Setting up drill electronics.
Setting up drill electronics. The drillers, working in the underground drill trench are almost ready to ream the borehole. They have installed a new electronic drill motor control, and they are adjusting the software to answer the commands given from the drilling console. It requires some programming skills; but Jens Christian is the man for it.
In the science trench, we have begun to mount the cooling unit. It may sound a bit ridiculous to mount a cooling unit in the middle of the Greenland ice sheet, especially after I have been complaining on how cold it continues to be. But Summer will come, and higher temperatures will follow. We are installing a cooling unit to protect the ice core from thermal shock when it comes from the deep. From experience we know that maintaining a temperature of -30° C in the trenches during summer is almost impossible, temperatures can go as high as -10° C in the trenches. Therefore, we have setup a cooling unit, kept at -30° C, which is the average temperature of the ice sheet and here, we will extract ice cores.
On the surface, the wind is still causing some sow drift and once in a while we have to use snow blowers to keep the entrance to the trenches free.
What we did today:
- Repairing Pistenbully 1. Too high oil pressure in the planetary gear.
- Work in the drilling trench.
- Work on setting up tables at stations in the science trench.
- Test of radar.
- Opening doctors clinic in WP 4.
- Removing snowdrifts from trench entrance.
- Work on mounting freezer aggregate in extraction tunnel.
- German snow sampling.
- Japanese aerosol sampling and snow experiments in progress.
- Water vapour sampling, methane sampling, boundary layer and meteorology station working.
Ad.2: Adjusting software of the new drill electronics so that the motor has the proper response to commands from the console.
Ad.4: The radar spotted a test person 3 km from camp.
Weather today: Thin high clouds. Strong wind and snow drift. Temp. -19° C to -34° C. Wind: 15 kt from W. Visibility: To horizon.
FL, J.P. Steffensen
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