Back when i was very active in my training, I was blessed to have attended a presentation by Bruce Fisher. It was put on as part of an early FAA Wings program at my local field (KJGG), back when that program was first getting kicked off. Anyway, it was a fascinating lecture
Read the history of NASA Lightening Strike research using he F-106 Delta Dart Ultimate Interceptor as it serverd for 30 years in NASA projects.
www.f-106deltadart.com
basically they purposely flew into T-Storms to see what would happen
probably lots of other info on the study they did out there too, if you search for it...
The strike enters at whatever point and exits at some other point. The takeaway as I recall it anyway, was that mostly it's a non-event but sometimes stuff happens
One photo he had in his slideshow I remember clearly. It wasn't part of their study, just some side research or examples that he had. It was the leading edge of a small GA aircraft that had been hit on a wingtip in flight. The lightning got into the nav light power wire and traveled out the opposite wingtip. The magnetic field generated in the wire (look up "right-hand rule" if you're not familiar) collapsed the wing's leading edge. Basically...you know how the curve looks on the leading edge? To simplify, call the cross-section shape a half circle, right? Convex. Well, the newly modified wing was the same except it was concave! Apparently, the plan landed safely.
A personal story that I've often wondered about how this would apply to GA aircraft.... especially now with all the microchip stuff we use now...
When I was a kid, I was fishing offshore with my dad in his little boat, a 23ft Penn Yan flying bridge. We found ourselves inside a little thunderstorm. Visibility from the inside helm was just about to the bow of the boat. We were motoring at idle speed...flashBANG. I was standing in the cabin at the open door with rain splashing on my legs from the rain. I felt the electric buzz...like licking a 9-volt battery
Everything in the boat shut down...nothing worked... but we were still floating. So we dropped the anchor till the rain passed. Then started fishing again until someone happened by to tow us in.
Found out later that it had struck the top of the CB radio antenna. Everything electrical on the boat that was powered on was either burned up or literally a melted pile of goo. Lights that were switched on, the electronic ignition module, the windshield wiper motor, etc. Everything electrical that was switched off was still ok after we got power back.... every light, the other windshield wiper motor that was off, etc... So it got into the electrical system and traveled everywhere. I've never understood though how the little DC switches used to control the circuits that we off had enough interrupt rating to save those devices.