Displaying reports 67141-67160 of 77167.Go to page Start 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 End
Reports until 19:02, Tuesday 25 February 2014
H1 SUS
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - posted 19:02, Tuesday 25 February 2014 - last comment - 11:50, Monday 03 March 2014(10331)
OL and BOSEM calibration using baffle PDs (Stefan, Keita)

After much of the day was spent for recovery from maintenance, we wanted to make green WFS wider band, for which we need to redo penultimate mass to final mass pit to pit and yaw to yaw measurement, and since we're using OLs, and since OL whitening were bad but are now good, and since ISI is performing much better than the beginning of the HIFO_X,  we decided to calibrate OL using baffle PDs again. And since we might want to use TMS for alignment we also did the calibration measurement for TMS.

We only had time for TMS and ITMX for today.

TMS:

Used H1:AOS-ITMX_BAFFLEPD_1_POWER and 3_POWER (3 is actually connected to PD4). Also recorded H1:SUS-ETMX_M0_DAMP_P_IN1 and H1:SUS-ETMX_M0_DAMP_Y_IN1 and used tdsavg.

"delta claimed" is the TMS rotation measured as the difference of bias offsets between PD4 and PD1, "delta physical" is derived from baffle diode drawing and the arm length of 4000m (see the drawing in this alog: https://alog.ligo-wa.caltech.edu/aLOG/index.php?callRep=9087).

Positive PIT means the beam points down. Positive YAW means the beam rotates counter-clockwise viewed from the top.

  ITMX baffle PD1 ITMX baffle PD4 (channel name is PD3) delta claimed delta physical correction factor
TMS bias slider (P, Y) (203.3, -228.1) (272.7, -289.7) (69.4, -61) (71.8, -72.0) (1.035, 1.180)
TMS BOSEMs (286.46 470.24) (396.13, 415.91) (109.67, -54.33) (71.8, -72.0) (0.654, 1.325)
power on baffle PD (mW) 0.22 0.24      

 

ITMX:

Used H1:AOS-ETMX_BAFFLEPD_1_POWER and H1:AOS-ETMX_BAFFLEPD_4_POWER. Also recorded H1:SUS-ITMX_L3_OPLEV_PIT_OUT and H1:SUS-ITMX_L3_OPLEV_YAW_OUT.

"delta reality" is half the angle formed by PD4, ETM and PD1 as the beam rotates twice the angle of the ETM.

Positive PIT means that the optic points down. Positive YAW means the beam rotates counter-clockwise viewed from the top. OL has different sign convention from SUS for PIT here.

  ETMX baffle PD1 ETMX baffle PD4 delta claimed delta reality Correction factor
ITM bias slider (P, Y) (34.6, -74.9) (66.9, -42.2) (32.3, 32.7) (37.34, 37.37) (1.156, 1.143)
ITM OLs (8.643, -3.20) (-11.115, 14.845) (-17.94, 16.34) (37.34, 37.37) (-2.081, 2.287)
ITM top BOSEMs (246.65, -386.038) (349.14, -358.02) (102.49, 28.02)    
PM BOSEMs (-2736.5, 193.8) (-2709.41, 224.14) (27.09, 30.34)    
power on baffle PD (mW) 0.65 0.65      

Didn't have time to do ETMX.

Comments related to this report
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - 11:50, Monday 03 March 2014 (10454)

ETM OL calibration was done using red beam while red team was doing red things.

  ITMX PD1 ITMX PD3 (wired to PD4) delta claimed delta physical correction factor
ETM bias slider (P, Y) (229.4, 90.5) (253.4, 60.3) (24.0, -30.2) (35.9, -36.0) (1.50, 1.19)
ETM OLs (-16.97, -17.62) (21.50, 24.07) (38.5, 41.7) (35.9, -36.0) (0.932, -0.863)
ETM top BOSEMs (163.25, 183.36) (276.98, 153.34) (113.7, -30.2)    
PUM BOSEMs (1114.59, -678.99) (1160.02, -715.61) (45.43, -15.9 )    
Power (mW) about 0.16 max  about 0.16 max      

Unlike ITMX, the OL PIT sign convention of ETMX is consistent with SUS convention, but OL YAW convention is inconsistent.

Also, unlike ITMX, ETMX OL amplitude doesn't seem to have a factor of 2 error.

Sign convention of SUS is: Positive P = pointing down. Positive Y = counter clockwise viewed from the top.

H1 SEI (INS, ISC, SEI)
hugh.radkins@LIGO.ORG - posted 17:06, Tuesday 25 February 2014 - last comment - 17:17, Tuesday 25 February 2014(10329)
EndY Field Cabling Work Update

Not sure if Filiberto is complete but maybe...

As far as SEI work goes:

CPS racks are located and all wired up sans sync cable.

~75% of the in-air cables going to the Feed Thrus are Strain Relieved.

The harder half of the Dial Indicators are in place.

Comments related to this report
filiberto.clara@LIGO.ORG - 17:17, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10330)
Cabling for SUS, ISC, and SEI are pulled and and connected to the feedthrus except for ISI Corner 1 Flange F6. Flange has DB25 connectors but should be 3 pin power connectors.

Filiberto Clara
H1 IOO
sheila.dwyer@LIGO.ORG - posted 16:04, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10327)
IMC mysteries

Daniel, Sheila, Alexa,

We pinned down the wandering peak in the IMC error signal.  It was a beat note between the fixed frequency 78.2MHz and the IMC VCO.  Moving the IMC VCO frequency (using the tune offset) moves it, it dissapears when the 79.2MHz is off. It becomes very small when the cable from the RF pacth panel in R1 to the doubler for the fiber distribution is disconnected from the patch panel, and can be small when the able is connected at the patch panel but not at the input to the doubler, perhaps depending on where the cable is.  Disconnecting the output of the doubler has no impact.  It seems like a purely electrical problem.

We still do not know why the UGF has changed, but the of the IMC error signal measured at Imon is 1.5V at the moment. 

H1 General
jeffrey.bartlett@LIGO.ORG - posted 15:55, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10326)
Ops Summary
LVEA Laser Safe

Hanford Ground Water coming check well 
Apollo working at End-Y

08:35 Filiberto – Going to End-Y 
08:35 Aaron – Going to End-X
08:47 Hugh – Going to End-X
10:00 Joe & Craig – Working in H2-PSL enclosure
10:32 Hugh – Dropping of electronics at HAM5
10:33 Corey - In LVEA West bay looking for parts 
10:39 Dave – DAC restart
10:41 Dave – Restart PSL, IOP, User Models, etc
10:48 Travis – Open rollup door in North Bay moving in Argo arm
11:25 Jax – Working in squeezer bay
11:25 Aaron & Alexa – Going to End-X to test Noise Eater function 
12:09 Hugh – Getting tools from HAM4/5 area
12:55 Karen – Cleaning at End-Y
13:05 Hanford Ground Water on site
13:20 Travis – In LVEA working on ITM monolithic build
13:40 Dave – Restart DAC
13:50 Dave – Recompiling/Restarting all the HAM-ISI models
13:52 Filiberto & Aaron – Working at End-Y
14:00 Kyle – Craning RGA over Y-Beam Manifold 
14:00 Joe, Chris, & Craig – Working in H2-PSL enclosure
14:05 Hugh – Working at End-Y
14:20 Justin – LVEA laser hazard
14:45 Ed & Evan – Working on IOT2R table
15:03 Alexa – Going to End-X 
16:00 Rick & Craig - Working in the H2-PSL enclosure

H1 AOS
douglas.cook@LIGO.ORG - posted 15:41, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10325)
SR alignment monuments are set at HAM 6 end door
The monuments are set on the floor that will be used to align SRM, SR2, SR3.
802 elevation target will be used to heights
H1 AOS (IOO, ISC, TCS)
paul.fulda@LIGO.ORG - posted 15:37, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10324)
Simulated buildup in H1 PRMI locked on sidebands with REFL45, over ITMY RH power

For comparison with experimental observations I ran some more simulations of SB locked PRMI POP 18MHz buildup.

The attached plot shows the modeled POP 18MHz signal as detected directly in transmission of PR2 (i.e. no additional POP pick-off optics considered). I tuned the demod phase to put all the signal in I phase at the starting (cold) point on the left hand side of the x-axis. The Q phase signal is also shown on the plot, along with the AS port power (unavaliable in practice of course).

The different colors represent different ITMX non-thermal substrate lens cases, ranging from -15uD to 15uD power. I wanted to look at a range of ITMX lens cases because of the questions thrown up by the beam size measurement analysis I posted on Friday (10237). As usual, I expect the ITMX lens is indistinguishable from PR2-PR3 distance offset. I also assumed no susbtrate lens in ITMY: this could certainly impact the required heating to optimize the power buildup. However it would also affect the maximum buildup level due to a) changing the PRC mode mismatch with the IMC beam and b) changing beam sizes at the BS thus affecting clipping (unmodeled here).

Just to clarify, here are some specific things included in the model:

And some specific things not included in the model:

Maybe the best short version I can give is this:

If the beam size measurements are to be believed, and assuming no ITMY non-thermal susbtrate lens, I expect ~8W should match ITMX and ITMY reflected curvatures best, and this should give the best PRMI buildup (about a factor 9 better than the cold state). In this case, the PRMI buildup should be relatively unaffected by BS clipping, as the beam sizes remain small.

If the beam size measurements are discounted and we assume the -12.5uD lens from surface figure measurements (and still no ITMY non-thermal lens), I expect ~9.8W should match ITMX and ITMY reflected curvatures best. This is unlikely to give the best PRMI buildup, as BS clipping starts to dominate losses as the PRY mode approaches the PRX mode and the contrast defect gets small. We've seen something of a trade-off between CD and BS clipping in determining PR gain at LLO, coming largely from the -80km lens setting the PRY beam size at the BS significantly larger than the design. We'd expect the same thing at LHO but switched between X/Y.

I include the simulations files here. It was run with the Matlab script "runlockedPRMIbuildup.m" calling the main kat file "H1_PRMI_RH_POP18.kat". It takes quite a while to run, due to the HOMs and locks, so included the .mat file with the results for convenience. You can just run the second block in the Matlab script to plot the results saved in the .mat file. If running the finesse simulation itself, you should use Finesse v1.1 or higher, which has the simultaneous sideband field computation feature included (see here for details).

Non-image files attached to this report
H1 SYS
stefan.ballmer@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:37, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10321)
ODC master updated / simplified
To eliminate the number of parts problem I rewrote a section of the ODC master as simple c code. Functionality and channel names stayed the same. The parts count dropped from 3549 to 536.
The function that now does most of the work is MASKING_MATRIX in ODC_MASKING_MATRIX.c.

I also added a hook to include IPS error checking to that c-function.

sys/h1/model/h1odcmaster.mdl
sys/common/model/ODC_MASTER_PARTS_V2.mdl
cds/common/src/ODC_MASKING_MATRIX.c
SVN revision 7282.
H1 DAQ
david.barker@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:34, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10323)
summary of DAQ restarts

10:40 Check which models had new INI files after make install

13:47 Check new ham isi INI files, add new dust channels

14:15 new h1odcmaster file, channels unchanged, chnnums changed?

H1 CDS
david.barker@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:31, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10322)
New h1odcmaster model restart, crashed h1oaf0 for the very last time

Stefan, Jim and Dave

Stefan created a new h1odcmaster.mdl model which drastically reduced the number of "parts to process" from 3,549 to 536. We started it after crashing the h1oaf0 for the last time, and then restarted it with no further crashing.

It required a DAQ restart.

H1 General
jeffrey.bartlett@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:14, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10320)
End-Y Dust Trends
Plotted the End-Y dust monitor data for the last 24 hours, (covering the cartridge install and subsequent activities at End-Y). Dust spikes are consistent with the cartridge installation and Apollo working on post-installation tasks. EY-DUST-1 covers from 06:00 to 12:00 02/25/14. EY-DUST-2 covers from 12:00 02/24/14 to 12:00 02/25/2014.    
Non-image files attached to this report
H1 CDS (CDS, PEM)
patrick.thomas@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:08, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10319)
Lighthouse dust monitor channels added to the EDCU
I added the channels to the ini file (cds_user_apps/trunk/cds/h1/daqfiles/ini/H0EDCU_DUST.ini) and Dave B. restarted the DAQ.
H1 CDS (SEI)
david.barker@LIGO.ORG - posted 14:05, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10318)
HAM ISI model changes

Fabrice, Dave.

WP4461: rebuilt, installed and restarted the models h1isiham[2,3,4,5,6]. Manually burt restored to 09:00 the models h1isiham[2,3,5,6] as before (ham4 has good safe.snap).

H1 ISC
sheila.dwyer@LIGO.ORG - posted 13:37, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10317)
end X laser settings

I set the end X ALS laser temperature to 31.77, the set current is at 1.84, and the doubling temp is 33.81.  We have a beat note.  I realinged the IR monitor PD and it reports 63mW now (power before pick off), and the green monitor reports 1.05mW

see alog 9057 for the last time I changed these values. 

After Aaron installed the relay for the noise eater the laser came back to a set temperature of 32.9C, so we could not find a beat note at first.  Richard is testing the relay now. 

H1 CDS (DAQ)
david.barker@LIGO.ORG - posted 13:35, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10316)
H1 upgraded to RCG2.8.3

Jim and Dave

We compiled all the front end models against 2.8.3 except for the three models mentioned previously.

I installed all the models using the install-World option and a modified local rtsystab to skip aforementioned models.

I then did a DAQ restart to see if any INI files were modified which we were not expecting, and we were surprised by h1odcmaster and h1susetmy which have modified INI files. h1lsc was modified by this was expected due to Jamie's new model.

We then logged into each front end and restarted the models. Since IOP models were being restarted the sequence was

stop all user models

restart the iop model

start all the user models

As usual we had to press the BURT button on many models before they timed out.

GOTCHA. the bug which doesn't allow the h1odcmaster to be restarted without crashing the h1oaf0 computer was tested and is still there! Jim was able to take this node out of the dolphin fabric so we didnt have to re-restart anything.

PSL was the first to be restarted. I burt restored to 09:00 today and opened the shutter from the MEDM screen. All looks good.

I then viewed the safe.log files for each model to see which ones reported many connection errors. For those with more then a few dozen I manually burtrestored the following to 09:00 this morning;

hpiham[4,5,6]  isiham[2,3,5,6] sustmsy, suspr3, susim, susitmy, lsc

I tried burt restoring h1susetmy but it had errors due to a model change.

H1 ISC
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - posted 12:52, Tuesday 25 February 2014 - last comment - 13:12, Wednesday 26 February 2014(10313)
ISCTEX green WFS path layout and mode measurement (Yuta, Jax, Keita)

This is from last week.

We briefly measured the distance between optics and such, and used nanoscan to measure beam width/profile at various places though they were very very ugly.

See attached scribbling for layout (all dimensions in inches). Mirror names are arbitrary.

Measurement points are indicated by alphabet from A to I. Measurement points with prime (G'-I') means that the first lens in WFSB path (LWFSB1) was removed during the measurement.

The rest of the attachements are the nanoscan result. WFSB1.jpg-WFSB4.jpg=measurement point A-D. WFSA1.jpg and WFSA2.jpg=measurement point E and F. WFSC1.jpg-WFSC3.jpg=measurement point G', H' and I'.

Images attached to this report
Comments related to this report
jaclyn.sanders@LIGO.ORG - 08:34, Wednesday 26 February 2014 (10341)

The lenses as installed are:

LWFSA1 +250mm

LWFSA2 -75mm

LWFSB1 +250mm

LWFSB2 -100mm

This is an adaptation of the mode-matching solution by Bram Slagmolen used for the OAT WFS in D1100607-v10, and shown in the attached plots. This is not the simplest possible solution, but it has the very desirable quality of having great flexibility with WFS placement while keeping 90 (+/-10) degree Guoy phase separation.

It is important to note that the nominal mode-matching solution used to generate this layout did not account for the beam quality issues. In theory, the input beam should have been small enough that the beam expansion properties of the layout would have been necessary to get a usable beam size on the WFS. If this ends up being an issue, the mode-matching can be modified to reflect reality.

Images attached to this comment
keita.kawabe@LIGO.ORG - 13:12, Wednesday 26 February 2014 (10350)

WFSa1.jpg in the original entry was bogus (it was a copy of WFSb1). Attached is the correct one.

Images attached to this comment
H1 CDS (CDS)
patrick.thomas@LIGO.ORG - posted 12:40, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10310)
started conlog, updated channel list
I started conlog again after the shutdown for the ntp time server install. I set it to use a new channel list with additional daq and filter module channels provided by Dave B.

The channels scanned from the autoBurt.req files are in full.txt (98,328 channels)
The additional daq and filter channels are in include.txt (24,076 channels)
A set of noisy channels to exclude are in exclude.txt (37 channels)
The set of currently used channels are in full_plus_include_minus_exclude.txt (122,376 channels)
Non-image files attached to this report
H1 SUS
betsy.weaver@LIGO.ORG - posted 09:25, Tuesday 25 February 2014 - last comment - 15:30, Friday 28 February 2014(10305)
PUM ITM03 ear bonding commences

We thought it prudent to have a spare PUM in-hand for the upcoming monolithic builds, so yesterday we started bonding ears to the PUM ITM03.  Gerardo sucessfully placed an ear on the S4 surface with an error of under 0.01mm misplacement (0.1mm is the tolerance, so well done Gerardo!).  On to the S3 ear...

Comments related to this report
betsy.weaver@LIGO.ORG - 12:44, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10312)

Like NBC jinxed all of the ice skaters by praising them just before they fell at the latest Olympics, I spoke too soon about the PUM ITM03 ear.  Just after writing the above alog, Gerardo and I inspected the S4 ear and discovered a large bubble near the corner of the ear.  It had a small fiberous particulate in the bubble.  SOmehow, after monitoring for 2-3 hours, this fiber migrated into the bond.  We had placed a LIGo-approved Vectra Alpha 10 cleanroom wipe over the S4+ear flat for the night in the event a random bug decided to perch, so possibly this added to the particulate.  Da*m.

 

With Mr. Barton's assistance, we loaded the mass into the ultrasonic cleaner and bathed it in water.  Within 4 minutes the ear came off.  The mass is now reloaded at the wash station and we'll work on the S3 ear we were already prepped for today.

Images attached to this comment
betsy.weaver@LIGO.ORG - 13:20, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10315)

Bubble is shown in far corner of ear in this picture.

Images attached to this comment
betsy.weaver@LIGO.ORG - 15:30, Friday 28 February 2014 (10421)

Further comment to the events above - Margot and Gerardo found this PUM to be dirtier than normal when they pulled it out of the cake tin many weeks ago.  AT that time, they did a methanol cleaning of the entire mass.  When Gerardo and I were cleaning the flats of this mass, we also noticed that it still seemed dirtier than "normal" - meaning, when rinsing, the water did not run on the surface as we had seen on other flats.  After we performed the standard cleaning of the flat, the water behaved "normally", meaning it clung to the full surface and "sheeted" off.  After we removed the contaminated ear, we recleaned the flat, expanding the surface area getting cleaned to the entire flat, not just the area when the ear gets bonded as is the typical procedure.  We hoped this would remove particulate that was previously closer to the bond area.  During the second ear bond attempt, we also did not cover the bond overnight with an alpha 10 wipe, since we were skeptical of the origin of the fiber which showed up in the bond.

H1 SEI (INS, ISC, SUS)
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - posted 01:37, Friday 14 February 2014 - last comment - 16:21, Tuesday 25 February 2014(10087)
The News From Steppe Wind-be-gone
J. Kissel

Given that this morning's ETM motion provided for difficult arm cavity locking and CARM hand-offing again, I've continued to pursue the long-term stability of the X ARM ISI Performance, by studying the ISI performance at 3 different times.

Here's what we learned (or re-learned) from the study today:
(1) Today (2014-02-13 17:00 UTC) was a really high-wind day. Yesterday (2013-02-13 04:39 UTC) was a medium-wind day. Two days ago (2014-02-12 01:00 UTC) was a low-wind day. The green team really liked two days ago, they were marginally happy with yesterday, and could not get anything done today.

(2) From Robert: "At the X-end, wind, which comes primarily from the Northwest and West and beats against the side of the building, tilting the building, slab, and ground. This motion is seen as increased signal in ground seismometers between 0.02 and 0.1 [Hz]. The corner station, being a shorter, squat building is much less sensitive to wind."

(3) In the current configuration, with Level 3 controllers and TCrappy blends, The longitudinal motion of the ETM suspension point is dominated by RY motion between 0.2 and 2 [Hz].

(4) The Level 3 controllers and TCrappy blends attempt to get awesome performance between 0.2 and 2 [Hz], because -- during low-wind days -- the QUAD pitch motion at the test mass between 0.3 and 0.7 [Hz] dominates to cavity motion. When larger than ~80-100 [nrad/rtHz] @ ~0.5 [Hz], the 0.3-0.7 [Hz] angular fluctuations make holding the optical gain constant difficult, and due to the poor quality of the coatings in green the cavity is more likely to fall out of lock.

(5) The wind / slab tilt does not obviously increase the ground seismometer signal between 0.3-0.7[Hz] band.

(6) During high-wind days, 0.02-0.1 [Hz] pitch motion of the ETM supersedes the 0.3-0.7 [Hz] motion, increasing the RMS motion so much so that the green VCO regularly saturates, kicking the cavity out of lock, again above ~100 [nrad] RMS.

(7) The TCrappy displacement sensor blend filter has a broad, factor-of-three-ish gain-peaking amplification hump between 0.01-0.07[Hz]. The filters were pretty good copies of L1's blend filters, where wind and 0.02-0.1 [Hz] motion is regularly pretty darn small. It's merely unfortunate that our ground motion is so volatile and different at these frequencies that we won't be able to use the exact same blend filters between the two IFOs.

(8) In order to reduce the cavity motion below the saturation limit of the VCO, one could try to just offload the bulk of the control authority to HEPI along the IPC tidal path up to, say a little past the microseism (but before the QUAD suspension resonances to keep the loop design simple). BUT the ISI's TCrappy filters blend at ~0.06 [Hz], with a *ton* of loop gain from the Level 3 isolation controllers, so any motion injected into HEPI will get ignored / suppressed by the ISI's inertial sensors above the blend frequency.

(9) The TCrappy blend filters we used in the design of the Level 3 controllers, and those particular blend filters are only "psuedo" complementary. Though this hasn't been thoroughly tested or confirmed, the belief that this means that TCrappy blends can *only* be used with the Level 3 controllers, and vice versa. The ISI had tripped one or two times while switching from this blend configuration to another, but there's not yet direct evidence that this marginal in-complementarity was cause.

(10) The ITM is consistently performing better than the ETM, as measured by the optical lever -- but remember, it's unclear whether we can trust the short-armed ETM lever to be measuring pure pitch below ~0.5 [Hz].

(11) The ITM optical lever's signal consistently has some high-frequency fuzz on it, above 0.5 [Hz] that's clearly visible in the SUM. Stefan suggests we should investigate / replace the laser head to make sure this isn't mode hopping of an old dying diode.

(12) One can monitor the blend filter status by watching the H1:ISI-ETMX_ST*_BLND_*_*_CUR_SWSTAT channels. At least in this case where we are using all TCrappy filters in FM5 of the filter banks, with the input, output, offset, and decimation buttons on, the bit-word is 7184.

In conclusion, 
- We need to pay attention to tilt, not just the translational direction of the ISI.
- Our performance is volatile, depending on the weather, so need to consider having windy-day vs. calm-day blend filters that we regularly are able to switch between without trouble.
- We still have work to do on the ISIs. Sensor correction, which has not been commissioned on either X ARM platforms can perhaps help, but maybe not if we are blending so low. We should most certainly investigate a set of blends with less gain peak in the wind band.
Non-image files attached to this report
Comments related to this report
sheila.dwyer@LIGO.ORG - 09:44, Friday 14 February 2014 (10095)

A few things:

Wensday we couldn't get anything done either, in large part because of being tripped much of the day, and yesterday was actually better than Wednesday. 

As far as complementarity of the filters, I know that I have been able to bring the ETM to level 3 on stage 1 with 250 blends, but that 750 blends tripped.  Also, stage 2 has been at level 2 with 250 blends. 

Also, Stefan and I looked at a strip tool yesterday of the control signal to the VCO, and ITM and ETM ST1+ST2 ISO_X output.  One of The ETM was clearly moving in phase with the VCO control, and causing saturations.

jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 10:15, Friday 14 February 2014 (10098)
J. Kissel, S. Dwyer,

For reference, the green VCO range is df = 2 MHz (cf. LowNoiseVCO Wikipage). The equivalent length change is dL = 14 um.

Calculation details
   dL / L = df_g / f_g
   dL / L = df_g / (c / lambda_g)
   dL = L * lambda_g * df_g / c
   dL = (4e3 [m]) * (532e-9 [m]) * (2e6 [Hz]) / (3e8 [m/s])
   dL = 1.4187e-5 [m]
   
       
jeffrey.kissel@LIGO.ORG - 16:21, Tuesday 25 February 2014 (10328)
The data from this entry can be found in the Seismic Repository, under 
${SeiSVN}/seismic/Common/Misc/2014-02-13_XARM_PerformanceASDs.xml
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