From: Phil deHaan (dehp@calvin.edu)
Date: Mon Oct 20 2003 - 09:13:31 EDT
October 20, 2003 == MEDIA ADVISORY
Calvin engineering students will have a chance to man a firehose this week -
all in the name of science.
The event was arranged by Calvin professor Matt Heun as a way for him to give
students in Engineering 319 (thermal-fluid sciences) a real-world example of
science in action.
So on Wednesday, October 22 the Grand Rapids Fire Department will come to
Calvin and Heun and his students will see - and feel - for themselves what it
takes to hold a fire hose in place when fighting a fire.
"I thought it would be cool to put the students on the fire hoses," says Heun,
"so that they get to feel for themselves how much force is required to hold the
hose in place and understand that you have to lean into the hose."
The fire hose demonstration will take place twice on October 22 - each time
for an hour. The first will be from 9 to 10 am and the second from 12:30 to
1:30 pm. Both demos will be in the parking lot of the Prince Conference Center
(look for the firetruck).
Says Heun: "In class we do force calculations and determine that it typically
takes two people to hold the hose in place. But, to the students this is very
abstract. The fire hose problem is probably one of the most counterintuitive
things we do. It is common to think that you need to pull back on the hose.
But, firefighters push forward on the hose to keep it in place. The equations
tell the correct story, but the students don't really believe it."
Come Wednesday, says Heun, they'll believe it!
Calvin offers a Bachelor of Science in Engineering degree (B.S.E.) with
concentrations in chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical &
computer engineering, and mechanical engineering accredited by the
Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).
Call Matt Heun at 526-6663
-end-
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