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Deleted member 36384
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A question and an observation: Would a big CME affect the night time side of the planet? Regarding designers of flying machines; on occasion they don't get it right because the effects of an event are underestimated by the designer.
The observation is based on the tail rotors of the Super Puma helicopter. They were designed for a lightening strike of significant intensity. A Helicopter in the North Sea ditched after being struck by lightening and it was established that the magnitude of the lightening strike was significantly more than the approved design criteria for airworthiness. Similar but different is the old 200 year wave criteria for off shore platform design. Its now understood that the frequency is wrong and the 200 year wave happened a lot more frequently, within the lifecycle of most platforms.
So, I don't trust designers to cover all relevant events, although I do believe that they do their best.
The observation is based on the tail rotors of the Super Puma helicopter. They were designed for a lightening strike of significant intensity. A Helicopter in the North Sea ditched after being struck by lightening and it was established that the magnitude of the lightening strike was significantly more than the approved design criteria for airworthiness. Similar but different is the old 200 year wave criteria for off shore platform design. Its now understood that the frequency is wrong and the 200 year wave happened a lot more frequently, within the lifecycle of most platforms.
So, I don't trust designers to cover all relevant events, although I do believe that they do their best.