WEBVTT
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Hello everybody, welcome to the Fire Science Show.
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In today's episode we will be talking about one of the most important knowledge resources we have as fire protection engineers and that is the SFP Handbook on Fire Protection Engineering.
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I think every fire engineer knows it.
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I've learned about it pretty late in my professional educations but since I found it it has been perhaps one of the most influential knowledge resources I've ever found, truly.
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And the fifth handbook is a little bit dusty already.
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It was published almost 10 years ago so it really needs a revision and SFB knows that, and the revision has been cooking for many, many recent years.
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I had a podcast episode 100 episodes ago with Chris Silenowicz.
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We were talking a little bit about SFP and handbook.
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Back then he promised the handbook is coming.
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We know that it's closer and closer, so I've invited CJ once again to the podcast to discuss the state of the handbook.
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Where are we with the sixth revision?
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When can we expect it?
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And, of course, besides this one most important question, I've asked plenty more to CJ about how this handbook is actually built, how the editorial process looks like, because it's a little bit different than what you used from the conferences or publications like journals.
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I've also asked him about the innovations in the handbook.
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So what's new in this new book?
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Why should we be looking forward for that?
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And there's plenty, plenty of new content that's going to be very interesting in the handbook outside of the revised chapters.
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We've also had a chance to briefly talk about other SFP activities and, of course, Chris brought a lot of interesting, good bits of knowledge from the SFP universe.
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Let's call it like that.
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So, whether you are looking for the SFP handbook or not, I'm still sure this episode will be very interesting, because it's just fascinating to know how a book with more than 200 authors is produced and delivered to you.
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So let's not prolong this anymore.
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Let's spin the intro and jump into the episode.
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Welcome to the Firesize Show.
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My name is Wojciech Wigrzyński and I will be your host.
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The FireSense Show is into its third year of continued support from its sponsor, OFR Consultants, who are an independent, multi-award-winning fire engineering consultancy with a reputation for delivering innovative, safety-driven solutions.
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The business continues to grow at a phenomenal rate, with offices across the country in eight locations, from Edinburgh to Bath, and plans for future expansions.
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If you're keen to find out more or join OFR Consultants during this exciting period of growth, visit their website at ofrconsultantscom.
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And now back to the episode.
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Hello everybody.
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I am here joined today by Chris Jelanovic CJ.
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Hello, Chris.
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Hello Wichek, my friend, it's an honor to be on the Fireside Show and you know, before we get started here, I really want to start by congratulating you for receiving the SFPE European Fire Safety Engineering Award that you received at our recent conference in Edinburgh.
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I think it's a great honor.
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I think you're always second person to receive that award and it was a great conference.
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Dougal Drysdale was there.
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He received the Lifetime Achievement Award, so it was great to see you to get that award and it just was a topping for a great conference we had.
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Thank you.
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Thank you, man.
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I mean, it was such an honor and it was really a surprise.
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They really have not told me I'm technically the board member responsible for those and those items magically disappeared from the board at some point and I actually sat in the table with them looking like a fool and they gave me an award.
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It was ridiculous.
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Well, they did a great job and I was well-referenced.
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It was very well-concealed.
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But yeah, it's a huge honor and I appreciate it a lot.
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And you know, sfp has always been a big part of my life and I'm happy that SFP also sees some value in stuff that I'm doing.
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So, yeah, big thanks to the SFP, eurovan and SFP in general.
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I mean it's a good relationship we have.
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Yeah, I think an important part of SFP is honoring our members that are doing great things, and you're doing some great things here with the Fireside Show, getting the word out about fire science and also fire protection or fire safety engineering throughout the world.
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Thanks man, Thanks man.
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Let's talk that exactly fire protection engineering.
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Around the world there's a lot of people practicing fire protection engineer and one thing that connects those people is a book that all of them are using, and you know exactly which book I'm talking about is one hell of a book, and its previous version does weigh exactly 9.4 kilograms if you put all three books on top of each other, CJ.
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Where is the handbook and when we're going to see it?
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We would love to see the handbook.
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It's a massive piece that the society is waiting.
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I brought you here to tell us what's the plan to release.
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Yeah, well, we're working on the sixth edition of the Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering.
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We're looking to be publishing this by the end of summer, certainly before the end of the year.
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We're very excited about the next edition because there's going to be a lot of new cool content.
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Just like the last edition, it'll be available in print if you would like a book.
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This time you mentioned three books.
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This time it's going to be five books, wow.
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That's really showing how our profession is growing.
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So, yeah, it's gonna be five books, but you could also purchase you know, if you don't want five books, they have to carry around with you wherever you go.
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Uh, you have the opportunity to have purchased the handbook online, which you could do now too, through Springer, our publishing partner, springer.
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And you could also, if you wanted, to purchase individual chapters, which is very great for people, especially people like students, right, who don't need every single chapter.
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And another unique thing about this handbook that I don't think a lot of people know that it is available in many college libraries through what is called SpringerLink, so you could just go.
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If you were a student, you could just go to your college library and say I want to look at this chapter on human behavior and you could just pop it up.
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I have no idea about that.
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So it's like a system for academia that people, people.
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That's an interesting thing, yeah they'd have to be part of the springer lake.
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And the other thing about it is, for example, one of our most downloaded chapters in the whole handbook is the chapter on conduction.
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Nobody would believe that if they were just looking at virus, at the engineers.
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But when you think about it, colleges throughout the world you maybe a student in a mechanical engineering, heat transfer class had to do some work with conduction and they could just pull up that chapter pretty easily by just going to their library.
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Oh, that's really good.
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Do you know how outstanding is that chapter versus other heat transfer modes?
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That would be an interesting comparison.
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Yeah, anyway, the last I saw the data was about a year ago, but the heat transfer chapters were all very popular, with induction being the most popular.
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Oh, man.
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You need to exploit this as a business model, like fire protection engineering, providing the world with outstanding heat transfer chapters to fund key research for fire science.
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Hey, any way we could get the word out about fire protected or fire safety engineering is a great thing right, I'm looking into the handbook context.
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Yes, convection heat transfer, third chapter, arvind Atreya, student of Howard Emmons.
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I think that's a good chapter, that's a good, that's a good legacy of fire science and fire engineering.
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Good, chris.
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So five books, springerlink that's great.
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I also think Springer has some sort of subscription schemes or other ways where you could purchase actually parts of the books from the entire Springer ecosystem.
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Yeah, yeah, there's many ways.
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For example, sfp has a SFP series that's part of Springer ecosystem.
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Yeah, yeah, there's many ways.
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And, for example, sfpe has a SFPE series that's part of Springer.
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So all the SFPE guides are published on the SFPE series.
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The handbook is part of the SFPE series, but also there's a number of other books about fire protection topics, for example, fire Protection Environment by Brian Meacham.
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We're working on other books.
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There's a structural fire protection handbook that's available there.
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So there's many different ways that we work with Springer and, like I said, our goal is to get as much technical content out to the fire protection community as possible.
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But because of the Springer partnership I guess they run the distribution scheme.
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You're not planning something like an FBA link where there would be just you know, sfp subscription service where you could just log in and get all of that?
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No, everything will be through Springer.
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Everything will be through Springer.
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One good advantage of working with them is that we just get a greater global reach.
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Originally we were selling some of our guides right out of our office at SFPE.
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I'll use our human behavior engineering guide as an example.
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The first edition that we sold at SFPE we probably sold 300 to 500 copies.
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The first week we published the second edition through Springer we were already selling over a thousand copies.
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So to get that reach is really helpful for our profession.
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The show can give us visibility.
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I mean being in this kind of, you know, influencer space, let's say, or creator economy, or maybe that's the proper word for me being in a creator economy.
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A lot of people are discussing in here whether you should self publish your books, should you go with a classical publisher, and of course, every model has its pros and cons.
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Yeah, I've never seen this being an easy choice.
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It's usually extremely elaborate discussions and, whether you end up with one or another, there's usually some little key things that you simply cannot achieve the other way.
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Five books Tell me, how did you divide the books?
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What are the themes of the books?
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Or it's random.
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I dubbed this random.
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What are the themes?
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No, it's not actually random.
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What we did is is, before we started the work on the sixth edition, we put together a committee to look at how we distribute the handbook and what's the content in the handbook, and a committee included past editorial members, authors, people who were fire educators, who had no relationship with the handbook, and they brought together a few suggestions for the sixth edition, and one of the main suggestions was to bring back the sections, and what I mean by that is, you know, the last edition was just a listing of chapters, but the previous editions were divided into different sections, and what the recommendation came out to be is that they wanted to have 11 different sections and each one represents a significant topic in fire safety engineering.
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So we actually divided it up by 11 sections and, as we go along with the five different books, that doesn't really matter what book it's in.
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It's just that one book might have two sections, other books might have three sections.
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It's really based on the amount of content available, and then when you look at it online, you wouldn't even notice the five books.
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You just see 11 sections per se.
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Yeah, that kind of makes sense.
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For some reason.
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I remember well Handbook version 3, I think when I was starting my university, version 3 was the one that was available, at least to us.
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I remember it had those sections.
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It was very convenient really.
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I think Handbook version 3, the last one there was a single book.
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I vaguely remember that.
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I think it was one book back.
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The last one.
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It was a single book.
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I vaguely remember that.
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I think it was one book back then.
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Yeah, could be yes.
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So now we're going to 5.
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And, like I said, it's just some interesting stats.
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Actually, before this morning I wrote down some interesting stats that I think people might find interesting.
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First of all, we're going to have five books, 11 sections, and then there's 11 sections, there's 104 chapters, okay, plus an annex that has the material properties that people are probably familiar with.
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The annex content when we submitted the manuscript to Springer, it was almost exactly 5,000 pages of Word document.
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What kind?
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Of computer opens that.
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So you can imagine, today you had to send 5,000 pages.
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You need this supercomputer to open the Word manuscript we have 21 editorial board members, that each section has two section editors that are part of the editorial board and we have over 200 authors.
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Wow, of those 104 chapters.
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Uh, we this that the one new thing we're doing this time is we wanted to ensure that we had two authors for every chapter so we could have some kind of continuity when we go into future editions.
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So, or if you know, even during the process of some person you know retired or wasn't interested in walking in the Hamburg anymore, that we'd have more continuity at that.
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And then the other new thing we did this time is we had what we would call we called it a peer review, but it's not necessarily officially a peer review of the fifth edition, but we asked our members to review the fifth edition and offer suggestions for the sixth edition, and we had over 35 of our members participate in this peer review process that provided feedback on the different chapters of the handbook.
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So when the author started the sixth edition, you know there wasn't any mandate, like you would have in a journal review, that you follow these recommendations, but it was something to think about.
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Say, hey, we would like to see more information about this or we'd like to see less information about that topic, and it worked out very well, I think.
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Yeah, and how do you handle like legacy chapters, because there were chapters in SFP handbook that would be written, you know, by very well esteemed members of community who retired.
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There are their like successors right now.
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Did you keep the big names at the chapters or some of them are now a completely new set of peoples?
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For me, the important chapter is the visibility chapter and, yeah, that's fundamental for my research.
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It starts on page 2181 in Handbook version 5.
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You can check that.
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That's my relationship with that chapter.
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You know that's an interesting question you bring up, but that was something that we thought about early on.
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But that was something that we thought about early on and you know it's a very delicate situation where you know you want to give credit to the people who provided the majority of the content but at the same time you know there wasn't.
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You know those people were not even interested in working on it anymore for various reasons, and sometimes they recommended the people to take over your chapter.
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Sometimes, you know, we, as our editorial board, find the best people that we are and I would say almost everyone is a case-by-case basis depending on a chapter, depending on, you know, the content that's involved, on how you know you want to give credit to those people that worked on it before.
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It's interesting.
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You know that our field has matured, that you know there are already many generational fire safety engineers and a lot has progressed, and the fact that some knowledge has been superseded by a newer knowledge, it's just a sign of maturity of the profession.
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It's not that the previous knowledge was wrong or incorrect.
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By this definition, the entire science is wrong because it will be superseded by a better science one day.
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So, by default, everything we did will be overwritten one day.
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That's how the science develops.
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But again, the handbook is also not a museum.
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It's, uh, it's a working piece that that people are going to be using in their everyday's work and it's critically important for them to have access to the newest and, uh, best defined knowledge.
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Um, in terms of of the chapters, so there's 104, there used to be 90 ish.
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So can you tease like what?
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Did you remove some chapters?
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Did you add some, uh, completely new chapters from the scratch?
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The little, what can?
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yes, yeah, well, there's a lot of new.
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Like you said, our own profession is always evolving and, uh, you know, I think the biggest thing we've been seeing in the last 10 years is, uh, emerging topics.
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A lot of them related to the environment, right.
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So, for example, section 11, a whole section.
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We'll have now a whole section on wildland open interface fires.
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Okay, where previously we had one chapter in the fifth edition, well, now I have seven chapters related to wildland interface fires, everything from human behavior and evacuation to health issues, to exposure threats to structures and, of course, you know how do we model wildland fires.
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So a lot of new content right there.
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Other, you know, emerging issues that we'll see.
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New stuff is lithium ion batteries.
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We never had a chapter, and a chapter like that is such a challenge because as soon as that chapter is drafted, the technology is changing already.
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I struggle to keep up with a podcast and I'm very, very responsive, so I can only imagine how hard it must be when you have a book.
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And then the other new topics that we're going to be seeing are.
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You know, sometimes we said, hey, how come we never had a chapter on firewalls and passive fire protection before we sat around and said, well, do we really need to have something on that?
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Fire safety during construction and demolition you know it was always an important topic but of course, in the last 10 years we're seeing we were seeing more fires in building and construction that we ever saw, so we'll now have a chapter in that they're also.
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I'm really you know one thing I was really excited about.
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The first chapter will be entitled Introduction to Fire Protection Engineering, which we never had a chapter on the profession itself.
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Like, hey, you know, back in the old days of ancient Rome they had the big, we burned to the ground and other cities were burning to the ground.
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That was like the first fire protection engineering.
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We saw where people were thinking about water supplies or distances between buildings or non-combustible construction, right.
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So how we've evolved from those days throughout the generations to where we are now today.
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And we have Jim Queter and Peter Johnson I think everybody knows those two names that wrote that chapter.
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To give us a background, and let me tell us what our profession is about.
00:21:09.539 --> 00:21:10.501
Wow, that's nice.
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I mean, yeah, like when you mention it, it feels like it was missing.
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I like when I was reading a a handbook or using the handbook, it was not something that would be something that I would immediately say, oh, we need that.
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But now that you mentioned it, I want that chapter.
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That sounds lovely.
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Another question I have about the handbook design is you know also the?
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The society is in a very different uh, by the side, I mean, sfp is in a very different position than in 2016.
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2016, we were all enjoying beers in warsaw, I believe.
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Uh, well, I'm still, but the society is is global.
00:21:42.607 --> 00:21:53.219
Now, when we talk about fundamentals of fire science and there's, you know, heat transfer chapters, compartment fire dynamics, all of that is universal, but a lot of content in the handbook.
00:21:53.219 --> 00:22:01.968
When you move into the technology chapters, you know smoke controls, expression systems, sprinkler systems, those technical system designs.
00:22:01.968 --> 00:22:05.471
They were very US-centric, from my perspective at least.
00:22:05.471 --> 00:22:12.107
Is this something you've also addressed in this handbook, or you do not see that as an issue?
00:22:12.107 --> 00:22:33.013
I mean, I don't see that as a direct issue, but perhaps there's also an opportunity to introduce American designers to more international perspectives and globalize this a little bit together our editorial board and the authors of each of the chapters.
00:22:33.534 --> 00:23:20.036
You know we really wanted to have a more global look at some of these topics, so you'll see that just the fact that the editorial board has much more diversity as far as the global wire protection in the world consists of, so we have editors from all throughout the world, we have authors throughout the world and even on the sections on systems, of course a lot of these, especially the water-based systems, have a lot of US-centric stuff, but I could say that I think a lot of the world still looks at the United States when it comes to those kind of things, but we are seeing a lot more diversity in that.
00:23:20.396 --> 00:23:33.915
The section on fire protection systems is the largest section, where it's going to have 15 different chapters through everything from water-based systems, smoke control, the fire alarm.
00:23:33.915 --> 00:23:57.307
One area where we got a lot of uh participation from outside the united states is the area water mist systems that the water mist association actually contacted us and offered a peer review of that chapter and helped us guide us to having a more, you know, globalized chapter in that area.
00:23:57.307 --> 00:24:05.295
And then the one area that we didn't have a chapter on before was the fundamentals of fire extinguishment.
00:24:05.295 --> 00:24:08.946
You know the chemistry, the physics behind fire extinguishment.
00:24:08.946 --> 00:24:11.557
That is going to be a new chapter.
00:24:11.557 --> 00:24:18.486
The physics behind fire extinguishment that is going to be a new chapter and we had some great authors from FM provide us guidance on that.
00:24:18.486 --> 00:24:21.949
That was never before in the HEM.
00:24:22.349 --> 00:24:23.932
I mean it's kind of interesting.
00:24:23.932 --> 00:24:34.423
I wonder if it will ever evolve in such a way that the fundamentals part will separate themselves from the engineering parts.
00:24:34.423 --> 00:24:46.801
I mean, but on the other hand, it's not that you design a sprinkler system in accordance with SFP handbook, no, you use it to understand the fundamentals, the principles, the rules, the general.
00:24:46.801 --> 00:24:53.119
You know ideas behind the design and then you have to reach to your NFPA 13 or whatever to design the system.
00:24:53.140 --> 00:24:54.645
Yeah, exactly, Exactly.
00:24:54.645 --> 00:24:57.410
That's what's intended to be right.
00:24:57.813 --> 00:24:59.902
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think that's in any section almost.
00:24:59.902 --> 00:25:20.367
Yeah, I mean it's like this philosophical thing, because the handbook is not going to replace the standards, the handbook is not going to replace the entirety of the technical knowledge, but then again, if a person gets the handbook chapter in their hand, it should kickstart them to a really good position in tackling the technical challenge that they're battling.
00:25:20.367 --> 00:25:21.934
I hope that's the philosophy.
00:25:23.057 --> 00:25:43.694
Yeah, and the other interesting thing you mentioned about the standards or the codes, right, is that one of our action items or our goals at SFPE is to not only, you know, publish these documents but to get our documents referenced in the international codes and standards.
00:25:43.694 --> 00:25:50.108
So that could be working with the ISO TC92 subcommittee for committee.
00:25:50.108 --> 00:25:51.605
It could be working with the NFPA committees.
00:25:51.605 --> 00:25:52.674
It could be working with the NFPA committees.
00:25:52.674 --> 00:25:55.183
It could be working with the International Billing Code.
00:25:55.855 --> 00:26:08.575
When you reference, you have a section on, for example, a lot of codes say, hey, you need to do a risk analysis for this right, but they don't really tell you how you do the risk analysis.
00:26:08.575 --> 00:26:10.617
So we joined the reference how you do the risk analysis.
00:26:10.617 --> 00:26:11.538
So we joined the reference.
00:26:11.538 --> 00:26:29.821
You know, when we see a section like that, hey, for mass notification system, we'd like you to do a risk analysis, Well, we like to look at these codes and go to the code making process and have the specific chapters of our handbook that would be applicable to this.
00:26:29.821 --> 00:26:35.075
You know reference somewhere in the code or standard itself.
00:26:35.075 --> 00:26:46.605
So after they say, you know, do a risk analysis, maybe an annex or a side note would say, well, check out the SFP handbook when you're doing this risk analysis.
00:26:47.255 --> 00:26:49.682
As your main reference technical background.
00:26:49.682 --> 00:26:50.705
That makes sense.