kiralynx, DO NOT plug your BiPAP into any kind of inverter or plug it into a generator unless you verify that the inverter or generator is a "pure sine wave" generator.
I'm assuming your BiPAP is not a PRS1 model, but one of the older ones, probably a "legacy" style machine, correct? Something like this?
https://www.cpap.com/productpage/remsta ... chine.html
Actually, it's even older than that one. It's this one:
https://www.cpap.com/cpap-machine/bipap ... -cpap.html
It's hard to believe it, but I just passed the 4th anniversary of my first sleep test (on 9/11 -- is that appropriate, or what?) and on 28 October, will hit my four year anniversary of using my Beastie, the Bipap ASV.
archangle wrote:Generators:
You don't just buy a generator. Once hooked up, you have to maintain it. You have to test it. You have to repair it. If it's gasoline powered, you have to keep fresh gasoline around and drain the tank periodically so the gas doesn't go bad. Lots of people find their generator doesn't work or only runs a short time when they actually need it.
They're great when they work, but they take a lot more care than a battery system.
Actually, that's one reason why I am looking at the whole house generator, running off natural gas. As I have explained several times in this thread, I don't have a garage to store a portable generator in. Nor do I have anywhere to store canisters of gasoline.
A battery system will work very well for my Bipap, but it won't do a darn thing to keep my refrigerator and my freezer going. Due to my special diet, I can't have commercially canned foods nor processed foods nor fast food, and that means a freezer full.
archangle wrote:Batteries:
I believe she has one of the machines that requires 24V, so she needs the $170 Respironics DC-DC converter.
I already HAVE it.
archangle wrote:This would still work for you for several days:
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=62477&p=586370
You will still eventually run out of battery power, but you'll get several good nights.
Yes, I'm sure it would work. The problem is, I'm not an electrician. I don't understand this stuff. Anything beyond "unplug the AC adapter. Plug in the DC adapter. Use only passover humidification. Attach red click to red pole and black clip to black pole. Keep the three month old puppy from chewing on the wires" is beyond me.
archangle wrote:If you run out of battery, and you have a working car, you could steal the car battery and swap it with your CPAP battery every night. Yes, that requires you to lug the battery back and forth to the car.
Yeah, well, I'm not physically able to lug batteries back and forth, nor do I have the strength to open the hood on the car to get at the cars battery, and I wouldn't know how to take that battery out.
I realize, once again, that to people for whom this stuff is utter simplicity, they're simply staring and saying, "How can she NOT know how to..." but I frackin' well DON'T. I don't KNOW how, and to have people reiterating that "It's so simple..." just reduces me to tears, because it is NOT so simple. Not to me. It's completely incomprehensible.
archangle wrote:Insurance:
I don't think anyone has succeeded in getting insurance to pay. We can complain, and we should complain, but the CPAP runs on electricity, not complaints.
Yeah. They darn near got to pay for a hospitalization, thanks to their refusal to cover a good battery and a means of recharging it. See my original post. If I'd fallen, I would not have been able to get up again without help. My husband doesn't have the strength to get me up again. I don't even know if 911 would have been able to scramble while the winds were still blowing. That's what scares me.