Alcator C-MOD Weekly Highlights Sept. 5, 1995 The scheduled maintenance and upgrade period continued on Alcator C-MOD last week. Good progress was made toward restarting operation in the fall. Seven out of ten of the outer divertor modules have been removed from the machine for refurbishment; of these, two are complete and ready to be re-installed. The inner divertor rib blocks have been aligned and locations documented. All gusset protection modules have been installed. Ten out of twenty of the lower inner divertor modules are installed. The TCI CO2 laser is back in operation. The mode quality and power levels look good. Construction has begun on the new tangential interferometer. The power supply and Bragg cell driver electronics are being assembled. The retro-reflector passed its outgassing test. Work on the new EF4 supply is progressing well. The control cabinet mechanical construction is complete. The relay logic design and documentation is done, as are all PLC IO allocations. All PLC and CAMAC hardware is in-house. UPS and Experimental power connections to the converter and control cabinets are complete. PC board chassis interconnect wiring and documentation is complete. Construction and testing of all PC boards is complete. Bracing of the EF4 bus to allow higher currents is complete. New fiber optic runs have been installed in the power room, cell, and interface room for the new EF4 supply and to extend some runs on the YAG system. Preparations for installation of the new EF1 transformer have been completed. The AC bus has been modified to accept two secondaries instead of one. The cabinet frame has been modified to allow access to the transformer. Dirck Dimock of PSI is visiting today to check the optics on the edge Thomson Scattering. A leak at the window of the optics head has been repaired. A review of the Alcator C-MOD proposed program for the next five years was held at MIT last week. Participants included Dr. Don Priester of D.o.E., and Drs. Hosea (PPPL), Callen (U. Wisc.), Hooper (LLNL), and Stambaugh (GA). Jim Rosati and Mike Fridberg visited PPPL last Friday to discuss water cooling and control issues involving the PPPL tunable transmitters.