Alcator C-MOD Weekly Highlights Feb. 27, 1994 Last week was a scheduled maintenance week on Alcator C-MOD. A "clean" vent was completed on Tuesday, following re-installation of the fast-scanning probe and installation of new windows on the reflectometer diagnostic. Additional maintenance and upgrade activities were performed on several diagnostics, power systems, ICRF system, and computer and data acquisition systems. Plasma operation will resume this week. After the machine was pumped down on Tuesday, a bake to 110C was run until Saturday morning. Discharge cleaning (ECDC) in helium was carried out for 32 hours at a wall temperature of 60C, followed by a cooldown to 45C and a final leak check on Monday. ECDC in D2 will be carried out on Tuesday morning. The feedback control algorithm used to maintain the coil temperatures during bakeout was improved. This modification resulted in better control and lower LN2 usage during the present bake. The HV supply for ICRF transmitter #4, which had been out for modification, was returned from the vendor and installed in the high-yard. This supply will be used with the tunable FMIT transmitters which are being brought from PPPL as part of the Princeton collaboration on the C-MOD project. In other ICRF activities this week, arc paths were located and repaired in the transmission line to the D-port antenna. These had been restricting the power available through this antenna in the last week of operation before the maintenance period. A Conceptual Design Review for the new 4-strap antenna being provided by PPPL as part of the Princeton collaboration is being held at MIT today. This antenna will be installed in 1996. Maintenance was performed on the ECE diagnostic, the Thomson scattering and TCI interferometer windows, the charge exchange system, and the UV spectrometer diagnostics. Modifications were made to the control boards of the OH2 power supplies to improve performance and limit the slew rate. Testing of these modifications was carried out on Monday. The VAX computers in the C-Mod cluster were all brought up to the latest release of OpenVMS operating system, version 6.1. A new disk caching feature in this release should result in a performance increase of the data acquisition and analysis systems. In addition to the operating system upgrade, the collection of disks used for the storage of C-Mod MDSplus data and RDB databases were converted to a RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) set. This should provide additional reliability and speed to the on-line storage facility. Using RAID technology, the data is spread evenly across the entire set of disks along with error correction information. Increased speed is obtained by spreading the disk activity across all of the disks. Prior to converting to RAID, all new C-Mod data was contained on one disk and all I/O requests from analysis and display programs had to be serviced by a single drive. Drs. C.H. Ma, Roger Richards, and Don Hutchinson from ORNL were working on-site last week, readying their experiments for operation on C-MOD. Dr. Rob Pinsker is visiting from GA this week. He will be participating in the C-MOD ICRF experiments. Dr. Katsumi Kondo from the Heliotron E group at the Institute of Plasma Physics at Kyoto University has begun a two-month visit to Alcator C-MOD. He will be working on VUV and x-ray spectroscopy.