Hibernation Effort

Yesterday (Dec 9) Peter and I went up to ML to work on the following:

  • Remove Heliax cables – Together we were able to remove 29 cables that consisted of a mix of 9-m, 7-m, and 2-m lengths.  The cables are stored in the support cone below the telescope and are separated by lengths.  We believe we can complete the removal of the Heliax cables within the platform with 2 more days of work (requires two persons).
  • Repair right rear exist frame – When we arrived we noticed the metal structure holding the canopy down had broken away.  It turn out that the two bolts holding it down were stripped (possibly wrong size to start?) so we replaced them with the correct size.  Photo after repair shown here.
New hold down bolts, this one showing the left side.
Photo of frame after replacing hold down bolts.  The horizontal curved support structure that came loose is circled in blue.  
  • Remove AC plugs for ROACH-2 chassis –  When we arrived we found 2 of the 4 ROACH bays were powered up unintentionally via the WTI network power switch, probably as a result of a power failure recovery routine.  In order to prevent this from happening in the future we removed the AC power plugs to the rear of all 32 ROACH-2 units.  We left the WTI units powered on so that we can perform remote reboots of network switches and other accessories.
Photo of on of the four ROACH-2 bays with WTI Network Power Switch at top.
  • Pull long extension cord from Eaton UPS to Control Container – Being that we will no longer power up the ROACH-2 hardware, we decided to use the large Eaton UPS, model 9170+, to power the PCs and other accessories within the Control Container.
Eaton 9170+ UPS
Yellow power cord carrying UPS power into Control Container.

I’ve attached the 6 views of the telescope as it stands today.  There is still much to do but hopefully with the stiff Heliax cables out of the way things will go a bit faster.

-Peter, Derek

View 1
View 2
View 3
View 4
View 5
View 6

YTLA network fixed

After troubleshooting the network today, I replaced the media converter (fiber from the visitor building to ethernet) in the junction box outside the control room, and that brought the network back online. Much thanks to Naomi for her remote help.

-Adam

10G Dual channel network card is working

Ranjani  fixed the dual port 10G network switch this afternoon.

Here is Ranjani’s solution to fix the issue:

“Ok I fixed the problem, the problem was not the port, but a very esoteric directive in the network configuration called reverse path filtering. Strangely enough, this directive was needed for only the 2nd hardware interface, not the first one.”

Thank you Ranjani!

Ranjani, Adam, Peter