STRUCK: An Aerospace Engineering & Lightning Protection Show
EP3 – 3 Important SAE Documents Explained
In episode three, we discuss some of the industry standards in testing aircraft lightning protection, SAE documents 5414B, 5412B and 5416A, and much more.
Transcript:
Dan: Welcome back. This is episode three of the Struck Podcast. I'm your co-host
Dan Blewett and I'm joined here by lightning protection and aviation expert Allen Hall. Allen how are you doing?
Allen: Great dan how are you?
Dan: I'm doing well. The quarantine is in full force. I'm not leaving my home except for a little bit of exercise and some very haphazard shopping. I guess but how are you guys holding up?
Allen: Well everybody's home obviously. So the college is being done online and the local public school should be switching over to some sort of quasi online classroom hopefully next week. So the kids are gonna start some sort of school which would be good because they're definitely not going back until earliest is May 4th. So we're about a month away from that.
Dan: Yeah and I was listening to another podcast this morning and one of the co-hosts she said you know my kids go to expensive private schools and she said it's just it's just not going well with the online learning. She's really not been pleased. She said it's just a poor experience so far and disorganized and granted I mean it's not to point any fingers to anyone, this is a tough situation for teachers to grab all their stuff and suddenly go online, but you know I think it's really just growing pains but she was bringing that up. They were talking about whether college students will get refunded or anyone will get any kind of tuition reimbursement. She said you know like we understand the situation, but at the same time not only are they not getting in person teaching but they're also just not really getting a great experience in general.
Allen: Yeah the thing we noticed was the room and board obviously got waived for in this case my son goes to Union College and they're on a trimester system. So they were just about to start their last trimester and the room aboard has obviously been waived because there's nobody on campus. But the yeah curriculum part we're still paying for and I think at least at the college level it's probably a little bit better at because they've been doing things like that for a while. A lot of things are online there but in the public schools it doesn't tend to be that way. So they've got to change the way they deliver the curriculum and that that's a lot of work to do. You know when you're in front of a board talking in front of 20 odd kids that's one way. But if you're trying to give something audio, visual, presentable via zoom typically it's a much different format to present information. So I can see why schools will be struggling with that. And I know that's here what they've been doing is the teachers have been sending out essentially an email a day saying here are some things you can read or here are some activities you can do here's some research you can do just to keep everybody active. It's not required, no one's getting graded on it, but it seems like the vast majority I would say probably 80% plus of the local kids are actually doing it. And the parents seem to be overseeing a lot of that obviously. But you know at least there's some learning going on. We're not just sitting at home watching YouTube or whatever the kids are doing watching tick tock probably.
Dan: Yeah it's hard. I mean it everyone was just thrown for such a loop and there's gonna be growing pains you know. And teachers work so hard. It's just a lot of transition I'm sure for them. All their curriculum just thrown into chaos.