STRUCK: An Aerospace Engineering & Lightning Protection Show

STRUCK: An Aerospace Engineering & Lightning Protection Show


EP18 – Jaunt Air Mobility EVTOL – Will it Fly? Hydrogen-Powered Planes and Is Fire-Suppressing Foam on Its Way Out?

July 20, 2020

In this episode of the Struck aerospace engineering podcast, we discuss Jaunt Air Mobility's gyrocopter EVTOL design and talk about it's future. We discuss NXTCOMM's new flat satcom radome antenna design, Airbus' white paper on hydrogen-powered planes and the EU's plan to become carbon-neutral. We cover Embraer's new foray into Turboprop planes, antimicrobial tech in cabins, and the toxic, costly nature of fire-suppressing foam.

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Full Transcript: EP18 - Jaunt Air Mobility EVTOL - Will it Fly? Hydrogen-Powered Planes and Is Fire-Suppressing Foam on Its Way Out?

Dan: This episode is brought to you by Weather Guard Lightning Tech at weather guard. We support design engineers and make lightning protection easy.

You're listening to the Struck podcast. I'm Dan Blewett

Allen Hall: I'm Allen hall.

Dan: And here on struck, we talk about everything. Aviation, aerospace engineering, and lightning protection.

All right, welcome back. This is struck episode 18, Allen. What's going on?

Allen Hall: Hey, it's been a great week, Dan, pretty busy things. Just starting to pick up. Looks like air. Aviation's getting a little, a little more busy. Flights are ticking up a little bit. So it's

Dan: gonna be, yeah, you got another trip this week.

Don't you?

Allen Hall: I want, so this is my second trip outside of Massachusetts. Uh, we're a little curious to see if the. Any changes have occurred in the, uh, airport experience and on the aircraft, it seems like the Southwest airlines was what were travel on. It is still blocking out the middle seats. And there was a report by MIT I saw yesterday or day before that was talking about how that reduced.

Um, exposure to COVID by like roughly 50%, which, which was interesting. But the last time we traveled through the airports, airports seem busy. They were really busy, but the parking lots were empty. It doesn't make a lot of sense, but that's what it was. Um, so yeah, it can be a busy week.

Dan: Well, I heard, yeah, I heard Delta's gonna keep, uh, their middle seats blocked off until September, but then again, other.

Uh, companies hadn't really followed suit. And of course, with American airlines, they didn't even seem to enforce, uh, one of our United States senators wearing a mask, the whole flight, apparently. So

Allen Hall: it's not

Dan: still spotty regulation across the industry.

Allen Hall: Well, it's not regulation, right? Uh, the FAA can't oppose company

Dan: policy, company policies,

Allen Hall: right.

And the companies can remove you from an aircraft for whatever reason they want it's denial of servi...