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November 11, 1999 Mr. Thomas Sugrue Chief, Wireless Telecommunication Bureau Federal Communications Commission The Portals 445 Twelfth Street, SW, Room 3C252 Washington, DC 20554 **Re: CC Docket No. 94-102** **E9-1-1/TTY Compatibility** **Status Report - TTY Forum** Dear Mr. Sugrue: Per the Commission\'s request, attached is a status report of the Wireless TTY Forum\'s on-going efforts to find viable solutions for TTY access to 9-1-1 over digital wireless systems. The Forum includes representatives from the four interest groups that have a significant stake in providing TTY users access to 9-1-1 over digital wireless systems: wireless telecommunications industry (wireless carriers and phone manufacturers), manufacturers of TTY equipment, emergency and relay service providers (9-1-1 and TRS) and consumer organizations that represent individuals who are deaf and hard of hearing. If you have any questions or feedback regarding the status report or the TTY Forum\'s efforts, we are available to meet with you or your staff. We will contact you early next week to schedule an appointment. Sincerely, Ed Hall Co-chair Wireless TTY Forum Todd Lantor Co-chair Wireless TTY Forum Attachment cc: Ari Fitzgerald Mark Schneider Bryan Tramont Peter Tenhula Adam Krinsky Dale Hatfield Kris Monteith Elizabeth Lyle Pam Gregory Marty Liebman Jamal Mazrui TTY Forum Technical Status Report 11/12/1999 Table of Contents 1 Overview [5](#overview) 2 A Note About U.S. Standards Process and Standards Nomenclature [6](#a-note-about-u.s.-standards-process-and-standards-nomenclature) 3 Technical Approaches [7](#technical-approaches) 3.1 Voice Based Solutions [7](#voice-based-solutions) 3.1.1 Direct Audio Connection [8](#direct-audio-connection) 3.1.2 Acoustic Solution [9](#acoustic-solution) 3.1.3 RJ-11-type Modular Connection/Jack (Analog Solution) [10](#rj-11-type-modular-connectionjack-analog-solution) 3.1.4 True RJ-11 Connection [10](#true-rj-11-connection) 3.1.5 Proprietary Solutions [10](#proprietary-solutions) 3.1.6 Recommendation [11](#recommendation) 3.2 Modified Vocoder [11](#modified-vocoder) 3.2.1 Audio Path Solution (Lucent) [11](#audio-path-solution-lucent) 3.2.2 Audio Path Solution (Nokia) [12](#audio-path-solution-nokia) 3.2.3 Audio Path Solution (Motorola) [12](#audio-path-solution-motorola) 3.2.4 Status of Technical Standards Development: [13](#status-of-technical-standards-development) 4 Data -- Vocoder Bypass: [13](#data-vocoder-bypass) 4.1 Circuit Switched Data / Inter-working Function [14](#circuit-switched-data-inter-working-function) 4.2 ITU-T Recommendation V.18 Modem Protocol [15](#itu-t-recommendation-v.18-modem-protocol) 4.3 Standards Support for Data Solution [15](#standards-support-for-data-solution) 4.4 TTY Forum's Actions to date [15](#tty-forums-actions-to-date) 4.4.1 V.18 [15](#v.18) 4.4.2 IWF [15](#iwf) 5 Performance Testing [15](#performance-testing) 5.1 Uniform Test Plan Development [15](#uniform-test-plan-development) 5.2 Conduct additional tests using Test Procedures and compare new results [16](#conduct-additional-tests-using-test-procedures-and-compare-new-results) 6 Consumer Criteria [17](#consumer-criteria) 6.1 Consumer Requirements Document [17](#consumer-requirements-document) 6.2 Notification to Subscribers and Potential Subscribers who use TTYs [18](#notification-to-subscribers-and-potential-subscribers-who-use-ttys) 7 Conclusions [18](#conclusions) # Overview Since September 1997, the wireless telecommunications industry (wireless carriers and wireless phone manufacturers), manufacturers of Text Telephone Devises (TTYs), emergency and relay service providers (9-1-1 and TRS), and consumer organizations representing individuals who are deaf and hard-of-hearing ("Stakeholders") have undertaken intensive collaborative efforts through the Wireless TTY Forum to develop technically feasible solutions that will enable TTY users to access 9-1-1 over digital wireless systems. The TTY Forum's primary focus has been on voice-based solutions in an effort to find an acceptable short-term solution that will meet the FCC's requirement that wireless carriers be capable of transmitting 911 calls from individuals with speech or hearing disabilities through means other than mobile radio handsets, *e.g*, through the use of TTYs. However, the TTY Forum has also proposed several data-based solutions that will enable TTY users to access 911 over digital wireless systems in the future. The TTY Forum has also evaluated a variety of physical connections that will enable these TTY transmissions to occur. The wireless industry is committed to continuing intensive collaborative efforts to provide viable and practical solutions for TTY access over digital wireless systems not only for 9-1-1 purposes, but also to meet the industry's obligations under Sections 225 and 255 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended. The wireless industry acknowledges that it must continue to work cooperatively with TTY manufacturers, appropriate consumer representatives and organizations representing public safety answering points ("PSAPs") in order to resolve this issue. The purpose of this report is to provide a consolidated and concise status update of the technical discoveries, agreements and advancements made by the Wireless TTY Forum since its inception, and to provide recommendations that are in the best interests of all stakeholders. This report covers every TTY test submitted to the TTY Forum as an official contribution. Testing conditions included using simulated field conditions and actual network "real-life" stationary and mobile operations. The aggregate of all TTY testing conducted by the various manufacturers includes testing for all digital air-interface technologies employed in the United States today: CDMA, GSM, iDEN and TDMA. The goal of the testing was to measure the effectiveness of passing TTY signals (45.45 baud Baudot) over a digital air interface. All test result contributions are individually numbered (Forum/ yr.month.day.#) and may be referred to as such in the text of the report. To measure the success rate of all testing, a Total Character Error Rate or TCER was used. This is a simple calculation of measuring the difference (or Delta) of what was received against what was transmitted. As an example, if 10 out of 100 characters were received incorrectly, the resulting TCER would be 10%. To create an objective yet standardized character pattern, a *Throughput Test* was developed. The *Throughput Test* standardized the testing by specifying an exact amount of characters, numeric figures, and punctuation. Likewise, a software program was developed to accurately and uniformly measure the results and determine the Total Character Error Rate (TCER). # A Note About U.S. Standards Process and Standards Nomenclature In the United States, telecommunications standards are created by industry under a consensus-based process. This process is conducted by non-governmental standards development organizations (SDOs), such as the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA). The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) accredits SDOs and audits them to ensure that they comply with ANSI's rules for openness, due process, balance, appeals process, etc. ANSI also reviews the balloting history and comment resolution for proposed American National Standards to be issued by SDOs. At TIA, standards issued before 1988 have the prefix "EIA" (Electronics Industries Alliance). In 1988, the EIA Information and Telecommunications Technology Group merged with the United States Telecommunications Suppliers Association (USTSA) to form TIA. Standards issued between 1988 and 1992 have the prefix "EIA/TIA". Standards issued since 1992 have the prefix "TIA/EIA". All ANSI standards must be reviewed every five years to ensure that they stay current. At this review, the standard may be reaffirmed, modified (revised), or rescinded. An Interim Standard (denoted by "IS") is a published standard intended for trial use on a temporary basis. An Interim Standard must be reaffirmed every year. After three years, the Interim Standard must be forwarded to ANSI to become an American National Standard or to be withdrawn. Although they may evolve to American National Standards, Interim Standards are not approved by the ANSI Board of Standards Review. A Telecommunications Systems Bulletin (denoted by "TSB") is a published document that contains useful information for the industry in the form of comments about an industry standard or an Interim Standard. A TSB is not a standard. # Technical Approaches In the early stages of the TTY Forum two separate general solutions were identified. The membership of the Forum agreed early on to pursue both approaches. The voice based and data based solutions have continued to represent the only viable solution for all digital technologies currently known to the TTY Forum. Below is an explanation of each solution. ## Voice Based Solutions The TTY Forum defines voice-based solutions as those that use the audio path of the digital mobile phone whereby the output of a TTY Device (Baudot signal) passes through the mobile phones Vocoder[^1]. Proposed voice-based solutions include physical connection (to the phone and to the TTY) methods such as: - Direct Audio Connection - Acoustic Solution - RJ-11-type Modular Connection/Jack (Analog Solution) - True RJ-11 Connection - Proprietary Solutions Other proposed voice-based solutions include solutions that may require modification of the Vocoder. (See section 3.2) ### Direct Audio Connection It appears that coupling via a direct audio connection between the TTY device and a digital wireless handset, *i.e.,* a standard 2.5mm audio interface (jack) is the preferred voice-based solution. A proposal for a standard wireless phone 2.5mm audio interface to TTY devices was submitted to the TTY Forum.[^2] The proposal noted that audio output and input levels are different for each make and model phone. Thus, manufacturers of wireless phones would need to provide a special adapter with standardized levels. Moreover, audio output and input levels of TTY devices have yet to be defined. The proposal recommended a "common interface" to resolve the variance in output and input levels.[^3] The TTY Forum reviewed a draft Technical Information Document (TID), which was finalized at TTY Forum-9. A Standards Requirements Document (SRD) for the 2.5mm jack was submitted to TIA\'s TR45 in March 1999. The SRD was remanded to TIA TR45.1 subcommittee. Completing the effort, TIA TR45.1 has recommended the use of the audio electrical specifications set forth in TIA TR45.1.4 vehicle interface standards, which are now published. ### {#section .unnumbered} ### Acoustic Solution Ericsson has indicated that it plans to pursue this option. Due to the confidential nature of Ericsson's marketing plans for this option, the TTY Forum recommended that Ericsson meet with the FCC under confidentiality to discuss specific implementation plans and scheduled milestones. Thereafter, Ericsson met with the FCC on various occasions and completed the design of the acoustic coupler during the 1st quarter of 1999. The product was first introduced at the June 27, 1999 SHHH exhibitor conference in New Orleans. This accessory product (T1000), an analog solution, is available for purchase through the Ericsson Special Needs Center. ### RJ-11-type Modular Connection/Jack (Analog Solution) The TTY Forum has discussed this option and does not consider it to be a viable short-term solution. Thus, the Forum has not pursued development or implementation of this option. ### True RJ-11 Connection The TTY Forum has discussed this option and does not consider it to be a viable short-term solution. Thus, the Forum has not pursued development or implementation of this option. ### Proprietary Solutions Several proprietary solutions such as the Mobility™ TTY, an enhanced TTY device developed by Lober & Walsh Engineering, the AxCell Interface Device developed by Sendele Wireless Communications[^4], and RangeStar™ Technology developed by RangeStar International, have been presented to the TTY Forum for consideration as solutions. Due to the proprietary nature of these solutions, the TTY Forum has not been privy to how soon these products will be made commercially available. The TTY Forum recommends that each company meet with the FCC under confidentiality to discuss specific implementation plans and scheduled milestones. ### {#section-1 .unnumbered} ### Recommendation > Although all the "Voiced-Based" Solutions offer a great deal of > promise, the connection that seems to provide the best short term > solution is the direct connect 2.5mm jack. The ability of the TTY > Forum to identify both the technical specifications and the consumer > benefits of a 2.5mm jack solution has been a key motivator for both > the standards groups and the handset manufacturer community. ## Modified Vocoder In contrast to the aforementioned solutions, other manufacturers have found success passing TTY signals over digital wireless phones by using a modified vocoder. The efforts of these manufacturers are described below: ### Audio Path Solution (Lucent) Lucent Technologies has proposed an audio path solution, called the *No Gain* Solution. By turning the gain down in the adaptive filter in the vocoder, Lucent has found that it is possible to improve the CER. Specifically, by turning the filter down to zero when a TTY Baudot signal is detected, it is possible to send the TTY bits seven times and use that as a form of correction. Initial tests indicate virtually 0% CER using this method. Testing of the *No Gain* Solution has been conducted on CDMA and TDMA vocoders. Lucent indicates that the *No Gain* Solution is adaptable to other digital technologies, *i.e.,* PCS 1900 and iDEN (digital technologies that use similar vocoders). Lucent has submitted its contribution to Standards Committee TIA TR45. The standards process is important in order to provide the interoperability required to develop a widespread solution. ### Audio Path Solution (Nokia) > Nokia also has proposed an audio path solution for TDMA. While there > are similarities between the Nokia and Lucent proposals, a significant > difference is that the Nokia proposal requires bypassing the vocoder > to use the TTY decoder. On receipt of the TTY signal, the TTY encoder > is used. This proposed solution requires a delay of approximately four > frames for the transmission of the TTY Baudot signal. The delay will > vary based upon the system. The change to the encoder adds a position > value to the TTY information. The transmission consists of two bits > that specify the type of signal present after the specified position. > The decoder contains an error correction algorithm and TTY signal > generator. Nokia has indicated that its proposed solution supports > HCO/VCO. ### Audio Path Solution (Motorola) > Motorola provided the TTY Forum with a proposed voice-based solution > for CDMA technology. Motorola proposes that the Baudot signal should > not be handled by the vocoder. Rather, the Baudot signal should be > handled in the higher pre-filter and rate selection by a rate > determination algorithm, which optimizes the frame rate for the > transmission. TTY tone detector identifies the presence of an > unmodulated Baudot signal and starts the TTY tone detector. The > primary channel goes to null traffic and the secondary channel carries > the TTY character. A history is carried with each character to ensure > that any lost character will be recovered with the next character as > history. According to Motorola, up to 100 characters can be contained > in the secondary channel, all carrying a sequence number to ensure > sequential transmission and identify any lost characters. Motorola\'s > proposed solution is independent of the vocoder, because the vocoder > is turned either on or off. Motorola indicates that the solution is in > the call processing when the service option is determined upon call > setup. The TTY option is enabled all the time making the phone capable > of accepting a TTY or voice call dependent on how the call is set up. > The proposed solution is currently only applicable to CDMA and would > require approximately a one-year cycle for development. Motorola > currently supports the Lucent *No Gain* solution for CDMA and TDMA. An > iDEN solution is being developed. ### Status of Technical Standards Development: > **CDMA (TR45.5)** -- Standards based on Lucent's "No Gain" solution > have been developed. (IS-127-2) > > **TDMA (TR45.3)** -- During September 1999, TR 45.3 formally adopted > the Lucent "No Gain" solution and will continue through the standards > process. (IS-733) > > **GSM** -- Lucent's "No-Gain" solution will be presented in 4Q99. > > **iDEN** - Unknown at this time # Data -- Vocoder Bypass: > The obstacles associated with passing traditional TTY tones (45.5-Baud > Baudot) through the vocoder forced the industry to search for > alternative methods. The most promising approach is the "vocoder > bypass". When transmitting TTY signals using a "vocoder bypass" > solution, a couple of fundamental changes in the transmission process > must take place. First, the conversion of the analog signals to > digital has to occur prior to transmission through the phone, or the > signal needs to originate in a digital format. In addition, once the > signaling is passed through the phone, at some point, (before the > signal reaches the end point) it needs to be converted back to analog. > Ultimately, the attention of the TTY Forum turned to Inter-Working > Function (IWF) solutions. These solutions rely on the development and > installation of the appropriate IWF software into a wireless carrier's > network infrastructure. The following sections outline the possible > IWF solutions. ## Circuit Switched Data / Inter-working Function > Circuit Switched Data (CSD) is a service that is complementary to the > existing suite of Voice and Data services including telephone > interconnect, Short Message Service (SMS) and Packet Data. CSD enables > subscribers to directly connect a laptop or facsimile device to their > Multi-Service portable or remote wireless modem and transmit data > communications to wireline data services. > > The Inter-working Function (IWF) contains both the hardware and > software elements that provide the rate adaptation and protocol > conversion between a landline destination Public Switched Telephone > Network (PSTN) and the network for both data and fax services. The IWF > is required as a network element to support circuit switched data. ## ITU-T Recommendation V.18 Modem Protocol > Specifies a protocol, which provides for higher speed ASCII[^5] based > communications while at the same time maintaining compatibility with > today\'s Baudot TTY devices. ## Standards Support for Data Solution ## TTY Forum's Actions to date ### V.18 > A letter from the TTY Forum to modem manufacturers was sent. ### IWF > 3Com is scheduled to present their product at the next TTY Forum > scheduled for November 18, 1999. # Performance Testing > The TTY Forum acknowledged the need for a consistent test methodology, > a uniform method of evaluating the test results ("test plan"), and a > uniform set of TTY performance standards. The test plan is used to > determine the minimal level of character error rate that TTY users can > expect with certain digital technologies used with certain TTY > devices. ## Uniform Test Plan Development > The TTY Forum with the assistance of the wireless digital technology > groups[^6] developed a uniform test process designed to limit and > control test variables, establish a test methodology yielding better > consistency in determining, and compare character error rates (CER) > across the various digital wireless technologies (CDMA, TDMA, GSM > 1900, iDEN). Each wireless digital technology group assumed > responsibility for modifying the test process to accommodate testing > variances of that technology. Even with the TTY Forum's uniform test > script and testing procedure, as expected, the test results indicated > a wide variance in the TCER. ## Conduct additional tests using Test Procedures and compare new results Each wireless digital technology group identified at least one test facility and advised the TTY Forum as to the availability of the test facility in order to commence testing prior to April 1999.[^7] Wireless manufacturers and carriers conducted tests in accordance with the test schedules submitted and shared results with the TTY Forum and the FCC. Concurrently, TTY Forum members continued to research acceptable error rates, voice-based and data-based solutions during the test schedule. The TTY Forum provided advance notice to all interested parties of the test dates, location of the test laboratories, and contact person(s). Technical representatives of TTY manufacturers, Gallaudet University, PSAPs and the FCC were encouraged to participate in the testing and to contact the appropriate manufacturer or carrier conducting the test to discuss participation. # Consumer Criteria ## Consumer Requirements Document > The purpose of the document was to stimulate discussion and solicit > the views of the wireless carriers and manufacturers participating in > the TTY Forum.[^8] On September 10, 1998, representatives of the > consumer groups circulated a document to members of the TTY Forum > outlining a new set of criteria to address only functional > characteristics of any proposed solution for TTY access to digital > wireless systems.[^9] In accordance with the FCC's Extension Order, > the TTY Forum considered whether the criteria set forth in the > September 1998 Consumer Memo is supported in the proposed voice-based > and data-based solutions set forth in this report. Consumers indicated > that the less than 1% CER is the viable and acceptable target. They do > not intend to revisit or change the CER target.[^10] ## Notification to Subscribers and Potential Subscribers who use TTYs > In compliance with the FCC's rules, wireless carriers have notified > subscribers and potential subscribers that they may not be able to use > TTYs to access 9-1-1 over digital wireless systems. Wireless carriers, > with the support of the wireless trade associations, the consumer > advocacy groups, TTY manufacturers and wireless handset manufacturers, > will continue to notify subscribers and potential subscribers at > appropriate intervals until a product is commercially available. # Conclusions The information, test data, test results and findings contained in this report indicate that the wireless industry has diligently attempted to resolve the issue of sending 45.5 Baud Baudot tones over digital air interfaces. Following two years of collaborative research, consumer input and guidance it is concluded that: The Lucent "No-Gain" solution is the most reasonable voice based solution, not only for CDMA but possibly for all digital technology that use code-excited linear predictive (CELP) vocoders. Furthermore, it can be concluded that although the "No-Gain" approach may be the most reasonable, there may be other solutions sought by vendors / carriers that may be more practical and timely to implement. This is acceptable as long as the consumer needs and requirements are met. Furthermore, the TTY Forum concludes that the data based solution using Interworking Function (IWF) that exploits the full potential of the V.18 protocol should be developed to support future data capabilities with backward compatibility to existing TTY devices using 45.5 Baud Baudot. The TTY Forum does not support any one solution over others. [^1]: A voice compression technique that employs algorithms so that only some of the digitally encoded voice signal is actually transmitted. [^2]: [See]{.underline} Proposed - Wireless Phone 2.5mm Audio Interface to TTY/TDD ("2.5mm Audio Interface Proposal"). Attached to October Quarterly Status Report as Appendix K. [^3]: [See]{.underline} 2.5mm Audio Interface Proposal at 3-4. Attached to October Quarterly Status Report as Appendix K. . [^4]: Sendele Wireless has informed the TTY Forum that it has a CDMA product and testing is being done in analog. [^5]: American National Standard Code for Information Interchange [^6]: For purposes of this report, wireless digital technology groups refers to the CDMA Development Group ("CDG"), GSM North America (GSMNA), Universal Wireless Communications Consortium (UWCC) and Motorola (iDEN). [^7]: GSM NA commenced testing in January 1999 to provide test results to the TTY Forum and the FCC, subject to the following conditions: 1) the test specification with modifications suggested by the GSM NA is approved and released by October 30, 1998; 2) lab based testing with real world conditions is accepted; 3) the test specification does not change dramatically; 4) manufacturers can assist the test facilities to set up the test; and 5) no unforeseen restrictions are placed on the testing. [^8]: The FCC's Wireless Telecommunications Bureau has elevated the new list of criteria by attaching it to the Extension Order as an appendix and holding it out as an example of what consumer groups would like to have incorporated into any solution implemented by the Forum, and therefore the Workplan. [See]{.underline} Extension Order at 4. [^9]: ^?^ Memorandum from Consumer Representatives to TTY Forum, Sept. 10, 1998. Attached to October Quarterly Status Report as Appendix R. [^10]: CTIA and consumer groups have initiated an on-going dialogue to address accessibility issues. They plan to meet every four to six months to discuss such issues.
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2003.352.18:20:46.44&ready/!+3s 2003.352.18:20:46.44&ready/label 2003.352.18:20:46.44&ready/check=*,rc 2003.352.18:20:46.44&ready/rec 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/bbcman 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/tpi=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/tpi=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/ifdab=20,20,*,* 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/ifdcd=20,20,*,* 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/!+2s 2003.352.18:20:46.44&sxcts/tpzero=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/tpzero=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/ifdab=0,0,*,* 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/ifdcd=0,0,*,* 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/calon 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/!+2s 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/tpical=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/tpical=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/bbcagc 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/caloff 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/caltemps 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/tsys1=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:20:46.45&sxcts/tsys2=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc01=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc02=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc03=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc04=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc05=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc06=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc07=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc08=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc09=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc10=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc11=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc12=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc13=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:46.45&bbcman/bbc14=*,*,*,*,*,man 2003.352.18:20:47.12/tpi/15799,16026,16140,16334,16219,16109,16301,16142,37724,12706 2003.352.18:20:47.19/tpi/15994,16269,16261,16076,15911,16140,28830 2003.352.18:20:49.34/tpzero/208,339,260,331,285,286,326,327,647,207 2003.352.18:20:49.41/tpzero/319,324,315,344,274,273,436 2003.352.18:20:49.45&calon/mat=96,5 2003.352.18:20:49.45&calon/rx=*,*,*,*,*,*,on 2003.352.18:20:51.64/tpical/21026,21368,21898,22283,22177,23164,23385,23088,50764,17742 2003.352.18:20:51.71/tpical/19464,19592,19141,19112,19469,19730,34814 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc01=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc02=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc03=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc04=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc05=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc06=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc07=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc08=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc09=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc10=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc11=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc12=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.71&bbcagc/bbc13=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:51.72&bbcagc/bbc14=*,*,*,*,*,agc 2003.352.18:20:52.28&caloff/mat=96,5 2003.352.18:20:52.28&caloff/rx=*,*,*,*,*,*,off 2003.352.18:20:52.35&caltemps/caltempa=18 2003.352.18:20:52.35&caltemps/caltempb=13 2003.352.18:20:52.35&caltemps/caltempc=23 2003.352.18:20:52.36/tsys1/53.7,52.9,49.6,48.4,48.1,40.4,40.6,41.0,51.2,44.7 2003.352.18:20:52.36/tsys2/58.7,62.4,72.0,67.4,57.1,57.5,61.7 2003.352.18:20:52.37&clocks/hpib=ca,as0 bs0 tr1 at+4 bt+4 fn2 re 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/mat=96,5 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=front 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=lo 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=dcal 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=lo5mhz 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=pres 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=20k 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rxx=70k 2003.352.18:20:52.39&rxmon/rx 2003.352.18:20:52.40&rxx/rx=$,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.352.18:20:52.51/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.91 2003.352.18:20:52.62/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.09 2003.352.18:20:52.73/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.94 2003.352.18:20:52.84/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.352.18:20:52.95/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.352.18:20:53.06/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.71 2003.352.18:20:53.17/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.352.18:20:53.17/newtape/"to continue, use label command 2003.352.18:20:56.16;label=hst00283,0037 2003.352.18:21:20.33/label/HST00283,0037 2003.352.18:21:20.38/rec/123,18204,109,18313,8 2003.352.18:21:20.38:sx4ca=1 2003.352.18:21:25.02/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.18:21:26.28;bread 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc01 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc02 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc03 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc04 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc05 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc06 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc07 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc08 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc09 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc10 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc11 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc12 2003.352.18:21:26.28&bread/bbc13 2003.352.18:21:26.29&bread/bbc14 2003.352.18:21:26.37/bbc01/612.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.10, -4.57,lock,15829,15957,540,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15400,15932,545,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.53/bbc03/752.89,a,4,4,1,agc, 0.49, 1.22,lock,16142,16188,542,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.61/bbc04/912.89,a,4,4,1,agc, 6.44, 5.91,lock,16311,16337,548,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.69/bbc05/652.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -3.49,lock,15820,15888,556,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.77/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16101,16223,554,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.85/bbc07/832.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 3.21, 3.39,lock,16195,16058,544,1pps 2003.352.18:21:26.93/bbc08/852.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 3.84, 3.66,lock,16114,16135,551,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.01/bbc09/687.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -2.18, -2.72,lock,16047,16067,546,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.09/bbc10/697.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -1.36, -2.01,lock,15710,16150,549,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.17/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16093,16107,550,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.25/bbc12/772.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16010,16015,553,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.33/bbc13/807.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 4.97, 4.42,lock,16065,16086,543,1pps 2003.352.18:21:27.41/bbc14/812.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 3.66, 4.66,lock,16059,15981,552,1pps 2003.352.18:21:34.15:!2003.352.18:29:50 2003.352.18:21:41.77;sxcts 2003.352.18:21:42.44/tpi/15795,15449,16161,16301,15797,16081,16223,16078,36439,12374 2003.352.18:21:42.51/tpi/16223,15719,16068,15995,16067,16088,27884 2003.352.18:21:44.66/tpzero/208,333,262,336,282,288,327,328,635,204 2003.352.18:21:44.73/tpzero/323,319,314,344,279,275,428 2003.352.18:21:46.95/tpical/21335,20837,22202,22481,21873,23422,23542,23324,49644,17487 2003.352.18:21:47.02/tpical/19873,19150,19165,19274,19821,19757,33917 2003.352.18:21:47.66/tsys1/50.6,50.5,47.4,46.5,46.0,38.7,39.1,39.1,48.8,42.8 2003.352.18:21:47.66/tsys2/56.6,58.4,66.1,62.1,54.7,56.0,59.2 2003.352.18:21:47.66;wx 2003.352.18:21:52.04/wx/-20.5,967.9,70.4 2003.352.18:22:11.97#setcl#time/311446814,1,2003,352,18,22,12.00,0.111,73.399,7 2003.352.18:22:11.97#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2348,285023048,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:22:20.61;sy=run setcl offset & 2003.352.18:22:20.99#setcl#time/311447716,1,2003,352,18,22,21.00,0.000,0.000,5 2003.352.18:22:20.99#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2348,285023048,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:22:21.05#setcl#model/new,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:22:26.05#setcl#time/311448216,1,2003,352,18,22,26.00,0.000,0.001,-1 2003.352.18:22:26.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:22:31.84;cable 2003.352.18:22:31.96/cable/+3.82976E-02 2003.352.18:23:06.93;cablelong 2003.352.18:23:07.00/cablelong/+3.76053E-02 2003.352.18:23:38.82;cablew 2003.352.18:23:38.82?ERROR sp -4 Unrecognized name (not a function or procedure). 2003.352.18:23:40.52;cable 2003.352.18:23:40.60/cable/+3.82964E-02 2003.352.18:25:27.15;"Session r4102 ready message for Gilmore Creek. 2003.352.18:25:27.18;"---------------------------------------------- 2003.352.18:25:27.20;"Comments: 2003.352.18:25:27.21;"na 2003.352.18:25:27.22;" 2003.352.18:25:27.24;"First source: 1318+225 at 183000 UT 2003.352.18:25:27.25;"GPS-FMOUT: 11.4 microseconds 2003.352.18:25:27.26;"Wx: Temperature (C): -20 Pressure (mBar): 967 Humidity (%): 70 2003.352.18:25:27.27;"Sky Conditions: partly cloudy 2003.352.18:25:27.29;"Cable difference is: longer cable makes the reading smaller by 2003.352.18:25:27.30;" 69.23 microseconds and is nominal 2003.352.18:25:27.31;"Pointing values: na 2003.352.18:25:27.32;" 2003.352.18:25:27.33;"Tsys (x1/s/x2): 49/59/43 2003.352.18:25:27.35;"Recorder Humidity (%): <20 2003.352.18:29:50.00:tape 2003.352.18:29:50.07/tape/low,00123,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:29:50.07:st=for,160 2003.352.18:29:50.11:!2003.352.18:29:50 2003.352.18:29:50.11:preob 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/"systracks=33,33,33,33 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/bbcman 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/calon 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/!+2s 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/tpical=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/tpical=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:29:50.11&preob/caloff 2003.352.18:29:50.75;"Session r4102 ready message for Gilmore Creek. 2003.352.18:29:50.75;"---------------------------------------------- 2003.352.18:29:50.75;"Started recording with source: 1318+225 at 352.18:29:50 UT 2003.352.18:29:52.86/tpical/21254,21745,22075,22411,21859,23423,23543,23346,49466,17519 2003.352.18:29:52.93/tpical/19745,19716,19141,19244,19790,19734,34237 2003.352.18:29:53.00:!2003.352.18:30:00 2003.352.18:30:00.00:tape 2003.352.18:30:00.07/tape/low,00239,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:30:00.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.18:30:00.07:midob 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/tpi=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/tpi=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/bbcagc 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/caltemps 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/tsys1=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/tsys2=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/wx 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/cable 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/ifdab 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/ifdcd 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/bbc02 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/bbc06 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/bbc11 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/form 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/sy=run setcl & 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/gpsfm 2003.352.18:30:00.07&midob/onsource 2003.352.18:30:00.18/tpi/15747,16087,16063,16244,15828,16117,16226,16133,36305,12397 2003.352.18:30:00.25/tpi/16049,16181,16072,15986,16021,15987,28150 2003.352.18:30:00.82/tsys1/50.8,50.1,47.3,46.4,46.4,39.0,39.1,39.4,48.8,42.8 2003.352.18:30:00.82/tsys2/55.3,58.3,66.7,62.4,54.3,54.5,59.2 2003.352.18:30:04.70/wx/-20.7,967.7,69.5 2003.352.18:30:04.76/cable/+3.82982E-02 2003.352.18:30:04.81/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36295,28092,0,1pps 2003.352.18:30:04.86/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12396,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.18:30:04.94/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16088,15868,545,1pps 2003.352.18:30:05.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16096,16247,554,1pps 2003.352.18:30:05.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16067,16052,550,1pps 2003.352.18:30:05.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.18:30:05.63&gpsfm/hpib=c3,as0 bs0 tr1 at+1.3 bt+.15 fn2 2003.352.18:30:05.64&gpsfm/!+1s 2003.352.18:30:05.64&gpsfm/mat=#aa=e800003f$; 2003.352.18:30:05.64&gpsfm/!+1s 2003.352.18:30:05.65&gpsfm/gps-fmout=c3 2003.352.18:30:08.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.18:30:08.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.18:30:08.23:!2003.352.18:32:48 2003.352.18:30:09.03#setcl#time/311494514,1,2003,352,18,30,09.00,3.692,0.130,1 2003.352.18:30:09.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:32:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.18:32:48.00:et 2003.352.18:32:48.04:!+3s 2003.352.18:32:51.05:tape 2003.352.18:32:51.12/tape/low,02497,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.18:32:51.12:postob 2003.352.18:32:51.12:scan_name=352-1835 2003.352.18:32:51.13:source=0642+449,064253.0,445430.9,1950.0 2003.352.18:32:57.64:check80f 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/check=*,-tp,-hd 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/"parity=,,,off,g0,g1,g2,g3 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/parity=,,ab,on 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/sfastr=10s 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/!+5.1s 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/repro=raw,6,8 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/!* 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/st=for,80,off 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/!+1.5s 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/parity 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/!*+41.40s 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/et 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/!+1.5s 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/repro=byp,6,8 2003.352.18:32:57.64&check80f/check=*,tp,hd 2003.352.18:32:57.66&sfastr/srw 2003.352.18:32:57.66&sfastr/!+$ 2003.352.18:32:57.66&sfastr/et 2003.352.18:33:30.37/parity/4.,2.,14.,4.,0.,24.,0.,4.,4.,6.,66.,6.,10.,14. 2003.352.18:33:30.37/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.18:33:55.95:sx4ca=1 2003.352.18:34:00.59/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.18:34:09.72:!2003.352.18:35:31 2003.352.18:35:31.00:tape 2003.352.18:35:31.07/tape/low,02496,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:35:31.07:st=for,160 2003.352.18:35:31.11:!2003.352.18:35:31 2003.352.18:35:31.11:preob 2003.352.18:35:33.86/tpical/21009,21282,21844,22042,21300,22944,23076,22919,50747,17983 2003.352.18:35:33.93/tpical/19757,19750,19044,19412,19838,19774,33877 2003.352.18:35:34.00:!2003.352.18:35:41 2003.352.18:35:41.00:tape 2003.352.18:35:41.07/tape/low,02612,off,moving,locked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.18:35:41.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.18:35:41.07:midob 2003.352.18:35:41.18/tpi/15749,15911,16056,16180,15612,16012,16111,16050,37644,12895 2003.352.18:35:41.25/tpi/16084,16232,16007,16094,16038,16005,27868 2003.352.18:35:41.82/tsys1/53.2,52.2,49.1,48.7,48.5,40.8,40.8,41.2,50.8,44.9 2003.352.18:35:41.82/tsys2/55.8,58.8,67.2,61.7,53.9,54.3,59.4 2003.352.18:35:46.75/wx/-20.9,967.8,69.7 2003.352.18:35:46.84/cable/+3.82965E-02 2003.352.18:35:46.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37661,27899,0,1pps 2003.352.18:35:46.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12894,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.18:35:47.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15901,15581,545,1pps 2003.352.18:35:47.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16018,16086,554,1pps 2003.352.18:35:47.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16013,16016,550,1pps 2003.352.18:35:47.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.18:35:50.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.18:35:50.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.18:35:50.23:!2003.352.18:37:19 2003.352.18:35:51.03#setcl#time/311528714,1,2003,352,18,35,51.00,2.133,0.225,1 2003.352.18:35:51.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:37:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.18:37:19.00:et 2003.352.18:37:19.04:!+3s 2003.352.18:37:22.05:tape 2003.352.18:37:22.12/tape/low,03935,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.18:37:22.12:postob 2003.352.18:37:22.13:scan_name=352-1845 2003.352.18:37:22.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.352.18:37:28.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.18:37:33.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.18:37:42.43:!2003.352.18:45:02 2003.352.18:45:02.00:tape 2003.352.18:45:02.07/tape/low,03935,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:45:02.07:st=for,160 2003.352.18:45:02.11:!2003.352.18:45:02 2003.352.18:45:02.11:preob 2003.352.18:45:04.86/tpical/20704,20798,21988,21692,20956,22636,22521,22834,52460,18654 2003.352.18:45:04.93/tpical/19052,19336,18965,19332,19950,19799,35510 2003.352.18:45:05.01:!2003.352.18:45:12 2003.352.18:45:12.00:tape 2003.352.18:45:12.07/tape/low,04051,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:45:12.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.18:45:12.07:midob 2003.352.18:45:12.18/tpi/15706,15724,16386,16141,15604,16072,16018,16333,39385,13592 2003.352.18:45:12.25/tpi/15637,16008,16102,16193,16250,16167,29491 2003.352.18:45:12.82/tsys1/55.8,54.6,51.8,51.3,51.5,43.3,43.4,44.3,53.3,47.6 2003.352.18:45:12.83/tsys2/58.3,61.3,71.7,65.6,56.1,56.9,62.8 2003.352.18:45:17.91/wx/-21.3,967.9,69.4 2003.352.18:45:18.03/cable/+3.82831E-02 2003.352.18:45:18.09/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39381,29540,0,1pps 2003.352.18:45:18.14/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13590,69,4063,1pps 2003.352.18:45:18.22/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15741,16275,545,1pps 2003.352.18:45:18.31/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16079,16033,554,1pps 2003.352.18:45:18.40/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16095,16224,550,1pps 2003.352.18:45:18.90/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.18:45:21.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.18:45:21.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.18:45:21.23:!2003.352.18:47:10 2003.352.18:45:22.03#setcl#time/311585814,1,2003,352,18,45,22.00,1.251,0.384,1 2003.352.18:45:22.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.18:47:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.18:47:10.00:et 2003.352.18:47:10.04:!+3s 2003.352.18:47:13.05:tape 2003.352.18:47:13.12/tape/low,05640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:47:13.12:postob 2003.352.18:47:13.13:scan_name=352-1855 2003.352.18:47:13.13:source=1023+131,102316.3,130905.7,1950.0 2003.352.18:47:19.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.18:47:24.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.18:47:24.29@wx 2003.352.18:47:28.84/wx/-21.4,967.8,69.3 2003.352.18:47:37.98:!2003.352.18:55:35 2003.352.18:51:52.18?ERROR ch -236 r1 tape drive shouldn't be moving and it is 2003.352.18:53:19.18;"weather - partly cloudy 2003.352.18:55:35.00:tape 2003.352.18:55:35.07/tape/low,05640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:55:35.07:st=for,160 2003.352.18:55:35.12:!2003.352.18:55:35 2003.352.18:55:35.12:preob 2003.352.18:55:37.88/tpical/21400,21720,21684,22071,21803,22879,23189,23020,51779,18412 2003.352.18:55:37.96/tpical/19443,19511,19029,19531,20006,19896,35959 2003.352.18:55:38.04:!2003.352.18:55:45 2003.352.18:55:45.00:tape 2003.352.18:55:45.07/tape/low,05756,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.18:55:45.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.18:55:45.08:midob 2003.352.18:55:45.19/tpi/16113,16335,16053,16307,16086,16080,16325,16248,38632,13294 2003.352.18:55:45.27/tpi/15909,16133,16083,16302,16270,16221,29838 2003.352.18:55:45.85/tsys1/54.1,53.5,50.5,49.9,49.8,41.8,42.0,42.3,52.0,46.0 2003.352.18:55:45.86/tsys2/57.3,60.9,69.6,64.2,55.6,56.4,62.5 2003.352.18:55:49.64/wx/-21.8,967.8,68.6 2003.352.18:55:49.71/cable/+3.82984E-02 2003.352.18:55:49.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38625,29836,0,1pps 2003.352.18:55:49.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13301,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.18:55:49.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16327,15986,545,1pps 2003.352.18:55:49.99/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16080,16082,554,1pps 2003.352.18:55:50.07/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16076,16115,550,1pps 2003.352.18:55:50.57/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.18:55:53.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.18:55:53.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.18:55:53.23:!2003.352.19:01:47 2003.352.18:55:54.03#setcl#time/311649014,1,2003,352,18,55,54.00,0.858,0.559,1 2003.352.18:55:54.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:01:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:01:47.00:et 2003.352.19:01:47.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:01:50.05:tape 2003.352.19:01:50.12/tape/low,10599,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:01:50.12:postob 2003.352.19:01:50.13:scan_name=352-1904 2003.352.19:01:50.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.352.19:01:56.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.19:02:01.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.19:02:10.43:!2003.352.19:04:19 2003.352.19:04:19.00:tape 2003.352.19:04:19.07/tape/low,10599,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:04:19.07:st=for,160 2003.352.19:04:19.12:!2003.352.19:04:19 2003.352.19:04:19.12:preob 2003.352.19:04:21.88/tpical/20965,21302,21794,22116,22248,23237,22877,23170,50584,17818 2003.352.19:04:21.96/tpical/19733,19077,18952,19463,20000,19910,35338 2003.352.19:04:22.04:!2003.352.19:04:29 2003.352.19:04:29.00:tape 2003.352.19:04:29.07/tape/low,10715,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:04:29.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:04:29.08:midob 2003.352.19:04:29.19/tpi/15743,15954,16044,16207,16276,16174,15954,16230,37544,12751 2003.352.19:04:29.27/tpi/16187,15795,16047,16303,16326,16262,29256 2003.352.19:04:29.85/tsys1/53.5,52.6,49.4,48.3,48.2,40.5,40.6,41.2,50.9,44.6 2003.352.19:04:29.86/tsys2/58.2,61.3,70.4,65.7,56.8,57.0,61.6 2003.352.19:04:34.99/wx/-21.6,967.7,69.8 2003.352.19:04:35.15/cable/+3.82946E-02 2003.352.19:04:35.21/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37538,30059,0,1pps 2003.352.19:04:35.26/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12754,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:04:35.34/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15924,15603,545,1pps 2003.352.19:04:35.43/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16166,16302,554,1pps 2003.352.19:04:35.52/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16050,16088,550,1pps 2003.352.19:04:36.02/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:04:38.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:04:38.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:04:38.23:!2003.352.19:06:30 2003.352.19:04:39.03#setcl#time/311701514,1,2003,352,19,04,39.00,0.681,0.705,1 2003.352.19:04:39.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:06:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:06:30.00:et 2003.352.19:06:30.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:06:33.05:tape 2003.352.19:06:33.12/tape/low,12344,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:06:33.12:postob 2003.352.19:06:33.13:scan_name=352-1910 2003.352.19:06:33.13:source=0014+813,001404.5,811828.2,1950.0 2003.352.19:06:39.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.19:06:44.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.19:06:53.43:!2003.352.19:10:30 2003.352.19:10:30.00:tape 2003.352.19:10:30.07/tape/low,12344,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:10:30.07:st=for,160 2003.352.19:10:30.12:!2003.352.19:10:30 2003.352.19:10:30.12:preob 2003.352.19:10:32.88/tpical/20907,21215,21707,22063,22190,23257,23400,23168,50374,17780 2003.352.19:10:32.96/tpical/19397,19401,19022,19527,19623,19923,35723 2003.352.19:10:33.04:!2003.352.19:10:40 2003.352.19:10:40.00:tape 2003.352.19:10:40.07/tape/low,12460,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:10:40.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:10:40.08:midob 2003.352.19:10:40.19/tpi/15662,15847,15954,16158,16206,16161,16299,16189,37322,12711 2003.352.19:10:40.27/tpi/15849,16007,16075,16304,15922,16211,29720 2003.352.19:10:40.85/tsys1/53.0,52.0,49.1,48.2,47.9,40.3,40.5,40.9,50.6,44.4 2003.352.19:10:40.86/tsys2/56.9,60.1,69.5,64.4,54.9,55.8,63.4 2003.352.19:10:44.86/wx/-21.6,967.6,70.0 2003.352.19:10:44.91/cable/+3.82904E-02 2003.352.19:10:44.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37316,29713,0,1pps 2003.352.19:10:45.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12707,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:10:45.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15835,15523,545,1pps 2003.352.19:10:45.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16157,16332,554,1pps 2003.352.19:10:45.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16065,16115,550,1pps 2003.352.19:10:45.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:10:46.03#setcl#time/311738214,1,2003,352,19,10,46.00,0.595,0.807,1 2003.352.19:10:46.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:10:48.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:10:48.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.19:10:48.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.19:10:48.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.19:10:48.23:!2003.352.19:12:18 2003.352.19:12:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:12:18.00:et 2003.352.19:12:18.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:12:21.05:tape 2003.352.19:12:21.12/tape/low,13783,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:12:21.12:postob 2003.352.19:12:21.13:scan_name=352-1916 2003.352.19:12:21.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.352.19:12:27.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.19:12:32.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.19:12:41.43:!2003.352.19:16:39 2003.352.19:16:39.00:tape 2003.352.19:16:39.07/tape/low,13783,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:16:39.07:st=for,160 2003.352.19:16:39.12:!2003.352.19:16:39 2003.352.19:16:39.12:preob 2003.352.19:16:41.88/tpical/21752,21212,21731,22124,22176,23188,23372,23085,50406,17762 2003.352.19:16:41.96/tpical/19585,19603,18835,19244,19581,19859,34969 2003.352.19:16:42.04:!2003.352.19:16:49 2003.352.19:16:49.00:tape 2003.352.19:16:49.07/tape/low,13898,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:16:49.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:16:49.08:midob 2003.352.19:16:49.19/tpi/16295,15860,15959,16167,16162,16044,16233,16070,37313,12663 2003.352.19:16:49.27/tpi/16036,16196,15953,16087,15937,16208,28957 2003.352.19:16:49.85/tsys1/53.1,52.2,49.0,47.8,47.5,39.7,40.1,40.4,50.4,44.0 2003.352.19:16:49.86/tsys2/57.6,60.6,70.5,64.8,55.9,56.7,61.7 2003.352.19:16:54.73/wx/-21.7,967.7,69.3 2003.352.19:16:54.83/cable/+3.82968E-02 2003.352.19:16:54.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37308,28982,0,1pps 2003.352.19:16:54.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12663,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.19:16:55.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15847,15533,545,1pps 2003.352.19:16:55.11/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16048,16197,554,1pps 2003.352.19:16:55.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15957,15952,550,1pps 2003.352.19:16:55.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:16:58.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:16:58.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:16:58.23:!2003.352.19:18:27 2003.352.19:16:59.03#setcl#time/311775514,1,2003,352,19,16,59.00,0.527,0.911,1 2003.352.19:16:59.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.352.19:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.54 2003.352.19:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.09 2003.352.19:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.94 2003.352.19:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.352.19:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.352.19:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.97 2003.352.19:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.352.19:17:23.64@wx 2003.352.19:17:27.46/wx/-21.7,967.7,69.4 2003.352.19:18:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:18:27.00:et 2003.352.19:18:27.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:18:30.05:tape 2003.352.19:18:30.12/tape/low,15221,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:18:30.12:postob 2003.352.19:18:30.13:scan_name=352-1920b 2003.352.19:18:30.13:source=1334-127,133500.0,-124209.7,1950.0 2003.352.19:18:36.65:sx4ca=1 2003.352.19:18:41.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.352.19:18:50.43:!2003.352.19:20:37 2003.352.19:20:37.00:tape 2003.352.19:20:37.07/tape/low,15221,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:20:37.07:st=for,160 2003.352.19:20:37.12:!2003.352.19:20:37 2003.352.19:20:37.12:preob 2003.352.19:20:39.88/tpical/20170,19665,20393,20933,20701,21332,21099,21750,61567,21915 2003.352.19:20:39.96/tpical/18873,18576,18730,18718,19428,19405,39577 2003.352.19:20:40.04:!2003.352.19:20:47 2003.352.19:20:47.00:tape 2003.352.19:20:47.07/tape/low,15336,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:20:47.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:20:47.08:midob 2003.352.19:20:47.19/tpi/15987,15573,15953,16354,16190,15998,15832,16352,48318,16805 2003.352.19:20:47.27/tpi/15909,15769,16233,16056,16242,16237,33573 2003.352.19:20:47.85/tsys1/67.9,67.0,63.6,63.0,63.5,53.0,53.0,53.4,64.8,58.5 2003.352.19:20:47.86/tsys2/68.4,71.6,82.9,76.7,65.1,65.5,71.8 2003.352.19:20:52.04/wx/-21.7,967.6,70.1 2003.352.19:20:52.11/cable/+3.82940E-02 2003.352.19:20:52.17/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,48337,33595,0,1pps 2003.352.19:20:52.22/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,16809,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:20:52.30/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.28, -5.28,lock,15570,16041,545,1pps 2003.352.19:20:52.39/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.23, -0.32,lock,16011,15934,554,1pps 2003.352.19:20:52.47/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16250,16237,550,1pps 2003.352.19:20:52.97/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:20:55.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.19:20:55.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:20:55.22:!2003.352.19:22:25 2003.352.19:20:56.05#setcl#time/311799216,1,2003,352,19,20,56.00,0.000,0.976,-1 2003.352.19:20:56.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:22:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:22:25.00:et 2003.352.19:22:25.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:22:28.05:tape 2003.352.19:22:28.12/tape/low,16660,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:22:28.12:postob 2003.352.19:22:28.13:scan_name=352-1924 2003.352.19:22:28.13:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.352.19:22:34.65:midtp 2003.352.19:22:34.65&midtp/bbcman 2003.352.19:22:34.66&midtp/ifdab=max,max,*,* 2003.352.19:22:34.66&midtp/ifdcd=max,max,*,* 2003.352.19:22:34.67&midtp/!+2s 2003.352.19:22:34.67&midtp/tpzero=1u,2u,3u,4u,5u,6u,7u,8u,ifa,ifc 2003.352.19:22:34.68&midtp/tpzero=9u,10u,11u,12u,13u,14u,ifb 2003.352.19:22:34.68&midtp/bbcagc 2003.352.19:22:34.68&midtp/ifdab=0,0,*,* 2003.352.19:22:34.69&midtp/ifdcd=0,0,*,* 2003.352.19:22:34.69&midtp/rxmon 2003.352.19:22:37.41/tpzero/196,327,240,290,268,267,304,304,709,232 2003.352.19:22:37.49/tpzero/306,304,303,333,256,256,464 2003.352.19:22:38.21/rx/-1(undef),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,0.833 2003.352.19:22:38.32/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.09 2003.352.19:22:38.43/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.19:22:38.54/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.352.19:22:38.65/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.352.19:22:38.76/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.97 2003.352.19:22:38.87/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.352.19:22:38.87:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:22:38.88&sx4cb/pcalon 2003.352.19:22:38.88&sx4cb/tapefsxc 2003.352.19:22:38.89&sx4cb/pass=$ 2003.352.19:22:38.89&sx4cb/bbcsx4 2003.352.19:22:38.90&sx4cb/ifdsx 2003.352.19:22:38.90&sx4cb/form=c,8.000 2003.352.19:22:38.90&sx4cb/!* 2003.352.19:22:38.91&sx4cb/bit_density=56250 2003.352.19:22:38.91&sx4cb/systracks= 2003.352.19:22:38.92&sx4cb/tape=low 2003.352.19:22:38.92&sx4cb/enable=g1,g3 2003.352.19:22:38.93&sx4cb/repro=byp,7,23 2003.352.19:22:38.93&sx4cb/!*+8s 2003.352.19:22:43.95/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:22:53.09:fastf=0m40s 2003.352.19:22:53.09&fastf/ff 2003.352.19:22:53.10&fastf/!+$ 2003.352.19:22:53.10&fastf/et 2003.352.19:23:33.20:!+5s 2003.352.19:23:38.21:!2003.352.19:24:46 2003.352.19:24:46.00:tape 2003.352.19:24:46.07/tape/low,17560,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:24:46.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:24:46.12:!2003.352.19:24:46 2003.352.19:24:46.12:preob 2003.352.19:24:48.88/tpical/21693,21175,21756,22190,21314,22981,23131,22986,50379,17902 2003.352.19:24:48.96/tpical/19527,19068,19279,19371,19786,19957,35483 2003.352.19:24:49.04:!2003.352.19:24:56 2003.352.19:24:56.00:tape 2003.352.19:24:56.07/tape/low,17444,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:24:56.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:24:56.08:midob 2003.352.19:24:56.19/tpi/16205,15773,15965,16238,15587,16013,16138,16096,37255,12796 2003.352.19:24:56.27/tpi/15962,15647,16285,16220,16130,16306,29457 2003.352.19:24:56.85/tsys1/52.5,51.5,48.9,48.2,48.1,40.7,40.8,41.3,50.1,44.3 2003.352.19:24:56.86/tsys2/57.1,58.3,69.4,65.5,56.4,57.1,62.5 2003.352.19:25:00.80/wx/-21.7,967.7,69.5 2003.352.19:25:00.91/cable/+3.82900E-02 2003.352.19:25:00.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37245,29450,0,1pps 2003.352.19:25:01.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12796,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:25:01.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15769,16294,545,1pps 2003.352.19:25:01.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16015,15977,554,1pps 2003.352.19:25:01.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16283,16303,550,1pps 2003.352.19:25:01.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:25:02.03#setcl#time/311823814,1,2003,352,19,25,02.00,0.459,1.045,1 2003.352.19:25:02.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:25:04.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:25:04.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.19:25:04.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.19:25:04.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.19:25:04.23:!2003.352.19:30:20 2003.352.19:30:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:30:20.00:et 2003.352.19:30:20.03:!+3s 2003.352.19:30:23.04:tape 2003.352.19:30:23.11/tape/low,13107,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:30:23.11:postob 2003.352.19:30:23.11:scan_name=352-1934a 2003.352.19:30:23.11:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.352.19:30:29.63:check80r 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/check=*,-tp,-hd 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/"parity=,,,off,g0,g1,g2,g3 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/parity=,,ab,on 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/sfastf=10s 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/!+5.1s 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/repro=raw,6,8 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/!* 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/st=rev,80,off 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/!+1.5s 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/parity 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/!*+41.40s 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/et 2003.352.19:30:29.63&check80r/!+1.5s 2003.352.19:30:29.64&check80r/repro=byp,6,8 2003.352.19:30:29.64&check80r/check=*,tp,hd 2003.352.19:30:29.64&sfastf/sff 2003.352.19:30:29.64&sfastf/!+$ 2003.352.19:30:29.65&sfastf/et 2003.352.19:31:02.36/parity/10.,24.,20.,22.,8.,10.,14.,8.,20.,58.,540.,10.,68.,26. 2003.352.19:31:02.36/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.19:31:27.94:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:31:32.58/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:31:41.71:!2003.352.19:34:48 2003.352.19:34:48.00:tape 2003.352.19:34:48.07/tape/low,13107,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:34:48.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:34:48.11:!2003.352.19:34:48 2003.352.19:34:48.11:preob 2003.352.19:34:50.86/tpical/21352,21857,22194,22477,21978,23604,23731,23561,49533,17562 2003.352.19:34:50.93/tpical/19708,19685,19046,19474,19937,19920,34433 2003.352.19:34:51.00:!2003.352.19:34:58 2003.352.19:34:58.00:tape 2003.352.19:34:58.07/tape/low,12992,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:34:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:34:58.07:midob 2003.352.19:34:58.18/tpi/15865,16179,16133,16300,15879,16196,16341,16274,36350,12411 2003.352.19:34:58.25/tpi/15985,16127,15957,16123,16084,16098,28356 2003.352.19:34:58.82/tsys1/51.4,50.3,47.2,46.7,46.1,38.7,39.1,39.4,48.7,42.6 2003.352.19:34:58.82/tsys2/54.7,57.8,65.9,61.3,53.4,53.9,59.7 2003.352.19:35:03.07/wx/-21.2,967.6,71.2 2003.352.19:35:03.15/cable/+3.82972E-02 2003.352.19:35:03.21/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36355,28327,0,1pps 2003.352.19:35:03.26/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12416,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:35:03.34/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16183,15948,545,1pps 2003.352.19:35:03.42/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16208,15963,554,1pps 2003.352.19:35:03.50/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15945,15950,550,1pps 2003.352.19:35:04.00/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:35:06.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:35:06.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:35:06.23:!2003.352.19:36:36 2003.352.19:35:07.03#setcl#time/311884314,1,2003,352,19,35,07.00,0.396,1.213,1 2003.352.19:35:07.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:36:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:36:36.00:et 2003.352.19:36:36.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:36:39.05:tape 2003.352.19:36:39.12/tape/low,11669,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:36:39.12:postob 2003.352.19:36:39.13:scan_name=352-1937 2003.352.19:36:39.14:source=1307+121,130704.4,121022.6,1950.0 2003.352.19:36:45.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:36:50.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:36:59.43:!2003.352.19:37:12 2003.352.19:37:12.00:tape 2003.352.19:37:12.07/tape/low,11669,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:37:12.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:37:12.12:!2003.352.19:37:12 2003.352.19:37:12.12:preob 2003.352.19:37:14.88/tpical/21738,21206,21779,22296,21342,23090,23249,23085,50434,17939 2003.352.19:37:14.96/tpical/19284,19349,18954,19428,19994,19917,34683 2003.352.19:37:15.04:!2003.352.19:37:22 2003.352.19:37:22.00:tape 2003.352.19:37:22.07/tape/low,11553,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:37:22.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:37:22.08:midob 2003.352.19:37:22.19/tpi/16210,15796,15955,16286,15586,16016,16199,16140,37247,12802 2003.352.19:37:22.27/tpi/15725,15904,15958,16158,16217,16187,28774 2003.352.19:37:22.85/tsys1/52.1,51.5,48.6,47.9,47.9,40.1,40.6,41.0,49.9,44.0 2003.352.19:37:22.86/tsys2/56.3,58.9,67.9,62.9,54.9,55.5,62.3 2003.352.19:37:27.09/wx/-21.3,967.5,71.0 2003.352.19:37:27.16/cable/+3.82959E-02 2003.352.19:37:27.21/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37283,28718,0,1pps 2003.352.19:37:27.26/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12814,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.19:37:27.34/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15811,16344,545,1pps 2003.352.19:37:27.43/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16048,16069,554,1pps 2003.352.19:37:27.52/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15962,15990,550,1pps 2003.352.19:37:28.02/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:37:30.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:37:30.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:37:30.22:!2003.352.19:39:07 2003.352.19:37:31.05#setcl#time/311898716,1,2003,352,19,37,31.00,0.000,1.253,-1 2003.352.19:37:31.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:39:07.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:39:07.00:et 2003.352.19:39:07.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:39:10.05:tape 2003.352.19:39:10.12/tape/low,10137,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:39:10.12:postob 2003.352.19:39:10.13:scan_name=352-1945 2003.352.19:39:10.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.352.19:39:16.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:39:21.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:39:30.43:!2003.352.19:44:53 2003.352.19:44:53.00:tape 2003.352.19:44:53.07/tape/low,10137,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:44:53.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:44:53.12:!2003.352.19:44:53 2003.352.19:44:53.12:preob 2003.352.19:44:55.88/tpical/21348,21825,22149,22510,21908,23522,23592,23415,49435,17510 2003.352.19:44:55.96/tpical/19558,19544,19300,19658,20144,20130,34502 2003.352.19:44:56.04:!2003.352.19:45:03 2003.352.19:45:03.00:tape 2003.352.19:45:03.07/tape/low,10021,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:45:03.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:45:03.08:midob 2003.352.19:45:03.18/tpi/15818,16126,16104,16303,15833,16137,16227,16168,36242,12372 2003.352.19:45:03.25/tpi/15826,15972,16147,16235,16199,16217,28457 2003.352.19:45:03.82/tsys1/50.8,49.9,47.2,46.4,46.1,38.7,38.9,39.4,48.5,42.5 2003.352.19:45:03.82/tsys2/54.1,57.0,65.3,60.4,52.5,53.0,60.2 2003.352.19:45:08.60/wx/-21.4,967.5,70.2 2003.352.19:45:08.75/cable/+3.82959E-02 2003.352.19:45:08.81/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36250,28412,0,1pps 2003.352.19:45:08.86/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12370,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.19:45:08.94/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16144,15883,545,1pps 2003.352.19:45:09.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16113,16319,554,1pps 2003.352.19:45:09.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16132,16154,550,1pps 2003.352.19:45:09.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:45:12.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:45:12.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:45:12.22:!2003.352.19:46:41 2003.352.19:45:13.05#setcl#time/311944916,1,2003,352,19,45,13.00,0.000,1.381,-1 2003.352.19:45:13.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:46:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:46:41.00:et 2003.352.19:46:41.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:46:44.05:tape 2003.352.19:46:44.12/tape/low,08699,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:46:44.12:postob 2003.352.19:46:44.13:scan_name=352-1949 2003.352.19:46:44.13:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.352.19:46:50.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:46:55.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:47:04.43:!2003.352.19:48:54 2003.352.19:47:23.64@wx 2003.352.19:47:27.71/wx/-21.3,967.4,70.5 2003.352.19:48:54.00:tape 2003.352.19:48:54.07/tape/low,08699,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:48:54.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:48:54.12:!2003.352.19:48:54 2003.352.19:48:54.12:preob 2003.352.19:48:56.88/tpical/20924,20903,21248,21640,20860,22690,22196,22263,55105,19589 2003.352.19:48:56.96/tpical/19634,19120,19075,19354,19724,19955,36171 2003.352.19:48:57.04:!2003.352.19:49:04 2003.352.19:49:04.00:tape 2003.352.19:49:04.07/tape/low,08582,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:49:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:49:04.08:midob 2003.352.19:49:04.19/tpi/16102,16029,16040,16359,15742,16367,16011,16145,41906,14434 2003.352.19:49:04.27/tpi/16216,15911,16247,16274,16174,16333,30046 2003.352.19:49:04.85/tsys1/59.4,58.0,54.6,54.8,54.4,45.8,45.7,46.6,56.2,49.6 2003.352.19:49:04.86/tsys2/60.5,63.2,73.3,67.3,58.3,57.7,62.8 2003.352.19:49:09.19/wx/-21.5,967.5,70.2 2003.352.19:49:09.24/cable/+3.82908E-02 2003.352.19:49:09.30/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41894,30053,0,1pps 2003.352.19:49:09.35/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14435,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.19:49:09.43/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16001,15652,545,1pps 2003.352.19:49:09.51/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,15889,16211,554,1pps 2003.352.19:49:09.59/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16242,16003,550,1pps 2003.352.19:49:10.09/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:49:13.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:49:13.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:49:13.23:!2003.352.19:50:42 2003.352.19:49:14.06#setcl#time/311969016,1,2003,352,19,49,14.00,0.000,1.448,-2 2003.352.19:49:14.06#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:50:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:50:42.00:et 2003.352.19:50:42.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:50:45.05:tape 2003.352.19:50:45.12/tape/low,07259,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:50:45.12:postob 2003.352.19:50:45.13:scan_name=352-1952 2003.352.19:50:45.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.352.19:50:51.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:50:56.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:51:05.43:!2003.352.19:52:25 2003.352.19:52:25.00:tape 2003.352.19:52:25.07/tape/low,07259,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:52:25.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:52:25.12:!2003.352.19:52:25 2003.352.19:52:25.12:preob 2003.352.19:52:27.88/tpical/20908,21240,21779,22151,22219,23239,23440,23130,50296,17709 2003.352.19:52:27.96/tpical/19629,18975,18795,19283,19595,19431,35212 2003.352.19:52:28.04:!2003.352.19:52:35 2003.352.19:52:35.00:tape 2003.352.19:52:35.07/tape/low,07144,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:52:35.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:52:35.08:midob 2003.352.19:52:35.19/tpi/15656,15889,16020,16255,16258,16147,16329,16176,37335,12685 2003.352.19:52:35.27/tpi/16081,15718,15926,16192,16013,15933,28978 2003.352.19:52:35.85/tsys1/53.0,52.3,49.3,48.7,48.3,40.3,40.6,41.1,50.9,44.6 2003.352.19:52:35.86/tsys2/57.8,61.5,70.8,66.7,57.2,58.3,59.5 2003.352.19:52:40.31/wx/-21.2,967.4,71.0 2003.352.19:52:40.44/cable/+3.82946E-02 2003.352.19:52:40.50/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37343,29234,0,1pps 2003.352.19:52:40.55/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12688,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.19:52:40.63/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15890,15586,545,1pps 2003.352.19:52:40.71/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16168,16269,554,1pps 2003.352.19:52:40.79/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15918,16003,550,1pps 2003.352.19:52:41.29/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:52:44.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:52:44.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:52:44.23:!2003.352.19:54:13 2003.352.19:52:45.06#setcl#time/311990116,1,2003,352,19,52,45.00,0.000,1.507,-2 2003.352.19:52:45.06#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.19:54:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.19:54:13.00:et 2003.352.19:54:13.04:!+3s 2003.352.19:54:16.05:tape 2003.352.19:54:16.12/tape/low,05821,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:54:16.12:postob 2003.352.19:54:16.13:scan_name=352-1959 2003.352.19:54:16.13:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.352.19:54:22.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.19:54:27.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.19:54:36.43:!2003.352.19:59:41 2003.352.19:59:41.00:tape 2003.352.19:59:41.07/tape/low,05821,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:59:41.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.19:59:41.12:!2003.352.19:59:41 2003.352.19:59:41.12:preob 2003.352.19:59:43.88/tpical/21005,21056,21462,21421,21003,22234,22434,22001,55431,19674 2003.352.19:59:43.96/tpical/19194,18980,18939,19253,19513,19612,37187 2003.352.19:59:44.04:!2003.352.19:59:51 2003.352.19:59:51.00:tape 2003.352.19:59:51.07/tape/low,05706,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.19:59:51.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.19:59:51.08:midob 2003.352.19:59:51.19/tpi/16183,16188,16269,16203,15901,16087,16261,16022,42264,14562 2003.352.19:59:51.27/tpi/15926,15885,16238,16316,16118,16213,31151 2003.352.19:59:51.85/tsys1/59.7,58.6,55.6,54.9,55.2,46.3,46.5,47.3,56.8,50.5 2003.352.19:59:51.86/tsys2/62.1,65.4,76.7,70.7,60.7,61.0,66.1 2003.352.19:59:55.63/wx/-21.1,967.4,70.8 2003.352.19:59:55.64/cable/+3.82831E-02 2003.352.19:59:55.70/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42263,31162,0,1pps 2003.352.19:59:55.75/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14562,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.19:59:55.83/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16192,15815,545,1pps 2003.352.19:59:55.92/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,16087,16341,554,1pps 2003.352.19:59:56.01/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16219,16232,550,1pps 2003.352.19:59:56.52/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.19:59:59.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.19:59:59.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.19:59:59.23:!2003.352.20:02:57 2003.352.20:00:00.03#setcl#time/312033613,1,2003,352,20,00,00.00,0.442,1.627,1 2003.352.20:00:00.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:02:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:02:57.00:et 2003.352.20:02:57.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:03:00.05:tape 2003.352.20:03:00.12/tape/low,03209,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:03:00.12:postob 2003.352.20:03:00.13:scan_name=352-2008 2003.352.20:03:00.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.352.20:03:06.65:sx4cb=2 2003.352.20:03:11.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-330.5,,-0.5, 2003.352.20:03:20.43:!2003.352.20:08:34 2003.352.20:03:50.47;"weather - partly cloudy 2003.352.20:04:08.35;"weather - mostly clear 2003.352.20:08:34.00:tape 2003.352.20:08:34.07/tape/low,03209,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:08:34.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.20:08:34.12:!2003.352.20:08:34 2003.352.20:08:34.12:preob 2003.352.20:08:36.88/tpical/21851,21300,21890,22037,21379,23113,23316,23153,50528,17954 2003.352.20:08:36.96/tpical/19643,19644,19231,19092,19801,20043,35132 2003.352.20:08:37.04:!2003.352.20:08:44 2003.352.20:08:44.00:tape 2003.352.20:08:44.07/tape/low,03094,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:08:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:08:44.08:midob 2003.352.20:08:44.19/tpi/16339,15889,16063,16147,15661,16092,16290,16248,37407,12851 2003.352.20:08:44.27/tpi/16044,16224,16206,15905,16075,16273,29061 2003.352.20:08:44.85/tsys1/52.7,51.8,48.9,48.5,48.5,40.6,41.0,41.6,50.3,44.5 2003.352.20:08:44.86/tsys2/56.8,60.5,68.3,63.5,55.2,55.2,61.2 2003.352.20:08:49.14/wx/-21.2,967.3,70.4 2003.352.20:08:49.24/cable/+3.82834E-02 2003.352.20:08:49.30/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37395,29063,0,1pps 2003.352.20:08:49.35/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12845,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:08:49.43/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15892,15556,545,1pps 2003.352.20:08:49.51/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16106,16167,554,1pps 2003.352.20:08:49.59/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.68,lock,16224,15912,550,1pps 2003.352.20:08:50.09/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:08:53.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:08:53.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:08:53.23:!2003.352.20:10:22 2003.352.20:08:54.03#setcl#time/312087013,1,2003,352,20,08,54.00,0.405,1.776,1 2003.352.20:08:54.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:10:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:10:22.00:et 2003.352.20:10:22.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:10:25.05:tape 2003.352.20:10:25.12/tape/low,01769,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:10:25.12:postob 2003.352.20:10:25.13:scan_name=352-2012 2003.352.20:10:25.14:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.352.20:10:31.65:midtp 2003.352.20:10:34.37/tpzero/213,337,258,331,277,284,324,326,641,207 2003.352.20:10:34.45/tpzero/319,323,315,348,276,276,438 2003.352.20:10:35.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.42 2003.352.20:10:35.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,45.72 2003.352.20:10:35.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.20:10:35.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.904 2003.352.20:10:35.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.352.20:10:35.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.84 2003.352.20:10:35.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,60.41 2003.352.20:10:35.83:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:10:41.41/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:10:50.55:fastr=1m14s 2003.352.20:10:50.55&fastr/rw 2003.352.20:10:50.56&fastr/!+$ 2003.352.20:10:50.56&fastr/et 2003.352.20:12:04.66:!+5s 2003.352.20:12:09.67:!2003.352.20:12:23 2003.352.20:12:23.00:tape 2003.352.20:12:23.07/tape/low,00204,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:12:23.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:12:23.12:!2003.352.20:12:23 2003.352.20:12:23.12:preob 2003.352.20:12:25.88/tpical/21969,22346,21982,22916,21509,23223,22673,22643,$$$$$,25653 2003.352.20:12:25.96/tpical/20717,19734,19787,19957,20656,20420,45132 2003.352.20:12:26.04:!2003.352.20:12:33 2003.352.20:12:33.00:tape 2003.352.20:12:33.07/tape/low,00319,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:12:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:12:33.08:midob 2003.352.20:12:33.19/tpi/18166,18494,18005,18701,17507,18184,17770,17766,60312,20569 2003.352.20:12:33.27/tpi/17837,17154,17445,17442,17614,17441,39118 2003.352.20:12:33.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.352.20:12:33.85/tsys1/85.0,84.8,80.3,78.4,77.5,63.9,64.0,64.4,$$$$$$$$,72.1 2003.352.20:12:33.86/tsys2/79.1,84.8,95.1,88.4,74.1,74.9,83.6 2003.352.20:12:38.26/wx/-20.9,967.2,71.2 2003.352.20:12:38.36/cable/+3.82912E-02 2003.352.20:12:38.42/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,60358,39141,0,1pps 2003.352.20:12:38.47/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,20589,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:12:38.55/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -6.06, -6.62,lock,16307,16395,545,1pps 2003.352.20:12:38.64/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -0.60, -1.20,lock,16192,15892,554,1pps 2003.352.20:12:38.72/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 0.74, 0.36,lock,16035,16339,550,1pps 2003.352.20:12:39.22/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:12:42.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.20:12:42.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:12:42.23:!2003.352.20:16:36 2003.352.20:12:43.03#setcl#time/312109913,1,2003,352,20,12,43.00,0.391,1.839,1 2003.352.20:12:43.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:16:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:16:36.00:et 2003.352.20:16:36.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:16:39.05:tape 2003.352.20:16:39.12/tape/low,03577,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:16:39.12:postob 2003.352.20:16:39.13:scan_name=352-2019 2003.352.20:16:39.13:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.352.20:16:45.65:check80f 2003.352.20:17:18.38/parity/30.,6.,28.,12.,16.,22.,8.,16.,8.,54.,394.,30.,16.,52. 2003.352.20:17:18.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.20:17:23.64@wx 2003.352.20:17:27.92/wx/-21.0,967.2,71.0 2003.352.20:17:43.96:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:17:48.60/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.352.20:17:57.74:!2003.352.20:19:05 2003.352.20:19:05.00:tape 2003.352.20:19:05.07/tape/low,03577,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:19:05.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:19:05.12:!2003.352.20:19:05 2003.352.20:19:05.12:preob 2003.352.20:19:07.88/tpical/21241,21602,22203,22318,21689,22786,23178,23017,51194,18168 2003.352.20:19:07.96/tpical/19859,19221,19099,19520,19882,19678,35239 2003.352.20:19:08.04:!2003.352.20:19:15 2003.352.20:19:15.00:tape 2003.352.20:19:15.07/tape/low,03694,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:19:15.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:19:15.08:midob 2003.352.20:19:15.19/tpi/15972,16200,16398,16413,15953,15970,16289,16256,38080,13082 2003.352.20:19:15.27/tpi/16277,15916,16165,16355,16219,16062,29178 2003.352.20:19:15.85/tsys1/53.8,52.9,50.0,49.0,49.2,41.4,41.7,42.4,51.4,45.6 2003.352.20:19:15.86/tsys2/57.9,61.3,70.2,65.7,56.6,56.8,61.6 2003.352.20:19:20.84/wx/-20.9,967.3,71.2 2003.352.20:19:20.92/cable/+3.82912E-02 2003.352.20:19:20.98/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38077,29162,0,1pps 2003.352.20:19:21.03/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13076,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:19:21.11/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16211,15855,545,1pps 2003.352.20:19:21.20/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,15981,15953,554,1pps 2003.352.20:19:21.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16166,16214,550,1pps 2003.352.20:19:21.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:19:24.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.20:19:24.23?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.20:19:24.23?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.20:19:24.24/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.20:19:24.24:!2003.352.20:20:53 2003.352.20:19:25.04#setcl#time/312150114,1,2003,352,20,19,25.00,0.246,1.951,0 2003.352.20:19:25.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:20:33.08;oso 2003.352.20:20:33.08&oso/onsource 2003.352.20:20:33.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:20:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:20:53.00:et 2003.352.20:20:53.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:20:56.05:tape 2003.352.20:20:56.12/tape/low,05016,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:20:56.12:postob 2003.352.20:20:56.13:scan_name=352-2022 2003.352.20:20:56.14:source=oq208,140445.6,284129.5,1950.0 2003.352.20:21:02.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:21:07.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:21:16.43:!2003.352.20:22:38 2003.352.20:22:38.00:tape 2003.352.20:22:38.07/tape/low,05016,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:22:38.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:22:38.12:!2003.352.20:22:38 2003.352.20:22:38.12:preob 2003.352.20:22:40.88/tpical/21329,21822,22178,22438,21939,23510,23218,23441,49380,17491 2003.352.20:22:40.96/tpical/19880,19193,19197,19200,19782,19753,33972 2003.352.20:22:41.04:!2003.352.20:22:48 2003.352.20:22:48.00:tape 2003.352.20:22:48.07/tape/low,05132,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:22:48.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:22:48.08:midob 2003.352.20:22:48.19/tpi/15794,16127,16092,16251,15819,16118,15953,16152,36204,12346 2003.352.20:22:48.27/tpi/16153,15854,16118,15939,16003,16005,27955 2003.352.20:22:48.85/tsys1/50.7,49.9,46.8,46.3,45.7,38.6,38.7,39.1,48.6,42.5 2003.352.20:22:48.86/tsys2/55.2,60.5,66.7,62.2,54.1,54.6,59.5 2003.352.20:22:53.59/wx/-21.1,967.2,70.5 2003.352.20:22:53.72/cable/+3.82943E-02 2003.352.20:22:53.78/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36197,27987,0,1pps 2003.352.20:22:53.83/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12345,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.20:22:53.91/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16124,15913,545,1pps 2003.352.20:22:54.00/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16122,16310,554,1pps 2003.352.20:22:54.09/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16131,16151,550,1pps 2003.352.20:22:54.59/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:22:57.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:22:57.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:22:57.23:!2003.352.20:24:26 2003.352.20:22:58.03#setcl#time/312171413,1,2003,352,20,22,58.00,0.358,2.010,1 2003.352.20:22:58.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:24:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:24:26.00:et 2003.352.20:24:26.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:24:29.05:tape 2003.352.20:24:29.12/tape/low,06454,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:24:29.12:postob 2003.352.20:24:29.13:scan_name=352-2026 2003.352.20:24:29.13:source=1334-127,133500.0,-124209.7,1950.0 2003.352.20:24:35.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:24:40.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:24:49.43:!2003.352.20:26:11 2003.352.20:26:11.00:tape 2003.352.20:26:11.07/tape/low,06454,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:26:11.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:26:11.12:!2003.352.20:26:11 2003.352.20:26:11.12:preob 2003.352.20:26:13.88/tpical/18380,18410,18469,18739,18261,18971,18990,19185,$$$$$,34846 2003.352.20:26:13.96/tpical/18107,17955,17655,17649,18277,18206,55199 2003.352.20:26:14.04:!2003.352.20:26:21 2003.352.20:26:21.00:tape 2003.352.20:26:21.07/tape/low,06570,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:26:21.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:26:21.08:midob 2003.352.20:26:21.19/tpi/16106,16122,16076,16286,15830,15973,15975,16163,$$$$$,29912 2003.352.20:26:21.27/tpi/16189,16186,16119,16015,16247,16156,50710 2003.352.20:26:21.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.352.20:26:21.85/tsys1/125.8,124.2,119.0,117.1,115.2,94.2,93.4,94.3,$$$$$$$$,108.4 2003.352.20:26:21.86/tsys2/107.6,116.6,133.8,124.6,102.3,100.7,145.6 2003.352.20:26:26.34/wx/-21.0,967.2,70.8 2003.352.20:26:26.36/cable/+3.82976E-02 2003.352.20:26:26.42/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,65535,49759,0,1pps 2003.352.20:26:26.47/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,29997,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:26:26.55/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -7.86, -8.21,lock,16176,15703,545,1pps 2003.352.20:26:26.64/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -2.36, -2.72,lock,16008,16235,554,1pps 2003.352.20:26:26.73/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -0.46, -1.05,lock,16177,15863,550,1pps 2003.352.20:26:27.23/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:26:30.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:26:30.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:26:30.23:!2003.352.20:27:59 2003.352.20:26:31.03#setcl#time/312192713,1,2003,352,20,26,31.00,0.348,2.069,1 2003.352.20:26:31.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:27:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:27:59.00:et 2003.352.20:27:59.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:28:02.05:tape 2003.352.20:28:02.12/tape/low,07893,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:28:02.12:postob 2003.352.20:28:02.13:scan_name=352-2031 2003.352.20:28:02.14:source=1121+238,112124.2,235314.9,1950.0 2003.352.20:28:08.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:28:13.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:28:22.43:!2003.352.20:31:13 2003.352.20:31:13.00:tape 2003.352.20:31:13.07/tape/low,07893,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:31:13.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:31:13.12:!2003.352.20:31:13 2003.352.20:31:13.12:preob 2003.352.20:31:15.88/tpical/21115,21423,22032,22239,21527,23247,22957,23252,50872,18082 2003.352.20:31:15.96/tpical/19223,19338,19327,19206,19829,19722,35728 2003.352.20:31:16.04:!2003.352.20:31:23 2003.352.20:31:23.00:tape 2003.352.20:31:23.07/tape/low,08009,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:31:23.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:31:23.08:midob 2003.352.20:31:23.19/tpi/15828,16014,16172,16315,15758,16181,16009,16286,37697,12947 2003.352.20:31:23.27/tpi/15652,16001,16272,15965,16040,15983,29677 2003.352.20:31:23.85/tsys1/53.2,52.2,48.9,48.6,48.3,40.5,40.6,41.2,50.6,44.7 2003.352.20:31:23.86/tsys2/55.8,61.1,67.9,62.6,54.1,54.6,62.8 2003.352.20:31:29.09/wx/-20.7,967.2,72.0 2003.352.20:31:29.24/cable/+3.82994E-02 2003.352.20:31:29.30/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37699,29973,0,1pps 2003.352.20:31:29.36/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12947,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:31:29.44/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16010,15676,545,1pps 2003.352.20:31:29.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16189,16233,554,1pps 2003.352.20:31:29.62/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16254,16308,550,1pps 2003.352.20:31:30.12/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:31:33.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:31:33.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:31:33.23:!2003.352.20:37:36 2003.352.20:31:34.03#setcl#time/312223013,1,2003,352,20,31,34.00,0.334,2.154,1 2003.352.20:31:34.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:37:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:37:36.00:et 2003.352.20:37:36.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:37:39.05:tape 2003.352.20:37:39.12/tape/low,12999,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:37:39.12:postob 2003.352.20:37:39.13:scan_name=352-2041 2003.352.20:37:39.13:source=1357+769,135742.2,765753.8,1950.0 2003.352.20:37:45.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:37:50.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:37:59.43:!2003.352.20:41:00 2003.352.20:41:00.00:tape 2003.352.20:41:00.07/tape/low,12999,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:41:00.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:41:00.12:!2003.352.20:41:00 2003.352.20:41:00.12:preob 2003.352.20:41:02.88/tpical/21246,21555,22114,22153,21393,23055,23237,23072,51012,17975 2003.352.20:41:02.96/tpical/19866,19154,19023,19432,19682,19596,35686 2003.352.20:41:03.04:!2003.352.20:41:10 2003.352.20:41:10.00:tape 2003.352.20:41:10.07/tape/low,13114,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:41:10.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:41:10.08:midob 2003.352.20:41:10.19/tpi/15937,16118,16252,16200,15579,15990,16147,16081,37802,12837 2003.352.20:41:10.27/tpi/16281,15861,16108,16263,16040,16000,29623 2003.352.20:41:10.85/tsys1/53.3,52.2,49.1,48.0,47.4,40.0,40.2,40.6,50.6,44.2 2003.352.20:41:10.86/tsys2/57.9,61.3,70.4,65.3,56.3,56.8,62.6 2003.352.20:41:14.96/wx/-20.9,967.3,70.8 2003.352.20:41:15.00/cable/+3.82984E-02 2003.352.20:41:15.06/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37800,29630,0,1pps 2003.352.20:41:15.11/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12830,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:41:15.19/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16119,15796,545,1pps 2003.352.20:41:15.28/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,15991,16089,554,1pps 2003.352.20:41:15.36/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16098,16176,550,1pps 2003.352.20:41:15.86/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:41:18.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:41:18.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:41:18.23:!2003.352.20:42:48 2003.352.20:41:19.03#setcl#time/312281513,1,2003,352,20,41,19.00,0.311,2.316,1 2003.352.20:41:19.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:42:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:42:48.00:et 2003.352.20:42:48.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:42:51.05:tape 2003.352.20:42:51.12/tape/low,14437,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:42:51.12:postob 2003.352.20:42:51.13:scan_name=352-2046 2003.352.20:42:51.14:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.352.20:42:57.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:43:02.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:43:11.43:!2003.352.20:46:16 2003.352.20:46:16.00:tape 2003.352.20:46:16.07/tape/low,14437,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:46:16.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:46:16.12:!2003.352.20:46:16 2003.352.20:46:16.12:preob 2003.352.20:46:18.88/tpical/21240,21596,22124,22168,21397,23062,23239,23045,51066,17981 2003.352.20:46:18.96/tpical/19155,19289,19180,19130,19838,19762,35593 2003.352.20:46:19.04:!2003.352.20:46:26 2003.352.20:46:26.00:tape 2003.352.20:46:26.07/tape/low,14553,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:46:26.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:46:26.08:midob 2003.352.20:46:26.19/tpi/15940,16169,16262,16251,15633,15989,16176,16082,37879,12853 2003.352.20:46:26.27/tpi/15727,15995,16279,16073,16212,16177,29595 2003.352.20:46:26.85/tsys1/53.4,52.5,49.1,48.4,48.0,40.0,40.4,40.7,50.8,44.4 2003.352.20:46:26.86/tsys2/58.4,61.9,71.5,66.9,57.1,57.7,63.2 2003.352.20:46:30.81/wx/-21.0,967.2,70.6 2003.352.20:46:30.84/cable/+3.82962E-02 2003.352.20:46:30.90/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37889,29627,0,1pps 2003.352.20:46:30.95/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12853,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.20:46:31.03/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16163,15855,545,1pps 2003.352.20:46:31.12/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16011,16088,554,1pps 2003.352.20:46:31.21/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.57,lock,16299,15962,550,1pps 2003.352.20:46:31.71/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:46:34.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.20:46:34.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:46:34.23:!2003.352.20:48:04 2003.352.20:46:35.03#setcl#time/312313113,1,2003,352,20,46,35.00,0.300,2.404,1 2003.352.20:46:35.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:47:23.64@wx 2003.352.20:47:28.09/wx/-21.0,967.1,70.6 2003.352.20:48:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:48:04.00:et 2003.352.20:48:04.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:48:07.05:tape 2003.352.20:48:07.12/tape/low,15875,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:48:07.12:postob 2003.352.20:48:07.13:scan_name=352-2050 2003.352.20:48:07.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.352.20:48:13.65:sx4ca=3 2003.352.20:48:18.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-275.0,,0.0, 2003.352.20:48:27.43:!2003.352.20:50:46 2003.352.20:50:46.00:tape 2003.352.20:50:46.07/tape/low,15875,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:50:46.07:st=for,160 2003.352.20:50:46.12:!2003.352.20:50:46 2003.352.20:50:46.12:preob 2003.352.20:50:48.88/tpical/21061,21390,21921,22255,21201,23354,22999,23248,50610,17801 2003.352.20:50:48.96/tpical/19793,19109,18989,19434,19700,19590,35180 2003.352.20:50:49.04:!2003.352.20:50:56 2003.352.20:50:56.00:tape 2003.352.20:50:56.07/tape/low,15992,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:50:56.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.20:50:56.08:midob 2003.352.20:50:56.19/tpi/15755,15976,16062,16261,15424,16169,15969,16188,37452,12688 2003.352.20:50:56.27/tpi/16237,15812,16078,16312,16068,16015,29141 2003.352.20:50:56.85/tsys1/52.7,52.0,48.6,47.8,47.2,39.8,40.1,40.4,50.4,43.9 2003.352.20:50:56.86/tsys2/58.2,61.1,70.4,66.5,56.5,57.2,61.8 2003.352.20:51:00.84/wx/-21.2,967.1,70.3 2003.352.20:51:00.92/cable/+3.82967E-02 2003.352.20:51:00.98/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37466,29139,0,1pps 2003.352.20:51:01.03/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12698,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.20:51:01.11/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15973,15649,545,1pps 2003.352.20:51:01.20/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16177,16314,554,1pps 2003.352.20:51:01.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16083,16118,550,1pps 2003.352.20:51:01.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.20:51:04.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.20:51:04.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.20:51:04.23:!2003.352.20:52:34 2003.352.20:51:05.03#setcl#time/312340113,1,2003,352,20,51,05.00,0.290,2.479,1 2003.352.20:51:05.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.20:52:34.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.20:52:34.00:et 2003.352.20:52:34.04:!+3s 2003.352.20:52:37.05:tape 2003.352.20:52:37.12/tape/low,17314,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.20:52:37.12:postob 2003.352.20:52:37.13:scan_name=352-2102 2003.352.20:52:37.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.352.20:52:43.65:midtp 2003.352.20:52:46.37/tpzero/208,340,259,331,276,288,322,328,644,207 2003.352.20:52:46.45/tpzero/323,321,314,347,275,272,441 2003.352.20:52:47.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.03 2003.352.20:52:47.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.09 2003.352.20:52:47.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.94 2003.352.20:52:47.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.352.20:52:47.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.352.20:52:47.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.97 2003.352.20:52:47.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.352.20:52:47.83:sx4cb=4 2003.352.20:52:52.85/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-275.7,,-0.7, 2003.352.20:53:01.99:fastf=0m15s 2003.352.20:53:17.09:!+5s 2003.352.20:53:22.10:!2003.352.21:02:34 2003.352.21:02:34.00:tape 2003.352.21:02:34.07/tape/low,17652,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:02:34.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:02:34.12:!2003.352.21:02:34 2003.352.21:02:34.12:preob 2003.352.21:02:36.87/tpical/20997,21199,21629,21641,21226,22327,22300,22256,52968,18759 2003.352.21:02:36.95/tpical/19518,19044,19102,19040,19533,19359,36415 2003.352.21:02:37.03:!2003.352.21:02:44 2003.352.21:02:44.00:tape 2003.352.21:02:44.07/tape/low,17535,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:02:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:02:44.08:midob 2003.352.21:02:44.19/tpi/15959,16079,16161,16136,15847,15918,15909,15922,39862,13705 2003.352.21:02:44.27/tpi/16097,15945,16277,16051,16023,15924,30402 2003.352.21:02:44.85/tsys1/56.3,55.3,52.3,51.7,52.1,43.9,43.9,44.3,53.9,48.1 2003.352.21:02:44.86/tsys2/59.9,65.5,73.5,68.3,58.3,59.2,64.8 2003.352.21:02:49.46/wx/-20.1,967.1,73.3 2003.352.21:02:49.55/cable/+3.82886E-02 2003.352.21:02:49.61/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39857,30376,0,1pps 2003.352.21:02:49.66/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13703,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:02:49.74/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16077,15760,545,1pps 2003.352.21:02:49.83/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.74,lock,15916,16211,554,1pps 2003.352.21:02:49.92/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16263,15997,550,1pps 2003.352.21:02:50.42/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:02:53.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:02:53.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.21:02:53.23:!2003.352.21:05:59 2003.352.21:02:54.03#setcl#time/312411013,1,2003,352,21,02,54.00,0.269,2.676,1 2003.352.21:02:54.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:04:51.66;"weather - mostly clear 2003.352.21:05:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:05:59.00:et 2003.352.21:05:59.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:06:02.05:tape 2003.352.21:06:02.12/tape/low,14919,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:06:02.12:postob 2003.352.21:06:02.13:scan_name=352-2119 2003.352.21:06:02.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.352.21:06:08.65:check80r 2003.352.21:06:41.38/parity/20.,12.,4.,12.,8.,12.,10.,0.,16.,28.,550.,14.,74.,16. 2003.352.21:06:41.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.21:07:06.96:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:07:11.97/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:07:21.11:!2003.352.21:19:01 2003.352.21:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.352.21:17:20.74/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.39 2003.352.21:17:20.85/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.58 2003.352.21:17:20.96/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.21:17:21.07/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.352.21:17:21.18/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.352.21:17:21.29/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.91 2003.352.21:17:21.40/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.352.21:17:23.64@wx 2003.352.21:17:28.28/wx/-20.3,967.1,71.4 2003.352.21:19:01.00:tape 2003.352.21:19:01.07/tape/low,14919,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:19:01.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:19:01.12:!2003.352.21:19:01 2003.352.21:19:01.12:preob 2003.352.21:19:03.87/tpical/19992,20728,20990,20929,20561,21731,21989,21692,57648,20453 2003.352.21:19:03.95/tpical/19314,19122,18942,19096,19696,19477,37639 2003.352.21:19:04.03:!2003.352.21:19:11 2003.352.21:19:11.00:tape 2003.352.21:19:11.07/tape/low,14804,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:19:11.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:19:11.08:midob 2003.352.21:19:11.19/tpi/15620,16162,16124,16101,15796,16025,16221,16060,44548,15409 2003.352.21:19:11.27/tpi/16091,16054,16241,16185,16293,16080,31543 2003.352.21:19:11.85/tsys1/63.5,62.4,58.7,58.8,58.6,49.6,49.6,50.3,60.3,54.2 2003.352.21:19:11.86/tsys2/63.6,66.7,76.7,70.7,61.2,60.5,66.3 2003.352.21:19:16.29/wx/-20.5,967.1,70.9 2003.352.21:19:16.43/cable/+3.82904E-02 2003.352.21:19:16.49/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,44551,31595,0,1pps 2003.352.21:19:16.54/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15408,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:19:16.62/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -5.04,lock,16184,15776,545,1pps 2003.352.21:19:16.70/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,16019,16183,554,1pps 2003.352.21:19:16.79/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16250,16274,550,1pps 2003.352.21:19:17.29/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:19:18.05#setcl#time/312509415,1,2003,352,21,19,18.00,0.081,2.949,-1 2003.352.21:19:18.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:19:20.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:19:20.23?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.352.21:19:20.23?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:19:20.24/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:19:20.24:!2003.352.21:20:49 2003.352.21:19:31.08;oso 2003.352.21:19:31.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.352.21:19:31.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:19:31.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:19:33.50;toso 2003.352.21:19:33.50&toso/source=*,*,* 2003.352.21:20:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:20:49.00:et 2003.352.21:20:49.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:20:52.05:tape 2003.352.21:20:52.12/tape/low,13481,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:20:52.12:postob 2003.352.21:20:52.13:scan_name=352-2122 2003.352.21:20:52.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.352.21:20:58.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:21:03.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:21:12.43:!2003.352.21:22:34 2003.352.21:22:34.00:tape 2003.352.21:22:34.07/tape/low,13481,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:22:34.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:22:34.12:!2003.352.21:22:34 2003.352.21:22:34.12:preob 2003.352.21:22:36.87/tpical/21709,21174,22468,22373,22021,23524,23607,23396,50068,17599 2003.352.21:22:36.95/tpical/19265,19318,19397,19334,19879,19817,34492 2003.352.21:22:37.03:!2003.352.21:22:44 2003.352.21:22:44.00:tape 2003.352.21:22:44.07/tape/low,13366,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:22:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:22:44.08:midob 2003.352.21:22:44.19/tpi/16182,15761,16417,16287,15990,16197,16325,16214,36936,12498 2003.352.21:22:44.27/tpi/15708,15889,16338,16083,16115,16110,28506 2003.352.21:22:44.85/tsys1/52.0,51.3,48.1,47.2,46.9,39.1,39.6,39.8,49.7,43.4 2003.352.21:22:44.86/tsys2/56.2,59.0,68.1,62.9,54.7,55.5,60.9 2003.352.21:22:49.04/wx/-20.5,967.1,70.9 2003.352.21:22:49.08/cable/+3.82982E-02 2003.352.21:22:49.13/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36944,28523,0,1pps 2003.352.21:22:49.18/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12504,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:22:49.26/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15755,16295,545,1pps 2003.352.21:22:49.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16219,16036,554,1pps 2003.352.21:22:49.42/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16337,16374,550,1pps 2003.352.21:22:49.92/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:22:52.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:22:52.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.21:22:52.23:!2003.352.21:24:22 2003.352.21:22:53.03#setcl#time/312530913,1,2003,352,21,22,53.00,0.239,3.009,1 2003.352.21:22:53.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:24:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:24:22.00:et 2003.352.21:24:22.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:24:25.05:tape 2003.352.21:24:25.12/tape/low,12042,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:24:25.12:postob 2003.352.21:24:25.13:scan_name=352-2126a 2003.352.21:24:25.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.352.21:24:31.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:24:36.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:24:45.43:!2003.352.21:25:56 2003.352.21:25:56.00:tape 2003.352.21:25:56.07/tape/low,12042,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:25:56.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:25:56.12:!2003.352.21:25:56 2003.352.21:25:56.12:preob 2003.352.21:25:58.88/tpical/21657,21157,21733,22185,22326,23345,23496,23200,50202,17794 2003.352.21:25:58.96/tpical/19401,19439,19081,19097,19812,20058,34636 2003.352.21:25:59.04:!2003.352.21:26:06 2003.352.21:26:06.00:tape 2003.352.21:26:06.07/tape/low,11927,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:26:06.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:26:06.08:midob 2003.352.21:26:06.19/tpi/16135,15761,15901,16193,16302,16214,16343,16183,37063,12702 2003.352.21:26:06.27/tpi/15858,16025,16076,15942,16138,16346,28682 2003.352.21:26:06.85/tsys1/51.9,51.4,48.3,47.6,47.9,40.2,40.3,40.7,49.9,44.2 2003.352.21:26:06.86/tsys2/57.0,59.8,68.2,64.3,56.1,56.3,61.7 2003.352.21:26:11.97/wx/-20.5,967.1,71.5 2003.352.21:26:12.12/cable/+3.82963E-02 2003.352.21:26:12.17/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37061,28617,0,1pps 2003.352.21:26:12.22/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12710,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:26:12.30/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15758,16276,545,1pps 2003.352.21:26:12.39/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16224,16278,554,1pps 2003.352.21:26:12.48/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16107,16320,550,1pps 2003.352.21:26:12.98/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:26:15.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:26:15.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.21:26:15.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:26:15.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:26:15.23:!2003.352.21:27:44 2003.352.21:26:16.03#setcl#time/312551213,1,2003,352,21,26,16.00,0.235,3.065,1 2003.352.21:26:16.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:27:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:27:44.00:et 2003.352.21:27:44.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:27:47.05:tape 2003.352.21:27:47.12/tape/low,10604,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:27:47.12:postob 2003.352.21:27:47.13:scan_name=352-2135 2003.352.21:27:47.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.352.21:27:53.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:27:58.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:28:07.43:!2003.352.21:35:25 2003.352.21:35:25.00:tape 2003.352.21:35:25.07/tape/low,10604,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:35:25.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:35:25.12:!2003.352.21:35:25 2003.352.21:35:25.12:preob 2003.352.21:35:27.88/tpical/21164,21493,22050,22078,21479,23144,22818,22665,50894,18013 2003.352.21:35:27.96/tpical/19700,19031,18881,19301,19959,19798,35094 2003.352.21:35:28.04:!2003.352.21:35:35 2003.352.21:35:35.00:tape 2003.352.21:35:35.07/tape/low,10488,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:35:35.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:35:35.08:midob 2003.352.21:35:35.19/tpi/15915,16122,16263,16279,15804,16275,16066,16037,37872,12981 2003.352.21:35:35.27/tpi/16133,15756,15983,16150,16277,16171,29078 2003.352.21:35:35.85/tsys1/53.9,52.9,49.8,49.5,49.3,41.9,42.0,42.7,51.5,45.7 2003.352.21:35:35.86/tsys2/57.6,61.3,70.3,65.2,56.5,57.0,61.9 2003.352.21:35:39.84/wx/-20.6,967.0,71.0 2003.352.21:35:39.95/cable/+3.82865E-02 2003.352.21:35:40.01/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37876,29076,0,1pps 2003.352.21:35:40.07/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12985,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:35:40.15/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16126,15779,545,1pps 2003.352.21:35:40.24/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16280,16324,554,1pps 2003.352.21:35:40.33/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15967,16062,550,1pps 2003.352.21:35:40.83/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:35:41.05#setcl#time/312607715,1,2003,352,21,35,41.00,0.074,3.222,-1 2003.352.21:35:41.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:35:44.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:35:44.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.21:35:44.23:!2003.352.21:41:48 2003.352.21:41:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:41:48.00:et 2003.352.21:41:48.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:41:51.05:tape 2003.352.21:41:51.12/tape/low,05499,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:41:51.12:postob 2003.352.21:41:51.13:scan_name=352-2144 2003.352.21:41:51.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.352.21:41:57.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:42:02.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:42:11.43:!2003.352.21:44:18 2003.352.21:44:18.00:tape 2003.352.21:44:18.07/tape/low,05499,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:44:18.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:44:18.12:!2003.352.21:44:18 2003.352.21:44:18.12:preob 2003.352.21:44:20.88/tpical/21541,20980,22275,22156,21970,22973,23138,22885,49650,17507 2003.352.21:44:20.96/tpical/19360,19458,18976,19482,19958,19827,34438 2003.352.21:44:21.04:!2003.352.21:44:28 2003.352.21:44:28.00:tape 2003.352.21:44:28.07/tape/low,05383,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:44:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:44:28.08:midob 2003.352.21:44:28.19/tpi/16057,15620,16293,16148,16009,15930,16084,15970,36651,12477 2003.352.21:44:28.27/tpi/15797,16001,16012,16244,16221,16149,28421 2003.352.21:44:28.85/tsys1/52.0,51.3,48.2,47.4,47.5,40.0,40.2,40.7,49.9,43.9 2003.352.21:44:28.86/tsys2/56.5,59.0,68.9,63.8,55.5,56.1,60.5 2003.352.21:44:33.34/wx/-20.5,966.8,71.2 2003.352.21:44:33.39/cable/+3.82904E-02 2003.352.21:44:33.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36653,28422,0,1pps 2003.352.21:44:33.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12489,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.21:44:33.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15608,16119,545,1pps 2003.352.21:44:33.66/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,15940,16059,554,1pps 2003.352.21:44:33.74/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16017,16060,550,1pps 2003.352.21:44:34.24/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:44:35.03#setcl#time/312661113,1,2003,352,21,44,35.00,0.214,3.371,1 2003.352.21:44:35.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:44:37.09/gps-fmout/T +1.12E-05 2003.352.21:44:37.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.21:44:37.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:44:37.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:44:37.23:!2003.352.21:46:06 2003.352.21:46:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:46:06.00:et 2003.352.21:46:06.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:46:09.05:tape 2003.352.21:46:09.12/tape/low,04061,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:46:09.12:postob 2003.352.21:46:09.13:scan_name=352-2147 2003.352.21:46:09.14:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.352.21:46:15.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:46:20.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:46:29.43:!2003.352.21:47:15 2003.352.21:47:15.00:tape 2003.352.21:47:15.07/tape/low,04061,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:47:15.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:47:15.12:!2003.352.21:47:15 2003.352.21:47:15.12:preob 2003.352.21:47:17.88/tpical/20976,21324,21793,22110,22075,23023,23206,22854,50396,17641 2003.352.21:47:17.96/tpical/19659,19006,18833,19308,19930,19823,34969 2003.352.21:47:18.04:!2003.352.21:47:25 2003.352.21:47:23.64@wx 2003.352.21:47:28.44/wx/-20.7,966.9,70.9 2003.352.21:47:28.44:tape 2003.352.21:47:28.52/tape/low,03899,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:47:28.52:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:47:28.53:midob 2003.352.21:47:28.64/tpi/15740,15965,16041,16205,16170,15998,16191,16005,37419,12633 2003.352.21:47:28.72/tpi/16132,15719,15962,16174,16248,16207,29020 2003.352.21:47:29.30/tsys1/53.4,52.5,49.4,48.4,48.4,40.3,40.7,41.2,51.0,44.7 2003.352.21:47:29.31/tsys2/58.3,60.9,70.9,65.7,56.4,57.3,62.5 2003.352.21:47:33.35/wx/-20.7,966.8,71.0 2003.352.21:47:33.39/cable/+3.82960E-02 2003.352.21:47:33.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37420,29005,0,1pps 2003.352.21:47:33.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12634,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.21:47:33.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15963,15648,545,1pps 2003.352.21:47:33.67/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16009,16176,554,1pps 2003.352.21:47:33.76/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15971,16058,550,1pps 2003.352.21:47:34.26/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:47:37.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:47:37.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.21:47:37.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:47:37.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:47:37.23:!2003.352.21:49:03 2003.352.21:47:38.03#setcl#time/312679413,1,2003,352,21,47,38.00,0.210,3.421,1 2003.352.21:47:38.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:49:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:49:03.00:et 2003.352.21:49:03.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:49:06.05:tape 2003.352.21:49:06.12/tape/low,02621,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:49:06.12:postob 2003.352.21:49:06.13:scan_name=352-2150 2003.352.21:49:06.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.352.21:49:12.65:sx4cb=4 2003.352.21:49:17.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.352.21:49:26.43:!2003.352.21:50:45 2003.352.21:50:45.00:tape 2003.352.21:50:45.07/tape/low,02621,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:50:45.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.21:50:45.12:!2003.352.21:50:45 2003.352.21:50:45.12:preob 2003.352.21:50:47.88/tpical/21014,21341,21879,22037,21239,23363,22929,23247,50599,17865 2003.352.21:50:47.96/tpical/19899,19135,19228,19119,20036,19967,34380 2003.352.21:50:48.04:!2003.352.21:50:55 2003.352.21:50:55.00:tape 2003.352.21:50:55.07/tape/low,02506,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:50:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:50:55.08:midob 2003.352.21:50:55.19/tpi/15744,15954,16082,16152,15555,16269,16027,16300,37504,12799 2003.352.21:50:55.27/tpi/16222,15752,16153,15888,16242,16216,28364 2003.352.21:50:55.85/tsys1/53.1,52.2,49.1,48.4,48.4,40.5,41.0,41.4,50.7,44.7 2003.352.21:50:55.86/tsys2/56.2,59.3,67.0,62.5,54.7,55.3,60.3 2003.352.21:51:01.19/wx/-20.0,966.7,73.0 2003.352.21:51:01.23/cable/+3.82975E-02 2003.352.21:51:01.29/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37503,28384,0,1pps 2003.352.21:51:01.34/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12803,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.21:51:01.42/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15946,15610,545,1pps 2003.352.21:51:01.50/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16299,15966,554,1pps 2003.352.21:51:01.58/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16163,16200,550,1pps 2003.352.21:51:02.08/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:51:05.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:51:05.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.21:51:05.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.21:51:05.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.21:51:05.23:!2003.352.21:52:33 2003.352.21:51:06.03#setcl#time/312700213,1,2003,352,21,51,06.00,0.207,3.479,1 2003.352.21:51:06.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:52:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:52:33.00:et 2003.352.21:52:33.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:52:36.05:tape 2003.352.21:52:36.12/tape/low,01181,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:52:36.12:postob 2003.352.21:52:36.13:scan_name=352-2154 2003.352.21:52:36.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.352.21:52:42.65:midtp 2003.352.21:52:45.37/tpzero/206,337,257,330,275,286,321,327,641,205 2003.352.21:52:45.45/tpzero/321,317,314,347,280,276,436 2003.352.21:52:46.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.88 2003.352.21:52:46.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.82 2003.352.21:52:46.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.352.21:52:46.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.908 2003.352.21:52:46.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.352.21:52:46.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.05 2003.352.21:52:46.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.352.21:52:46.83:sx4ca=5 2003.352.21:52:52.41/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.21:53:01.55:fastr=0m43s 2003.352.21:53:44.65:!+5s 2003.352.21:53:49.66:!2003.352.21:54:37 2003.352.21:54:37.00:tape 2003.352.21:54:37.07/tape/low,00215,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:54:37.07:st=for,160 2003.352.21:54:37.12:!2003.352.21:54:37 2003.352.21:54:37.12:preob 2003.352.21:54:39.88/tpical/21625,21083,21616,22263,22099,23089,23224,22969,49932,17603 2003.352.21:54:39.96/tpical/19356,19398,19098,19121,19825,19676,34930 2003.352.21:54:40.04:!2003.352.21:54:47 2003.352.21:54:47.00:tape 2003.352.21:54:47.07/tape/low,00330,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:54:47.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.21:54:47.08:midob 2003.352.21:54:47.19/tpi/16169,15740,15869,16278,16167,16040,16197,16074,36950,12584 2003.352.21:54:47.27/tpi/15853,16042,16116,15987,16190,16053,28975 2003.352.21:54:47.85/tsys1/52.7,51.9,48.9,48.0,48.2,40.2,40.7,41.1,50.3,44.4 2003.352.21:54:47.86/tsys2/57.6,60.9,68.9,64.9,56.9,56.6,62.3 2003.352.21:54:51.94/wx/-19.7,966.7,73.6 2003.352.21:54:51.95/cable/+3.82957E-02 2003.352.21:54:52.01/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36967,28976,0,1pps 2003.352.21:54:52.07/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12586,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.21:54:52.15/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15746,16257,545,1pps 2003.352.21:54:52.23/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16050,16139,554,1pps 2003.352.21:54:52.31/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16134,16214,550,1pps 2003.352.21:54:52.81/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.21:54:55.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.21:54:55.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.21:54:55.22:!2003.352.21:56:25 2003.352.21:54:56.05#setcl#time/312723215,1,2003,352,21,54,56.00,0.068,3.543,-1 2003.352.21:54:56.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.21:56:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.21:56:25.00:et 2003.352.21:56:25.04:!+3s 2003.352.21:56:28.05:tape 2003.352.21:56:28.12/tape/low,01653,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.21:56:28.12:postob 2003.352.21:56:28.13:scan_name=352-2202 2003.352.21:56:28.13:source=2149+056,214907.7,053806.8,1950.0 2003.352.21:56:34.65:check80f 2003.352.21:57:07.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 24 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.352.21:57:07.38/parity/20.,28.,16.,20.,18.,26.,16.,40.,32.,76.,710.,28.,18.,62. 2003.352.21:57:07.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.21:57:32.96:sx4ca=5 2003.352.21:57:37.60/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.21:57:46.74:!2003.352.22:01:50 2003.352.22:01:50.00:tape 2003.352.22:01:50.07/tape/low,01653,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:01:50.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:01:50.12:!2003.352.22:01:50 2003.352.22:01:50.12:preob 2003.352.22:01:52.88/tpical/20520,20564,21463,21379,21629,22102,22616,22092,54066,19108 2003.352.22:01:52.96/tpical/19796,19270,18931,18860,19477,19608,36846 2003.352.22:01:53.04:!2003.352.22:02:00 2003.352.22:02:00.00:tape 2003.352.22:02:00.07/tape/low,01769,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:02:00.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:02:00.08:midob 2003.352.22:02:00.18/tpi/15733,15742,16184,16079,16275,15924,16284,16001,41014,14103 2003.352.22:02:00.25/tpi/16394,16118,16178,15979,16083,16204,30844 2003.352.22:02:00.82/tsys1/58.4,57.5,54.3,53.5,53.8,45.6,45.4,46.3,55.7,50.0 2003.352.22:02:00.82/tsys2/61.4,65.2,74.9,70.5,60.5,60.8,65.9 2003.352.22:02:05.62/wx/-19.5,966.6,73.6 2003.352.22:02:05.71/cable/+3.82898E-02 2003.352.22:02:05.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41022,30806,0,1pps 2003.352.22:02:05.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14111,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:02:05.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.57,lock,15734,16230,545,1pps 2003.352.22:02:05.98/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.61,lock,15921,16167,554,1pps 2003.352.22:02:06.06/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16186,16330,550,1pps 2003.352.22:02:06.56/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:02:09.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:02:09.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:02:09.22:!2003.352.22:04:20 2003.352.22:02:10.05#setcl#time/312766615,1,2003,352,22,02,10.00,0.066,3.664,-1 2003.352.22:02:10.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:02:30.42;"weather - clear 2003.352.22:04:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:04:20.00:et 2003.352.22:04:20.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:04:23.05:tape 2003.352.22:04:23.12/tape/low,03653,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:04:23.12:postob 2003.352.22:04:23.13:scan_name=352-2211 2003.352.22:04:23.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.352.22:04:29.65:sx4ca=5 2003.352.22:04:34.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.22:04:43.43:!2003.352.22:11:04 2003.352.22:11:04.00:tape 2003.352.22:11:04.07/tape/low,03653,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:11:04.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:11:04.12:!2003.352.22:11:04 2003.352.22:11:04.12:preob 2003.352.22:11:06.88/tpical/21286,20534,21670,21875,21643,22615,22890,22705,51331,18129 2003.352.22:11:06.95/tpical/19769,19121,19032,19050,19869,19617,35971 2003.352.22:11:07.02:!2003.352.22:11:14 2003.352.22:11:14.00:tape 2003.352.22:11:14.07/tape/low,03769,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:11:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:11:14.07:midob 2003.352.22:11:14.18/tpi/16067,15449,16049,16161,15972,15902,16152,16076,38309,13104 2003.352.22:11:14.25/tpi/16239,15863,16144,16008,16267,16085,30077 2003.352.22:11:14.82/tsys1/54.7,53.5,50.6,49.9,49.8,41.9,42.3,42.8,52.1,46.2 2003.352.22:11:14.82/tsys2/58.6,62.0,71.3,66.9,57.7,58.2,65.4 2003.352.22:11:18.77/wx/-19.5,966.4,73.3 2003.352.22:11:18.83/cable/+3.82913E-02 2003.352.22:11:18.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38301,30068,0,1pps 2003.352.22:11:18.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13102,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:11:19.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15443,15950,545,1pps 2003.352.22:11:19.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.98,lock,15917,16348,554,1pps 2003.352.22:11:19.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16140,16226,550,1pps 2003.352.22:11:19.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:11:22.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:11:22.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.22:11:22.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.22:11:22.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.22:11:22.23:!2003.352.22:14:26 2003.352.22:11:23.03#setcl#time/312821913,1,2003,352,22,11,23.00,0.189,3.817,1 2003.352.22:11:23.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:11:30.79;oso 2003.352.22:11:30.92?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.22:11:30.92?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.22:11:30.93/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.22:11:32.41;toso 2003.352.22:14:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:14:26.00:et 2003.352.22:14:26.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:14:29.05:tape 2003.352.22:14:29.12/tape/low,06345,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:14:29.12:postob 2003.352.22:14:29.13:scan_name=352-2218b 2003.352.22:14:29.13:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.352.22:14:35.65:sx4ca=5 2003.352.22:14:40.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.22:14:49.43:!2003.352.22:18:33 2003.352.22:17:23.64@wx 2003.352.22:17:28.62/wx/-20.0,966.4,71.5 2003.352.22:18:33.00:tape 2003.352.22:18:33.07/tape/low,06345,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:18:33.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:18:33.12:!2003.352.22:18:33 2003.352.22:18:33.12:preob 2003.352.22:18:35.88/tpical/20118,20888,21074,21013,20490,22192,21779,21917,57972,20397 2003.352.22:18:35.96/tpical/18817,18733,18485,18816,18970,19120,41242 2003.352.22:18:36.04:!2003.352.22:18:43 2003.352.22:18:43.00:tape 2003.352.22:18:43.07/tape/low,06461,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:18:43.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:18:43.08:midob 2003.352.22:18:43.19/tpi/15727,16301,16222,16125,15688,16251,15969,16118,44839,15333 2003.352.22:18:43.27/tpi/15971,16047,16117,16239,15944,16095,35248 2003.352.22:18:43.85/tsys1/63.6,62.6,59.2,58.2,57.8,48.4,48.5,49.0,60.6,53.8 2003.352.22:18:43.86/tsys2/71.5,76.1,86.8,80.2,67.3,68.0,75.5 2003.352.22:18:48.81/wx/-20.2,966.4,71.4 2003.352.22:18:48.91/cable/+3.82984E-02 2003.352.22:18:48.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,44838,35203,0,1pps 2003.352.22:18:49.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15341,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:18:49.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -5.04,lock,16305,15892,545,1pps 2003.352.22:18:49.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.74, 0.23,lock,16262,15937,554,1pps 2003.352.22:18:49.27/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16122,16071,550,1pps 2003.352.22:18:49.77/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:18:52.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:18:52.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:18:52.22:!2003.352.22:23:40 2003.352.22:18:53.02#setcl#time/312866912,1,2003,352,22,18,53.00,0.244,3.942,2 2003.352.22:18:53.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:23:40.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:23:40.00:et 2003.352.22:23:40.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:23:43.05:tape 2003.352.22:23:43.12/tape/low,10437,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:23:43.12:postob 2003.352.22:23:43.13:scan_name=352-2226 2003.352.22:23:43.14:source=1749+096,174910.4,093942.9,1950.0 2003.352.22:23:49.65:sx4ca=5 2003.352.22:23:54.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.22:24:03.43:!2003.352.22:25:57 2003.352.22:25:57.00:tape 2003.352.22:25:57.07/tape/low,10437,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:25:57.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:25:57.12:!2003.352.22:25:57 2003.352.22:25:57.12:preob 2003.352.22:25:59.88/tpical/21609,21109,22455,22142,22286,23319,23424,23107,50090,17765 2003.352.22:25:59.96/tpical/19176,19244,18866,19487,19678,19536,34345 2003.352.22:26:00.04:!2003.352.22:26:07 2003.352.22:26:07.00:tape 2003.352.22:26:07.07/tape/low,10553,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:26:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:26:07.08:midob 2003.352.22:26:07.19/tpi/16105,15705,16450,16191,16248,16159,16243,16105,36974,12667 2003.352.22:26:07.27/tpi/15666,15869,15898,16262,16017,15914,28379 2003.352.22:26:07.85/tsys1/52.0,51.2,48.5,48.0,47.6,39.9,39.9,40.6,49.9,44.0 2003.352.22:26:07.86/tsys2/56.8,59.9,68.3,64.2,55.9,56.1,60.9 2003.352.22:26:12.32/wx/-19.6,966.2,72.9 2003.352.22:26:12.43/cable/+3.82965E-02 2003.352.22:26:12.49/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36970,28376,0,1pps 2003.352.22:26:12.54/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12670,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:26:12.62/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15707,16226,545,1pps 2003.352.22:26:12.71/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16153,16197,554,1pps 2003.352.22:26:12.80/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15916,15957,550,1pps 2003.352.22:26:13.30/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:26:16.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:26:16.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:26:16.22:!2003.352.22:27:45 2003.352.22:26:17.02#setcl#time/312911312,1,2003,352,22,26,17.00,0.236,4.066,2 2003.352.22:26:17.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:27:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:27:45.00:et 2003.352.22:27:45.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:27:48.05:tape 2003.352.22:27:48.12/tape/low,11875,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:27:48.12:postob 2003.352.22:27:48.13:scan_name=352-2229a 2003.352.22:27:48.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.352.22:27:54.65:sx4ca=5 2003.352.22:27:59.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.22:28:08.43:!2003.352.22:28:57 2003.352.22:28:57.00:tape 2003.352.22:28:57.07/tape/low,11875,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:28:57.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:28:57.12:!2003.352.22:28:57 2003.352.22:28:57.12:preob 2003.352.22:28:59.88/tpical/21514,20960,22309,22183,22021,23556,23202,23479,49711,17552 2003.352.22:28:59.96/tpical/19328,19392,19031,19054,19794,19612,34510 2003.352.22:29:00.04:!2003.352.22:29:07 2003.352.22:29:07.00:tape 2003.352.22:29:07.07/tape/low,11991,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:29:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:29:07.08:midob 2003.352.22:29:07.19/tpi/16030,15608,16294,16166,16028,16303,16112,16368,36661,12496 2003.352.22:29:07.27/tpi/15774,15989,16062,15905,16105,15989,28526 2003.352.22:29:07.85/tsys1/51.9,51.4,48.0,47.4,47.3,39.7,40.1,40.6,49.7,43.8 2003.352.22:29:07.86/tsys2/56.5,59.9,69.0,64.2,55.8,56.4,61.0 2003.352.22:29:12.34/wx/-19.4,966.2,73.4 2003.352.22:29:12.43/cable/+3.82947E-02 2003.352.22:29:12.49/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36662,28515,0,1pps 2003.352.22:29:12.54/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12496,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.22:29:12.62/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15589,16115,545,1pps 2003.352.22:29:12.70/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16334,16026,554,1pps 2003.352.22:29:12.78/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16060,16118,550,1pps 2003.352.22:29:13.28/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:29:14.03#setcl#time/312929013,1,2003,352,22,29,14.00,0.175,4.115,1 2003.352.22:29:14.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:29:16.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:29:16.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.22:29:16.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.22:29:16.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.22:29:16.23:!2003.352.22:32:28 2003.352.22:32:28.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:32:28.00:et 2003.352.22:32:28.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:32:31.05:tape 2003.352.22:32:31.12/tape/low,14687,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:32:31.12:postob 2003.352.22:32:31.13:scan_name=352-2235 2003.352.22:32:31.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.352.22:32:37.65:sx4ca=5 2003.352.22:32:42.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.352.22:32:51.43:!2003.352.22:35:02 2003.352.22:33:46.36;oso 2003.352.22:33:46.57?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.22:33:46.57?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.22:33:46.58/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.22:33:48.81;toso 2003.352.22:35:02.00:tape 2003.352.22:35:02.07/tape/low,14687,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:35:02.07:st=for,160 2003.352.22:35:02.12:!2003.352.22:35:02 2003.352.22:35:02.12:preob 2003.352.22:35:04.88/tpical/21344,20811,22055,22309,21745,23243,23317,23114,49277,17377 2003.352.22:35:04.96/tpical/19587,19542,19303,19215,19683,20104,34929 2003.352.22:35:05.04:!2003.352.22:35:12 2003.352.22:35:12.00:tape 2003.352.22:35:12.07/tape/low,14803,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:35:12.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:35:12.08:midob 2003.352.22:35:12.19/tpi/15819,15395,16044,16189,15723,15968,16054,15979,36173,12297 2003.352.22:35:12.27/tpi/15885,16037,16193,15920,15879,16232,28958 2003.352.22:35:12.85/tsys1/50.9,50.0,47.3,46.6,46.2,38.8,39.0,39.5,48.8,42.8 2003.352.22:35:12.86/tsys2/54.7,58.3,66.4,61.4,53.3,53.6,62.1 2003.352.22:35:17.28/wx/-19.7,966.1,72.3 2003.352.22:35:17.39/cable/+3.82963E-02 2003.352.22:35:17.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36177,28950,0,1pps 2003.352.22:35:17.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12301,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.22:35:17.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15381,15902,545,1pps 2003.352.22:35:17.66/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,15984,16195,554,1pps 2003.352.22:35:17.75/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16191,16229,550,1pps 2003.352.22:35:18.25/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:35:19.04#setcl#time/312965514,1,2003,352,22,35,19.00,0.114,4.216,0 2003.352.22:35:19.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:35:21.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.22:35:21.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:35:21.22:!2003.352.22:36:50 2003.352.22:36:50.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:36:50.00:et 2003.352.22:36:50.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:36:53.05:tape 2003.352.22:36:53.12/tape/low,16125,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:36:53.12:postob 2003.352.22:36:53.13:scan_name=352-2239 2003.352.22:36:53.14:source=0804+499,080458.4,495923.2,1950.0 2003.352.22:36:59.65:midtp 2003.352.22:37:02.37/tpzero/211,335,262,335,281,286,326,328,634,203 2003.352.22:37:02.45/tpzero/321,323,318,346,284,281,435 2003.352.22:37:03.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.352.22:37:03.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.70 2003.352.22:37:03.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.22:37:03.50/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,9.533 2003.352.22:37:03.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.352.22:37:03.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.45 2003.352.22:37:03.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.352.22:37:03.83:sx4cb=6 2003.352.22:37:08.85/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.22:37:17.99:fastf=1m8s 2003.352.22:38:26.09:!+5s 2003.352.22:38:31.10:!2003.352.22:38:50 2003.352.22:38:50.00:tape 2003.352.22:38:50.07/tape/low,17656,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:38:50.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.22:38:50.12:!2003.352.22:38:50 2003.352.22:38:50.12:preob 2003.352.22:38:52.87/tpical/21391,21692,21672,22042,21744,22784,23001,22818,51440,18258 2003.352.22:38:52.95/tpical/19347,19393,18925,19260,20155,20068,34649 2003.352.22:38:53.03:!2003.352.22:39:00 2003.352.22:39:00.00:tape 2003.352.22:39:00.07/tape/low,17540,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:39:00.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:39:00.08:midob 2003.352.22:39:00.19/tpi/16120,16309,16023,16305,16061,16042,16228,16176,38371,13200 2003.352.22:39:00.27/tpi/15816,15997,15951,16023,16355,16269,28682 2003.352.22:39:00.85/tsys1/54.3,53.4,50.2,50.1,50.0,42.1,42.3,42.9,52.0,46.3 2003.352.22:39:00.86/tsys2/57.0,60.0,68.3,63.0,55.0,54.7,61.5 2003.352.22:39:04.76/wx/-19.4,966.0,73.2 2003.352.22:39:04.91/cable/+3.82904E-02 2003.352.22:39:04.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38378,28693,0,1pps 2003.352.22:39:05.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13199,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:39:05.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16286,15950,545,1pps 2003.352.22:39:05.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16025,16072,554,1pps 2003.352.22:39:05.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15942,15994,550,1pps 2003.352.22:39:05.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:39:08.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:39:08.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:39:08.22:!2003.352.22:42:16 2003.352.22:39:09.02#setcl#time/312988512,1,2003,352,22,39,09.00,0.224,4.280,2 2003.352.22:39:09.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:42:16.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:42:16.00:et 2003.352.22:42:16.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:42:19.05:tape 2003.352.22:42:19.12/tape/low,14911,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:42:19.12:postob 2003.352.22:42:19.13:scan_name=352-2244 2003.352.22:42:19.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.352.22:42:25.65:check80r 2003.352.22:42:58.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 25 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.352.22:42:58.38/parity/4.,24.,8.,12.,2.,18.,10.,14.,30.,48.,876.,36.,134.,52. 2003.352.22:42:58.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.22:43:23.96:sx4cb=6 2003.352.22:43:28.60/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.22:43:37.74:!2003.352.22:44:29 2003.352.22:44:29.00:tape 2003.352.22:44:29.07/tape/low,14910,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:44:29.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.22:44:29.12:!2003.352.22:44:29 2003.352.22:44:29.12:preob 2003.352.22:44:31.88/tpical/21512,20676,21793,21790,21764,22754,23014,22813,51778,18301 2003.352.22:44:31.96/tpical/19392,19491,18982,19366,19920,19765,34438 2003.352.22:44:32.04:!2003.352.22:44:39 2003.352.22:44:39.00:tape 2003.352.22:44:39.07/tape/low,14795,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:44:39.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:44:39.08:midob 2003.352.22:44:39.19/tpi/16266,15590,16172,16152,16127,16042,16279,16185,38719,13263 2003.352.22:44:39.27/tpi/15869,16092,16029,16169,16205,16098,28481 2003.352.22:44:39.85/tsys1/55.1,54.0,50.9,50.5,50.6,42.3,42.6,43.1,52.5,46.7 2003.352.22:44:39.86/tsys2/57.4,60.3,69.2,64.3,55.7,56.1,61.2 2003.352.22:44:45.17/wx/-19.7,965.8,72.7 2003.352.22:44:45.24/cable/+3.82969E-02 2003.352.22:44:45.30/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38743,28487,0,1pps 2003.352.22:44:45.35/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13267,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:44:45.43/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15593,16117,545,1pps 2003.352.22:44:45.52/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16079,16079,554,1pps 2003.352.22:44:45.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16031,16088,550,1pps 2003.352.22:44:46.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:44:49.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:44:49.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:44:49.23:!2003.352.22:46:17 2003.352.22:44:50.03#setcl#time/313022612,1,2003,352,22,44,50.00,0.219,4.375,1 2003.352.22:44:50.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:46:17.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:46:17.00:et 2003.352.22:46:17.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:46:20.05:tape 2003.352.22:46:20.12/tape/low,13472,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:46:20.12:postob 2003.352.22:46:20.13:scan_name=352-2247 2003.352.22:46:20.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.352.22:46:26.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.22:46:31.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.22:46:40.43:!2003.352.22:47:40 2003.352.22:47:23.64@wx 2003.352.22:47:28.83/wx/-19.6,965.8,72.9 2003.352.22:47:40.00:tape 2003.352.22:47:40.07/tape/low,13472,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:47:40.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.22:47:40.12:!2003.352.22:47:40 2003.352.22:47:40.12:preob 2003.352.22:47:42.88/tpical/21201,21499,22021,22225,21487,23089,23179,22988,50987,18053 2003.352.22:47:42.96/tpical/19932,19173,19227,19535,19972,19894,34331 2003.352.22:47:43.04:!2003.352.22:47:50 2003.352.22:47:50.00:tape 2003.352.22:47:50.07/tape/low,13356,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:47:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:47:50.08:midob 2003.352.22:47:50.19/tpi/15925,16096,16214,16347,15806,16167,16234,16181,37899,12985 2003.352.22:47:50.27/tpi/16258,15790,16192,16225,16181,16151,28364 2003.352.22:47:50.85/tsys1/53.6,52.5,49.4,49.0,49.2,41.3,41.2,41.9,51.3,45.4 2003.352.22:47:50.86/tsys2/56.4,59.4,68.0,62.4,54.5,55.1,60.8 2003.352.22:47:55.01/wx/-19.6,965.8,73.0 2003.352.22:47:55.16/cable/+3.82950E-02 2003.352.22:47:55.22/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37901,28378,0,1pps 2003.352.22:47:55.27/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12983,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:47:55.35/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16100,15767,545,1pps 2003.352.22:47:55.44/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16169,16252,554,1pps 2003.352.22:47:55.53/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16188,16197,550,1pps 2003.352.22:47:56.03/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:47:57.03#setcl#time/313041312,1,2003,352,22,47,57.00,0.217,4.427,1 2003.352.22:47:57.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:47:59.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:47:59.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:47:59.23:!2003.352.22:49:28 2003.352.22:49:28.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:49:28.00:et 2003.352.22:49:28.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:49:31.05:tape 2003.352.22:49:31.12/tape/low,12033,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:49:31.12:postob 2003.352.22:49:31.13:scan_name=352-2251 2003.352.22:49:31.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.352.22:49:37.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.22:49:42.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.22:49:51.43:!2003.352.22:51:41 2003.352.22:51:41.00:tape 2003.352.22:51:41.07/tape/low,12033,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:51:41.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.22:51:41.12:!2003.352.22:51:41 2003.352.22:51:41.12:preob 2003.352.22:51:43.88/tpical/20569,20344,21309,21104,21390,21933,22143,22212,56588,20069 2003.352.22:51:43.96/tpical/19283,19079,19022,19280,19512,19616,37552 2003.352.22:51:44.04:!2003.352.22:51:51 2003.352.22:51:51.00:tape 2003.352.22:51:51.07/tape/low,11918,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:51:51.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:51:51.08:midob 2003.352.22:51:51.19/tpi/15957,15747,16295,16135,16355,16068,16246,16341,43508,15039 2003.352.22:51:51.27/tpi/16096,16068,16332,16371,16143,16253,31526 2003.352.22:51:51.85/tsys1/61.5,60.3,57.6,57.2,57.5,48.4,48.6,49.1,59.0,53.1 2003.352.22:51:51.86/tsys2/64.3,68.0,77.4,71.6,61.2,61.7,67.1 2003.352.22:51:55.59/wx/-19.4,965.7,73.3 2003.352.22:51:55.64/cable/+3.82860E-02 2003.352.22:51:55.70/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,43490,31507,0,1pps 2003.352.22:51:55.76/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15024,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:51:55.84/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15761,16269,545,1pps 2003.352.22:51:55.93/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.74, 0.36,lock,16061,16257,554,1pps 2003.352.22:51:56.02/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16343,15981,550,1pps 2003.352.22:51:56.52/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:51:59.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:51:59.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:51:59.23:!2003.352.22:53:29 2003.352.22:52:00.03#setcl#time/313065612,1,2003,352,22,52,00.00,0.214,4.494,1 2003.352.22:52:00.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.22:53:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.22:53:29.00:et 2003.352.22:53:29.04:!+3s 2003.352.22:53:32.05:tape 2003.352.22:53:32.12/tape/low,10595,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:53:32.12:postob 2003.352.22:53:32.13:scan_name=352-2258 2003.352.22:53:32.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.352.22:53:38.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.22:53:43.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.22:53:52.43:!2003.352.22:58:46 2003.352.22:58:46.00:tape 2003.352.22:58:46.07/tape/low,10595,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:58:46.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.22:58:46.12:!2003.352.22:58:46 2003.352.22:58:46.12:preob 2003.352.22:58:48.88/tpical/21304,21800,22072,22236,21637,23575,23616,23394,49196,17284 2003.352.22:58:48.96/tpical/19721,19727,19081,19543,19638,19939,33941 2003.352.22:58:49.04:!2003.352.22:58:56 2003.352.22:58:56.00:tape 2003.352.22:58:56.07/tape/low,10478,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.22:58:56.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.22:58:56.08:midob 2003.352.22:58:56.19/tpi/15841,16156,16074,16138,15655,16201,16256,16143,36157,12229 2003.352.22:58:56.27/tpi/16041,16205,16025,16247,15910,16190,27955 2003.352.22:58:56.85/tsys1/51.5,50.5,47.5,46.6,46.3,38.8,39.0,39.3,49.0,42.8 2003.352.22:58:56.86/tsys2/55.5,58.6,66.8,62.7,54.5,55.2,59.8 2003.352.22:59:01.09/wx/-18.7,965.5,74.9 2003.352.22:59:01.24/cable/+3.82986E-02 2003.352.22:59:01.30/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36164,27900,0,1pps 2003.352.22:59:01.35/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12234,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.22:59:01.43/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16168,15926,545,1pps 2003.352.22:59:01.52/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16215,16017,554,1pps 2003.352.22:59:01.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16046,16063,550,1pps 2003.352.22:59:02.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.22:59:05.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.22:59:05.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.22:59:05.23:!2003.352.23:00:34 2003.352.22:59:06.03#setcl#time/313108212,1,2003,352,22,59,06.00,0.208,4.612,1 2003.352.22:59:06.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:00:34.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:00:34.00:et 2003.352.23:00:34.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:00:37.05:tape 2003.352.23:00:37.12/tape/low,09156,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:00:37.12:postob 2003.352.23:00:37.13:scan_name=352-2302 2003.352.23:00:37.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.352.23:00:43.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.23:00:48.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.23:00:57.43:!2003.352.23:01:56 2003.352.23:01:56.00:tape 2003.352.23:01:56.07/tape/low,09156,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:01:56.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:01:56.12:!2003.352.23:01:56 2003.352.23:01:56.12:preob 2003.352.23:01:58.88/tpical/21387,20861,22144,22307,21773,23265,23384,23191,49361,17383 2003.352.23:01:58.96/tpical/19226,19285,18882,19414,19903,19778,34191 2003.352.23:01:59.04:!2003.352.23:02:06 2003.352.23:02:06.00:tape 2003.352.23:02:06.07/tape/low,09040,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:02:06.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:02:06.08:midob 2003.352.23:02:06.19/tpi/15926,15492,16169,16242,15848,16082,16200,16147,36395,12370 2003.352.23:02:06.27/tpi/15693,15912,15939,16187,16159,16091,28281 2003.352.23:02:06.85/tsys1/51.8,50.8,47.9,47.2,47.3,39.6,39.8,40.4,49.6,43.7 2003.352.23:02:06.86/tsys2/56.6,60.1,69.0,63.8,55.1,55.7,61.3 2003.352.23:02:10.93/wx/-19.6,965.4,72.2 2003.352.23:02:11.00/cable/+3.82933E-02 2003.352.23:02:11.06/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36399,28222,0,1pps 2003.352.23:02:11.11/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12366,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.23:02:11.19/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15488,16015,545,1pps 2003.352.23:02:11.28/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16092,16265,554,1pps 2003.352.23:02:11.37/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15932,16009,550,1pps 2003.352.23:02:11.87/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:02:12.03#setcl#time/313126812,1,2003,352,23,02,12.00,0.206,4.664,1 2003.352.23:02:12.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:02:14.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:02:14.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:02:14.23:!2003.352.23:03:44 2003.352.23:02:59.75;"weather - clear 2003.352.23:03:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:03:44.00:et 2003.352.23:03:44.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:03:47.05:tape 2003.352.23:03:47.12/tape/low,07718,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:03:47.12:postob 2003.352.23:03:47.13:scan_name=352-2306 2003.352.23:03:47.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.352.23:03:53.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.23:03:58.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.23:04:07.43:!2003.352.23:06:00 2003.352.23:06:00.00:tape 2003.352.23:06:00.07/tape/low,07718,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:06:00.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:06:00.12:!2003.352.23:06:00 2003.352.23:06:00.12:preob 2003.352.23:06:02.88/tpical/19872,19203,20344,20316,19876,21020,20943,21043,63391,22322 2003.352.23:06:02.96/tpical/19048,18928,18323,18714,19014,19233,43085 2003.352.23:06:03.04:!2003.352.23:06:10 2003.352.23:06:10.00:tape 2003.352.23:06:10.07/tape/low,07602,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:06:10.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:06:10.08:midob 2003.352.23:06:10.19/tpi/15928,15363,16112,16072,15683,16000,15923,16057,50317,17341 2003.352.23:06:10.27/tpi/16168,16267,16010,16197,16066,16239,37063 2003.352.23:06:10.85/tsys1/71.7,70.4,67.4,66.7,66.1,56.3,55.9,56.8,68.4,61.9 2003.352.23:06:10.86/tsys2/71.5,77.9,88.2,81.9,69.6,69.3,79.1 2003.352.23:06:14.77/wx/-19.7,965.3,72.3 2003.352.23:06:14.84/cable/+3.82872E-02 2003.352.23:06:14.90/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,50310,37080,0,1pps 2003.352.23:06:14.95/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,17330,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:06:15.04/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.28, -5.53,lock,16306,15837,545,1pps 2003.352.23:06:15.13/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.09, -0.46,lock,15996,15951,554,1pps 2003.352.23:06:15.22/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.74,lock,16004,16326,550,1pps 2003.352.23:06:15.72/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:06:16.03#setcl#time/313151212,1,2003,352,23,06,16.00,0.203,4.732,1 2003.352.23:06:16.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:06:18.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:06:18.23?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.352.23:06:18.23?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.352.23:06:18.24/onsource/SLEWING 2003.352.23:06:18.24:!2003.352.23:08:04 2003.352.23:08:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:08:04.00:et 2003.352.23:08:04.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:08:07.05:tape 2003.352.23:08:07.12/tape/low,06066,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:08:07.12:postob 2003.352.23:08:07.13:scan_name=352-2309 2003.352.23:08:07.13:source=2149+056,214907.7,053806.8,1950.0 2003.352.23:08:13.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.23:08:18.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.23:08:27.43:!2003.352.23:09:22 2003.352.23:09:22.00:tape 2003.352.23:09:22.07/tape/low,06066,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:09:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:09:22.12:!2003.352.23:09:22 2003.352.23:09:22.12:preob 2003.352.23:09:24.88/tpical/20643,20815,21959,21850,20762,22875,22671,22489,52009,18361 2003.352.23:09:24.96/tpical/19241,19430,18883,19333,19649,19867,36237 2003.352.23:09:25.04:!2003.352.23:09:32 2003.352.23:09:32.00:tape 2003.352.23:09:32.07/tape/low,05950,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:09:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:09:32.08:midob 2003.352.23:09:32.19/tpi/15634,15748,16386,16257,15440,16252,16135,16063,39066,13383 2003.352.23:09:32.27/tpi/15832,16158,16064,16266,16107,16307,30303 2003.352.23:09:32.85/tsys1/55.4,54.8,52.1,51.2,51.3,43.4,43.5,44.1,53.4,47.7 2003.352.23:09:32.86/tsys2/59.2,62.9,72.6,67.5,58.1,58.5,65.4 2003.352.23:09:37.71/wx/-19.5,965.4,73.1 2003.352.23:09:37.87/cable/+3.82890E-02 2003.352.23:09:37.93/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39073,30282,0,1pps 2003.352.23:09:37.98/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13383,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.23:09:38.06/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15762,15456,545,1pps 2003.352.23:09:38.14/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16255,16207,554,1pps 2003.352.23:09:38.22/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16057,16149,550,1pps 2003.352.23:09:38.72/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:09:41.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:09:41.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:09:41.23:!2003.352.23:11:35 2003.352.23:09:42.03#setcl#time/313171812,1,2003,352,23,09,42.00,0.200,4.789,1 2003.352.23:09:42.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:11:35.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:11:35.00:et 2003.352.23:11:35.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:11:38.05:tape 2003.352.23:11:38.12/tape/low,04294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:11:38.12:postob 2003.352.23:11:38.13:scan_name=352-2312 2003.352.23:11:38.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.352.23:11:44.65:sx4cb=6 2003.352.23:11:49.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.352.23:11:58.43:!2003.352.23:12:30 2003.352.23:12:30.00:tape 2003.352.23:12:30.07/tape/low,04294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:12:30.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:12:30.12:!2003.352.23:12:30 2003.352.23:12:30.12:preob 2003.352.23:12:32.88/tpical/20935,21299,21826,22165,21234,22814,22922,22686,50418,17800 2003.352.23:12:32.96/tpical/19593,18980,18912,19424,19726,19506,40755 2003.352.23:12:33.04:!2003.352.23:12:40 2003.352.23:12:40.00:tape 2003.352.23:12:40.07/tape/low,04178,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:12:40.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:12:40.08:midob 2003.352.23:12:40.19/tpi/15686,15937,16093,16324,15639,15977,16065,16007,37485,12813 2003.352.23:12:40.27/tpi/16083,15711,16058,16277,16117,15957,34079 2003.352.23:12:40.85/tsys1/53.1,52.4,49.7,49.3,49.4,41.3,41.3,42.3,51.3,45.5 2003.352.23:12:40.86/tsys2/58.4,61.2,71.7,65.8,57.0,57.4,65.5 2003.352.23:12:45.91/wx/-19.6,965.2,73.2 2003.352.23:12:46.04/cable/+3.82908E-02 2003.352.23:12:46.10/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37502,33335,0,1pps 2003.352.23:12:46.15/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12815,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:12:46.23/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15956,15609,545,1pps 2003.352.23:12:46.32/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,15990,15965,554,1pps 2003.352.23:12:46.40/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16054,16066,550,1pps 2003.352.23:12:46.90/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:12:49.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.352.23:12:49.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:12:49.23:!2003.352.23:15:50 2003.352.23:12:50.03#setcl#time/313190612,1,2003,352,23,12,50.00,0.198,4.841,1 2003.352.23:12:50.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:15:50.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:15:50.00:et 2003.352.23:15:50.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:15:53.05:tape 2003.352.23:15:53.12/tape/low,01628,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:15:53.12:postob 2003.352.23:15:53.13:scan_name=352-2319 2003.352.23:15:53.14:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.352.23:15:59.65:midtp 2003.352.23:16:02.37/tpzero/213,337,257,329,276,287,321,323,639,205 2003.352.23:16:02.45/tpzero/320,317,312,346,274,269,448 2003.352.23:16:03.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.03 2003.352.23:16:03.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.45 2003.352.23:16:03.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.352.23:16:03.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.352.23:16:03.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.352.23:16:03.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.60 2003.352.23:16:03.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,56.96 2003.352.23:16:03.83:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:16:09.47/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:16:18.61:fastr=1m3s 2003.352.23:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.352.23:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.91 2003.352.23:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.45 2003.352.23:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.23:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.352.23:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.352.23:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.53 2003.352.23:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,56.27 2003.352.23:17:21.71:!+5s 2003.352.23:17:23.64@wx 2003.352.23:17:27.40/wx/-18.9,965.2,74.8 2003.352.23:17:27.40:!2003.352.23:18:53 2003.352.23:18:53.00:tape 2003.352.23:18:53.07/tape/low,00210,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:18:53.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:18:53.12:!2003.352.23:18:53 2003.352.23:18:53.12:preob 2003.352.23:18:55.87/tpical/20922,21259,21770,22085,22039,23504,23195,23366,50321,17627 2003.352.23:18:55.95/tpical/19420,19495,19097,19095,19757,19644,34807 2003.352.23:18:56.03:!2003.352.23:19:03 2003.352.23:19:03.00:tape 2003.352.23:19:03.07/tape/low,00325,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:19:03.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:19:03.08:midob 2003.352.23:19:03.19/tpi/15676,15883,15983,16164,16061,16274,16088,16275,37269,12573 2003.352.23:19:03.27/tpi/15900,16101,16136,15968,16090,16034,28853 2003.352.23:19:03.85/tsys1/53.1,52.1,48.9,48.1,47.5,39.8,39.9,40.5,50.5,44.0 2003.352.23:19:03.86/tsys2/57.5,60.5,69.5,64.9,56.1,56.8,62.0 2003.352.23:19:08.86/wx/-18.9,965.3,74.7 2003.352.23:19:08.92/cable/+3.82983E-02 2003.352.23:19:08.98/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37269,28863,0,1pps 2003.352.23:19:09.03/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12579,70,4059,1pps 2003.352.23:19:09.11/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15879,15581,545,1pps 2003.352.23:19:09.20/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16285,16047,554,1pps 2003.352.23:19:09.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16136,16208,550,1pps 2003.352.23:19:09.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:19:10.04#setcl#time/313228613,1,2003,352,23,19,10.00,0.146,4.947,0 2003.352.23:19:10.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:19:12.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:19:12.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:19:12.23:!2003.352.23:20:41 2003.352.23:20:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:20:41.00:et 2003.352.23:20:41.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:20:44.05:tape 2003.352.23:20:44.12/tape/low,01648,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:20:44.12:postob 2003.352.23:20:44.13:scan_name=352-2323a 2003.352.23:20:44.14:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.352.23:20:50.65:check80f 2003.352.23:21:23.38/parity/4.,16.,16.,28.,6.,24.,0.,14.,16.,30.,414.,6.,10.,24. 2003.352.23:21:23.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.352.23:21:48.96:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:21:53.60/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:22:02.74:!2003.352.23:22:54 2003.352.23:22:54.00:tape 2003.352.23:22:54.07/tape/low,01649,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:22:54.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:22:54.12:!2003.352.23:22:54 2003.352.23:22:54.12:preob 2003.352.23:22:56.88/tpical/18591,18885,19383,19746,18768,20196,20151,20262,$$$$$,26951 2003.352.23:22:56.96/tpical/18595,18071,17934,18450,18774,18621,48746 2003.352.23:22:57.04:!2003.352.23:23:04 2003.352.23:23:04.00:tape 2003.352.23:23:04.07/tape/low,01764,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:23:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:23:04.08:midob 2003.352.23:23:04.19/tpi/15635,15868,16131,16380,15523,16121,16061,16175,65171,22010 2003.352.23:23:04.27/tpi/16275,15937,16027,16359,16287,16122,42865 2003.352.23:23:04.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.352.23:23:04.85/tsys1/93.9,92.7,87.9,85.8,84.6,69.9,69.3,69.8,$$$$$$$$,79.4 2003.352.23:23:04.86/tsys2/89.4,95.2,107.1,99.6,83.7,82.5,93.8 2003.352.23:23:09.44/wx/-18.9,965.3,74.2 2003.352.23:23:09.56/cable/+3.82964E-02 2003.352.23:23:09.62/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,65319,42881,0,1pps 2003.352.23:23:09.67/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,22068,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:23:09.75/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -6.62, -6.92,lock,15923,15657,545,1pps 2003.352.23:23:09.83/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -0.90, -1.36,lock,16156,16310,554,1pps 2003.352.23:23:09.91/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 0.36, -0.18,lock,16023,16222,550,1pps 2003.352.23:23:10.41/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:23:11.05#setcl#time/313252714,1,2003,352,23,23,11.00,0.096,5.014,-1 2003.352.23:23:11.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:23:13.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:23:13.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:23:13.23:!2003.352.23:25:31 2003.352.23:25:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:25:31.00:et 2003.352.23:25:31.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:25:34.05:tape 2003.352.23:25:34.12/tape/low,03742,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:25:34.12:postob 2003.352.23:25:34.13:scan_name=352-2327 2003.352.23:25:34.14:source=1741-038,174120.6,-034848.9,1950.0 2003.352.23:25:40.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:25:45.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:25:54.43:!2003.352.23:26:58 2003.352.23:26:58.00:tape 2003.352.23:26:58.07/tape/low,03742,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:26:58.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:26:58.12:!2003.352.23:26:58 2003.352.23:26:58.12:preob 2003.352.23:27:00.88/tpical/21688,20891,22042,22086,22150,23185,23014,22827,52361,18583 2003.352.23:27:00.96/tpical/19825,19849,19513,19379,20078,19886,35142 2003.352.23:27:01.04:!2003.352.23:27:08 2003.352.23:27:08.00:tape 2003.352.23:27:08.07/tape/low,03858,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:27:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:27:08.08:midob 2003.352.23:27:08.19/tpi/16750,16103,16749,16745,16778,16730,16640,16558,40011,13773 2003.352.23:27:08.27/tpi/16687,16782,16834,16483,16639,16500,29767 2003.352.23:27:08.85/tsys1/60.3,59.3,56.1,55.3,55.3,45.9,46.1,46.6,57.4,50.8 2003.352.23:27:08.86/tsys2/67.8,69.8,80.2,72.4,61.9,62.3,70.9 2003.352.23:27:13.28/wx/-19.0,965.2,73.9 2003.352.23:27:13.40/cable/+3.82962E-02 2003.352.23:27:13.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40019,29734,0,1pps 2003.352.23:27:13.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13778,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:27:13.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16110,15790,545,1pps 2003.352.23:27:13.67/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16348,16243,554,1pps 2003.352.23:27:13.76/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,15994,16063,550,1pps 2003.352.23:27:14.26/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:27:17.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:27:17.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:27:17.23:!2003.352.23:28:46 2003.352.23:27:18.03#setcl#time/313277412,1,2003,352,23,27,18.00,0.189,5.082,1 2003.352.23:27:18.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:28:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:28:46.00:et 2003.352.23:28:46.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:28:49.05:tape 2003.352.23:28:49.12/tape/low,05180,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:28:49.12:postob 2003.352.23:28:49.13:scan_name=352-2329 2003.352.23:28:49.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.352.23:28:55.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:29:00.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:29:09.43:!2003.352.23:29:26 2003.352.23:29:26.00:tape 2003.352.23:29:26.07/tape/low,05180,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:29:26.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:29:26.12:!2003.352.23:29:26 2003.352.23:29:26.12:preob 2003.352.23:29:28.88/tpical/21102,21429,21970,22147,21404,23032,22763,23013,50838,17982 2003.352.23:29:28.96/tpical/19323,19355,18918,19348,19903,19766,34883 2003.352.23:29:29.04:!2003.352.23:29:36 2003.352.23:29:36.00:tape 2003.352.23:29:36.07/tape/low,05297,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:29:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:29:36.08:midob 2003.352.23:29:36.19/tpi/15821,16037,16165,16280,15701,16103,15895,16182,37748,12908 2003.352.23:29:36.27/tpi/15773,15958,15949,16120,16148,16080,28928 2003.352.23:29:36.85/tsys1/53.2,52.4,49.3,48.9,48.7,41.1,40.8,41.8,51.0,45.1 2003.352.23:29:36.86/tsys2/56.6,59.9,68.5,63.5,55.0,55.8,62.2 2003.352.23:29:42.21/wx/-19.0,965.2,73.7 2003.352.23:29:42.35/cable/+3.82986E-02 2003.352.23:29:42.41/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37738,28850,0,1pps 2003.352.23:29:42.46/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12907,70,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:29:42.54/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16046,15700,545,1pps 2003.352.23:29:42.63/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16099,16117,554,1pps 2003.352.23:29:42.72/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15942,16032,550,1pps 2003.352.23:29:43.22/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:29:44.04#setcl#time/313292013,1,2003,352,23,29,44.00,0.141,5.123,0 2003.352.23:29:44.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:29:46.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:29:46.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:29:46.23:!2003.352.23:31:14 2003.352.23:31:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:31:14.00:et 2003.352.23:31:14.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:31:17.05:tape 2003.352.23:31:17.12/tape/low,06619,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:31:17.12:postob 2003.352.23:31:17.13:scan_name=352-2332 2003.352.23:31:17.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.352.23:31:23.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:31:28.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:31:37.43:!2003.352.23:32:27 2003.352.23:32:27.00:tape 2003.352.23:32:27.07/tape/low,06619,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:32:27.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:32:27.12:!2003.352.23:32:27 2003.352.23:32:27.12:preob 2003.352.23:32:29.88/tpical/21226,21346,21719,21890,21344,22998,22833,22715,53472,18919 2003.352.23:32:29.96/tpical/19960,19308,19066,19352,20058,19858,35399 2003.352.23:32:30.04:!2003.352.23:32:37 2003.352.23:32:37.00:tape 2003.352.23:32:37.07/tape/low,06735,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:32:37.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:32:37.08:midob 2003.352.23:32:37.19/tpi/16245,16287,16348,16420,15987,16437,16344,16322,40456,13884 2003.352.23:32:37.27/tpi/16449,16057,16208,16253,16410,16275,29484 2003.352.23:32:37.85/tsys1/57.9,56.8,53.9,53.0,52.8,44.3,44.4,45.0,55.1,48.9 2003.352.23:32:37.86/tsys2/59.7,62.9,72.3,66.7,57.5,58.1,63.8 2003.352.23:32:42.23/wx/-19.1,965.1,73.4 2003.352.23:32:42.35/cable/+3.82972E-02 2003.352.23:32:42.41/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40462,29715,0,1pps 2003.352.23:32:42.46/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13893,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:32:42.54/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16297,15992,545,1pps 2003.352.23:32:42.63/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.61,lock,16059,15915,554,1pps 2003.352.23:32:42.72/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16219,16330,550,1pps 2003.352.23:32:43.22/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:32:44.04#setcl#time/313310013,1,2003,352,23,32,44.00,0.139,5.173,0 2003.352.23:32:44.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:32:46.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:32:46.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:32:46.23:!2003.352.23:34:15 2003.352.23:34:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:34:15.00:et 2003.352.23:34:15.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:34:18.05:tape 2003.352.23:34:18.12/tape/low,08057,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:34:18.12:postob 2003.352.23:34:18.13:scan_name=352-2336 2003.352.23:34:18.14:source=1634+213,163428.7,211856.6,1950.0 2003.352.23:34:24.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:34:29.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:34:38.43:!2003.352.23:36:28 2003.352.23:36:28.00:tape 2003.352.23:36:28.07/tape/low,08057,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:36:28.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:36:28.12:!2003.352.23:36:28 2003.352.23:36:28.12:preob 2003.352.23:36:30.88/tpical/21359,21829,22130,22420,21859,23413,23520,23353,49384,17458 2003.352.23:36:30.96/tpical/19688,19640,19433,19413,19876,19835,33609 2003.352.23:36:31.04:!2003.352.23:36:38 2003.352.23:36:38.00:tape 2003.352.23:36:38.07/tape/low,08174,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:36:38.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:36:38.08:midob 2003.352.23:36:38.19/tpi/15845,16161,16089,16262,15823,16113,16237,16156,36266,12356 2003.352.23:36:38.27/tpi/15987,16102,16317,16124,16065,16058,27638 2003.352.23:36:38.85/tsys1/51.0,50.3,47.2,46.6,46.4,39.0,39.3,39.6,48.9,42.9 2003.352.23:36:38.86/tsys2/55.0,58.0,66.8,62.4,53.9,54.3,59.2 2003.352.23:36:42.80/wx/-19.0,965.1,73.9 2003.352.23:36:42.83/cable/+3.82995E-02 2003.352.23:36:42.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36270,27641,0,1pps 2003.352.23:36:42.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12360,71,4059,1pps 2003.352.23:36:43.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16165,15941,545,1pps 2003.352.23:36:43.11/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16114,16255,554,1pps 2003.352.23:36:43.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 1.90,lock,16328,15968,550,1pps 2003.352.23:36:43.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:36:44.03#setcl#time/313334012,1,2003,352,23,36,44.00,0.183,5.240,1 2003.352.23:36:44.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:36:46.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:36:46.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:36:46.23:!2003.352.23:43:04 2003.352.23:43:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:43:04.00:et 2003.352.23:43:04.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:43:07.05:tape 2003.352.23:43:07.12/tape/low,13337,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:43:07.12:postob 2003.352.23:43:07.13:scan_name=352-2346 2003.352.23:43:07.13:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.352.23:43:13.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:43:18.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:43:27.43:!2003.352.23:45:53 2003.352.23:45:53.00:tape 2003.352.23:45:53.07/tape/low,13337,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:45:53.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:45:53.12:!2003.352.23:45:53 2003.352.23:45:53.12:preob 2003.352.23:45:55.88/tpical/21042,20996,21343,21267,20812,21998,22164,22214,55261,19538 2003.352.23:45:55.96/tpical/19048,18924,18749,18963,19636,19735,38585 2003.352.23:45:56.04:!2003.352.23:46:03 2003.352.23:46:03.00:tape 2003.352.23:46:03.07/tape/low,13452,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:46:03.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:46:03.08:midob 2003.352.23:46:03.19/tpi/16237,16166,16192,16108,15781,15964,16092,16208,42197,14456 2003.352.23:46:03.27/tpi/15808,16105,16040,16067,16193,16315,32752 2003.352.23:46:03.85/tsys1/60.0,59.0,55.7,55.1,55.5,46.8,46.8,47.6,57.3,50.5 2003.352.23:46:03.86/tsys2/62.1,72.8,75.5,70.6,60.1,61.0,72.0 2003.352.23:46:09.04/wx/-19.2,965.0,73.1 2003.352.23:46:09.07/cable/+3.82837E-02 2003.352.23:46:09.13/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42193,33096,0,1pps 2003.352.23:46:09.18/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14457,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:46:09.26/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16176,15806,545,1pps 2003.352.23:46:09.35/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,15960,16265,554,1pps 2003.352.23:46:09.44/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16048,16159,550,1pps 2003.352.23:46:09.94/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:46:10.04#setcl#time/313390613,1,2003,352,23,46,10.00,0.133,5.397,0 2003.352.23:46:10.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:46:12.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:46:12.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:46:12.22:!2003.352.23:47:41 2003.352.23:47:23.64@wx 2003.352.23:47:27.60/wx/-19.2,964.9,73.0 2003.352.23:47:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:47:41.00:et 2003.352.23:47:41.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:47:44.05:tape 2003.352.23:47:44.12/tape/low,14775,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.352.23:47:44.12:postob 2003.352.23:47:44.13:scan_name=352-2349a 2003.352.23:47:44.14:source=0014+813,001404.5,811828.2,1950.0 2003.352.23:47:50.65:sx4ca=7 2003.352.23:47:55.29/pass/7,,auto,-165.0,,-164.6,,0.4, 2003.352.23:48:04.43:!2003.352.23:49:08 2003.352.23:49:08.00:tape 2003.352.23:49:08.07/tape/low,14775,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:49:08.07:st=for,160 2003.352.23:49:08.12:!2003.352.23:49:08 2003.352.23:49:08.12:preob 2003.352.23:49:10.89/tpical/21138,21443,21889,22219,22263,23256,23404,23135,50661,17783 2003.352.23:49:10.97/tpical/19714,19012,18902,19332,20016,19904,35207 2003.352.23:49:11.05:!2003.352.23:49:18 2003.352.23:49:18.00:tape 2003.352.23:49:18.07/tape/low,14891,off,moving,locked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:49:18.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:49:18.08:midob 2003.352.23:49:18.19/tpi/15881,16053,16141,16315,16301,16208,16342,16203,37634,12740 2003.352.23:49:18.27/tpi/16154,15734,15993,16196,16314,16284,29187 2003.352.23:49:18.85/tsys1/53.6,52.5,49.7,48.7,48.4,40.7,40.8,41.2,51.1,44.7 2003.352.23:49:18.86/tsys2/57.8,61.1,70.1,65.7,56.3,57.5,62.1 2003.352.23:49:23.79/wx/-19.1,964.8,73.4 2003.352.23:49:23.95/cable/+3.82921E-02 2003.352.23:49:24.01/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37643,29177,0,1pps 2003.352.23:49:24.07/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12742,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:49:24.16/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16062,15729,545,1pps 2003.352.23:49:24.25/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16192,15945,554,1pps 2003.352.23:49:24.34/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15986,16045,550,1pps 2003.352.23:49:24.84/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:49:25.03#setcl#time/313410112,1,2003,352,23,49,25.00,0.176,5.451,1 2003.352.23:49:25.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:49:27.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:49:27.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:49:27.22:!2003.352.23:50:56 2003.352.23:50:56.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:50:56.00:et 2003.352.23:50:56.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:50:59.05:tape 2003.352.23:50:59.12/tape/low,16214,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:50:59.12:postob 2003.352.23:50:59.13:scan_name=352-2355 2003.352.23:50:59.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.352.23:51:05.65:midtp 2003.352.23:51:08.37/tpzero/209,341,261,332,287,290,329,330,646,207 2003.352.23:51:08.45/tpzero/324,320,315,349,281,277,447 2003.352.23:51:09.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.39 2003.352.23:51:09.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.58 2003.352.23:51:09.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.352.23:51:09.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.352.23:51:09.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.352.23:51:09.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.71 2003.352.23:51:09.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.352.23:51:09.83:sx4cb=8 2003.352.23:51:14.85/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.352.23:51:23.99:fastf=1m4s 2003.352.23:52:28.09:!+5s 2003.352.23:52:33.10:!2003.352.23:55:03 2003.352.23:55:03.00:tape 2003.352.23:55:03.07/tape/low,17654,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:55:03.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:55:03.12:!2003.352.23:55:03 2003.352.23:55:03.12:preob 2003.352.23:55:05.88/tpical/21332,21813,22115,22377,21758,23754,23334,23579,49296,17358 2003.352.23:55:05.96/tpical/19652,19683,18986,19431,19954,19923,33986 2003.352.23:55:06.04:!2003.352.23:55:13 2003.352.23:55:13.00:tape 2003.352.23:55:13.07/tape/low,17537,off,moving,locked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:55:13.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:55:13.08:midob 2003.352.23:55:13.19/tpi/15850,16187,16103,16220,15741,16323,16066,16281,36203,12271 2003.352.23:55:13.27/tpi/15966,16158,15934,16114,16133,16130,28179 2003.352.23:55:13.85/tsys1/51.4,50.7,47.4,46.4,46.2,38.8,39.0,39.3,48.9,42.7 2003.352.23:55:13.86/tsys2/55.2,58.4,66.5,61.8,53.9,54.3,62.1 2003.352.23:55:18.92/wx/-19.2,964.7,73.4 2003.352.23:55:18.99/cable/+3.82990E-02 2003.352.23:55:19.05/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36197,28031,0,1pps 2003.352.23:55:19.10/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12271,71,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:55:19.18/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16140,15923,545,1pps 2003.352.23:55:19.27/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16325,16152,554,1pps 2003.352.23:55:19.35/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15923,15951,550,1pps 2003.352.23:55:19.85/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:55:22.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:55:22.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:55:22.23:!2003.352.23:56:51 2003.352.23:55:23.03#setcl#time/313445912,1,2003,352,23,55,23.00,0.173,5.551,1 2003.352.23:55:23.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:56:51.00:data_valid=off 2003.352.23:56:51.00:et 2003.352.23:56:51.04:!+3s 2003.352.23:56:54.05:tape 2003.352.23:56:54.12/tape/low,16215,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:56:54.12:postob 2003.352.23:56:54.13:scan_name=352-2359 2003.352.23:56:54.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.352.23:57:00.65:check80r 2003.352.23:57:33.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 25 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.352.23:57:33.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 29 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.352.23:57:33.39/parity/74.,30.,26.,26.,6.,10.,6.,2.,14.,72.,614.,38.,877.,66. 2003.352.23:57:33.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0 2003.352.23:57:36.86;"weather - clear 2003.352.23:57:58.96:sx4cb=8 2003.352.23:58:03.60/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.352.23:58:12.74:!2003.352.23:59:04 2003.352.23:59:04.00:tape 2003.352.23:59:04.07/tape/low,16215,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:59:04.07:st=rev,160 2003.352.23:59:04.12:!2003.352.23:59:04 2003.352.23:59:04.12:preob 2003.352.23:59:06.88/tpical/20908,20766,21038,21188,20544,21756,21968,21707,57647,20363 2003.352.23:59:06.96/tpical/19011,18819,18628,18791,19401,19492,46198 2003.352.23:59:07.04:!2003.352.23:59:14 2003.352.23:59:14.00:tape 2003.352.23:59:14.07/tape/low,16098,off,moving,locked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.352.23:59:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.352.23:59:14.08:midob 2003.352.23:59:14.19/tpi/16281,16175,16168,16278,15782,16015,16202,16058,44499,15329 2003.352.23:59:14.27/tpi/15881,15882,16090,16039,16155,16251,39944 2003.352.23:59:14.85/tsys1/62.5,62.1,58.8,58.5,58.6,49.3,49.6,50.1,60.0,54.1 2003.352.23:59:14.86/tsys2/64.6,68.9,80.8,74.1,63.6,64.1,82.1 2003.352.23:59:19.49/wx/-19.2,964.6,73.5 2003.352.23:59:19.63/cable/+3.82914E-02 2003.352.23:59:19.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,44500,40172,0,1pps 2003.352.23:59:19.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15328,72,4063,1pps 2003.352.23:59:19.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -5.04,lock,16177,15779,545,1pps 2003.352.23:59:19.90/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,16033,16090,554,1pps 2003.352.23:59:19.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16078,16053,550,1pps 2003.352.23:59:20.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.352.23:59:21.04#setcl#time/313469713,1,2003,352,23,59,21.00,0.128,5.617,0 2003.352.23:59:21.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.352.23:59:23.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.352.23:59:23.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.352.23:59:23.22:!2003.353.00:01:02 2003.353.00:01:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:01:02.00:et 2003.353.00:01:02.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:01:05.05:tape 2003.353.00:01:05.12/tape/low,14643,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:01:05.12:postob 2003.353.00:01:05.13:scan_name=353-0002 2003.353.00:01:05.14:source=2149+056,214907.7,053806.8,1950.0 2003.353.00:01:11.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:01:16.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:01:25.43:!2003.353.00:02:03 2003.353.00:02:03.00:tape 2003.353.00:02:03.07/tape/low,14643,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:02:03.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:02:03.12:!2003.353.00:02:03 2003.353.00:02:03.12:preob 2003.353.00:02:05.88/tpical/21370,20641,21788,22053,21829,22821,22629,22453,51573,18225 2003.353.00:02:05.96/tpical/19128,19387,18762,19258,19654,19867,36710 2003.353.00:02:06.04:!2003.353.00:02:13 2003.353.00:02:13.00:tape 2003.353.00:02:13.07/tape/low,14526,off,moving,locked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:02:13.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:02:13.08:midob 2003.353.00:02:13.19/tpi/16117,15534,16114,16286,16125,16092,15975,15908,38479,13189 2003.353.00:02:13.27/tpi/15723,16074,15954,16174,16105,16308,30620 2003.353.00:02:13.85/tsys1/54.5,53.5,50.3,49.8,50.0,42.3,42.3,42.8,52.0,46.4 2003.353.00:02:13.86/tsys2/58.8,61.8,72.4,66.7,58.0,58.6,64.4 2003.353.00:02:17.87/wx/-19.1,964.6,74.1 2003.353.00:02:18.03/cable/+3.82895E-02 2003.353.00:02:18.09/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38491,30587,0,1pps 2003.353.00:02:18.14/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13188,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:02:18.22/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15522,16027,545,1pps 2003.353.00:02:18.31/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16104,16054,554,1pps 2003.353.00:02:18.40/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,15931,16021,550,1pps 2003.353.00:02:18.90/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:02:21.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:02:21.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:02:21.22:!2003.353.00:04:05 2003.353.00:02:22.05#setcl#time/313487814,1,2003,353,00,02,22.00,0.085,5.667,-1 2003.353.00:02:22.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:04:05.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:04:05.00:et 2003.353.00:04:05.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:04:08.05:tape 2003.353.00:04:08.12/tape/low,13017,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:04:08.12:postob 2003.353.00:04:08.13:scan_name=353-0005 2003.353.00:04:08.14:source=1749+096,174910.4,093942.9,1950.0 2003.353.00:04:14.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:04:19.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:04:28.43:!2003.353.00:05:49 2003.353.00:05:49.00:tape 2003.353.00:05:49.07/tape/low,13017,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:05:49.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:05:49.12:!2003.353.00:05:49 2003.353.00:05:49.12:preob 2003.353.00:05:51.88/tpical/21883,21349,21916,22407,22479,23528,23157,23407,50651,17882 2003.353.00:05:51.96/tpical/19339,19476,19018,19530,19813,19994,34438 2003.353.00:05:52.04:!2003.353.00:05:59 2003.353.00:05:59.00:tape 2003.353.00:05:59.07/tape/low,12901,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:05:59.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:05:59.08:midob 2003.353.00:05:59.19/tpi/16377,15973,16097,16442,16488,16407,16160,16426,37524,12809 2003.353.00:05:59.27/tpi/15807,16033,16020,16286,16082,16262,28419 2003.353.00:05:59.85/tsys1/52.9,52.3,49.0,48.6,48.7,40.7,40.7,41.5,50.6,44.7 2003.353.00:05:59.86/tsys2/57.0,59.3,68.1,63.9,55.1,55.7,60.4 2003.353.00:06:03.71/wx/-18.7,964.6,74.9 2003.353.00:06:03.79/cable/+3.82971E-02 2003.353.00:06:03.85/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37535,28408,0,1pps 2003.353.00:06:03.90/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12815,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:06:03.98/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15976,15646,545,1pps 2003.353.00:06:04.06/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16040,16046,554,1pps 2003.353.00:06:04.14/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16037,16091,550,1pps 2003.353.00:06:04.64/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:06:07.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:06:07.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:06:07.22:!2003.353.00:07:37 2003.353.00:06:08.05#setcl#time/313510414,1,2003,353,00,06,08.00,0.084,5.730,-1 2003.353.00:06:08.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:07:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:07:37.00:et 2003.353.00:07:37.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:07:40.05:tape 2003.353.00:07:40.12/tape/low,11579,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:07:40.12:postob 2003.353.00:07:40.13:scan_name=353-0009 2003.353.00:07:40.13:source=1357+769,135742.2,765753.8,1950.0 2003.353.00:07:46.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:07:51.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:08:00.43:!2003.353.00:09:06 2003.353.00:09:06.00:tape 2003.353.00:09:06.07/tape/low,11579,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:09:06.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:09:06.12:!2003.353.00:09:06 2003.353.00:09:06.12:preob 2003.353.00:09:08.88/tpical/21133,21417,21909,22214,22140,23112,23298,22985,50600,17659 2003.353.00:09:08.96/tpical/19473,19480,19069,19571,19688,19590,35350 2003.353.00:09:09.04:!2003.353.00:09:16 2003.353.00:09:16.00:tape 2003.353.00:09:16.07/tape/low,11463,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:09:16.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:09:16.08:midob 2003.353.00:09:16.19/tpi/15830,16028,16105,16266,16166,16033,16193,16025,37491,12608 2003.353.00:09:16.27/tpi/15924,16073,16119,16337,16004,15955,29486 2003.353.00:09:16.85/tsys1/53.0,52.4,49.1,48.2,47.8,40.0,40.2,40.6,50.6,44.2 2003.353.00:09:16.86/tsys2/57.1,60.1,69.6,64.3,55.5,56.1,64.4 2003.353.00:09:21.73/wx/-18.6,964.6,74.7 2003.353.00:09:21.87/cable/+3.82977E-02 2003.353.00:09:21.93/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37468,29450,0,1pps 2003.353.00:09:21.98/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12594,72,4059,1pps 2003.353.00:09:22.06/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16017,15678,545,1pps 2003.353.00:09:22.15/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16013,16176,554,1pps 2003.353.00:09:22.24/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16122,16155,550,1pps 2003.353.00:09:22.74/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:09:23.03#setcl#time/313529912,1,2003,353,00,09,23.00,0.166,5.784,1 2003.353.00:09:23.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:09:25.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:09:25.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:09:25.22:!2003.353.00:10:54 2003.353.00:10:54.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:10:54.00:et 2003.353.00:10:54.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:10:57.05:tape 2003.353.00:10:57.12/tape/low,10141,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.9,85,okay 2003.353.00:10:57.12:postob 2003.353.00:10:57.13:scan_name=353-0013 2003.353.00:10:57.14:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.353.00:11:03.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:11:08.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:11:17.43:!2003.353.00:13:45 2003.353.00:13:45.00:tape 2003.353.00:13:45.07/tape/low,10141,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:13:45.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:13:45.12:!2003.353.00:13:45 2003.353.00:13:45.12:preob 2003.353.00:13:47.88/tpical/21687,21148,22460,22302,21941,23367,23458,23222,49960,17461 2003.353.00:13:47.96/tpical/19292,19289,19381,19399,19961,19890,34372 2003.353.00:13:48.04:!2003.353.00:13:55 2003.353.00:13:55.00:tape 2003.353.00:13:55.07/tape/low,10024,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:13:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:13:55.08:midob 2003.353.00:13:55.19/tpi/16164,15737,16404,16261,15890,16102,16201,16082,36846,12395 2003.353.00:13:55.27/tpi/15758,15866,16323,16178,16207,16211,28409 2003.353.00:13:55.85/tsys1/52.0,51.2,48.0,47.5,46.4,39.2,39.4,39.7,49.7,43.3 2003.353.00:13:55.86/tsys2/56.8,59.0,68.1,63.9,55.2,56.3,61.0 2003.353.00:13:59.94/wx/-19.2,964.5,72.9 2003.353.00:14:00.11/cable/+3.83025E-02 2003.353.00:14:00.17/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36859,28420,0,1pps 2003.353.00:14:00.22/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12403,72,4059,1pps 2003.353.00:14:00.30/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15743,15411,545,1pps 2003.353.00:14:00.39/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16111,16321,554,1pps 2003.353.00:14:00.48/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.79,lock,16322,15925,550,1pps 2003.353.00:14:00.98/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:14:02.05#setcl#time/313557814,1,2003,353,00,14,02.00,0.082,5.861,-1 2003.353.00:14:02.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:14:05.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.00:14:05.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:14:05.23:!2003.353.00:15:33 2003.353.00:15:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:15:33.00:et 2003.353.00:15:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:15:36.05:tape 2003.353.00:15:36.12/tape/low,08702,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:15:36.12:postob 2003.353.00:15:36.13:scan_name=353-0017 2003.353.00:15:36.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.353.00:15:42.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:15:47.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:15:56.43:!2003.353.00:17:31 2003.353.00:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.00:17:27.78/wx/-19.2,964.4,73.0 2003.353.00:17:31.00:tape 2003.353.00:17:31.07/tape/low,08702,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:17:31.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:17:31.12:!2003.353.00:17:31 2003.353.00:17:31.12:preob 2003.353.00:17:33.88/tpical/21316,21805,22106,22390,21714,23728,23717,23497,49208,17307 2003.353.00:17:33.96/tpical/19493,19471,19189,19528,20003,20009,34594 2003.353.00:17:34.04:!2003.353.00:17:41 2003.353.00:17:41.00:tape 2003.353.00:17:41.07/tape/low,08586,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:17:41.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:17:41.08:midob 2003.353.00:17:41.19/tpi/15812,16117,16035,16238,15728,16304,16323,16240,36100,12242 2003.353.00:17:41.27/tpi/15787,15945,16069,16141,16102,16123,28646 2003.353.00:17:41.85/tsys1/51.0,49.9,46.8,46.5,46.4,38.8,38.9,39.5,48.7,42.8 2003.353.00:17:41.86/tsys2/54.2,57.6,65.6,60.6,52.7,53.0,61.6 2003.353.00:17:45.78/wx/-19.3,964.4,73.1 2003.353.00:17:45.87/cable/+3.82978E-02 2003.353.00:17:45.93/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36107,28623,0,1pps 2003.353.00:17:45.98/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12241,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:17:46.06/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16120,15850,545,1pps 2003.353.00:17:46.15/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16316,16162,554,1pps 2003.353.00:17:46.23/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16075,16133,550,1pps 2003.353.00:17:46.73/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:17:49.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:17:49.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:17:49.22:!2003.353.00:19:19 2003.353.00:17:50.05#setcl#time/313580614,1,2003,353,00,17,50.00,0.081,5.925,-1 2003.353.00:17:50.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:19:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:19:19.00:et 2003.353.00:19:19.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:19:22.05:tape 2003.353.00:19:22.12/tape/low,07263,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:19:22.12:postob 2003.353.00:19:22.13:scan_name=353-0020 2003.353.00:19:22.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.00:19:28.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:19:33.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:19:42.43:!2003.353.00:20:22 2003.353.00:20:22.00:tape 2003.353.00:20:22.07/tape/low,07263,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:20:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:20:22.12:!2003.353.00:20:22 2003.353.00:20:22.12:preob 2003.353.00:20:24.88/tpical/21569,20757,21848,22204,21803,22787,23074,22858,51882,18260 2003.353.00:20:24.96/tpical/19682,19696,19208,19659,19854,20060,35579 2003.353.00:20:25.04:!2003.353.00:20:32 2003.353.00:20:32.00:tape 2003.353.00:20:32.07/tape/low,07148,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:20:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:20:32.08:midob 2003.353.00:20:32.19/tpi/16320,15658,16238,16470,16137,16077,16314,16226,38809,13233 2003.353.00:20:32.27/tpi/16131,16325,16234,16414,16193,16386,29630 2003.353.00:20:32.85/tsys1/55.2,54.1,51.3,50.7,50.4,42.3,42.6,43.1,52.5,46.6 2003.353.00:20:32.86/tsys2/57.9,61.7,69.6,64.4,56.5,57.0,63.8 2003.353.00:20:37.61/wx/-18.8,964.3,74.4 2003.353.00:20:37.71/cable/+3.83011E-02 2003.353.00:20:37.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38824,29650,0,1pps 2003.353.00:20:37.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13233,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:20:37.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15655,16185,545,1pps 2003.353.00:20:37.99/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16076,16069,554,1pps 2003.353.00:20:38.08/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16242,16306,550,1pps 2003.353.00:20:38.58/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:20:41.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:20:41.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:20:41.22:!2003.353.00:22:10 2003.353.00:20:42.05#setcl#time/313597814,1,2003,353,00,20,42.00,0.080,5.972,-1 2003.353.00:20:42.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:22:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:22:10.00:et 2003.353.00:22:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:22:13.05:tape 2003.353.00:22:13.12/tape/low,05825,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:22:13.12:postob 2003.353.00:22:13.13:scan_name=353-0023 2003.353.00:22:13.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.00:22:19.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:22:24.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:22:33.43:!2003.353.00:23:23 2003.353.00:23:23.00:tape 2003.353.00:23:23.07/tape/low,05825,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:23:23.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:23:23.12:!2003.353.00:23:23 2003.353.00:23:23.12:preob 2003.353.00:23:25.88/tpical/21040,20852,21776,21662,21719,22806,22874,22391,57977,20377 2003.353.00:23:25.96/tpical/19208,19790,19207,19521,19989,19779,37247 2003.353.00:23:26.04:!2003.353.00:23:33 2003.353.00:23:33.00:tape 2003.353.00:23:33.07/tape/low,05709,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:23:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:23:33.08:midob 2003.353.00:23:33.19/tpi/16697,16526,17028,16907,16879,16954,17041,16727,45378,15521 2003.353.00:23:33.27/tpi/16121,16758,16612,16673,16628,16462,31567 2003.353.00:23:33.85/tsys1/68.3,67.3,63.6,62.7,61.7,51.3,51.6,52.1,63.9,56.8 2003.353.00:23:33.86/tsys2/66.5,70.5,81.6,74.5,63.2,63.4,71.2 2003.353.00:23:37.63/wx/-18.4,964.3,75.3 2003.353.00:23:37.71/cable/+3.82980E-02 2003.353.00:23:37.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,45403,31549,0,1pps 2003.353.00:23:37.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15527,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:23:37.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.04, -5.04,lock,15643,16109,545,1pps 2003.353.00:23:37.98/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,16083,16224,554,1pps 2003.353.00:23:38.06/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16265,16332,550,1pps 2003.353.00:23:38.56/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:23:39.05#setcl#time/313615514,1,2003,353,00,23,39.00,0.080,6.022,-1 2003.353.00:23:39.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:23:42.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:23:42.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:23:42.22:!2003.353.00:25:11 2003.353.00:25:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:25:11.00:et 2003.353.00:25:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:25:14.05:tape 2003.353.00:25:14.12/tape/low,04386,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:25:14.12:postob 2003.353.00:25:14.13:scan_name=353-0026 2003.353.00:25:14.14:source=0718+793,071808.7,791722.7,1950.0 2003.353.00:25:20.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:25:25.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:25:34.43:!2003.353.00:26:39 2003.353.00:26:39.00:tape 2003.353.00:26:39.07/tape/low,04386,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:26:39.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:26:39.12:!2003.353.00:26:39 2003.353.00:26:39.12:preob 2003.353.00:26:41.88/tpical/21787,21236,22500,22369,22001,23553,23591,23412,50086,17540 2003.353.00:26:41.96/tpical/20019,19204,19274,19661,19995,19941,35436 2003.353.00:26:42.04:!2003.353.00:26:49 2003.353.00:26:49.00:tape 2003.353.00:26:49.07/tape/low,04271,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:26:49.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:26:49.08:midob 2003.353.00:26:49.19/tpi/16275,15806,16472,16316,16012,16279,16334,16270,36987,12477 2003.353.00:26:49.27/tpi/16319,15832,16235,16347,16208,16201,29400 2003.353.00:26:49.85/tsys1/52.5,51.3,48.4,47.5,47.3,39.6,39.7,40.2,49.9,43.6 2003.353.00:26:49.86/tsys2/56.2,59.8,68.1,62.8,54.7,55.4,62.4 2003.353.00:26:54.01/wx/-17.7,964.2,77.0 2003.353.00:26:54.03/cable/+3.82962E-02 2003.353.00:26:54.09/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36984,29409,0,1pps 2003.353.00:26:54.14/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12478,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.00:26:54.22/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15802,16325,545,1pps 2003.353.00:26:54.31/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16273,16095,554,1pps 2003.353.00:26:54.40/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16229,16298,550,1pps 2003.353.00:26:54.90/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:26:55.03#setcl#time/313635112,1,2003,353,00,26,55.00,0.158,6.076,1 2003.353.00:26:55.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:26:57.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:26:57.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:26:57.22:!2003.353.00:28:59 2003.353.00:28:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:28:59.00:et 2003.353.00:28:59.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:29:02.05:tape 2003.353.00:29:02.12/tape/low,02521,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:29:02.12:postob 2003.353.00:29:02.13:scan_name=353-0035 2003.353.00:29:02.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.00:29:08.65:sx4cb=8 2003.353.00:29:13.29/pass/8,,auto,-165.0,,-165.4,,-0.4, 2003.353.00:29:22.43:!2003.353.00:35:22 2003.353.00:35:22.00:tape 2003.353.00:35:22.07/tape/low,02521,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:35:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.00:35:22.12:!2003.353.00:35:22 2003.353.00:35:22.12:preob 2003.353.00:35:24.88/tpical/21704,21155,21624,22251,21934,23349,23032,23212,49925,17437 2003.353.00:35:24.96/tpical/19646,19631,19157,19185,19795,20056,34962 2003.353.00:35:25.04:!2003.353.00:35:32 2003.353.00:35:32.00:tape 2003.353.00:35:32.07/tape/low,02405,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:35:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:35:32.08:midob 2003.353.00:35:32.19/tpi/16230,15813,15863,16254,16004,16229,16022,16253,36984,12464 2003.353.00:35:32.27/tpi/16063,16203,16204,16074,16106,16340,28934 2003.353.00:35:32.85/tsys1/52.7,52.1,48.7,47.8,47.7,40.3,40.3,41.2,50.5,44.4 2003.353.00:35:32.86/tsys2/57.1,60.2,69.9,65.7,55.8,56.2,61.4 2003.353.00:35:37.69/wx/-17.8,964.0,75.3 2003.353.00:35:37.71/cable/+3.82942E-02 2003.353.00:35:37.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36986,28901,0,1pps 2003.353.00:35:37.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12463,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:35:37.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15801,15474,545,1pps 2003.353.00:35:37.99/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16230,15987,554,1pps 2003.353.00:35:38.08/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16208,16324,550,1pps 2003.353.00:35:38.58/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:35:41.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:35:41.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:35:41.22:!2003.353.00:37:10 2003.353.00:35:42.02#setcl#time/313687811,1,2003,353,00,35,42.00,0.193,6.222,2 2003.353.00:35:42.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:37:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:37:10.00:et 2003.353.00:37:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:37:13.05:tape 2003.353.00:37:13.12/tape/low,01081,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:37:13.12:postob 2003.353.00:37:13.13:scan_name=353-0039 2003.353.00:37:13.14:source=1741-038,174120.6,-034848.9,1950.0 2003.353.00:37:19.65:midtp 2003.353.00:37:22.37/tpzero/216,339,267,335,285,290,325,332,643,205 2003.353.00:37:22.45/tpzero/323,325,318,350,279,279,487 2003.353.00:37:23.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.76 2003.353.00:37:23.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,46.82 2003.353.00:37:23.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.353.00:37:23.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.353.00:37:23.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.00:37:23.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.38 2003.353.00:37:23.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.00:37:23.83:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:37:29.41/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:37:38.55:fastr=0m39s 2003.353.00:38:17.65:!+5s 2003.353.00:38:22.66:!2003.353.00:39:02 2003.353.00:39:02.00:tape 2003.353.00:39:02.07/tape/low,00209,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:39:02.07:st=for,160 2003.353.00:39:02.12:!2003.353.00:39:02 2003.353.00:39:02.12:preob 2003.353.00:39:04.88/tpical/20838,20853,21727,21752,21869,22895,22809,22695,54758,19288 2003.353.00:39:04.96/tpical/19776,19178,19168,19513,19833,20038,36317 2003.353.00:39:05.04:!2003.353.00:39:12 2003.353.00:39:12.00:tape 2003.353.00:39:12.07/tape/low,00324,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:39:12.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:39:12.08:midob 2003.353.00:39:12.19/tpi/16032,15998,16440,16419,16483,16511,16478,16461,41667,14275 2003.353.00:39:12.27/tpi/16374,16023,16339,16483,16329,16495,30364 2003.353.00:39:12.85/tsys1/59.2,58.1,55.1,54.3,54.1,45.7,45.9,46.6,56.4,50.5 2003.353.00:39:12.86/tsys2/61.3,64.7,73.6,69.2,59.5,59.5,65.2 2003.353.00:39:16.98/wx/-18.0,963.9,75.5 2003.353.00:39:17.07/cable/+3.82986E-02 2003.353.00:39:17.13/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41686,30499,0,1pps 2003.353.00:39:17.18/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14286,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:39:17.26/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16008,15650,545,1pps 2003.353.00:39:17.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.61,lock,16100,16368,554,1pps 2003.353.00:39:17.42/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16362,16222,550,1pps 2003.353.00:39:17.92/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:39:20.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:39:20.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:39:20.22:!2003.353.00:40:50 2003.353.00:39:21.02#setcl#time/313709711,1,2003,353,00,39,21.00,0.191,6.283,2 2003.353.00:39:21.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:40:50.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:40:50.00:et 2003.353.00:40:50.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:40:53.05:tape 2003.353.00:40:53.12/tape/low,01647,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:40:53.12:postob 2003.353.00:40:53.13:scan_name=353-0043 2003.353.00:40:53.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.00:40:59.65:check80f 2003.353.00:41:32.38/parity/8.,18.,22.,18.,4.,10.,4.,14.,18.,24.,396.,12.,14.,54. 2003.353.00:41:32.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.00:41:57.96:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:42:02.60/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:42:11.74:!2003.353.00:43:03 2003.353.00:43:03.00:tape 2003.353.00:43:03.07/tape/low,01647,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:43:03.07:st=for,160 2003.353.00:43:03.12:!2003.353.00:43:03 2003.353.00:43:03.12:preob 2003.353.00:43:05.88/tpical/21598,21077,22380,22229,21912,23350,23399,23199,49780,17420 2003.353.00:43:05.96/tpical/19512,19513,19041,19046,19773,19612,34612 2003.353.00:43:06.04:!2003.353.00:43:13 2003.353.00:43:13.00:tape 2003.353.00:43:13.07/tape/low,01763,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:43:13.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:43:13.08:midob 2003.353.00:43:13.19/tpi/16107,15675,16350,16170,15909,16109,16182,16100,36702,12374 2003.353.00:43:13.27/tpi/15913,16082,16090,15950,16093,15992,29392 2003.353.00:43:13.85/tsys1/52.1,51.1,48.0,47.0,46.8,39.3,39.5,40.0,49.6,43.4 2003.353.00:43:13.86/tsys2/56.3,59.7,69.5,65.5,55.9,56.4,72.0 2003.353.00:43:19.18/wx/-17.9,963.7,75.7 2003.353.00:43:19.31/cable/+3.82979E-02 2003.353.00:43:19.37/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36708,28730,0,1pps 2003.353.00:43:19.42/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12377,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:43:19.50/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15670,16217,545,1pps 2003.353.00:43:19.59/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16126,16275,554,1pps 2003.353.00:43:19.68/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16082,16114,550,1pps 2003.353.00:43:20.18/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:43:23.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:43:23.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:43:23.22:!2003.353.00:44:51 2003.353.00:43:24.02#setcl#time/313734011,1,2003,353,00,43,24.00,0.189,6.351,2 2003.353.00:43:24.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:44:51.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:44:51.00:et 2003.353.00:44:51.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:44:54.05:tape 2003.353.00:44:54.12/tape/low,03087,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:44:54.12:postob 2003.353.00:44:54.13:scan_name=353-0048 2003.353.00:44:54.14:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.00:45:00.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:45:05.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:45:14.43:!2003.353.00:47:53 2003.353.00:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.00:47:27.93/wx/-17.9,963.8,75.5 2003.353.00:47:53.00:tape 2003.353.00:47:53.07/tape/low,03087,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:47:53.07:st=for,160 2003.353.00:47:53.12:!2003.353.00:47:53 2003.353.00:47:53.12:preob 2003.353.00:47:55.88/tpical/21111,21417,21853,22122,22062,23508,23123,23347,50465,17582 2003.353.00:47:55.96/tpical/19859,19133,18900,19299,19877,19787,34940 2003.353.00:47:56.04:!2003.353.00:48:03 2003.353.00:48:03.00:tape 2003.353.00:48:03.07/tape/low,03203,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:48:03.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:48:03.08:midob 2003.353.00:48:03.19/tpi/15819,16019,16064,16205,16086,16309,16083,16257,37411,12557 2003.353.00:48:03.27/tpi/16314,15834,15995,16178,16215,16180,28985 2003.353.00:48:03.85/tsys1/53.1,52.3,49.1,48.3,47.6,40.1,40.3,40.4,50.7,44.2 2003.353.00:48:03.86/tsys2/58.6,61.1,70.2,65.9,56.6,57.3,62.2 2003.353.00:48:08.84/wx/-17.8,963.8,75.5 2003.353.00:48:08.91/cable/+3.82993E-02 2003.353.00:48:08.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37419,28981,0,1pps 2003.353.00:48:09.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12558,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:48:09.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16007,15690,545,1pps 2003.353.00:48:09.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16299,16099,554,1pps 2003.353.00:48:09.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16023,16092,550,1pps 2003.353.00:48:09.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:48:12.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:48:12.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:48:12.22:!2003.353.00:49:41 2003.353.00:48:13.02#setcl#time/313762911,1,2003,353,00,48,13.00,0.187,6.431,2 2003.353.00:48:13.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:49:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:49:41.00:et 2003.353.00:49:41.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:49:44.05:tape 2003.353.00:49:44.12/tape/low,04526,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:49:44.12:postob 2003.353.00:49:44.13:scan_name=353-0054 2003.353.00:49:44.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.00:49:50.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:49:55.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:50:04.43:!2003.353.00:53:50 2003.353.00:53:50.00:tape 2003.353.00:53:50.07/tape/low,04526,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:53:50.07:st=for,160 2003.353.00:53:50.12:!2003.353.00:53:50 2003.353.00:53:50.12:preob 2003.353.00:53:52.88/tpical/21208,21328,21728,21651,21176,22221,22599,22432,53163,18680 2003.353.00:53:52.96/tpical/19682,19025,19044,18915,19708,19220,36154 2003.353.00:53:53.04:!2003.353.00:54:00 2003.353.00:54:00.00:tape 2003.353.00:54:00.07/tape/low,04641,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:54:00.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:54:00.08:midob 2003.353.00:54:00.19/tpi/16210,16254,16314,16235,15870,15929,16237,16188,40204,13719 2003.353.00:54:00.27/tpi/16262,15864,16258,15952,16229,15826,30250 2003.353.00:54:00.85/tsys1/57.6,56.5,53.4,52.8,52.9,44.7,45.0,45.7,55.0,49.0 2003.353.00:54:00.86/tsys2/60.6,63.9,74.4,68.5,59.6,59.5,65.5 2003.353.00:54:05.60/wx/-17.6,963.6,75.6 2003.353.00:54:05.71/cable/+3.82866E-02 2003.353.00:54:05.77/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40204,30258,0,1pps 2003.353.00:54:05.82/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13723,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:54:05.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16250,15932,545,1pps 2003.353.00:54:05.99/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.74,lock,15944,16279,554,1pps 2003.353.00:54:06.08/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16239,16007,550,1pps 2003.353.00:54:06.58/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:54:07.04#setcl#time/313798313,1,2003,353,00,54,07.00,0.110,6.529,0 2003.353.00:54:07.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:54:09.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.00:54:09.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:54:09.22:!2003.353.00:55:38 2003.353.00:55:38.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:55:38.00:et 2003.353.00:55:38.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:55:41.05:tape 2003.353.00:55:41.12/tape/low,05964,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:55:41.12:postob 2003.353.00:55:41.13:scan_name=353-0057a 2003.353.00:55:41.13:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.00:55:47.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:55:52.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:56:01.43:!2003.353.00:57:39 2003.353.00:57:39.00:tape 2003.353.00:57:39.07/tape/low,05964,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:57:39.07:st=for,160 2003.353.00:57:39.12:!2003.353.00:57:39 2003.353.00:57:39.12:preob 2003.353.00:57:41.88/tpical/21364,21858,22108,22632,21604,23575,23548,23297,49183,17220 2003.353.00:57:41.96/tpical/19680,19599,19248,19647,20104,20043,34602 2003.353.00:57:42.04:!2003.353.00:57:49 2003.353.00:57:49.00:tape 2003.353.00:57:49.07/tape/low,06080,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:57:49.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.00:57:49.08:midob 2003.353.00:57:49.19/tpi/15886,16206,16116,16475,15698,16255,16278,16196,36214,12226 2003.353.00:57:49.27/tpi/15991,16079,16163,16284,16262,16230,28671 2003.353.00:57:49.85/tsys1/51.5,50.5,47.6,47.2,47.0,39.3,39.5,40.2,49.4,43.3 2003.353.00:57:49.86/tsys2/55.2,58.2,66.8,61.6,54.1,54.4,61.8 2003.353.00:57:54.71/wx/-17.2,963.5,76.7 2003.353.00:57:54.83/cable/+3.82981E-02 2003.353.00:57:54.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36232,28688,0,1pps 2003.353.00:57:54.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12232,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.00:57:55.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16219,15973,545,1pps 2003.353.00:57:55.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16263,16064,554,1pps 2003.353.00:57:55.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16176,16232,550,1pps 2003.353.00:57:55.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.00:57:56.02#setcl#time/313821211,1,2003,353,00,57,56.00,0.182,6.593,2 2003.353.00:57:56.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.00:57:58.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.00:57:58.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.00:57:58.22:!2003.353.00:59:27 2003.353.00:59:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.00:59:27.00:et 2003.353.00:59:27.04:!+3s 2003.353.00:59:30.05:tape 2003.353.00:59:30.12/tape/low,07403,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.00:59:30.12:postob 2003.353.00:59:30.13:scan_name=353-0103 2003.353.00:59:30.14:source=2149+056,214907.7,053806.8,1950.0 2003.353.00:59:36.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.00:59:41.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.00:59:50.43:!2003.353.01:03:22 2003.353.01:03:22.00:tape 2003.353.01:03:22.07/tape/low,07403,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:03:22.07:st=for,160 2003.353.01:03:22.12:!2003.353.01:03:22 2003.353.01:03:22.12:preob 2003.353.01:03:24.88/tpical/21067,21447,21986,22055,21402,22957,23046,22824,50692,17869 2003.353.01:03:24.96/tpical/19680,19060,18781,19304,19714,19816,34622 2003.353.01:03:25.04:!2003.353.01:03:32 2003.353.01:03:32.00:tape 2003.353.01:03:32.07/tape/low,07519,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:03:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:03:32.08:midob 2003.353.01:03:32.19/tpi/15809,16066,16201,16193,15716,16094,16149,16075,37673,12840 2003.353.01:03:32.27/tpi/16150,15783,15926,16199,16120,16247,28700 2003.353.01:03:32.85/tsys1/53.4,52.6,49.6,48.7,48.8,41.5,41.3,42.0,51.2,45.2 2003.353.01:03:32.86/tsys2/58.3,61.3,71.1,66.4,57.3,58.2,61.9 2003.353.01:03:36.73/wx/-16.8,963.5,77.3 2003.353.01:03:36.75/cable/+3.82932E-02 2003.353.01:03:36.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37670,28699,0,1pps 2003.353.01:03:36.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12845,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:03:36.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16068,15722,545,1pps 2003.353.01:03:37.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16097,16051,554,1pps 2003.353.01:03:37.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15924,15973,550,1pps 2003.353.01:03:37.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:03:40.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:03:40.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.01:03:40.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.01:03:40.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.01:03:40.23:!2003.353.01:05:13 2003.353.01:03:41.03#setcl#time/313855712,1,2003,353,01,03,41.00,0.144,6.689,1 2003.353.01:03:41.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:04:32.18;"weather - clear 2003.353.01:05:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:05:13.00:et 2003.353.01:05:13.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:05:16.05:tape 2003.353.01:05:16.12/tape/low,08882,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:05:16.12:postob 2003.353.01:05:16.13:scan_name=353-0107 2003.353.01:05:16.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.01:05:22.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.01:05:27.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.01:05:36.43:!2003.353.01:07:26 2003.353.01:07:26.00:tape 2003.353.01:07:26.07/tape/low,08882,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:07:26.07:st=for,160 2003.353.01:07:26.12:!2003.353.01:07:26 2003.353.01:07:26.12:preob 2003.353.01:07:28.88/tpical/21233,21352,21688,21746,21229,22775,22593,22425,53253,18732 2003.353.01:07:28.96/tpical/19274,19384,19095,19419,19766,19885,38922 2003.353.01:07:29.04:!2003.353.01:07:36 2003.353.01:07:36.00:tape 2003.353.01:07:36.07/tape/low,08997,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:07:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:07:36.08:midob 2003.353.01:07:36.19/tpi/16212,16277,16269,16300,15871,16301,16193,16119,40247,13744 2003.353.01:07:36.27/tpi/15886,16127,16234,16300,16194,16303,35224 2003.353.01:07:36.85/tsys1/57.3,56.5,53.2,52.8,52.4,44.5,44.6,45.1,54.8,48.9 2003.353.01:07:36.86/tsys2/59.7,63.1,72.3,66.5,57.9,58.2,122.1 2003.353.01:07:42.20/wx/-16.9,963.5,76.8 2003.353.01:07:42.35/cable/+3.83008E-02 2003.353.01:07:42.41/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40259,32543,0,1pps 2003.353.01:07:42.46/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13748,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.01:07:42.54/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16273,15946,545,1pps 2003.353.01:07:42.63/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16281,16202,554,1pps 2003.353.01:07:42.72/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16242,16303,550,1pps 2003.353.01:07:43.22/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:07:44.04#setcl#time/313880013,1,2003,353,01,07,44.00,0.107,6.756,0 2003.353.01:07:44.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:07:46.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.01:07:46.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.01:07:46.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.01:07:46.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.01:07:46.23:!2003.353.01:09:14 2003.353.01:09:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:09:14.00:et 2003.353.01:09:14.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:09:17.05:tape 2003.353.01:09:17.12/tape/low,10320,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:09:17.12:postob 2003.353.01:09:17.13:scan_name=353-0109 2003.353.01:09:17.13:source=1634+213,163428.7,211856.6,1950.0 2003.353.01:09:23.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.01:09:28.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.01:09:37.43:!2003.353.01:09:47 2003.353.01:09:47.00:tape 2003.353.01:09:47.07/tape/low,10320,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:09:47.07:st=for,160 2003.353.01:09:47.12:!2003.353.01:09:47 2003.353.01:09:47.12:preob 2003.353.01:09:49.88/tpical/21747,21198,21670,22086,22126,23054,23185,22872,50053,17598 2003.353.01:09:49.96/tpical/19971,19249,19168,19448,19898,19799,36204 2003.353.01:09:50.05:!2003.353.01:09:57 2003.353.01:09:57.00:tape 2003.353.01:09:57.07/tape/low,10435,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:09:57.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:09:57.08:midob 2003.353.01:09:57.19/tpi/16254,15814,15887,16167,16193,16049,16166,16034,37065,12596 2003.353.01:09:57.27/tpi/16230,15723,16054,16126,16090,16063,34213 2003.353.01:09:57.85/tsys1/52.6,51.7,48.6,48.1,48.3,40.5,40.6,41.3,50.5,44.6 2003.353.01:09:57.86/tsys2/55.3,56.8,65.7,61.7,54.0,54.9,220.2 2003.353.01:10:02.94/wx/-16.7,963.5,77.4 2003.353.01:10:02.98/cable/+3.83019E-02 2003.353.01:10:03.04/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37066,31850,0,1pps 2003.353.01:10:03.09/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12593,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:10:03.18/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15808,15482,545,1pps 2003.353.01:10:03.26/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16054,16120,554,1pps 2003.353.01:10:03.34/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16040,16085,550,1pps 2003.353.01:10:03.84/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:10:06.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:10:06.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.01:10:06.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.01:10:06.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.01:10:06.23:!2003.353.01:16:19 2003.353.01:10:07.03#setcl#time/313894312,1,2003,353,01,10,07.00,0.141,6.796,1 2003.353.01:10:07.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:16:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:16:19.00:et 2003.353.01:16:19.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:16:22.05:tape 2003.353.01:16:22.12/tape/low,15546,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:16:22.12:postob 2003.353.01:16:22.13:scan_name=353-0119 2003.353.01:16:22.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.353.01:16:28.65:sx4ca=9 2003.353.01:16:33.29/pass/9,,auto,-110.0,,-109.9,,0.1, 2003.353.01:16:42.43:!2003.353.01:19:10 2003.353.01:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.01:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.25 2003.353.01:17:20.86/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,2.366 2003.353.01:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.07 2003.353.01:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.908 2003.353.01:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,4.301 2003.353.01:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.72 2003.353.01:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.01:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.01:17:28.06/wx/-16.3,963.3,77.6 2003.353.01:19:10.00:tape 2003.353.01:19:10.07/tape/low,15546,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:19:10.07:st=for,160 2003.353.01:19:10.12:!2003.353.01:19:10 2003.353.01:19:10.12:preob 2003.353.01:19:12.88/tpical/20729,20739,21577,21498,20450,22153,22592,22064,54380,19122 2003.353.01:19:12.96/tpical/19035,18787,19130,19016,19645,19763,37166 2003.353.01:19:13.04:!2003.353.01:19:20 2003.353.01:19:20.00:tape 2003.353.01:19:20.07/tape/low,15661,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:19:20.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:19:20.08:midob 2003.353.01:19:20.19/tpi/15930,15929,16322,16232,15471,16042,16325,16034,41382,14171 2003.353.01:19:20.27/tpi/15799,15747,16325,16121,16245,16314,31079 2003.353.01:19:20.85/tsys1/58.9,58.3,55.0,54.3,54.9,46.4,46.0,46.9,56.4,50.8 2003.353.01:19:20.86/tsys2/62.2,65.9,74.2,70.8,61.0,60.4,65.3 2003.353.01:19:25.88/wx/-16.3,963.3,77.6 2003.353.01:19:26.03/cable/+3.82933E-02 2003.353.01:19:26.09/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41397,31017,0,1pps 2003.353.01:19:26.15/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14173,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:19:26.23/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,15911,15564,545,1pps 2003.353.01:19:26.32/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.61,lock,16046,16252,554,1pps 2003.353.01:19:26.41/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,16333,16010,550,1pps 2003.353.01:19:26.91/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:19:29.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:19:29.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:19:29.22:!2003.353.01:21:04 2003.353.01:19:30.02#setcl#time/313950611,1,2003,353,01,19,30.00,0.173,6.952,2 2003.353.01:19:30.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:21:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:21:04.00:et 2003.353.01:21:04.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:21:07.05:tape 2003.353.01:21:07.12/tape/low,17064,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:21:07.12:postob 2003.353.01:21:07.13:scan_name=353-0122 2003.353.01:21:07.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.01:21:13.65:midtp 2003.353.01:21:16.37/tpzero/204,331,252,319,280,279,314,317,664,215 2003.353.01:21:16.45/tpzero/321,318,308,342,265,268,456 2003.353.01:21:17.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.37 2003.353.01:21:17.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.01:21:17.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.01:21:17.50/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,9.539 2003.353.01:21:17.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.01:21:17.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.53 2003.353.01:21:17.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.01:21:17.83:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:21:22.85/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-109.8,,0.2, 2003.353.01:21:31.99:fastf=0m26s 2003.353.01:21:58.09:!+5s 2003.353.01:22:03.10:!2003.353.01:22:24 2003.353.01:22:24.00:tape 2003.353.01:22:24.07/tape/low,17649,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:22:24.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:22:24.12:!2003.353.01:22:24 2003.353.01:22:24.12:preob 2003.353.01:22:26.88/tpical/21393,20836,22030,22414,21481,23362,23329,23116,49102,17092 2003.353.01:22:26.96/tpical/19351,19315,18853,19382,19476,19731,34111 2003.353.01:22:27.04:!2003.353.01:22:34 2003.353.01:22:34.00:tape 2003.353.01:22:34.07/tape/low,17533,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:22:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:22:34.08:midob 2003.353.01:22:34.19/tpi/16048,15589,16232,16453,15704,16257,16257,16175,36456,12226 2003.353.01:22:34.27/tpi/15843,15983,15953,16232,15912,16112,28337 2003.353.01:22:34.85/tsys1/53.4,52.3,49.6,48.7,48.1,40.5,40.6,41.1,50.9,44.4 2003.353.01:22:34.86/tsys2/57.5,61.1,70.1,65.6,57.1,56.9,62.8 2003.353.01:22:38.98/wx/-16.1,963.2,78.1 2003.353.01:22:39.14/cable/+3.82942E-02 2003.353.01:22:39.20/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36459,28375,0,1pps 2003.353.01:22:39.25/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12231,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:22:39.33/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15598,16116,545,1pps 2003.353.01:22:39.42/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16242,16051,554,1pps 2003.353.01:22:39.51/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15982,16143,550,1pps 2003.353.01:22:40.01/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:22:42.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:22:42.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.01:22:42.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.01:22:42.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.01:22:42.23:!2003.353.01:27:35 2003.353.01:22:43.03#setcl#time/313969912,1,2003,353,01,22,43.00,0.137,7.006,1 2003.353.01:22:43.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:27:35.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:27:35.00:et 2003.353.01:27:35.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:27:38.05:tape 2003.353.01:27:38.12/tape/low,13503,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:27:38.12:postob 2003.353.01:27:38.13:scan_name=353-0129 2003.353.01:27:38.13:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.01:27:44.65:check80r 2003.353.01:28:17.38/parity/28.,24.,6.,14.,4.,22.,10.,12.,14.,26.,400.,16.,56.,211. 2003.353.01:28:17.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1 2003.353.01:28:42.96:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:28:47.60/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:28:56.74:!2003.353.01:29:48 2003.353.01:29:48.00:tape 2003.353.01:29:48.07/tape/low,13502,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:29:48.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:29:48.12:!2003.353.01:29:48 2003.353.01:29:48.12:preob 2003.353.01:29:50.87/tpical/21593,21035,22225,22329,21618,23483,22988,23169,49559,17239 2003.353.01:29:50.94/tpical/19901,19074,19070,19082,19587,19866,34817 2003.353.01:29:51.01:!2003.353.01:29:58 2003.353.01:29:58.00:tape 2003.353.01:29:58.07/tape/low,13387,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:29:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:29:58.07:midob 2003.353.01:29:58.18/tpi/16127,15701,16290,16306,15710,16229,15936,16123,36648,12277 2003.353.01:29:58.25/tpi/16207,15713,16066,15905,15941,16172,28859 2003.353.01:29:58.82/tsys1/52.4,51.9,48.6,47.8,47.0,39.6,39.9,40.4,50.2,43.8 2003.353.01:29:58.82/tsys2/55.9,59.5,68.2,63.7,55.9,56.0,62.0 2003.353.01:30:04.10/wx/-16.1,963.2,77.6 2003.353.01:30:04.26/cable/+3.83011E-02 2003.353.01:30:04.32/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36650,28836,0,1pps 2003.353.01:30:04.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12280,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:30:04.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15715,15368,545,1pps 2003.353.01:30:04.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16259,16093,554,1pps 2003.353.01:30:04.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16057,16101,550,1pps 2003.353.01:30:05.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:30:06.02#setcl#time/314014211,1,2003,353,01,30,06.00,0.168,7.129,2 2003.353.01:30:06.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:30:08.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:30:08.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:30:08.22:!2003.353.01:31:36 2003.353.01:31:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:31:36.00:et 2003.353.01:31:36.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:31:39.05:tape 2003.353.01:31:39.12/tape/low,12064,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:31:39.12:postob 2003.353.01:31:39.13:scan_name=353-0134 2003.353.01:31:39.13:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.01:31:45.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:31:50.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:31:59.43:!2003.353.01:34:27 2003.353.01:34:27.00:tape 2003.353.01:34:27.07/tape/low,12064,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:34:27.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:34:27.12:!2003.353.01:34:27 2003.353.01:34:27.12:preob 2003.353.01:34:29.88/tpical/21325,21815,22044,22205,21658,23589,23477,23215,49138,17226 2003.353.01:34:29.96/tpical/19850,19070,19129,19265,19833,19650,33879 2003.353.01:34:30.04:!2003.353.01:34:37 2003.353.01:34:37.00:tape 2003.353.01:34:37.07/tape/low,11949,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:34:37.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:34:37.08:midob 2003.353.01:34:37.19/tpi/15838,16196,16101,16164,15737,16309,16226,16124,36199,12241 2003.353.01:34:37.27/tpi/16210,15728,16140,16110,16156,16035,28026 2003.353.01:34:37.85/tsys1/51.3,50.8,48.0,47.2,47.0,39.6,39.5,40.1,49.4,43.4 2003.353.01:34:37.86/tsys2/56.7,59.9,68.9,65.0,56.2,56.7,61.2 2003.353.01:34:42.32/wx/-15.8,963.1,78.3 2003.353.01:34:42.35/cable/+3.82980E-02 2003.353.01:34:42.41/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36202,28042,0,1pps 2003.353.01:34:42.46/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12242,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:34:42.54/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16197,15944,545,1pps 2003.353.01:34:42.62/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16302,16018,554,1pps 2003.353.01:34:42.70/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16137,16157,550,1pps 2003.353.01:34:43.20/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:34:44.05#setcl#time/314042013,1,2003,353,01,34,44.00,0.100,7.206,-1 2003.353.01:34:44.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:34:46.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.01:34:46.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:34:46.23:!2003.353.01:36:15 2003.353.01:36:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:36:15.00:et 2003.353.01:36:15.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:36:18.05:tape 2003.353.01:36:18.12/tape/low,10626,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:36:18.12:postob 2003.353.01:36:18.13:scan_name=353-0137 2003.353.01:36:18.14:source=1741-038,174120.6,-034848.9,1950.0 2003.353.01:36:24.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:36:29.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:36:38.43:!2003.353.01:37:48 2003.353.01:37:48.00:tape 2003.353.01:37:48.07/tape/low,10626,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:37:48.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:37:48.12:!2003.353.01:37:48 2003.353.01:37:48.12:preob 2003.353.01:37:50.88/tpical/20272,21038,21137,21605,20499,22133,22273,22242,58144,20354 2003.353.01:37:50.96/tpical/19490,19256,19077,19289,19546,19571,37609 2003.353.01:37:51.04:!2003.353.01:37:58 2003.353.01:37:58.00:tape 2003.353.01:37:58.07/tape/low,10510,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:37:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:37:58.08:midob 2003.353.01:37:58.19/tpi/15920,16494,16358,16684,15801,16374,16509,16505,45189,15406 2003.353.01:37:58.27/tpi/16303,16251,16519,16454,16279,16287,31783 2003.353.01:37:58.85/tsys1/65.0,64.0,60.7,59.9,59.5,50.3,50.6,50.8,61.9,55.3 2003.353.01:37:58.86/tsys2/65.2,68.9,82.4,73.9,63.7,63.4,69.9 2003.353.01:38:03.60/wx/-16.0,963.2,77.4 2003.353.01:38:03.63/cable/+3.83004E-02 2003.353.01:38:03.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,45227,31779,0,1pps 2003.353.01:38:03.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15409,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.01:38:03.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.04, -5.04,lock,15601,16076,545,1pps 2003.353.01:38:03.91/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,15951,16032,554,1pps 2003.353.01:38:04.00/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.22,lock,16160,16098,550,1pps 2003.353.01:38:04.50/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:38:05.05#setcl#time/314062113,1,2003,353,01,38,05.00,0.099,7.262,-1 2003.353.01:38:05.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:38:07.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.01:38:07.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:38:07.23:!2003.353.01:39:36 2003.353.01:39:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:39:36.00:et 2003.353.01:39:36.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:39:39.05:tape 2003.353.01:39:39.12/tape/low,09187,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:39:39.12:postob 2003.353.01:39:39.13:scan_name=353-0142 2003.353.01:39:39.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.01:39:45.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:39:50.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:39:59.43:!2003.353.01:42:01 2003.353.01:42:01.00:tape 2003.353.01:42:01.07/tape/low,09187,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:42:01.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:42:01.12:!2003.353.01:42:01 2003.353.01:42:01.12:preob 2003.353.01:42:03.88/tpical/20840,20895,21942,21914,21826,22753,22902,22677,52139,18308 2003.353.01:42:03.96/tpical/19661,19624,19047,19355,19837,19679,34996 2003.353.01:42:04.04:!2003.353.01:42:11 2003.353.01:42:11.00:tape 2003.353.01:42:11.07/tape/low,09071,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:42:11.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:42:11.08:midob 2003.353.01:42:11.19/tpi/15798,15841,16374,16340,16258,16173,16302,16243,39174,13350 2003.353.01:42:11.27/tpi/16146,16246,16151,16208,16162,16067,29161 2003.353.01:42:11.85/tsys1/55.7,55.2,52.1,51.7,51.7,43.5,43.6,44.6,53.5,47.7 2003.353.01:42:11.86/tsys2/58.5,61.3,71.1,65.5,56.2,56.9,64.0 2003.353.01:42:15.62/wx/-16.1,963.3,77.3 2003.353.01:42:15.63/cable/+3.82940E-02 2003.353.01:42:15.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39183,29210,0,1pps 2003.353.01:42:15.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13355,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.01:42:15.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15830,15548,545,1pps 2003.353.01:42:15.90/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16177,16181,554,1pps 2003.353.01:42:15.98/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16148,16236,550,1pps 2003.353.01:42:16.48/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:42:17.03#setcl#time/314087311,1,2003,353,01,42,17.00,0.164,7.332,1 2003.353.01:42:17.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:42:19.10/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.01:42:19.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:42:19.23:!2003.353.01:43:49 2003.353.01:43:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:43:49.00:et 2003.353.01:43:49.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:43:52.05:tape 2003.353.01:43:52.12/tape/low,07749,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:43:52.12:postob 2003.353.01:43:52.13:scan_name=353-0150 2003.353.01:43:52.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.01:43:58.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:44:03.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:44:12.43:!2003.353.01:50:45 2003.353.01:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.01:47:28.19/wx/-16.4,963.2,76.9 2003.353.01:50:45.00:tape 2003.353.01:50:45.07/tape/low,07749,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:50:45.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:50:45.12:!2003.353.01:50:45 2003.353.01:50:45.12:preob 2003.353.01:50:47.88/tpical/20615,20731,21719,21867,21554,22473,22671,22462,51566,18045 2003.353.01:50:47.96/tpical/19125,19218,19003,18916,19721,19824,35346 2003.353.01:50:48.04:!2003.353.01:50:55 2003.353.01:50:55.00:tape 2003.353.01:50:55.07/tape/low,07633,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:50:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:50:55.08:midob 2003.353.01:50:55.19/tpi/15628,15695,16208,16271,16025,15966,16150,16069,38737,13143 2003.353.01:50:55.27/tpi/15767,15993,16158,15931,16166,16296,29496 2003.353.01:50:55.85/tsys1/55.7,54.9,52.1,51.3,51.3,43.4,43.7,44.4,53.4,47.5 2003.353.01:50:55.86/tsys2/59.8,63.2,72.4,67.9,58.1,59.1,64.5 2003.353.01:51:00.93/wx/-16.4,963.1,77.3 2003.353.01:51:01.08/cable/+3.82893E-02 2003.353.01:51:01.14/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38752,29468,0,1pps 2003.353.01:51:01.19/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13145,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.01:51:01.28/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15711,16247,545,1pps 2003.353.01:51:01.37/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,15960,15963,554,1pps 2003.353.01:51:01.45/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16150,16241,550,1pps 2003.353.01:51:01.95/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:51:04.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.01:51:04.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:51:04.23:!2003.353.01:52:33 2003.353.01:51:05.03#setcl#time/314140111,1,2003,353,01,51,05.00,0.160,7.479,1 2003.353.01:51:05.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:52:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:52:33.00:et 2003.353.01:52:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:52:36.05:tape 2003.353.01:52:36.12/tape/low,06311,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:52:36.12:postob 2003.353.01:52:36.13:scan_name=353-0157 2003.353.01:52:36.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.01:52:42.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:52:47.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.01:52:56.43:!2003.353.01:57:40 2003.353.01:57:40.00:tape 2003.353.01:57:40.07/tape/low,06311,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:57:40.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.01:57:40.12:!2003.353.01:57:40 2003.353.01:57:40.12:preob 2003.353.01:57:42.88/tpical/20920,21224,21556,22095,21782,23099,23145,22883,49958,17351 2003.353.01:57:42.96/tpical/19620,19565,19127,19253,19778,19624,34696 2003.353.01:57:43.04:!2003.353.01:57:50 2003.353.01:57:50.00:tape 2003.353.01:57:50.07/tape/low,06194,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:57:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.01:57:50.08:midob 2003.353.01:57:50.19/tpi/15736,15965,15898,16267,15956,16161,16210,16079,37198,12462 2003.353.01:57:50.27/tpi/16146,16228,16231,16165,16189,16093,28929 2003.353.01:57:50.85/tsys1/53.9,53.5,49.8,49.3,48.4,41.2,41.3,41.7,51.5,45.1 2003.353.01:57:50.86/tsys2/59.2,62.0,71.5,66.6,57.7,58.3,64.2 2003.353.01:57:54.96/wx/-16.4,963.0,77.3 2003.353.01:57:54.99/cable/+3.82971E-02 2003.353.01:57:55.05/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37182,28967,0,1pps 2003.353.01:57:55.10/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12456,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.01:57:55.18/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15949,15627,545,1pps 2003.353.01:57:55.27/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16136,16329,554,1pps 2003.353.01:57:55.35/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16248,16296,550,1pps 2003.353.01:57:55.85/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.01:57:56.04#setcl#time/314181212,1,2003,353,01,57,56.00,0.126,7.593,0 2003.353.01:57:56.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.01:57:58.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.01:57:58.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.01:57:58.22:!2003.353.01:59:28 2003.353.01:59:28.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.01:59:28.00:et 2003.353.01:59:28.04:!+3s 2003.353.01:59:31.05:tape 2003.353.01:59:31.12/tape/low,04872,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.01:59:31.12:postob 2003.353.01:59:31.13:scan_name=353-0201 2003.353.01:59:31.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.01:59:37.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.01:59:42.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-109.8,,0.2, 2003.353.01:59:51.43:!2003.353.02:01:41 2003.353.02:01:41.00:tape 2003.353.02:01:41.07/tape/low,04872,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:01:41.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.02:01:41.12:!2003.353.02:01:41 2003.353.02:01:41.12:preob 2003.353.02:01:43.88/tpical/21593,21037,22202,22082,21732,23161,23100,23335,49603,17347 2003.353.02:01:43.96/tpical/19627,19540,19224,19623,20052,19980,33541 2003.353.02:01:44.04:!2003.353.02:01:51 2003.353.02:01:51.00:tape 2003.353.02:01:51.07/tape/low,04756,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:01:51.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:01:51.08:midob 2003.353.02:01:51.19/tpi/16130,15681,16270,16161,15882,16089,16091,16327,36703,12394 2003.353.02:01:51.27/tpi/15972,16069,16163,16309,16235,16216,27685 2003.353.02:01:51.85/tsys1/52.5,51.6,48.6,48.2,48.0,40.2,40.5,41.1,50.3,44.3 2003.353.02:01:51.86/tsys2/55.7,59.0,67.3,62.6,54.4,55.1,60.4 2003.353.02:01:57.16/wx/-16.7,963.0,76.1 2003.353.02:01:57.23/cable/+3.82995E-02 2003.353.02:01:57.29/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36711,27650,0,1pps 2003.353.02:01:57.34/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12400,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.02:01:57.42/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15682,16184,545,1pps 2003.353.02:01:57.51/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16093,16253,554,1pps 2003.353.02:01:57.60/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16173,16266,550,1pps 2003.353.02:01:58.10/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:01:59.04#setcl#time/314205512,1,2003,353,02,01,59.00,0.125,7.661,0 2003.353.02:01:59.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:02:01.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:02:01.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:02:01.22:!2003.353.02:03:29 2003.353.02:03:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:03:29.00:et 2003.353.02:03:29.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:03:32.05:tape 2003.353.02:03:32.12/tape/low,03434,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:03:32.12:postob 2003.353.02:03:32.13:scan_name=353-0206b 2003.353.02:03:32.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.02:03:38.65:sx4cb=10 2003.353.02:03:43.29/pass/10,,auto,-110.0,,-110.6,,-0.6, 2003.353.02:03:52.43:!2003.353.02:06:49 2003.353.02:05:36.29;"weather - clear 2003.353.02:06:49.00:tape 2003.353.02:06:49.07/tape/low,03434,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:06:49.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.02:06:49.12:!2003.353.02:06:49 2003.353.02:06:49.12:preob 2003.353.02:06:51.88/tpical/21573,21050,22211,22323,21685,23575,23504,23229,49614,17290 2003.353.02:06:51.96/tpical/19284,19247,19295,19363,19859,19747,34167 2003.353.02:06:52.04:!2003.353.02:06:59 2003.353.02:06:59.00:tape 2003.353.02:06:59.07/tape/low,03317,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:06:59.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:06:59.08:midob 2003.353.02:06:59.19/tpi/16124,15703,16301,16304,15811,16335,16315,16174,36706,12323 2003.353.02:06:59.27/tpi/15768,15909,16321,16196,16202,16123,28338 2003.353.02:06:59.85/tsys1/52.6,51.7,48.9,47.8,47.6,39.9,40.1,40.5,50.3,43.9 2003.353.02:06:59.86/tsys2/57.1,60.7,70.0,65.1,56.7,56.9,62.2 2003.353.02:07:04.82/wx/-16.9,962.9,76.2 2003.353.02:07:04.91/cable/+3.82987E-02 2003.353.02:07:04.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36705,28342,0,1pps 2003.353.02:07:05.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12323,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.02:07:05.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15714,16235,545,1pps 2003.353.02:07:05.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16331,16120,554,1pps 2003.353.02:07:05.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.79,lock,16312,15955,550,1pps 2003.353.02:07:05.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:07:08.10/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:07:08.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:07:08.23:!2003.353.02:08:37 2003.353.02:07:09.03#setcl#time/314236511,1,2003,353,02,07,09.00,0.155,7.747,1 2003.353.02:07:09.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:08:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:08:37.00:et 2003.353.02:08:37.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:08:40.05:tape 2003.353.02:08:40.12/tape/low,01994,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:08:40.12:postob 2003.353.02:08:40.13:scan_name=353-0210 2003.353.02:08:40.14:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.353.02:08:46.65:midtp 2003.353.02:08:49.37/tpzero/212,337,264,336,282,292,331,331,638,204 2003.353.02:08:49.45/tpzero/319,322,318,348,280,276,434 2003.353.02:08:50.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.353.02:08:50.28/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,2.366 2003.353.02:08:50.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.02:08:50.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.02:08:50.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,4.386 2003.353.02:08:50.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.78 2003.353.02:08:50.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.02:08:50.83:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:08:56.43/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-54.3,,0.7, 2003.353.02:09:05.57:fastr=1m20s 2003.353.02:10:25.67:!+5s 2003.353.02:10:30.68:!2003.353.02:10:40 2003.353.02:10:40.00:tape 2003.353.02:10:40.07/tape/low,00210,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:10:40.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:10:40.12:!2003.353.02:10:40 2003.353.02:10:40.12:preob 2003.353.02:10:42.88/tpical/21187,21602,22304,22242,22359,23175,23531,23293,48634,16984 2003.353.02:10:42.96/tpical/19304,19211,19395,19352,19797,19789,33911 2003.353.02:10:43.04:!2003.353.02:10:50 2003.353.02:10:50.00:tape 2003.353.02:10:50.07/tape/low,00325,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:10:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:10:50.08:midob 2003.353.02:10:50.19/tpi/15695,16037,16233,16150,16195,15928,16223,16121,35755,12021 2003.353.02:10:50.27/tpi/15673,15742,16265,16054,16000,16004,28043 2003.353.02:10:50.85/tsys1/50.7,50.8,47.3,46.7,46.5,38.8,39.1,39.6,49.1,42.9 2003.353.02:10:50.86/tsys2/55.0,57.8,66.2,61.9,53.8,54.0,61.2 2003.353.02:10:55.57/wx/-16.8,962.9,76.6 2003.353.02:10:55.63/cable/+3.83008E-02 2003.353.02:10:55.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35745,28039,0,1pps 2003.353.02:10:55.75/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12017,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.02:10:55.83/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16027,15799,545,1pps 2003.353.02:10:55.92/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15921,16157,554,1pps 2003.353.02:10:56.01/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.01,lock,16270,15950,550,1pps 2003.353.02:10:56.52/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:10:57.05#setcl#time/314259313,1,2003,353,02,10,57.00,0.092,7.810,-1 2003.353.02:10:57.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:11:00.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:11:00.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:11:00.23:!2003.353.02:13:19 2003.353.02:13:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:13:19.00:et 2003.353.02:13:19.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:13:22.05:tape 2003.353.02:13:22.12/tape/low,02329,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:13:22.12:postob 2003.353.02:13:22.13:scan_name=353-0217 2003.353.02:13:22.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.353.02:13:28.65:check80f 2003.353.02:14:01.38/parity/6.,18.,18.,20.,6.,6.,10.,24.,4.,10.,234.,6.,4.,26. 2003.353.02:14:01.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.02:14:26.96:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:14:31.60/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-54.3,,0.7, 2003.353.02:14:40.74:!2003.353.02:17:22 2003.353.02:17:22.00:tape 2003.353.02:17:22.07/tape/low,02330,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:17:22.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:17:22.12:!2003.353.02:17:22 2003.353.02:17:22.12:preob 2003.353.02:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.02:17:28.33/wx/-16.8,962.7,76.8 2003.353.02:17:28.44/tpical/21544,21940,22072,22332,21710,23129,23040,23290,49411,17317 2003.353.02:17:28.52/tpical/19583,19438,19169,19507,19890,19853,33066 2003.353.02:17:28.60:!2003.353.02:17:32 2003.353.02:17:32.00:tape 2003.353.02:17:32.07/tape/low,02446,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:17:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:17:32.08:midob 2003.353.02:17:32.19/tpi/16077,16347,16148,16317,15853,16068,16035,16288,36509,12354 2003.353.02:17:32.27/tpi/15929,15980,16113,16186,16109,16104,27297 2003.353.02:17:32.85/tsys1/52.2,51.5,48.3,47.8,47.9,40.2,40.4,41.0,50.0,44.1 2003.353.02:17:32.86/tsys2/55.5,58.9,67.2,62.0,54.4,54.9,60.5 2003.353.02:17:38.15/wx/-16.8,962.7,76.8 2003.353.02:17:38.19/cable/+3.82967E-02 2003.353.02:17:38.25/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36507,27239,0,1pps 2003.353.02:17:38.30/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12357,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.02:17:38.38/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16349,16110,545,1pps 2003.353.02:17:38.46/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16078,16267,554,1pps 2003.353.02:17:38.54/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16090,16178,550,1pps 2003.353.02:17:39.04/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:17:40.04#setcl#time/314299612,1,2003,353,02,17,40.00,0.121,7.922,0 2003.353.02:17:40.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:17:42.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.02:17:42.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:17:42.22:!2003.353.02:19:10 2003.353.02:19:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:19:10.00:et 2003.353.02:19:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:19:13.05:tape 2003.353.02:19:13.12/tape/low,03768,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:19:13.12:postob 2003.353.02:19:13.13:scan_name=353-0224 2003.353.02:19:13.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.353.02:19:19.66:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:19:24.30/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-54.3,,0.7, 2003.353.02:19:33.44:!2003.353.02:24:28 2003.353.02:24:28.00:tape 2003.353.02:24:28.07/tape/low,03768,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:24:28.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:24:28.12:!2003.353.02:24:28 2003.353.02:24:28.12:preob 2003.353.02:24:30.88/tpical/21107,21255,21574,21535,21115,22640,22829,22611,53012,18632 2003.353.02:24:30.96/tpical/19393,19030,18911,18966,19825,19248,35912 2003.353.02:24:31.04:!2003.353.02:24:38 2003.353.02:24:38.00:tape 2003.353.02:24:38.07/tape/low,03885,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:24:38.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:24:38.08:midob 2003.353.02:24:38.19/tpi/16113,16211,16219,16150,15815,16215,16336,16247,40081,13676 2003.353.02:24:38.27/tpi/16032,15921,16150,16038,16353,15886,30071 2003.353.02:24:38.85/tsys1/57.3,56.6,53.6,52.9,52.8,44.6,44.4,45.0,54.9,48.9 2003.353.02:24:38.86/tsys2/60.8,65.2,74.5,69.7,60.2,60.4,66.0 2003.353.02:24:43.64/wx/-17.4,962.7,75.2 2003.353.02:24:43.79/cable/+3.82971E-02 2003.353.02:24:43.85/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40081,30074,0,1pps 2003.353.02:24:43.90/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13678,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.02:24:43.98/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16187,15896,545,1pps 2003.353.02:24:44.06/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16210,16072,554,1pps 2003.353.02:24:44.15/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16133,16236,550,1pps 2003.353.02:24:44.65/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:24:47.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:24:47.22?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.02:24:47.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.02:24:47.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.02:24:47.23:!2003.353.02:26:21 2003.353.02:24:48.03#setcl#time/314342411,1,2003,353,02,24,48.00,0.149,8.041,1 2003.353.02:24:48.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:26:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:26:21.00:et 2003.353.02:26:21.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:26:24.05:tape 2003.353.02:26:24.12/tape/low,05274,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:26:24.12:postob 2003.353.02:26:24.13:scan_name=353-0228 2003.353.02:26:24.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.02:26:30.65:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:26:35.29/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-55.1,,-0.1, 2003.353.02:26:44.43:!2003.353.02:27:56 2003.353.02:27:56.00:tape 2003.353.02:27:56.07/tape/low,05274,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:27:56.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:27:56.12:!2003.353.02:27:56 2003.353.02:27:56.12:preob 2003.353.02:27:58.88/tpical/20497,20930,21539,21920,20102,21726,22132,21876,64886,22561 2003.353.02:27:58.96/tpical/18953,18752,18746,18749,19821,19824,39552 2003.353.02:27:59.04:!2003.353.02:28:06 2003.353.02:28:06.00:tape 2003.353.02:28:06.07/tape/low,05389,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:28:06.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:28:06.08:midob 2003.353.02:28:06.19/tpi/16571,16904,17182,17459,16003,16608,16927,16780,51956,17657 2003.353.02:28:06.27/tpi/16051,16020,16304,16172,16675,16675,34100 2003.353.02:28:06.85/tsys1/75.0,74.1,69.9,69.1,69.0,57.4,57.4,58.1,71.4,64.1 2003.353.02:28:06.86/tsys2/70.5,74.7,85.1,79.8,67.7,67.7,80.3 2003.353.02:28:11.48/wx/-17.8,962.6,74.7 2003.353.02:28:11.63/cable/+3.83004E-02 2003.353.02:28:11.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,52009,34684,0,1pps 2003.353.02:28:11.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,17676,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.02:28:11.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.53, -5.79,lock,15934,15404,545,1pps 2003.353.02:28:11.91/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.09, -0.46,lock,16145,16121,554,1pps 2003.353.02:28:12.00/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16300,16294,550,1pps 2003.353.02:28:12.50/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:28:15.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:28:15.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:28:15.22:!2003.353.02:29:44 2003.353.02:28:16.05#setcl#time/314363213,1,2003,353,02,28,16.00,0.089,8.099,-1 2003.353.02:28:16.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:29:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:29:44.00:et 2003.353.02:29:44.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:29:47.05:tape 2003.353.02:29:47.12/tape/low,06713,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:29:47.12:postob 2003.353.02:29:47.13:scan_name=353-0231 2003.353.02:29:47.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.02:29:53.65:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:29:58.29/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-55.1,,-0.1, 2003.353.02:30:07.43:!2003.353.02:31:00 2003.353.02:31:00.00:tape 2003.353.02:31:00.07/tape/low,06713,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:31:00.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:31:00.12:!2003.353.02:31:00 2003.353.02:31:00.12:preob 2003.353.02:31:02.88/tpical/21281,21793,21939,22169,21630,23522,23372,23573,49050,17210 2003.353.02:31:02.96/tpical/19770,19696,19039,19610,20022,19950,33813 2003.353.02:31:03.04:!2003.353.02:31:10 2003.353.02:31:10.00:tape 2003.353.02:31:10.07/tape/low,06828,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:31:10.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:31:10.08:midob 2003.353.02:31:10.19/tpi/15827,16165,16027,16134,15714,16267,16182,16388,36141,12243 2003.353.02:31:10.27/tpi/16103,16208,16050,16362,16297,16255,27858 2003.353.02:31:10.85/tsys1/51.5,50.6,48.0,47.1,47.0,39.6,39.7,40.2,49.5,43.6 2003.353.02:31:10.86/tsys2/56.0,59.2,68.4,64.1,55.9,56.2,59.9 2003.353.02:31:14.77/wx/-17.4,962.6,76.0 2003.353.02:31:14.83/cable/+3.82999E-02 2003.353.02:31:14.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36139,27901,0,1pps 2003.353.02:31:14.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12246,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.02:31:15.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16171,15939,545,1pps 2003.353.02:31:15.11/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16290,16036,554,1pps 2003.353.02:31:15.20/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16068,16119,550,1pps 2003.353.02:31:15.70/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:31:18.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:31:18.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:31:18.23:!2003.353.02:32:48 2003.353.02:31:19.03#setcl#time/314381511,1,2003,353,02,31,19.00,0.147,8.149,1 2003.353.02:31:19.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:32:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:32:48.00:et 2003.353.02:32:48.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:32:51.05:tape 2003.353.02:32:51.12/tape/low,08151,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:32:51.12:postob 2003.353.02:32:51.13:scan_name=353-0236 2003.353.02:32:51.14:source=2152+226,215247.3,223607.8,1950.0 2003.353.02:32:57.65:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:33:02.29/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-54.3,,0.7, 2003.353.02:33:11.43:!2003.353.02:36:18 2003.353.02:36:18.00:tape 2003.353.02:36:18.07/tape/low,08151,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:36:18.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:36:18.12:!2003.353.02:36:18 2003.353.02:36:18.12:preob 2003.353.02:36:20.88/tpical/21980,21601,22353,22293,21409,23294,23227,23406,48678,17057 2003.353.02:36:20.96/tpical/19645,19567,18946,19536,19958,19880,33487 2003.353.02:36:21.04:!2003.353.02:36:28 2003.353.02:36:28.00:tape 2003.353.02:36:28.07/tape/low,08266,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:36:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:36:28.08:midob 2003.353.02:36:28.19/tpi/16298,15964,16254,16190,15502,16032,15999,16180,35744,12072 2003.353.02:36:28.27/tpi/15985,16076,15926,16273,16226,16153,27716 2003.353.02:36:28.85/tsys1/51.0,49.9,47.2,46.8,46.4,39.0,39.0,39.5,48.9,42.9 2003.353.02:36:28.86/tsys2/55.6,58.7,67.2,63.4,55.5,55.4,61.5 2003.353.02:36:33.89/wx/-17.6,962.5,75.4 2003.353.02:36:34.03/cable/+3.82989E-02 2003.353.02:36:34.09/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35740,27766,0,1pps 2003.353.02:36:34.14/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12073,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.02:36:34.22/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15978,15762,545,1pps 2003.353.02:36:34.30/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16039,16201,554,1pps 2003.353.02:36:34.38/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15945,15987,550,1pps 2003.353.02:36:34.88/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:36:35.04#setcl#time/314413112,1,2003,353,02,36,35.00,0.117,8.237,0 2003.353.02:36:35.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:36:37.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:36:37.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.02:36:37.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.02:36:37.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.02:36:37.23:!2003.353.02:42:44 2003.353.02:42:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:42:44.00:et 2003.353.02:42:44.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:42:47.05:tape 2003.353.02:42:47.12/tape/low,13296,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:42:47.12:postob 2003.353.02:42:47.13:scan_name=353-0247 2003.353.02:42:47.14:source=0201+113,020106.0,112022.8,1950.0 2003.353.02:42:53.65:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:42:58.29/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-54.3,,0.7, 2003.353.02:43:07.43:!2003.353.02:46:54 2003.353.02:46:54.00:tape 2003.353.02:46:54.07/tape/low,13296,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:46:54.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:46:54.12:!2003.353.02:46:54 2003.353.02:46:54.12:preob 2003.353.02:46:56.88/tpical/21344,20593,21645,21745,21525,23057,23077,22880,51278,18000 2003.353.02:46:56.96/tpical/19043,19236,18989,19015,19815,19534,35528 2003.353.02:46:57.04:!2003.353.02:47:04 2003.353.02:47:04.00:tape 2003.353.02:47:04.07/tape/low,13412,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:47:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:47:04.08:midob 2003.353.02:47:04.19/tpi/16132,15519,16072,16144,15941,16302,16349,16263,38373,13052 2003.353.02:47:04.27/tpi/15678,15964,16115,15985,16247,16049,29696 2003.353.02:47:04.85/tsys1/55.0,53.9,51.1,50.8,50.5,42.7,42.9,43.3,52.6,46.7 2003.353.02:47:04.86/tsys2/59.3,62.1,71.5,67.1,58.2,58.8,65.2 2003.353.02:47:08.86/wx/-17.4,962.3,76.6 2003.353.02:47:08.91/cable/+3.82919E-02 2003.353.02:47:08.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38376,29694,0,1pps 2003.353.02:47:09.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13050,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.02:47:09.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15521,16057,545,1pps 2003.353.02:47:09.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16295,16287,554,1pps 2003.353.02:47:09.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16124,16236,550,1pps 2003.353.02:47:09.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:47:12.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.02:47:12.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.02:47:12.22:!2003.353.02:48:46 2003.353.02:47:13.02#setcl#time/314476910,1,2003,353,02,47,13.00,0.171,8.414,2 2003.353.02:47:13.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.02:47:28.50/wx/-17.4,962.3,76.6 2003.353.02:48:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:48:46.00:et 2003.353.02:48:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:48:49.05:tape 2003.353.02:48:49.12/tape/low,14788,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:48:49.12:postob 2003.353.02:48:49.13:scan_name=353-0254 2003.353.02:48:49.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.02:48:55.65:sx4ca=11 2003.353.02:49:00.29/pass/11,,auto,-55.0,,-55.1,,-0.1, 2003.353.02:49:09.43:!2003.353.02:54:48 2003.353.02:54:48.00:tape 2003.353.02:54:48.07/tape/low,14788,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:54:48.07:st=for,160 2003.353.02:54:48.12:!2003.353.02:54:48 2003.353.02:54:48.12:preob 2003.353.02:54:50.88/tpical/20955,21263,21664,22216,21902,23338,23319,23099,50095,17453 2003.353.02:54:50.96/tpical/19567,19513,19107,19161,19767,19603,34892 2003.353.02:54:51.04:!2003.353.02:54:58 2003.353.02:54:58.00:tape 2003.353.02:54:58.07/tape/low,14903,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:54:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.02:54:58.08:midob 2003.353.02:54:58.19/tpi/15724,15954,15953,16289,16021,16252,16302,16169,37201,12495 2003.353.02:54:58.27/tpi/16051,16143,16181,16090,16149,16054,29094 2003.353.02:54:58.85/tsys1/53.4,52.9,49.4,48.4,48.2,40.5,41.0,41.1,51.0,44.6 2003.353.02:54:58.86/tsys2/58.2,61.0,70.5,66.6,57.0,57.8,64.3 2003.353.02:55:03.45/wx/-17.4,962.2,76.0 2003.353.02:55:03.47/cable/+3.82968E-02 2003.353.02:55:03.53/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37213,30161,0,1pps 2003.353.02:55:03.58/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12500,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.02:55:03.66/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15929,15604,545,1pps 2003.353.02:55:03.75/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16245,15979,554,1pps 2003.353.02:55:03.83/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16185,16255,550,1pps 2003.353.02:55:04.33/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.02:55:05.03#setcl#time/314524111,1,2003,353,02,55,05.00,0.140,8.546,1 2003.353.02:55:05.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.02:55:07.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.02:55:07.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.02:55:07.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.02:55:07.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.02:55:07.23:!2003.353.02:57:25 2003.353.02:56:37.82;"weather - clear 2003.353.02:57:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.02:57:25.00:et 2003.353.02:57:25.04:!+3s 2003.353.02:57:28.05:tape 2003.353.02:57:28.12/tape/low,16880,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.02:57:28.12:postob 2003.353.02:57:28.13:scan_name=353-0301 2003.353.02:57:28.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.02:57:34.65:midtp 2003.353.02:57:37.37/tpzero/209,340,259,333,285,290,329,330,642,205 2003.353.02:57:37.45/tpzero/322,324,317,345,279,274,439 2003.353.02:57:38.17/rx/-1(undef),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,0.913 2003.353.02:57:38.28/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,2.366 2003.353.02:57:38.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.02:57:38.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.909 2003.353.02:57:38.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.353.02:57:38.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.99 2003.353.02:57:38.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,56.96 2003.353.02:57:38.83:sx4cb=12 2003.353.02:57:43.85/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.02:57:52.99:fastf=0m34s 2003.353.02:58:27.09:!+5s 2003.353.02:58:32.10:!2003.353.03:01:10 2003.353.03:01:10.00:tape 2003.353.03:01:10.07/tape/low,17645,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:01:10.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:01:10.12:!2003.353.03:01:10 2003.353.03:01:10.12:preob 2003.353.03:01:12.87/tpical/21168,21487,21861,21960,21186,23189,23200,22927,50682,17771 2003.353.03:01:12.95/tpical/19948,19168,19123,19452,19895,19777,33927 2003.353.03:01:13.03:!2003.353.03:01:20 2003.353.03:01:20.00:tape 2003.353.03:01:20.07/tape/low,17529,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:01:20.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:01:20.08:midob 2003.353.03:01:20.19/tpi/15916,16104,16150,16191,15563,16243,16296,16141,37734,12792 2003.353.03:01:20.27/tpi/16298,15809,16117,16237,16173,16082,27870 2003.353.03:01:20.85/tsys1/53.8,52.7,50.1,49.5,48.9,41.3,41.6,41.9,51.6,45.5 2003.353.03:01:20.86/tsys2/56.9,59.9,68.3,64.3,55.5,55.6,58.9 2003.353.03:01:24.75/wx/-17.1,962.2,76.8 2003.353.03:01:24.91/cable/+3.82992E-02 2003.353.03:01:24.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37756,27880,0,1pps 2003.353.03:01:25.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12799,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.03:01:25.11/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16133,15774,545,1pps 2003.353.03:01:25.20/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16255,15934,554,1pps 2003.353.03:01:25.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16126,16198,550,1pps 2003.353.03:01:25.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:01:26.04#setcl#time/314562212,1,2003,353,03,01,26.00,0.111,8.651,0 2003.353.03:01:26.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:01:28.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:01:28.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:01:28.22:!2003.353.03:02:58 2003.353.03:02:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:02:58.00:et 2003.353.03:02:58.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:03:01.05:tape 2003.353.03:03:01.12/tape/low,16207,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:03:01.12:postob 2003.353.03:03:01.13:scan_name=353-0307 2003.353.03:03:01.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.03:03:07.65:check80r 2003.353.03:03:40.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 25 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.03:03:40.38/parity/22.,12.,14.,26.,24.,16.,8.,6.,8.,40.,648.,6.,98.,60. 2003.353.03:03:40.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.03:04:05.96:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:04:10.60/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:04:19.74:!2003.353.03:07:31 2003.353.03:07:31.00:tape 2003.353.03:07:31.07/tape/low,16207,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:07:31.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:07:31.12:!2003.353.03:07:31 2003.353.03:07:31.12:preob 2003.353.03:07:33.88/tpical/20789,20860,21893,21815,21818,22722,22917,22749,52021,18291 2003.353.03:07:33.96/tpical/19093,18604,18902,19227,19857,19658,35302 2003.353.03:07:34.04:!2003.353.03:07:41 2003.353.03:07:41.00:tape 2003.353.03:07:41.07/tape/low,16091,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:07:41.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:07:41.08:midob 2003.353.03:07:41.19/tpi/15779,15818,16340,16277,16273,16183,16343,16297,39126,13353 2003.353.03:07:41.26/tpi/15710,15879,16031,16142,16239,16099,29416 2003.353.03:07:41.83/tsys1/55.9,55.3,52.1,51.8,51.9,43.7,43.8,44.5,53.7,47.9 2003.353.03:07:41.83/tsys2/59.1,74.2,71.2,66.6,57.3,57.8,64.0 2003.353.03:07:46.06/wx/-17.4,962.1,75.8 2003.353.03:07:46.19/cable/+3.82893E-02 2003.353.03:07:46.25/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39125,29441,0,1pps 2003.353.03:07:46.30/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13355,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:07:46.38/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15811,16355,545,1pps 2003.353.03:07:46.46/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16201,16231,554,1pps 2003.353.03:07:46.54/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16041,16204,550,1pps 2003.353.03:07:47.04/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:07:50.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:07:50.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:07:50.22:!2003.353.03:09:19 2003.353.03:07:51.02#setcl#time/314600710,1,2003,353,03,07,51.00,0.164,8.758,2 2003.353.03:07:51.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:09:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:09:19.00:et 2003.353.03:09:19.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:09:22.05:tape 2003.353.03:09:22.12/tape/low,14768,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:09:22.12:postob 2003.353.03:09:22.13:scan_name=353-0311 2003.353.03:09:22.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.03:09:28.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:09:33.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:09:42.43:!2003.353.03:11:32 2003.353.03:11:32.00:tape 2003.353.03:11:32.07/tape/low,14768,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:11:32.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:11:32.12:!2003.353.03:11:32 2003.353.03:11:32.12:preob 2003.353.03:11:34.87/tpical/21019,21331,21769,22062,20992,23047,23126,22836,50303,17602 2003.353.03:11:34.95/tpical/19624,19607,19141,19124,19795,19590,34920 2003.353.03:11:35.03:!2003.353.03:11:42 2003.353.03:11:42.00:tape 2003.353.03:11:42.07/tape/low,14652,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:11:42.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:11:42.08:midob 2003.353.03:11:42.19/tpi/15827,16029,16082,16242,15479,16208,16288,16171,37484,12698 2003.353.03:11:42.27/tpi/16098,16214,16232,16046,16173,16033,29068 2003.353.03:11:42.85/tsys1/54.1,53.3,50.1,49.2,49.6,41.9,42.0,42.8,51.7,45.9 2003.353.03:11:42.86/tsys2/58.2,60.9,71.1,66.3,57.0,57.6,63.6 2003.353.03:11:46.63/wx/-17.6,962.1,75.3 2003.353.03:11:46.67/cable/+3.82913E-02 2003.353.03:11:46.73/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37491,29119,0,1pps 2003.353.03:11:46.78/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12697,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:11:46.86/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16027,15692,545,1pps 2003.353.03:11:46.95/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16202,16290,554,1pps 2003.353.03:11:47.04/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16218,16267,550,1pps 2003.353.03:11:47.54/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:11:50.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:11:50.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.03:11:50.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.03:11:50.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.03:11:50.23:!2003.353.03:13:31 2003.353.03:11:51.03#setcl#time/314624711,1,2003,353,03,11,51.00,0.136,8.825,1 2003.353.03:11:51.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:13:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:13:31.00:et 2003.353.03:13:31.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:13:34.05:tape 2003.353.03:13:34.12/tape/low,13183,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:13:34.12:postob 2003.353.03:13:34.13:scan_name=353-0315 2003.353.03:13:34.13:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.03:13:40.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:13:45.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:13:54.43:!2003.353.03:15:18 2003.353.03:15:18.00:tape 2003.353.03:15:18.07/tape/low,13183,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:15:18.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:15:18.12:!2003.353.03:15:18 2003.353.03:15:18.12:preob 2003.353.03:15:20.88/tpical/15698,15998,16218,16162,15411,15940,15931,16132,35717,12028 2003.353.03:15:20.95/tpical/15736,15838,15963,16070,16034,16039,28914 2003.353.03:15:21.02:!2003.353.03:15:28 2003.353.03:15:28.00:tape 2003.353.03:15:28.07/tape/low,13067,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:15:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:15:28.07:midob 2003.353.03:15:28.18/tpi/15714,16027,16222,16185,15442,15956,15964,16149,35752,12040 2003.353.03:15:28.25/tpi/15734,15811,15923,16059,16015,16023,28887 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 1u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 2u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 3u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 4u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 5u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 6u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 7u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device 8u overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ic overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.03:15:28.83/tsys1/-17443.1,-9736.8,-71833.5,-12405.9,-8800.8,-17624.2,-8528.2,-16749.5,-18056.6,-17752.5 2003.353.03:15:28.83/tsys2/100178.0,7456.7,5072.0,18571.1,10766.7,12796.1,13697.2 2003.353.03:15:34.11/wx/-17.5,962.0,75.9 2003.353.03:15:34.19/cable/+3.82983E-02 2003.353.03:15:34.24/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35771,28892,0,1pps 2003.353.03:15:34.29/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12050,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.03:15:34.37/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16041,15776,545,1pps 2003.353.03:15:34.45/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15973,16225,554,1pps 2003.353.03:15:34.53/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15946,15993,550,1pps 2003.353.03:15:35.03/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:15:38.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:15:38.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:15:38.22:!2003.353.03:17:06 2003.353.03:15:39.02#setcl#time/314647510,1,2003,353,03,15,39.00,0.162,8.888,2 2003.353.03:15:39.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:17:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:17:06.00:et 2003.353.03:17:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:17:09.05:tape 2003.353.03:17:09.12/tape/low,11745,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:17:09.12:postob 2003.353.03:17:09.13:scan_name=353-0319 2003.353.03:17:09.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.353.03:17:15.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:17:20.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:17:20.64@rxmon 2003.353.03:17:21.69/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.353.03:17:21.80/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.03:17:21.91/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.03:17:22.02/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.910 2003.353.03:17:22.13/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.03:17:22.24/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.85 2003.353.03:17:22.35/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,56.96 2003.353.03:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.03:17:28.66/wx/-17.4,962.0,75.8 2003.353.03:17:29.45:!2003.353.03:19:12 2003.353.03:19:12.00:tape 2003.353.03:19:12.07/tape/low,11745,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:19:12.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:19:12.12:!2003.353.03:19:12 2003.353.03:19:12.12:preob 2003.353.03:19:14.88/tpical/21065,21217,21533,21586,21110,22668,22455,22655,52961,18669 2003.353.03:19:14.96/tpical/19338,19464,18772,19267,19631,19819,35474 2003.353.03:19:15.04:!2003.353.03:19:22 2003.353.03:19:22.00:tape 2003.353.03:19:22.07/tape/low,11629,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:19:22.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:19:22.08:midob 2003.353.03:19:22.19/tpi/16031,16138,16125,16179,15809,16210,16061,16267,39969,13690 2003.353.03:19:22.27/tpi/15994,16252,16004,16248,16178,16323,29583 2003.353.03:19:22.85/tsys1/56.6,56.0,52.8,52.8,52.7,44.4,44.3,44.9,54.5,48.8 2003.353.03:19:22.86/tsys2/60.9,64.5,73.7,68.5,59.9,59.7,64.3 2003.353.03:19:28.13/wx/-17.7,962.1,75.0 2003.353.03:19:28.27/cable/+3.82976E-02 2003.353.03:19:28.33/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39972,29626,0,1pps 2003.353.03:19:28.38/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13693,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:19:28.46/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16147,15827,545,1pps 2003.353.03:19:28.55/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16198,16103,554,1pps 2003.353.03:19:28.64/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16006,16133,550,1pps 2003.353.03:19:29.14/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:19:30.04#setcl#time/314670612,1,2003,353,03,19,30.00,0.107,8.952,0 2003.353.03:19:30.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:19:32.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:19:32.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.03:19:32.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.03:19:32.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.03:19:32.23:!2003.353.03:21:00 2003.353.03:21:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:21:00.00:et 2003.353.03:21:00.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:21:03.05:tape 2003.353.03:21:03.12/tape/low,10306,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:21:03.12:postob 2003.353.03:21:03.13:scan_name=353-0323 2003.353.03:21:03.14:source=1357+769,135742.2,765753.8,1950.0 2003.353.03:21:09.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:21:14.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:21:23.43:!2003.353.03:22:54 2003.353.03:22:54.00:tape 2003.353.03:22:54.07/tape/low,10306,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:22:54.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:22:54.12:!2003.353.03:22:54 2003.353.03:22:54.12:preob 2003.353.03:22:56.88/tpical/20935,21229,21571,22099,21696,23107,23112,23310,49919,17329 2003.353.03:22:56.96/tpical/19226,19150,18664,19119,19574,19510,35242 2003.353.03:22:57.04:!2003.353.03:23:04 2003.353.03:23:04.00:tape 2003.353.03:23:04.07/tape/low,10190,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:23:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:23:04.08:midob 2003.353.03:23:04.19/tpi/15527,15697,15698,16073,15725,15917,15968,16170,36686,12295 2003.353.03:23:04.27/tpi/15472,15583,15498,15661,15666,15613,29145 2003.353.03:23:04.85/tsys1/51.0,50.0,47.3,47.0,46.5,39.1,39.4,39.9,49.0,43.2 2003.353.03:23:04.86/tsys2/52.5,55.6,62.3,57.6,51.2,51.2,61.2 2003.353.03:23:09.06/wx/-17.6,962.0,75.7 2003.353.03:23:09.22/cable/+3.82960E-02 2003.353.03:23:09.28/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36707,29147,0,1pps 2003.353.03:23:09.33/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12311,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:23:09.41/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15719,15390,545,1pps 2003.353.03:23:09.50/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,15937,16169,554,1pps 2003.353.03:23:09.59/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15943,15992,550,1pps 2003.353.03:23:10.09/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:23:11.03#setcl#time/314692711,1,2003,353,03,23,11.00,0.133,9.014,1 2003.353.03:23:11.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:23:13.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:23:13.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:23:13.22:!2003.353.03:24:42 2003.353.03:24:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:24:42.00:et 2003.353.03:24:42.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:24:45.05:tape 2003.353.03:24:45.12/tape/low,08867,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:24:45.12:postob 2003.353.03:24:45.13:scan_name=353-0328 2003.353.03:24:45.13:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.03:24:51.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:24:56.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:25:05.43:!2003.353.03:27:58 2003.353.03:27:58.00:tape 2003.353.03:27:58.07/tape/low,08867,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:27:58.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:27:58.12:!2003.353.03:27:58 2003.353.03:27:58.12:preob 2003.353.03:28:00.88/tpical/21357,20797,21991,22450,21495,23378,23308,23486,49085,17131 2003.353.03:28:00.96/tpical/19815,19014,19074,19122,19669,19543,33681 2003.353.03:28:01.04:!2003.353.03:28:08 2003.353.03:28:08.00:tape 2003.353.03:28:08.07/tape/low,08752,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:28:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:28:08.08:midob 2003.353.03:28:08.19/tpi/15863,15441,16043,16329,15556,16081,16086,16254,36137,12142 2003.353.03:28:08.27/tpi/16180,15656,16061,15930,15991,15921,27756 2003.353.03:28:08.85/tsys1/51.3,50.8,47.8,47.0,46.3,39.0,39.3,39.6,49.3,43.1 2003.353.03:28:08.86/tsys2/56.7,59.4,67.9,63.5,55.5,56.2,59.9 2003.353.03:28:13.45/wx/-18.1,962.0,74.5 2003.353.03:28:13.54/cable/+3.83000E-02 2003.353.03:28:13.60/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36140,27778,0,1pps 2003.353.03:28:13.66/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12140,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.03:28:13.74/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15426,15959,545,1pps 2003.353.03:28:13.83/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16078,16306,554,1pps 2003.353.03:28:13.92/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16077,16130,550,1pps 2003.353.03:28:14.42/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:28:15.03#setcl#time/314723111,1,2003,353,03,28,15.00,0.132,9.098,1 2003.353.03:28:15.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:28:17.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:28:17.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:28:17.22:!2003.353.03:29:46 2003.353.03:29:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:29:46.00:et 2003.353.03:29:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:29:49.05:tape 2003.353.03:29:49.12/tape/low,07429,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:29:49.12:postob 2003.353.03:29:49.13:scan_name=353-0332 2003.353.03:29:49.14:source=2152+226,215247.3,223607.8,1950.0 2003.353.03:29:55.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:30:00.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:30:09.43:!2003.353.03:32:28 2003.353.03:32:28.00:tape 2003.353.03:32:28.07/tape/low,07429,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:32:28.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:32:28.12:!2003.353.03:32:28 2003.353.03:32:28.12:preob 2003.353.03:32:30.88/tpical/21199,21676,22422,22359,21451,23371,23329,23507,48838,17111 2003.353.03:32:30.96/tpical/19677,19627,18941,19460,19576,19833,33571 2003.353.03:32:31.04:!2003.353.03:32:38 2003.353.03:32:38.00:tape 2003.353.03:32:38.07/tape/low,07313,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:32:38.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:32:38.08:midob 2003.353.03:32:38.19/tpi/15710,16047,16292,16232,15521,16080,16077,16261,35871,12107 2003.353.03:32:38.27/tpi/16017,16134,15934,16211,15905,16119,27698 2003.353.03:32:38.85/tsys1/50.8,50.2,47.1,46.7,46.2,39.0,39.1,39.6,48.9,42.8 2003.353.03:32:38.86/tsys2/55.7,58.8,67.5,63.5,55.3,55.5,60.3 2003.353.03:32:43.48/wx/-17.9,962.0,75.1 2003.353.03:32:43.62/cable/+3.83002E-02 2003.353.03:32:43.68/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35874,27681,0,1pps 2003.353.03:32:43.73/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12112,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.03:32:43.81/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16044,15828,545,1pps 2003.353.03:32:43.90/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16084,16293,554,1pps 2003.353.03:32:43.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15936,15975,550,1pps 2003.353.03:32:44.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:32:45.04#setcl#time/314750112,1,2003,353,03,32,45.00,0.105,9.173,0 2003.353.03:32:45.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:32:47.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:32:47.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:32:47.22:!2003.353.03:38:56 2003.353.03:38:56.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:38:56.00:et 2003.353.03:38:56.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:38:59.05:tape 2003.353.03:38:59.12/tape/low,02257,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:38:59.12:postob 2003.353.03:38:59.13:scan_name=353-0341 2003.353.03:38:59.13:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.353.03:39:05.65:sx4cb=12 2003.353.03:39:10.29/pass/12,,auto,-55.0,,-55.9,,-0.9, 2003.353.03:39:15.23;"weather - clear 2003.353.03:39:19.43:!2003.353.03:41:22 2003.353.03:41:22.00:tape 2003.353.03:41:22.07/tape/low,02257,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:41:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.03:41:22.12:!2003.353.03:41:22 2003.353.03:41:22.12:preob 2003.353.03:41:24.88/tpical/21642,21035,22212,22171,21897,23430,23364,23218,49688,17468 2003.353.03:41:24.96/tpical/19648,19519,19221,19509,20260,19883,33116 2003.353.03:41:25.04:!2003.353.03:41:32 2003.353.03:41:32.00:tape 2003.353.03:41:32.07/tape/low,02141,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:41:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:41:32.08:midob 2003.353.03:41:32.19/tpi/16141,15672,16262,16218,15985,16268,16275,16249,36723,12478 2003.353.03:41:32.27/tpi/15988,16033,16128,16193,16370,16073,27248 2003.353.03:41:32.85/tsys1/52.1,51.5,48.4,48.0,47.8,40.2,40.5,41.1,50.1,44.3 2003.353.03:41:32.86/tsys2/55.6,58.6,66.5,62.1,53.8,53.9,59.4 2003.353.03:41:36.98/wx/-18.0,961.9,75.5 2003.353.03:41:37.06/cable/+3.82959E-02 2003.353.03:41:37.12/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36732,27261,0,1pps 2003.353.03:41:37.17/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12476,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:41:37.25/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15684,16202,545,1pps 2003.353.03:41:37.33/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16271,16047,554,1pps 2003.353.03:41:37.41/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16142,16242,550,1pps 2003.353.03:41:37.91/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:41:40.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:41:40.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:41:40.22:!2003.353.03:43:10 2003.353.03:41:41.02#setcl#time/314803710,1,2003,353,03,41,41.00,0.154,9.322,2 2003.353.03:41:41.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:43:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:43:10.00:et 2003.353.03:43:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:43:13.05:tape 2003.353.03:43:13.12/tape/low,00817,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:43:13.12:postob 2003.353.03:43:13.13:scan_name=353-0348 2003.353.03:43:13.14:source=2318+049,231812.1,045723.3,1950.0 2003.353.03:43:19.65:midtp 2003.353.03:43:22.37/tpzero/211,335,261,330,281,288,326,328,634,202 2003.353.03:43:22.45/tpzero/320,322,316,348,280,278,422 2003.353.03:43:23.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.353.03:43:23.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.03:43:23.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.03:43:23.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.03:43:23.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.03:43:23.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.38 2003.353.03:43:23.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,56.96 2003.353.03:43:23.83:sx4ca=13 2003.353.03:43:29.41/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.03:43:38.55:fastr=0m27s 2003.353.03:44:05.65:!+5s 2003.353.03:44:10.66:!2003.353.03:48:23 2003.353.03:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.03:47:28.83/wx/-18.5,961.8,73.7 2003.353.03:48:23.00:tape 2003.353.03:48:23.07/tape/low,00210,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.03:48:23.07:st=for,160 2003.353.03:48:23.12:!2003.353.03:48:23 2003.353.03:48:23.12:preob 2003.353.03:48:25.88/tpical/21708,21195,21638,22045,22179,23100,23099,23316,50101,17635 2003.353.03:48:25.96/tpical/19309,19315,18901,19515,19733,19906,34189 2003.353.03:48:26.04:!2003.353.03:48:33 2003.353.03:48:33.00:tape 2003.353.03:48:33.07/tape/low,00325,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:48:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:48:33.08:midob 2003.353.03:48:33.19/tpi/16233,15839,15908,16173,16246,16110,16125,16311,37134,12638 2003.353.03:48:33.27/tpi/15797,15966,15990,16347,16112,16303,28295 2003.353.03:48:33.85/tsys1/52.7,52.1,49.2,48.6,48.4,40.7,40.8,41.1,50.7,44.8 2003.353.03:48:33.86/tsys2/57.3,60.7,70.0,65.7,56.8,57.8,61.5 2003.353.03:48:39.20/wx/-18.5,961.7,73.6 2003.353.03:48:39.31/cable/+3.82991E-02 2003.353.03:48:39.36/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37134,28301,0,1pps 2003.353.03:48:39.42/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12641,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:48:39.50/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15837,16349,545,1pps 2003.353.03:48:39.59/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16124,16145,554,1pps 2003.353.03:48:39.67/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15980,16035,550,1pps 2003.353.03:48:40.17/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:48:41.02#setcl#time/314845710,1,2003,353,03,48,41.00,0.153,9.439,2 2003.353.03:48:41.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:48:43.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:48:43.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.03:48:43.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.03:48:43.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.03:48:43.23:!2003.353.03:50:11 2003.353.03:50:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:50:11.00:et 2003.353.03:50:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:50:14.05:tape 2003.353.03:50:14.12/tape/low,01648,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:50:14.12:postob 2003.353.03:50:14.13:scan_name=353-0352 2003.353.03:50:14.13:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.03:50:20.65:check80f 2003.353.03:50:53.38/parity/20.,10.,24.,22.,10.,10.,4.,8.,6.,26.,414.,10.,18.,20. 2003.353.03:50:53.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.03:51:18.96:sx4ca=13 2003.353.03:51:23.60/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.03:51:32.74:!2003.353.03:52:29 2003.353.03:52:29.00:tape 2003.353.03:52:29.07/tape/low,01648,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:52:29.07:st=for,160 2003.353.03:52:29.12:!2003.353.03:52:29 2003.353.03:52:29.12:preob 2003.353.03:52:31.88/tpical/21698,21135,22357,22103,21898,23340,23349,23143,49843,17417 2003.353.03:52:31.96/tpical/19413,19369,18962,19476,20003,19839,34158 2003.353.03:52:32.04:!2003.353.03:52:39 2003.353.03:52:39.00:tape 2003.353.03:52:39.07/tape/low,01764,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:52:39.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:52:39.08:midob 2003.353.03:52:39.19/tpi/16288,15837,16457,16223,16069,16319,16338,16269,37004,12495 2003.353.03:52:39.27/tpi/15921,16013,16035,16310,16314,16210,28308 2003.353.03:52:39.85/tsys1/53.5,52.7,49.4,48.7,48.8,41.1,41.1,41.7,51.0,45.0 2003.353.03:52:39.86/tsys2/58.1,60.8,69.8,65.5,56.5,57.1,62.0 2003.353.03:52:44.68/wx/-18.2,961.6,74.9 2003.353.03:52:44.74/cable/+3.82941E-02 2003.353.03:52:44.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37009,28351,0,1pps 2003.353.03:52:44.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12493,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.03:52:44.94/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15829,16361,545,1pps 2003.353.03:52:45.03/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16308,16018,554,1pps 2003.353.03:52:45.12/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16054,16123,550,1pps 2003.353.03:52:45.62/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:52:46.02#setcl#time/314870210,1,2003,353,03,52,46.00,0.151,9.507,2 2003.353.03:52:46.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:52:48.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.03:52:48.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:52:48.22:!2003.353.03:55:59 2003.353.03:55:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:55:59.00:et 2003.353.03:55:59.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:56:02.05:tape 2003.353.03:56:02.12/tape/low,04449,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:56:02.12:postob 2003.353.03:56:02.13:scan_name=353-0357 2003.353.03:56:02.14:source=0014+813,001404.5,811828.2,1950.0 2003.353.03:56:08.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.03:56:13.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.03:56:22.43:!2003.353.03:57:35 2003.353.03:57:35.00:tape 2003.353.03:57:35.07/tape/low,04449,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:57:35.07:st=for,160 2003.353.03:57:35.12:!2003.353.03:57:35 2003.353.03:57:35.12:preob 2003.353.03:57:37.88/tpical/21054,21335,21719,22190,21873,23302,23245,23057,50200,17451 2003.353.03:57:37.96/tpical/19708,19600,19198,19185,19772,19674,34787 2003.353.03:57:38.04:!2003.353.03:57:45 2003.353.03:57:45.00:tape 2003.353.03:57:45.07/tape/low,04564,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:57:45.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.03:57:45.08:midob 2003.353.03:57:45.19/tpi/15833,16007,16001,16317,16032,16237,16250,16138,37333,12512 2003.353.03:57:45.27/tpi/16185,16260,16290,16096,16148,16121,28911 2003.353.03:57:45.85/tsys1/53.9,52.9,49.5,49.0,48.5,40.6,41.0,41.1,51.3,44.9 2003.353.03:57:45.86/tsys2/58.5,62.0,71.4,66.3,56.9,58.0,63.0 2003.353.03:57:50.70/wx/-18.2,961.6,75.3 2003.353.03:57:50.82/cable/+3.82974E-02 2003.353.03:57:50.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37333,28903,0,1pps 2003.353.03:57:50.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12516,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.03:57:51.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16006,15685,545,1pps 2003.353.03:57:51.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16238,16026,554,1pps 2003.353.03:57:51.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.68,lock,16297,15980,550,1pps 2003.353.03:57:51.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.03:57:52.02#setcl#time/314900810,1,2003,353,03,57,52.00,0.150,9.592,2 2003.353.03:57:52.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.03:57:54.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.03:57:54.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.03:57:54.22:!2003.353.03:59:23 2003.353.03:59:23.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.03:59:23.00:et 2003.353.03:59:23.04:!+3s 2003.353.03:59:26.05:tape 2003.353.03:59:26.12/tape/low,05887,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.03:59:26.12:postob 2003.353.03:59:26.13:scan_name=353-0401 2003.353.03:59:26.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.03:59:32.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.03:59:37.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.03:59:46.43:!2003.353.04:01:07 2003.353.04:01:07.00:tape 2003.353.04:01:07.07/tape/low,05887,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:01:07.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:01:07.12:!2003.353.04:01:07 2003.353.04:01:07.12:preob 2003.353.04:01:09.88/tpical/20992,21309,21660,22188,21876,23270,23275,23019,50140,17435 2003.353.04:01:09.96/tpical/19720,19673,18798,19276,19854,19751,34680 2003.353.04:01:10.04:!2003.353.04:01:17 2003.353.04:01:17.00:tape 2003.353.04:01:17.07/tape/low,06002,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:01:17.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:01:17.08:midob 2003.353.04:01:17.19/tpi/15781,15995,15985,16317,16041,16250,16291,16169,37321,12512 2003.353.04:01:17.27/tpi/16210,16331,15953,16187,16244,16175,28823 2003.353.04:01:17.85/tsys1/53.8,53.0,49.9,49.0,48.6,40.9,41.1,41.6,51.5,45.0 2003.353.04:01:17.86/tsys2/58.9,62.3,71.5,66.7,57.5,57.8,63.0 2003.353.04:01:21.81/wx/-18.2,961.5,75.6 2003.353.04:01:21.86/cable/+3.83001E-02 2003.353.04:01:21.92/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37315,28836,0,1pps 2003.353.04:01:21.97/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12515,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:01:22.06/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15992,15673,545,1pps 2003.353.04:01:22.15/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16251,16001,554,1pps 2003.353.04:01:22.24/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15960,16026,550,1pps 2003.353.04:01:22.74/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:01:25.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:01:25.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:01:25.22:!2003.353.04:02:55 2003.353.04:01:26.02#setcl#time/314922210,1,2003,353,04,01,26.00,0.149,9.651,2 2003.353.04:01:26.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:02:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:02:55.00:et 2003.353.04:02:55.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:02:58.05:tape 2003.353.04:02:58.12/tape/low,07325,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:02:58.12:postob 2003.353.04:02:58.13:scan_name=353-0404 2003.353.04:02:58.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.04:03:04.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.04:03:09.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.04:03:18.43:!2003.353.04:03:58 2003.353.04:03:58.00:tape 2003.353.04:03:58.07/tape/low,07325,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:03:58.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:03:58.12:!2003.353.04:03:58 2003.353.04:03:58.12:preob 2003.353.04:04:00.88/tpical/20942,21243,21605,22123,21848,23231,23227,22988,49995,17388 2003.353.04:04:00.96/tpical/19557,19531,19087,19126,19753,19611,34706 2003.353.04:04:01.04:!2003.353.04:04:08 2003.353.04:04:08.00:tape 2003.353.04:04:08.07/tape/low,07441,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:04:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:04:08.08:midob 2003.353.04:04:08.19/tpi/15703,15915,15907,16250,15972,16165,16205,16106,37146,12453 2003.353.04:04:08.27/tpi/16064,16164,16193,16051,16165,16052,28866 2003.353.04:04:08.85/tsys1/53.2,52.6,49.4,48.8,48.1,40.4,40.7,41.3,51.1,44.7 2003.353.04:04:08.86/tsys2/58.6,61.2,71.3,66.4,57.6,57.6,63.3 2003.353.04:04:13.65/wx/-17.9,961.5,75.9 2003.353.04:04:13.70/cable/+3.82991E-02 2003.353.04:04:13.76/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37153,28876,0,1pps 2003.353.04:04:13.81/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12454,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:04:13.90/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15920,15598,545,1pps 2003.353.04:04:13.99/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16165,15929,554,1pps 2003.353.04:04:14.08/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.68,lock,16180,15895,550,1pps 2003.353.04:04:14.58/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:04:15.04#setcl#time/314939112,1,2003,353,04,04,15.00,0.099,9.698,0 2003.353.04:04:15.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:04:17.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:04:17.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:04:17.22:!2003.353.04:05:46 2003.353.04:05:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:05:46.00:et 2003.353.04:05:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:05:49.05:tape 2003.353.04:05:49.12/tape/low,08764,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:05:49.12:postob 2003.353.04:05:49.13:scan_name=353-0407 2003.353.04:05:49.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.353.04:05:55.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.04:06:00.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.04:06:09.43:!2003.353.04:07:24 2003.353.04:07:24.00:tape 2003.353.04:07:24.07/tape/low,08764,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:07:24.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:07:24.12:!2003.353.04:07:24 2003.353.04:07:24.12:preob 2003.353.04:07:26.89/tpical/21140,21295,21595,21606,21169,22760,22576,22324,53109,18704 2003.353.04:07:26.97/tpical/19366,19405,19189,19122,19509,19661,35366 2003.353.04:07:27.05:!2003.353.04:07:34 2003.353.04:07:34.00:tape 2003.353.04:07:34.07/tape/low,08879,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:07:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:07:34.08:midob 2003.353.04:07:34.19/tpi/16117,16235,16201,16206,15868,16282,16163,16079,40135,13726 2003.353.04:07:34.27/tpi/16049,16181,16345,16122,16063,16185,29549 2003.353.04:07:34.85/tsys1/57.0,56.6,53.2,52.9,52.9,44.4,44.5,45.4,54.8,48.9 2003.353.04:07:34.86/tsys2/61.6,63.9,73.3,68.4,59.5,59.5,65.1 2003.353.04:07:39.85/wx/-17.9,961.4,76.0 2003.353.04:07:39.94/cable/+3.83001E-02 2003.353.04:07:40.00/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40156,29586,0,1pps 2003.353.04:07:40.05/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13730,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:07:40.13/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16230,15916,545,1pps 2003.353.04:07:40.21/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16288,16192,554,1pps 2003.353.04:07:40.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.57,lock,16355,16041,550,1pps 2003.353.04:07:40.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:07:43.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:07:43.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:07:43.22:!2003.353.04:09:12 2003.353.04:07:44.02#setcl#time/314960010,1,2003,353,04,07,44.00,0.148,9.756,2 2003.353.04:07:44.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:09:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:09:12.00:et 2003.353.04:09:12.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:09:15.05:tape 2003.353.04:09:15.12/tape/low,10202,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:09:15.12:postob 2003.353.04:09:15.13:scan_name=353-0409 2003.353.04:09:15.14:source=2149+056,214907.7,053806.8,1950.0 2003.353.04:09:21.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.04:09:26.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.04:09:35.43:!2003.353.04:09:45 2003.353.04:09:45.00:tape 2003.353.04:09:45.07/tape/low,10202,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:09:45.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:09:45.12:!2003.353.04:09:45 2003.353.04:09:45.12:preob 2003.353.04:09:47.88/tpical/21035,21373,21795,22196,21201,22741,22801,22568,50493,17762 2003.353.04:09:47.96/tpical/19284,19262,18811,19305,19506,19697,33990 2003.353.04:09:48.04:!2003.353.04:09:55 2003.353.04:09:55.00:tape 2003.353.04:09:55.07/tape/low,10318,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:09:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:09:55.08:midob 2003.353.04:09:55.19/tpi/15772,16020,16067,16337,15585,15956,16015,15913,37541,12776 2003.353.04:09:55.27/tpi/15847,15915,15900,16138,15922,16084,28247 2003.353.04:09:55.85/tsys1/53.2,52.7,49.7,49.2,49.1,41.6,41.6,42.2,51.3,45.4 2003.353.04:09:55.86/tsys2/58.7,60.6,69.6,64.8,56.7,56.9,63.0 2003.353.04:10:00.59/wx/-18.0,961.5,75.5 2003.353.04:10:00.74/cable/+3.83016E-02 2003.353.04:10:00.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37544,28148,0,1pps 2003.353.04:10:00.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12780,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:10:00.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16015,15695,545,1pps 2003.353.04:10:01.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,15963,15964,554,1pps 2003.353.04:10:01.11/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15875,15930,550,1pps 2003.353.04:10:01.61/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:10:04.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.04:10:04.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.04:10:04.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.04:10:04.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.04:10:04.23:!2003.353.04:11:33 2003.353.04:10:05.03#setcl#time/314974111,1,2003,353,04,10,05.00,0.123,9.796,1 2003.353.04:10:05.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:11:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:11:33.00:et 2003.353.04:11:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:11:36.05:tape 2003.353.04:11:36.12/tape/low,11640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:11:36.12:postob 2003.353.04:11:36.13:scan_name=353-0413 2003.353.04:11:36.14:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.04:11:42.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.04:11:47.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.04:11:56.43:!2003.353.04:13:15 2003.353.04:13:15.00:tape 2003.353.04:13:15.07/tape/low,11640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:13:15.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:13:15.12:!2003.353.04:13:15 2003.353.04:13:15.12:preob 2003.353.04:13:17.88/tpical/21744,21142,22288,22100,21760,23156,23117,23364,49827,17362 2003.353.04:13:17.96/tpical/19170,19112,19146,19083,19588,19865,35130 2003.353.04:13:18.04:!2003.353.04:13:25 2003.353.04:13:25.00:tape 2003.353.04:13:25.07/tape/low,11757,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:13:25.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:13:25.08:midob 2003.353.04:13:25.19/tpi/16254,15788,16359,16164,15861,16023,16090,16273,36882,12385 2003.353.04:13:25.27/tpi/15677,15761,16135,15920,15898,16188,29265 2003.353.04:13:25.85/tsys1/52.6,52.0,48.9,48.0,47.5,39.7,40.4,40.5,50.4,44.1 2003.353.04:13:25.86/tsys2/57.2,59.9,68.3,64.0,55.0,56.2,63.9 2003.353.04:13:30.06/wx/-18.1,961.4,75.5 2003.353.04:13:30.18/cable/+3.83002E-02 2003.353.04:13:30.24/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36900,29268,0,1pps 2003.353.04:13:30.29/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12396,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:13:30.37/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15800,15476,545,1pps 2003.353.04:13:30.46/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16058,16271,554,1pps 2003.353.04:13:30.55/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16158,16195,550,1pps 2003.353.04:13:31.05/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:13:32.02#setcl#time/314994810,1,2003,353,04,13,32.00,0.146,9.853,2 2003.353.04:13:32.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:13:34.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:13:34.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:13:34.22:!2003.353.04:15:03 2003.353.04:15:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:15:03.00:et 2003.353.04:15:03.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:15:06.05:tape 2003.353.04:15:06.12/tape/low,13079,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:15:06.12:postob 2003.353.04:15:06.13:scan_name=353-0422 2003.353.04:15:06.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.04:15:12.65:sx4ca=13 2003.353.04:15:17.29/pass/13,,auto,0.0,,0.5,,0.5, 2003.353.04:15:26.43:!2003.353.04:22:44 2003.353.04:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.04:17:27.35/wx/-17.7,961.3,76.5 2003.353.04:22:44.00:tape 2003.353.04:22:44.07/tape/low,13079,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:22:44.07:st=for,160 2003.353.04:22:44.12:!2003.353.04:22:44 2003.353.04:22:44.12:preob 2003.353.04:22:46.88/tpical/21122,21242,21481,21553,21019,22571,22798,22570,52893,18595 2003.353.04:22:46.96/tpical/19046,19202,18847,19163,19488,19621,34888 2003.353.04:22:47.04:!2003.353.04:22:54 2003.353.04:22:54.00:tape 2003.353.04:22:54.07/tape/low,13195,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:22:54.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:22:54.08:midob 2003.353.04:22:54.19/tpi/16127,16174,16102,16138,15749,16113,16293,16206,39944,13630 2003.353.04:22:54.27/tpi/15684,16009,16017,16070,15967,16075,29006 2003.353.04:22:54.85/tsys1/57.4,56.3,53.0,52.5,52.8,44.1,44.2,44.9,54.6,48.7 2003.353.04:22:54.86/tsys2/59.4,63.9,72.1,66.1,57.9,57.9,63.2 2003.353.04:22:59.57/wx/-17.8,961.1,75.8 2003.353.04:22:59.63/cable/+3.82989E-02 2003.353.04:22:59.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39942,29023,0,1pps 2003.353.04:22:59.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13624,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:22:59.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16171,15838,545,1pps 2003.353.04:22:59.91/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16096,16043,554,1pps 2003.353.04:22:59.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16005,16141,550,1pps 2003.353.04:23:00.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:23:01.04#setcl#time/315051711,1,2003,353,04,23,01.00,0.120,10.011,0 2003.353.04:23:01.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:23:03.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:23:03.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:23:03.22:!2003.353.04:24:32 2003.353.04:24:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:24:32.00:et 2003.353.04:24:32.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:24:35.05:tape 2003.353.04:24:35.12/tape/low,14517,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:24:35.12:postob 2003.353.04:24:35.13:scan_name=353-0428 2003.353.04:24:35.14:source=1634+213,163428.7,211856.6,1950.0 2003.353.04:24:41.65:midtp 2003.353.04:24:44.37/tpzero/213,343,260,327,282,287,325,326,672,217 2003.353.04:24:44.45/tpzero/318,323,312,347,277,274,441 2003.353.04:24:45.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.353.04:24:45.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.04:24:45.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.04:24:45.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.04:24:45.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.687 2003.353.04:24:45.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.58 2003.353.04:24:45.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.04:24:45.83:sx4cb=14 2003.353.04:24:50.85/pass/14,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.04:24:59.99:fastf=2m19s 2003.353.04:27:19.09:!+5s 2003.353.04:27:24.10:!2003.353.04:28:32 2003.353.04:28:32.00:tape 2003.353.04:28:32.07/tape/low,17645,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:28:32.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.04:28:32.12:!2003.353.04:28:32 2003.353.04:28:32.12:preob 2003.353.04:28:34.88/tpical/19253,19565,19536,19547,19513,20256,20604,20559,$$$$$,26202 2003.353.04:28:34.96/tpical/18710,18049,18139,18573,18723,18606,47976 2003.353.04:28:35.04:!2003.353.04:28:42 2003.353.04:28:42.00:tape 2003.353.04:28:42.07/tape/low,17529,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:28:42.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:28:42.08:midob 2003.353.04:28:42.19/tpi/16143,16432,16205,16199,16098,16115,16390,16399,63150,21325 2003.353.04:28:42.27/tpi/16311,15855,16179,16409,16125,16034,41870 2003.353.04:28:42.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.04:28:42.85/tsys1/92.2,92.4,86.2,85.3,83.4,68.8,68.6,69.5,$$$$$$$$,77.9 2003.353.04:28:42.86/tsys2/86.7,92.0,105.2,96.5,79.3,79.7,88.2 2003.353.04:28:48.15/wx/-17.6,960.9,75.9 2003.353.04:28:48.27/cable/+3.83001E-02 2003.353.04:28:48.32/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,63296,41822,0,1pps 2003.353.04:28:48.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,21379,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:28:48.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -6.62, -6.62,lock,15487,16219,545,1pps 2003.353.04:28:48.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -0.75, -1.36,lock,16157,15817,554,1pps 2003.353.04:28:48.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.09,lock,16237,16068,550,1pps 2003.353.04:28:49.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:28:50.05#setcl#time/315086612,1,2003,353,04,28,50.00,0.095,10.108,-1 2003.353.04:28:50.05#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:28:53.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:28:53.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:28:53.23:!2003.353.04:36:00 2003.353.04:29:39.12;"tpi overflow low ele 8.2 degrees 2003.353.04:30:46.47;"weather - clear skies and no visible aurora 2003.353.04:36:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:36:00.00:et 2003.353.04:36:00.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:36:03.05:tape 2003.353.04:36:03.12/tape/low,11673,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:36:03.12:postob 2003.353.04:36:03.13:scan_name=353-0441 2003.353.04:36:03.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.04:36:09.65:check80r 2003.353.04:36:42.38/parity/8.,4.,6.,16.,4.,8.,8.,4.,14.,18.,348.,10.,54.,16. 2003.353.04:36:42.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.04:37:07.96:sx4cb=14 2003.353.04:37:12.60/pass/14,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.04:37:21.74:!2003.353.04:41:26 2003.353.04:41:26.00:tape 2003.353.04:41:26.07/tape/low,11672,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:41:26.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.04:41:26.12:!2003.353.04:41:26 2003.353.04:41:26.12:preob 2003.353.04:41:28.88/tpical/20370,20219,21065,21100,21023,22073,22118,22129,55875,19636 2003.353.04:41:28.96/tpical/19352,19369,18546,18758,19160,19257,38034 2003.353.04:41:29.04:!2003.353.04:41:36 2003.353.04:41:36.00:tape 2003.353.04:41:36.07/tape/low,11557,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:41:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:41:36.08:midob 2003.353.04:41:36.19/tpi/15791,15690,16120,16138,16055,16169,16214,16285,42946,14690 2003.353.04:41:36.27/tpi/16138,16191,15947,15976,15926,16029,32240 2003.353.04:41:36.85/tsys1/61.2,61.0,57.7,57.4,57.1,48.4,48.4,49.2,58.9,52.7 2003.353.04:41:36.86/tsys2/64.0,64.9,78.2,73.0,62.9,63.4,71.3 2003.353.04:41:40.58/wx/-17.9,960.7,74.8 2003.353.04:41:40.75/cable/+3.82936E-02 2003.353.04:41:40.81/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42936,32320,0,1pps 2003.353.04:41:40.86/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14691,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:41:40.94/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15671,16170,545,1pps 2003.353.04:41:41.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,16157,15848,554,1pps 2003.353.04:41:41.11/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,15937,15963,550,1pps 2003.353.04:41:41.61/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:41:44.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:41:44.23?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.04:41:44.23?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.04:41:44.24/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.04:41:44.24:!2003.353.04:46:45 2003.353.04:41:45.04#setcl#time/315164111,1,2003,353,04,41,45.00,0.116,10.323,0 2003.353.04:41:45.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:46:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:46:45.00:et 2003.353.04:46:45.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:46:48.05:tape 2003.353.04:46:48.12/tape/low,07421,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:46:48.12:postob 2003.353.04:46:48.13:scan_name=353-0448 2003.353.04:46:48.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.04:46:54.65:sx4cb=14 2003.353.04:46:59.29/pass/14,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.04:47:08.43:!2003.353.04:48:48 2003.353.04:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.04:47:27.51/wx/-18.0,960.6,74.9 2003.353.04:48:48.00:tape 2003.353.04:48:48.07/tape/low,07421,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:48:48.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.04:48:48.12:!2003.353.04:48:48 2003.353.04:48:48.12:preob 2003.353.04:48:50.88/tpical/21251,21643,22339,22343,21441,23309,23607,23400,48721,17061 2003.353.04:48:50.96/tpical/19408,19300,19477,19341,20088,19729,33037 2003.353.04:48:51.04:!2003.353.04:48:58 2003.353.04:48:58.00:tape 2003.353.04:48:58.07/tape/low,07305,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:48:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:48:58.08:midob 2003.353.04:48:58.19/tpi/15783,16059,16268,16286,15555,16107,16343,16240,35857,12118 2003.353.04:48:58.27/tpi/15745,15819,16326,16022,16236,15955,26955 2003.353.04:48:58.85/tsys1/51.3,50.7,47.5,47.4,46.7,39.5,39.7,40.0,49.2,43.3 2003.353.04:48:58.86/tsys2/54.8,57.9,66.1,61.4,53.9,54.0,56.7 2003.353.04:49:04.07/wx/-17.8,960.5,75.5 2003.353.04:49:04.11/cable/+3.82962E-02 2003.353.04:49:04.17/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35860,27034,0,1pps 2003.353.04:49:04.22/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12121,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.04:49:04.31/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16066,15825,545,1pps 2003.353.04:49:04.39/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16106,16347,554,1pps 2003.353.04:49:04.47/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.01,lock,16327,16104,550,1pps 2003.353.04:49:04.97/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:49:06.04#setcl#time/315208211,1,2003,353,04,49,06.00,0.115,10.446,0 2003.353.04:49:06.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:49:08.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:49:08.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:49:08.22:!2003.353.04:50:36 2003.353.04:50:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:50:36.00:et 2003.353.04:50:36.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:50:39.05:tape 2003.353.04:50:39.12/tape/low,05982,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:50:39.12:postob 2003.353.04:50:39.13:scan_name=353-0453 2003.353.04:50:39.13:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.04:50:45.65:sx4cb=14 2003.353.04:50:50.29/pass/14,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.04:50:59.43:!2003.353.04:53:22 2003.353.04:53:22.00:tape 2003.353.04:53:22.07/tape/low,05982,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:53:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.04:53:22.12:!2003.353.04:53:22 2003.353.04:53:22.12:preob 2003.353.04:53:24.88/tpical/21638,21071,22281,22166,21993,23401,23369,23142,49742,17470 2003.353.04:53:24.96/tpical/19805,19711,19005,19483,19928,19790,33682 2003.353.04:53:25.04:!2003.353.04:53:32 2003.353.04:53:32.00:tape 2003.353.04:53:32.07/tape/low,05867,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:53:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:53:32.08:midob 2003.353.04:53:32.19/tpi/16152,15724,16343,16265,16059,16305,16312,16210,36824,12495 2003.353.04:53:32.27/tpi/16163,16246,16013,16227,16167,16087,27835 2003.353.04:53:32.85/tsys1/52.3,51.8,48.8,48.6,47.9,40.6,40.8,41.2,50.4,44.4 2003.353.04:53:32.86/tsys2/56.6,59.7,68.2,63.4,54.9,55.5,60.9 2003.353.04:53:37.36/wx/-17.3,960.6,76.7 2003.353.04:53:37.38/cable/+3.83013E-02 2003.353.04:53:37.44/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36814,27874,0,1pps 2003.353.04:53:37.49/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12491,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.04:53:37.57/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15727,16244,545,1pps 2003.353.04:53:37.66/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16293,16001,554,1pps 2003.353.04:53:37.75/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16013,16069,550,1pps 2003.353.04:53:38.25/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:53:41.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.04:53:41.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.04:53:41.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.04:53:41.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.04:53:41.23:!2003.353.04:55:10 2003.353.04:53:42.03#setcl#time/315235810,1,2003,353,04,53,42.00,0.137,10.522,1 2003.353.04:53:42.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:54:06.95;oso 2003.353.04:54:07.08/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:55:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:55:10.00:et 2003.353.04:55:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:55:13.05:tape 2003.353.04:55:13.12/tape/low,04544,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:55:13.12:postob 2003.353.04:55:13.13:scan_name=353-0457 2003.353.04:55:13.14:source=0229+131,022902.5,130940.6,1950.0 2003.353.04:55:19.65:sx4cb=14 2003.353.04:55:24.29/pass/14,,auto,0.0,,-0.3,,-0.3, 2003.353.04:55:33.43:!2003.353.04:56:52 2003.353.04:56:52.00:tape 2003.353.04:56:52.07/tape/low,04544,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:56:52.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.04:56:52.12:!2003.353.04:56:52 2003.353.04:56:52.12:preob 2003.353.04:56:54.88/tpical/21642,21133,21562,22199,22084,22982,23022,23221,49872,17518 2003.353.04:56:54.96/tpical/19426,19435,19028,19100,19816,19976,35051 2003.353.04:56:55.04:!2003.353.04:57:02 2003.353.04:57:02.00:tape 2003.353.04:57:02.07/tape/low,04427,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:57:02.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.04:57:02.08:midob 2003.353.04:57:02.19/tpi/16210,15800,15863,16293,16209,16054,16112,16327,36985,12570 2003.353.04:57:02.27/tpi/15920,16082,16112,16004,16194,16342,29121 2003.353.04:57:02.85/tsys1/53.0,52.2,49.3,48.7,48.8,41.0,41.1,41.8,50.7,44.9 2003.353.04:57:02.86/tsys2/57.9,61.1,70.4,65.7,57.1,57.5,62.9 2003.353.04:57:06.83/wx/-16.9,960.5,77.7 2003.353.04:57:06.99/cable/+3.82967E-02 2003.353.04:57:07.05/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36976,29104,0,1pps 2003.353.04:57:07.10/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12573,72,4059,1pps 2003.353.04:57:07.18/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15784,16308,545,1pps 2003.353.04:57:07.27/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16081,16119,554,1pps 2003.353.04:57:07.36/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16104,16191,550,1pps 2003.353.04:57:07.86/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.04:57:10.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.04:57:10.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.04:57:10.22:!2003.353.04:58:40 2003.353.04:57:11.02#setcl#time/315256709,1,2003,353,04,57,11.00,0.159,10.581,2 2003.353.04:57:11.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.04:58:40.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.04:58:40.00:et 2003.353.04:58:40.04:!+3s 2003.353.04:58:43.05:tape 2003.353.04:58:43.12/tape/low,03105,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.04:58:43.12:postob 2003.353.04:58:43.13:scan_name=353-0501b 2003.353.04:58:43.13:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.04:58:49.65:midtp 2003.353.04:58:52.37/tpzero/212,336,264,331,284,284,323,328,636,204 2003.353.04:58:52.45/tpzero/318,321,313,343,276,277,438 2003.353.04:58:53.17/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,0.925 2003.353.04:58:53.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.04:58:53.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.04:58:53.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.910 2003.353.04:58:53.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.04:58:53.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.92 2003.353.04:58:53.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.04:58:53.83:sx4ca=15 2003.353.04:58:59.10/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,55.2,,0.2, 2003.353.04:59:08.24:fastr=2m9s 2003.353.05:01:17.34:!+5s 2003.353.05:01:22.35:!2003.353.05:01:33 2003.353.05:01:33.00:tape 2003.353.05:01:33.07/tape/low,00209,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:01:33.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:01:33.12:!2003.353.05:01:33 2003.353.05:01:33.12:preob 2003.353.05:01:35.88/tpical/21237,21682,22382,22330,21397,23263,23221,23369,48786,17041 2003.353.05:01:35.96/tpical/19479,19430,19192,19198,19637,20024,33102 2003.353.05:01:36.04:!2003.353.05:01:43 2003.353.05:01:43.00:tape 2003.353.05:01:43.07/tape/low,00324,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:01:43.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:01:43.08:midob 2003.353.05:01:43.19/tpi/15752,16068,16301,16210,15483,16000,15999,16158,35852,12063 2003.353.05:01:43.27/tpi/15884,15952,16124,15946,15928,16274,27276 2003.353.05:01:43.85/tsys1/51.0,50.4,47.5,46.7,46.3,38.9,39.1,39.5,49.0,42.9 2003.353.05:01:43.86/tsys2/56.3,58.4,67.0,62.4,54.9,55.5,59.9 2003.353.05:01:48.30/wx/-16.9,960.6,77.0 2003.353.05:01:48.43/cable/+3.83023E-02 2003.353.05:01:48.49/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35855,27263,0,1pps 2003.353.05:01:48.54/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12059,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:01:48.62/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16072,15846,545,1pps 2003.353.05:01:48.71/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15997,16223,554,1pps 2003.353.05:01:48.80/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16132,16193,550,1pps 2003.353.05:01:49.30/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:01:52.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:01:52.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:01:52.22:!2003.353.05:05:22 2003.353.05:01:53.02#setcl#time/315284909,1,2003,353,05,01,53.00,0.158,10.659,2 2003.353.05:01:53.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:05:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:05:22.00:et 2003.353.05:05:22.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:05:25.05:tape 2003.353.05:05:25.12/tape/low,03262,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:05:25.12:postob 2003.353.05:05:25.13:scan_name=353-0508 2003.353.05:05:25.14:source=2243-123,224339.8,-122240.3,1950.0 2003.353.05:05:31.65:check80f 2003.353.05:06:04.38/parity/10.,22.,12.,12.,12.,32.,0.,18.,4.,32.,296.,0.,28.,18. 2003.353.05:06:04.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.05:06:29.96:sx4ca=15 2003.353.05:06:34.60/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,54.5,,-0.5, 2003.353.05:06:43.74:!2003.353.05:07:57 2003.353.05:07:57.00:tape 2003.353.05:07:57.07/tape/low,03262,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:07:57.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:07:57.12:!2003.353.05:07:57 2003.353.05:07:57.12:preob 2003.353.05:07:59.88/tpical/20355,19805,20355,20809,20500,21587,21426,21188,61465,21600 2003.353.05:07:59.96/tpical/18690,19197,18504,18969,19495,19095,38856 2003.353.05:08:00.04:!2003.353.05:08:07 2003.353.05:08:07.00:tape 2003.353.05:08:07.07/tape/low,03378,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:08:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:08:07.08:midob 2003.353.05:08:07.19/tpi/16222,15729,15988,16315,16055,16275,16165,16026,48433,16634 2003.353.05:08:07.27/tpi/15780,16332,16065,16301,16331,16020,33056 2003.353.05:08:07.85/tsys1/69.7,68.0,64.8,64.0,63.9,54.2,54.2,54.7,66.0,59.6 2003.353.05:08:07.86/tsys2/69.1,72.7,84.0,77.8,66.0,66.6,73.1 2003.353.05:08:12.88/wx/-18.0,960.4,74.7 2003.353.05:08:12.91/cable/+3.83016E-02 2003.353.05:08:12.96/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,48455,33158,0,1pps 2003.353.05:08:13.01/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,16647,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:08:13.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.28, -5.28,lock,15732,16233,545,1pps 2003.353.05:08:13.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.36, -0.04,lock,16298,16302,554,1pps 2003.353.05:08:13.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16070,16091,550,1pps 2003.353.05:08:13.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:08:16.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:08:16.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:08:16.22:!2003.353.05:09:45 2003.353.05:08:17.02#setcl#time/315323309,1,2003,353,05,08,17.00,0.156,10.766,2 2003.353.05:08:17.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:09:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:09:45.00:et 2003.353.05:09:45.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:09:48.05:tape 2003.353.05:09:48.12/tape/low,04701,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:09:48.12:postob 2003.353.05:09:48.13:scan_name=353-0516 2003.353.05:09:48.14:source=1053+815,105336.1,813036.0,1950.0 2003.353.05:09:54.65:sx4ca=15 2003.353.05:09:59.29/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,55.2,,0.2, 2003.353.05:10:08.43:!2003.353.05:16:14 2003.353.05:16:14.00:tape 2003.353.05:16:14.07/tape/low,04701,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:16:14.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:16:14.12:!2003.353.05:16:14 2003.353.05:16:14.12:preob 2003.353.05:16:16.88/tpical/20958,21221,22347,22126,21807,23263,23198,23001,49922,17393 2003.353.05:16:16.96/tpical/19181,19141,19187,19121,19911,19871,34754 2003.353.05:16:17.04:!2003.353.05:16:24 2003.353.05:16:24.00:tape 2003.353.05:16:24.07/tape/low,04816,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:16:24.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:16:24.08:midob 2003.353.05:16:24.19/tpi/15684,15874,16424,16193,15925,16143,16150,16078,36991,12427 2003.353.05:16:24.27/tpi/15679,15794,16197,15983,16181,16178,28894 2003.353.05:16:24.85/tsys1/52.8,52.3,49.1,48.1,47.9,40.1,40.4,41.0,50.6,44.3 2003.353.05:16:24.86/tsys2/57.0,60.1,69.1,64.8,55.4,56.0,63.1 2003.353.05:16:28.74/wx/-17.9,960.2,75.0 2003.353.05:16:28.91/cable/+3.82972E-02 2003.353.05:16:28.97/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36987,28901,0,1pps 2003.353.05:16:29.02/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12426,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:16:29.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15852,15542,545,1pps 2003.353.05:16:29.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16134,16372,554,1pps 2003.353.05:16:29.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16176,16287,550,1pps 2003.353.05:16:29.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:16:30.03#setcl#time/315372610,1,2003,353,05,16,30.00,0.132,10.902,1 2003.353.05:16:30.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:16:32.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.05:16:32.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:16:32.22:!2003.353.05:19:06 2003.353.05:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.05:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.353.05:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.05:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.05:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.05:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.05:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.78 2003.353.05:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.05:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.05:17:27.65/wx/-17.9,960.3,75.2 2003.353.05:19:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:19:06.00:et 2003.353.05:19:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:19:09.05:tape 2003.353.05:19:09.12/tape/low,06992,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:19:09.12:postob 2003.353.05:19:09.13:scan_name=353-0520 2003.353.05:19:09.14:source=1101+384,110140.6,382843.3,1950.0 2003.353.05:19:15.65:sx4ca=15 2003.353.05:19:20.29/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,55.2,,0.2, 2003.353.05:19:29.43:!2003.353.05:20:10 2003.353.05:20:10.00:tape 2003.353.05:20:10.07/tape/low,06992,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:20:10.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:20:10.12:!2003.353.05:20:10 2003.353.05:20:10.12:preob 2003.353.05:20:12.88/tpical/20998,20907,21149,21271,20545,22251,22138,22087,54820,19235 2003.353.05:20:12.96/tpical/18921,19379,18924,19262,19746,19501,37022 2003.353.05:20:13.04:!2003.353.05:20:20 2003.353.05:20:20.00:tape 2003.353.05:20:20.07/tape/low,07109,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:20:20.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:20:20.08:midob 2003.353.05:20:20.19/tpi/16223,16150,16078,16171,15610,16190,16106,16159,41943,14365 2003.353.05:20:20.27/tpi/15748,16255,16221,16353,16326,16147,31133 2003.353.05:20:20.85/tsys1/60.4,59.8,56.1,55.9,55.9,47.2,47.1,48.1,57.7,52.3 2003.353.05:20:20.86/tsys2/63.2,66.3,76.5,71.5,61.0,61.5,67.8 2003.353.05:20:26.03/wx/-18.1,960.3,74.7 2003.353.05:20:26.18/cable/+3.82913E-02 2003.353.05:20:26.24/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41935,31166,0,1pps 2003.353.05:20:26.29/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14360,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:20:26.37/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16132,15791,545,1pps 2003.353.05:20:26.46/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.49,lock,16203,16004,554,1pps 2003.353.05:20:26.55/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,16198,15927,550,1pps 2003.353.05:20:27.05/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:20:30.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:20:30.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:20:30.22:!2003.353.05:28:18 2003.353.05:20:31.02#setcl#time/315396709,1,2003,353,05,20,31.00,0.153,10.969,2 2003.353.05:20:31.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:28:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:28:18.00:et 2003.353.05:28:18.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:28:21.05:tape 2003.353.05:28:21.12/tape/low,13497,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:28:21.12:postob 2003.353.05:28:21.13:scan_name=353-0542 2003.353.05:28:21.13:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.05:28:27.65:sx4ca=15 2003.353.05:28:32.29/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,55.2,,0.2, 2003.353.05:28:41.43:!2003.353.05:42:07 2003.353.05:42:07.00:tape 2003.353.05:42:07.07/tape/low,13497,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:42:07.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:42:07.12:!2003.353.05:42:07 2003.353.05:42:07.12:preob 2003.353.05:42:09.88/tpical/21748,21205,21573,22102,21755,23123,23139,23308,49931,17344 2003.353.05:42:09.96/tpical/19504,19461,19068,19010,19676,19534,34294 2003.353.05:42:10.04:!2003.353.05:42:17 2003.353.05:42:17.00:tape 2003.353.05:42:17.07/tape/low,13614,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:42:17.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:42:17.08:midob 2003.353.05:42:17.19/tpi/16334,15885,15879,16206,15911,16097,16161,16316,37098,12420 2003.353.05:42:17.27/tpi/16022,16144,16171,15978,16088,15992,28531 2003.353.05:42:17.85/tsys1/53.6,52.6,49.4,48.5,48.1,40.5,40.9,41.2,51.1,44.7 2003.353.05:42:17.86/tsys2/58.6,62.0,71.2,67.0,57.3,57.7,63.4 2003.353.05:42:21.78/wx/-17.5,959.8,76.8 2003.353.05:42:21.86/cable/+3.83010E-02 2003.353.05:42:21.92/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37080,28492,0,1pps 2003.353.05:42:21.97/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12417,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:42:22.05/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15894,15566,545,1pps 2003.353.05:42:22.14/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16083,16276,554,1pps 2003.353.05:42:22.22/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16165,16258,550,1pps 2003.353.05:42:22.72/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:42:25.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:42:25.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:42:25.22:!2003.353.05:43:55 2003.353.05:42:26.02#setcl#time/315528209,1,2003,353,05,42,26.00,0.148,11.335,2 2003.353.05:42:26.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:43:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:43:55.00:et 2003.353.05:43:55.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:43:58.05:tape 2003.353.05:43:58.12/tape/low,14937,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:43:58.12:postob 2003.353.05:43:58.13:scan_name=353-0545 2003.353.05:43:58.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.05:44:04.65:sx4ca=15 2003.353.05:44:09.29/pass/15,,auto,55.0,,55.2,,0.2, 2003.353.05:44:18.43:!2003.353.05:45:21 2003.353.05:45:21.00:tape 2003.353.05:45:21.07/tape/low,14937,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:45:21.07:st=for,160 2003.353.05:45:21.12:!2003.353.05:45:21 2003.353.05:45:21.12:preob 2003.353.05:45:23.88/tpical/21385,21054,22254,22507,21457,23036,23116,22595,61754,21453 2003.353.05:45:23.96/tpical/19811,19627,19745,19590,20147,20241,38424 2003.353.05:45:24.04:!2003.353.05:45:31 2003.353.05:45:31.00:tape 2003.353.05:45:31.07/tape/low,15052,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:45:31.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:45:31.08:midob 2003.353.05:45:31.19/tpi/18307,17995,18748,18932,17887,18374,18416,18051,51811,17522 2003.353.05:45:31.27/tpi/17387,17386,17788,17445,17451,17486,33974 2003.353.05:45:31.85/tsys1/105.8,103.9,94.9,93.7,88.8,69.8,69.3,70.2,92.6,79.3 2003.353.05:45:31.86/tsys2/91.5,99.0,116.1,103.6,82.8,81.2,98.0 2003.353.05:45:36.52/wx/-17.6,959.7,75.9 2003.353.05:45:36.59/cable/+3.82962E-02 2003.353.05:45:36.65/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,51846,34001,0,1pps 2003.353.05:45:36.70/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,17541,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.05:45:36.78/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.53, -5.79,lock,15956,15397,545,1pps 2003.353.05:45:36.86/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.09, -0.32,lock,15900,16358,554,1pps 2003.353.05:45:36.94/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16218,16240,550,1pps 2003.353.05:45:37.44/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:45:40.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:45:40.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:45:40.22:!2003.353.05:47:09 2003.353.05:45:41.02#setcl#time/315547709,1,2003,353,05,45,41.00,0.148,11.389,2 2003.353.05:45:41.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:45:50.88;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.05:47:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:47:09.00:et 2003.353.05:47:09.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:47:12.05:tape 2003.353.05:47:12.12/tape/low,16375,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:47:12.12:postob 2003.353.05:47:12.13:scan_name=353-0549a 2003.353.05:47:12.14:source=3c446,222311.1,-051217.9,1950.0 2003.353.05:47:18.65:midtp 2003.353.05:47:21.37/tpzero/218,351,264,307,292,286,315,318,812,264 2003.353.05:47:21.45/tpzero/328,332,314,350,271,268,506 2003.353.05:47:22.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.353.05:47:22.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.05:47:22.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.05:47:22.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.913 2003.353.05:47:22.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.05:47:22.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.97 2003.353.05:47:22.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.05:47:22.83:sx4cb=16 2003.353.05:47:27.84/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,54.5,,-0.5, 2003.353.05:47:27.84@wx 2003.353.05:47:32.72/wx/-17.6,959.7,75.8 2003.353.05:47:41.86:fastf=0m57s 2003.353.05:48:38.96:!+5s 2003.353.05:48:43.97:!2003.353.05:48:56 2003.353.05:48:56.00:tape 2003.353.05:48:56.07/tape/low,17658,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:48:56.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.05:48:56.12:!2003.353.05:48:56 2003.353.05:48:56.12:preob 2003.353.05:48:58.87/tpical/21156,21101,21264,21538,20675,22353,22206,22153,55338,19402 2003.353.05:48:58.95/tpical/19701,19135,19202,18999,19821,19267,36090 2003.353.05:48:59.03:!2003.353.05:49:06 2003.353.05:49:06.00:tape 2003.353.05:49:06.07/tape/low,17541,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.05:49:06.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:49:06.08:midob 2003.353.05:49:06.19/tpi/16703,16671,16535,16746,16066,16597,16504,16519,43314,14765 2003.353.05:49:06.27/tpi/16695,16350,16764,16410,16680,16193,30851 2003.353.05:49:06.85/tsys1/66.6,66.3,61.9,61.7,61.6,51.0,51.1,51.8,63.6,56.3 2003.353.05:49:06.86/tsys2/70.8,74.8,87.7,80.6,67.9,67.3,75.3 2003.353.05:49:10.91/wx/-17.8,959.7,75.6 2003.353.05:49:10.98/cable/+3.83008E-02 2003.353.05:49:11.04/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,43337,30874,0,1pps 2003.353.05:49:11.09/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14771,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:49:11.17/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15816,16322,545,1pps 2003.353.05:49:11.25/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,16144,15872,554,1pps 2003.353.05:49:11.33/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,16328,16030,550,1pps 2003.353.05:49:11.83/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:49:14.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:49:14.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:49:14.22:!2003.353.05:50:44 2003.353.05:49:15.02#setcl#time/315569109,1,2003,353,05,49,15.00,0.147,11.448,2 2003.353.05:49:15.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:50:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:50:44.00:et 2003.353.05:50:44.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:50:47.05:tape 2003.353.05:50:47.12/tape/low,16219,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:50:47.12:postob 2003.353.05:50:47.13:scan_name=353-0557 2003.353.05:50:47.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.05:50:53.65:check80r 2003.353.05:51:26.38/parity/16.,10.,6.,16.,8.,4.,6.,12.,6.,36.,552.,6.,60.,40. 2003.353.05:51:26.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.05:51:51.96:sx4cb=16 2003.353.05:51:56.60/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,54.5,,-0.5, 2003.353.05:52:05.74:!2003.353.05:57:27 2003.353.05:57:27.00:tape 2003.353.05:57:27.07/tape/low,16219,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:57:27.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.05:57:27.12:!2003.353.05:57:27 2003.353.05:57:27.12:preob 2003.353.05:57:29.88/tpical/21161,21453,21851,21968,21220,23232,23263,22960,50692,17783 2003.353.05:57:29.96/tpical/19966,19207,19176,19581,19696,19924,34435 2003.353.05:57:30.04:!2003.353.05:57:37 2003.353.05:57:37.00:tape 2003.353.05:57:37.07/tape/low,16103,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:57:37.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.05:57:37.08:midob 2003.353.05:57:37.19/tpi/15932,16143,16148,16216,15608,16293,16361,16201,37791,12821 2003.353.05:57:37.27/tpi/16335,15845,16201,16364,16037,16246,28563 2003.353.05:57:37.85/tsys1/54.1,53.5,50.1,49.8,49.1,41.5,41.8,42.3,51.6,45.6 2003.353.05:57:37.86/tsys2/57.3,60.0,69.4,64.7,56.0,56.5,62.1 2003.353.05:57:43.14/wx/-18.1,959.6,74.9 2003.353.05:57:43.30/cable/+3.83040E-02 2003.353.05:57:43.36/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37782,28563,0,1pps 2003.353.05:57:43.41/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12817,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.05:57:43.49/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16139,15802,545,1pps 2003.353.05:57:43.58/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16296,15940,554,1pps 2003.353.05:57:43.66/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16192,16263,550,1pps 2003.353.05:57:44.16/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.05:57:45.04#setcl#time/315620111,1,2003,353,05,57,45.00,0.104,11.590,0 2003.353.05:57:45.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.05:57:47.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.05:57:47.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.05:57:47.22:!2003.353.05:59:15 2003.353.05:59:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.05:59:15.00:et 2003.353.05:59:15.04:!+3s 2003.353.05:59:18.05:tape 2003.353.05:59:18.12/tape/low,14781,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.05:59:18.12:postob 2003.353.05:59:18.13:scan_name=353-0600 2003.353.05:59:18.13:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.353.05:59:24.65:sx4cb=16 2003.353.05:59:29.29/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,54.5,,-0.5, 2003.353.05:59:38.43:!2003.353.06:00:27 2003.353.06:00:27.00:tape 2003.353.06:00:27.07/tape/low,14781,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:00:27.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.06:00:27.12:!2003.353.06:00:27 2003.353.06:00:27.12:preob 2003.353.06:00:29.88/tpical/21917,21315,21659,22429,22094,23526,23448,23250,50319,17628 2003.353.06:00:29.96/tpical/19807,19721,19422,19789,20169,20114,33568 2003.353.06:00:30.04:!2003.353.06:00:37 2003.353.06:00:37.00:tape 2003.353.06:00:37.07/tape/low,14665,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:00:37.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:00:37.08:midob 2003.353.06:00:37.19/tpi/16493,16011,15999,16523,16270,16486,16448,16354,37453,12689 2003.353.06:00:37.27/tpi/16200,16281,16393,16469,16421,16339,27721 2003.353.06:00:37.85/tsys1/54.0,53.1,50.0,49.4,49.4,41.4,41.5,41.9,51.3,45.3 2003.353.06:00:37.86/tsys2/57.2,60.3,69.0,63.1,56.0,55.3,60.5 2003.353.06:00:43.15/wx/-17.9,959.6,75.7 2003.353.06:00:43.31/cable/+3.82994E-02 2003.353.06:00:43.37/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37470,27694,0,1pps 2003.353.06:00:43.42/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12692,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:00:43.50/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16011,15697,545,1pps 2003.353.06:00:43.59/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16108,16223,554,1pps 2003.353.06:00:43.68/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16014,16084,550,1pps 2003.353.06:00:44.18/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:00:45.04#setcl#time/315638111,1,2003,353,06,00,45.00,0.103,11.640,0 2003.353.06:00:45.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:00:47.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:00:47.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:00:47.22:!2003.353.06:03:50 2003.353.06:03:50.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:03:50.00:et 2003.353.06:03:50.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:03:53.05:tape 2003.353.06:03:53.12/tape/low,12075,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.06:03:53.12:postob 2003.353.06:03:53.13:scan_name=353-0607 2003.353.06:03:53.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.06:03:59.65:sx4cb=16 2003.353.06:04:04.66/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,56.0,,1.0, 2003.353.06:04:13.80:!2003.353.06:07:23 2003.353.06:07:23.00:tape 2003.353.06:07:23.07/tape/low,12075,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:07:23.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.06:07:23.12:!2003.353.06:07:23 2003.353.06:07:23.12:preob 2003.353.06:07:25.88/tpical/20890,21215,22263,22306,21659,23533,23491,23181,49849,17295 2003.353.06:07:25.96/tpical/19588,18879,19158,19124,19706,19597,34582 2003.353.06:07:26.04:!2003.353.06:07:33 2003.353.06:07:33.00:tape 2003.353.06:07:33.07/tape/low,11960,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:07:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:07:33.08:midob 2003.353.06:07:33.19/tpi/15672,15873,16378,16350,15798,16328,16317,16161,36979,12347 2003.353.06:07:33.27/tpi/16098,15753,16275,16081,16136,16061,28832 2003.353.06:07:33.85/tsys1/53.3,52.3,49.3,48.5,47.6,40.1,40.1,40.6,50.6,44.0 2003.353.06:07:33.86/tsys2/58.7,64.1,72.0,67.2,57.8,58.1,64.0 2003.353.06:07:38.83/wx/-17.5,959.4,76.5 2003.353.06:07:38.98/cable/+3.83023E-02 2003.353.06:07:39.04/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36969,28796,0,1pps 2003.353.06:07:39.09/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12348,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:07:39.17/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15879,15543,545,1pps 2003.353.06:07:39.26/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16324,16158,554,1pps 2003.353.06:07:39.35/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16268,16313,550,1pps 2003.353.06:07:39.85/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:07:40.04#setcl#time/315679611,1,2003,353,06,07,40.00,0.102,11.755,0 2003.353.06:07:40.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:07:42.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.06:07:42.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:07:42.22:!2003.353.06:09:11 2003.353.06:09:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:09:11.00:et 2003.353.06:09:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:09:14.05:tape 2003.353.06:09:14.12/tape/low,10637,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.06:09:14.12:postob 2003.353.06:09:14.13:scan_name=353-0610a 2003.353.06:09:14.13:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.06:09:20.65:sx4cb=16 2003.353.06:09:25.29/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,56.0,,1.0, 2003.353.06:09:34.43:!2003.353.06:10:04 2003.353.06:10:04.00:tape 2003.353.06:10:04.07/tape/low,10637,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.06:10:04.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.06:10:04.12:!2003.353.06:10:04 2003.353.06:10:04.12:preob 2003.353.06:10:06.88/tpical/22043,21585,22222,22499,22328,23120,23452,23207,48577,16949 2003.353.06:10:06.96/tpical/19352,19318,19011,19503,19948,19890,33593 2003.353.06:10:07.04:!2003.353.06:10:14 2003.353.06:10:14.00:tape 2003.353.06:10:14.07/tape/low,10521,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:10:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:10:14.08:midob 2003.353.06:10:14.19/tpi/16340,15985,16178,16365,16186,15891,16195,16077,35722,12016 2003.353.06:10:14.27/tpi/15747,15879,15978,16205,16172,16141,27795 2003.353.06:10:14.85/tsys1/50.9,50.3,47.4,47.1,46.6,38.9,39.4,39.8,48.9,42.9 2003.353.06:10:14.86/tsys2/55.6,58.8,67.1,62.5,54.7,55.0,61.2 2003.353.06:10:19.21/wx/-17.4,959.3,76.5 2003.353.06:10:19.30/cable/+3.83017E-02 2003.353.06:10:19.36/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35720,27857,0,1pps 2003.353.06:10:19.41/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12017,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:10:19.49/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15989,15783,545,1pps 2003.353.06:10:19.58/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15915,16116,554,1pps 2003.353.06:10:19.67/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15977,16072,550,1pps 2003.353.06:10:20.17/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:10:21.04#setcl#time/315695711,1,2003,353,06,10,21.00,0.102,11.800,0 2003.353.06:10:21.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:10:23.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:10:23.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:10:23.22:!2003.353.06:14:25 2003.353.06:14:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:14:25.00:et 2003.353.06:14:25.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:14:28.05:tape 2003.353.06:14:28.12/tape/low,07158,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.06:14:28.12:postob 2003.353.06:14:28.13:scan_name=353-0616 2003.353.06:14:28.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.06:14:34.65:sx4cb=16 2003.353.06:14:39.29/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,56.0,,1.0, 2003.353.06:14:48.43:!2003.353.06:16:15 2003.353.06:16:15.00:tape 2003.353.06:16:15.07/tape/low,07158,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:16:15.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.06:16:15.12:!2003.353.06:16:15 2003.353.06:16:15.12:preob 2003.353.06:16:17.88/tpical/21813,21188,21558,22175,22011,22958,23020,22722,49991,17520 2003.353.06:16:17.96/tpical/19366,19292,18876,19391,19873,19748,34388 2003.353.06:16:18.04:!2003.353.06:16:25 2003.353.06:16:25.00:tape 2003.353.06:16:25.07/tape/low,07042,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:16:25.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:16:25.08:midob 2003.353.06:16:25.19/tpi/16367,15900,15903,16321,16210,16099,16175,16050,37171,12610 2003.353.06:16:25.27/tpi/15875,15959,15980,16258,16249,16148,28597 2003.353.06:16:25.85/tsys1/53.4,52.9,49.8,49.2,49.4,41.5,41.7,42.4,51.1,45.3 2003.353.06:16:25.86/tsys2/57.9,61.0,70.3,66.0,57.3,57.3,63.1 2003.353.06:16:30.69/wx/-17.8,959.2,75.9 2003.353.06:16:30.82/cable/+3.82945E-02 2003.353.06:16:30.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37183,28605,0,1pps 2003.353.06:16:30.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12612,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.06:16:31.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15904,15558,545,1pps 2003.353.06:16:31.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16111,16211,554,1pps 2003.353.06:16:31.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15990,16056,550,1pps 2003.353.06:16:31.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:16:34.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:16:34.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.06:16:34.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.06:16:34.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.06:16:34.22:!2003.353.06:18:03 2003.353.06:16:35.02#setcl#time/315733109,1,2003,353,06,16,35.00,0.141,11.904,2 2003.353.06:16:35.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.06:17:27.97/wx/-17.6,959.2,76.6 2003.353.06:18:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:18:03.00:et 2003.353.06:18:03.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:18:06.05:tape 2003.353.06:18:06.12/tape/low,05720,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:18:06.12:postob 2003.353.06:18:06.13:scan_name=353-0621 2003.353.06:18:06.14:source=0718+793,071808.7,791722.7,1950.0 2003.353.06:18:12.65:sx4cb=16 2003.353.06:18:17.29/pass/16,,auto,55.0,,56.0,,1.0, 2003.353.06:18:26.43:!2003.353.06:21:03 2003.353.06:21:03.00:tape 2003.353.06:21:03.07/tape/low,05720,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:21:03.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.06:21:03.12:!2003.353.06:21:03 2003.353.06:21:03.12:preob 2003.353.06:21:05.88/tpical/20957,21266,22299,22047,21778,23154,23100,23306,49955,17365 2003.353.06:21:05.96/tpical/19474,19404,18979,19062,19912,19804,34854 2003.353.06:21:06.04:!2003.353.06:21:13 2003.353.06:21:13.00:tape 2003.353.06:21:13.07/tape/low,05604,off,moving,locked,ready,10.8,85,okay 2003.353.06:21:13.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:21:13.08:midob 2003.353.06:21:13.19/tpi/15753,15957,16454,16222,15946,16148,16133,16337,37140,12451 2003.353.06:21:13.27/tpi/15995,16080,16080,16033,16262,16206,29034 2003.353.06:21:13.85/tsys1/53.7,52.9,49.9,49.2,48.3,40.8,40.9,41.4,51.0,44.6 2003.353.06:21:13.86/tsys2/58.5,61.6,70.7,67.3,57.0,57.6,63.7 2003.353.06:21:18.72/wx/-17.4,959.1,76.8 2003.353.06:21:18.83/cable/+3.82975E-02 2003.353.06:21:18.89/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37153,29018,0,1pps 2003.353.06:21:18.94/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12447,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:21:19.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15944,15598,545,1pps 2003.353.06:21:19.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16132,16332,554,1pps 2003.353.06:21:19.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16069,16204,550,1pps 2003.353.06:21:19.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:21:22.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:21:22.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:21:22.22:!2003.353.06:23:18 2003.353.06:21:23.02#setcl#time/315761909,1,2003,353,06,21,23.00,0.140,11.984,2 2003.353.06:21:23.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:23:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:23:18.00:et 2003.353.06:23:18.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:23:21.05:tape 2003.353.06:23:21.12/tape/low,03921,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:23:21.12:postob 2003.353.06:23:21.13:scan_name=353-0626 2003.353.06:23:21.13:source=1101+384,110140.6,382843.3,1950.0 2003.353.06:23:27.65:midtp 2003.353.06:23:30.37/tpzero/208,338,256,333,282,288,325,333,643,204 2003.353.06:23:30.45/tpzero/320,321,312,348,279,275,436 2003.353.06:23:31.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.353.06:23:31.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.06:23:31.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.06:23:31.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.913 2003.353.06:23:31.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.06:23:31.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.19 2003.353.06:23:31.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.06:23:31.83:sx4ca=17 2003.353.06:23:37.47/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,109.2,,-0.8, 2003.353.06:23:46.61:fastr=2m45s 2003.353.06:26:31.71:!+5s 2003.353.06:26:36.72:!2003.353.06:26:47 2003.353.06:26:47.00:tape 2003.353.06:26:47.07/tape/low,00212,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:26:47.07:st=for,160 2003.353.06:26:47.12:!2003.353.06:26:47 2003.353.06:26:47.12:preob 2003.353.06:26:49.87/tpical/20913,21001,21227,21800,20746,22263,22501,22290,52255,18318 2003.353.06:26:49.95/tpical/19279,19373,18698,19121,19421,19640,35395 2003.353.06:26:50.03:!2003.353.06:26:57 2003.353.06:26:57.00:tape 2003.353.06:26:57.07/tape/low,00327,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:26:57.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:26:57.08:midob 2003.353.06:26:57.18/tpi/15924,15982,15917,16336,15524,15937,16125,16041,39443,13431 2003.353.06:26:57.25/tpi/15930,16150,15943,16143,15972,16155,29554 2003.353.06:26:57.82/tsys1/56.7,56.1,53.1,52.7,52.5,44.5,44.6,45.2,54.5,48.7 2003.353.06:26:57.82/tsys2/60.6,63.8,73.8,69.0,59.2,59.2,64.8 2003.353.06:27:02.39/wx/-17.3,959.0,76.7 2003.353.06:27:02.50/cable/+3.82902E-02 2003.353.06:27:02.56/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39448,29534,0,1pps 2003.353.06:27:02.61/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13426,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:27:02.69/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15972,15678,545,1pps 2003.353.06:27:02.77/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.86,lock,15931,16293,554,1pps 2003.353.06:27:02.85/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,15939,16102,550,1pps 2003.353.06:27:03.35/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:27:04.03#setcl#time/315796010,1,2003,353,06,27,04.00,0.119,12.079,1 2003.353.06:27:04.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:27:06.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:27:06.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:27:06.22:!2003.353.06:34:48 2003.353.06:34:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:34:48.00:et 2003.353.06:34:48.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:34:51.05:tape 2003.353.06:34:51.12/tape/low,06625,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:34:51.12:postob 2003.353.06:34:51.13:scan_name=353-0637 2003.353.06:34:51.13:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.06:34:57.65:check80f 2003.353.06:35:30.38/parity/18.,10.,20.,20.,6.,38.,6.,42.,22.,24.,170.,14.,30.,283. 2003.353.06:35:30.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1 2003.353.06:35:55.96:sx4ca=17 2003.353.06:36:00.60/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.06:36:09.74:!2003.353.06:37:48 2003.353.06:37:48.00:tape 2003.353.06:37:48.07/tape/low,06625,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:37:48.07:st=for,160 2003.353.06:37:48.12:!2003.353.06:37:48 2003.353.06:37:48.12:preob 2003.353.06:37:50.88/tpical/17972,18386,18576,18735,18950,19569,19640,19810,$$$$$,29174 2003.353.06:37:50.96/tpical/17981,17839,17339,17786,18269,18083,54431 2003.353.06:37:51.04:!2003.353.06:37:58 2003.353.06:37:58.00:tape 2003.353.06:37:58.07/tape/low,06741,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:37:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:37:58.08:midob 2003.353.06:37:58.19/tpi/15394,15758,15766,15900,15985,15971,16026,16173,$$$$$,24364 2003.353.06:37:58.27/tpi/15929,15934,15707,15987,16101,15895,48550 2003.353.06:37:58.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ia overflowed or were less than zero. 2003.353.06:37:58.85/tsys1/106.0,105.6,99.4,98.8,95.3,78.5,78.2,78.4,$$$$$$$$,90.4 2003.353.06:37:58.86/tsys2/98.9,106.5,122.6,113.0,94.9,92.8,106.4 2003.353.06:38:03.54/wx/-17.4,958.8,75.8 2003.353.06:38:03.62/cable/+3.82901E-02 2003.353.06:38:03.68/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,65535,48467,0,1pps 2003.353.06:38:03.73/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,24328,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:38:03.81/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -7.22, -7.54,lock,15713,15391,545,1pps 2003.353.06:38:03.90/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -1.36, -1.84,lock,15968,16005,554,1pps 2003.353.06:38:03.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -0.46, -0.90,lock,15665,15889,550,1pps 2003.353.06:38:04.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:38:05.04#setcl#time/315862111,1,2003,353,06,38,05.00,0.098,12.262,0 2003.353.06:38:05.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:38:07.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.06:38:07.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:38:07.22:!2003.353.06:42:51 2003.353.06:42:51.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:42:51.00:et 2003.353.06:42:51.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:42:54.05:tape 2003.353.06:42:54.12/tape/low,10663,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:42:54.12:postob 2003.353.06:42:54.12:scan_name=353-0651 2003.353.06:42:54.12:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.06:43:00.64:sx4ca=17 2003.353.06:43:05.28/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,109.2,,-0.8, 2003.353.06:43:14.41:!2003.353.06:50:55 2003.353.06:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.06:47:28.15/wx/-17.4,958.8,75.5 2003.353.06:49:45.61;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.06:50:55.00:tape 2003.353.06:50:55.07/tape/low,10663,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:50:55.07:st=for,160 2003.353.06:50:55.11:!2003.353.06:50:55 2003.353.06:50:55.11:preob 2003.353.06:50:57.86/tpical/20794,20884,21784,21782,21786,22674,22807,22563,52009,18265 2003.353.06:50:57.93/tpical/19552,19557,19053,19502,19700,19870,36691 2003.353.06:50:58.00:!2003.353.06:51:05 2003.353.06:51:05.00:tape 2003.353.06:51:05.07/tape/low,10780,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:51:05.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:51:05.08:midob 2003.353.06:51:05.18/tpi/15784,15845,16270,16263,16230,16113,16237,16141,39129,13327 2003.353.06:51:05.26/tpi/16081,16233,16135,16367,16123,16275,30900 2003.353.06:51:05.84/tsys1/56.0,55.4,52.3,52.0,51.7,43.4,43.6,44.3,53.8,47.8 2003.353.06:51:05.85/tsys2/59.0,62.2,70.5,66.4,57.6,57.9,68.4 2003.353.06:51:10.71/wx/-17.5,958.8,75.5 2003.353.06:51:10.82/cable/+3.83019E-02 2003.353.06:51:10.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39143,30906,0,1pps 2003.353.06:51:10.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13326,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.06:51:11.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15824,15554,545,1pps 2003.353.06:51:11.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16125,16119,554,1pps 2003.353.06:51:11.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16166,16243,550,1pps 2003.353.06:51:11.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:51:14.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.06:51:14.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.06:51:14.22:!2003.353.06:52:43 2003.353.06:51:15.02#setcl#time/315941109,1,2003,353,06,51,15.00,0.135,12.482,2 2003.353.06:51:15.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:52:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.06:52:43.00:et 2003.353.06:52:43.04:!+3s 2003.353.06:52:46.05:tape 2003.353.06:52:46.12/tape/low,12102,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:52:46.12:postob 2003.353.06:52:46.13:scan_name=353-0659 2003.353.06:52:46.14:source=0202+149,020207.4,145950.8,1950.0 2003.353.06:52:52.65:sx4ca=17 2003.353.06:52:57.29/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.06:53:06.43:!2003.353.06:59:18 2003.353.06:59:18.00:tape 2003.353.06:59:18.07/tape/low,12102,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:59:18.07:st=for,160 2003.353.06:59:18.12:!2003.353.06:59:18 2003.353.06:59:18.12:preob 2003.353.06:59:20.88/tpical/21211,21644,22307,22374,21549,23462,23247,23441,48813,17150 2003.353.06:59:20.96/tpical/19697,19674,19012,19582,20020,19891,33488 2003.353.06:59:21.04:!2003.353.06:59:28 2003.353.06:59:28.00:tape 2003.353.06:59:28.07/tape/low,12218,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.06:59:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.06:59:28.08:midob 2003.353.06:59:28.19/tpi/15748,16069,16272,16284,15663,16189,16088,16246,35934,12186 2003.353.06:59:28.27/tpi/16069,16195,16015,16347,16311,16226,27652 2003.353.06:59:28.85/tsys1/51.2,50.8,47.8,47.1,47.0,39.4,39.6,39.8,49.3,43.4 2003.353.06:59:28.86/tsys2/56.4,59.3,68.1,64.3,56.2,56.6,60.6 2003.353.06:59:33.13/wx/-17.9,958.6,74.9 2003.353.06:59:33.22/cable/+3.83003E-02 2003.353.06:59:33.28/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35925,27663,0,1pps 2003.353.06:59:33.33/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12188,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.06:59:33.41/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16061,15839,545,1pps 2003.353.06:59:33.49/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16179,16363,554,1pps 2003.353.06:59:33.57/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16024,16074,550,1pps 2003.353.06:59:34.07/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.06:59:35.04#setcl#time/315991111,1,2003,353,06,59,35.00,0.095,12.621,0 2003.353.06:59:35.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.06:59:38.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.06:59:38.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.06:59:38.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.06:59:38.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.06:59:38.22:!2003.353.07:01:06 2003.353.07:01:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:01:06.00:et 2003.353.07:01:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:01:09.05:tape 2003.353.07:01:09.12/tape/low,13541,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:01:09.12:postob 2003.353.07:01:09.13:scan_name=353-0702 2003.353.07:01:09.14:source=2318+049,231812.1,045723.3,1950.0 2003.353.07:01:15.65:sx4ca=17 2003.353.07:01:20.29/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,109.2,,-0.8, 2003.353.07:01:29.43:!2003.353.07:02:40 2003.353.07:02:40.00:tape 2003.353.07:02:40.07/tape/low,13541,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:02:40.07:st=for,160 2003.353.07:02:40.12:!2003.353.07:02:40 2003.353.07:02:40.12:preob 2003.353.07:02:42.88/tpical/20638,20745,21676,21966,21705,22569,22762,22499,51709,18174 2003.353.07:02:42.96/tpical/19516,19524,19072,19501,19673,19861,34866 2003.353.07:02:43.04:!2003.353.07:02:50 2003.353.07:02:50.00:tape 2003.353.07:02:50.07/tape/low,13657,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:02:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:02:50.08:midob 2003.353.07:02:50.19/tpi/15641,15693,16145,16375,16130,16040,16180,16043,38848,13238 2003.353.07:02:50.27/tpi/16059,16200,16180,16351,16126,16277,29020 2003.353.07:02:50.85/tsys1/55.6,54.7,51.7,51.6,51.2,43.4,43.4,43.8,53.5,47.5 2003.353.07:02:50.86/tsys2/59.2,62.1,71.3,66.0,58.1,58.0,63.6 2003.353.07:02:56.06/wx/-17.8,958.7,75.3 2003.353.07:02:56.10/cable/+3.83017E-02 2003.353.07:02:56.16/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38855,29002,0,1pps 2003.353.07:02:56.21/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13240,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:02:56.30/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15709,16243,545,1pps 2003.353.07:02:56.39/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16032,16032,554,1pps 2003.353.07:02:56.48/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.68,lock,16181,16110,550,1pps 2003.353.07:02:56.98/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:02:59.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:02:59.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.07:02:59.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.07:02:59.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.07:02:59.22:!2003.353.07:04:28 2003.353.07:03:00.02#setcl#time/316011609,1,2003,353,07,03,00.00,0.133,12.677,2 2003.353.07:03:00.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:04:28.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:04:28.00:et 2003.353.07:04:28.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:04:31.05:tape 2003.353.07:04:31.12/tape/low,14980,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:04:31.12:postob 2003.353.07:04:31.13:scan_name=353-0706 2003.353.07:04:31.13:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.353.07:04:37.65:sx4ca=17 2003.353.07:04:42.29/pass/17,,auto,110.0,,109.2,,-0.8, 2003.353.07:04:51.43:!2003.353.07:06:03 2003.353.07:06:03.00:tape 2003.353.07:06:03.07/tape/low,14980,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:06:03.07:st=for,160 2003.353.07:06:03.12:!2003.353.07:06:03 2003.353.07:06:03.12:preob 2003.353.07:06:05.88/tpical/21177,21456,21720,22224,22301,23217,23166,22846,50603,17774 2003.353.07:06:05.96/tpical/19912,19809,19094,19397,20225,20168,33766 2003.353.07:06:06.04:!2003.353.07:06:13 2003.353.07:06:13.00:tape 2003.353.07:06:13.07/tape/low,15095,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:06:13.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:06:13.08:midob 2003.353.07:06:13.19/tpi/16154,16349,16282,16661,16696,16566,16557,16404,38237,13015 2003.353.07:06:13.27/tpi/16435,16510,16254,16290,16593,16546,28074 2003.353.07:06:13.85/tsys1/57.1,56.4,53.0,52.8,52.7,44.1,44.2,44.9,54.7,48.5 2003.353.07:06:13.86/tsys2/60.3,63.8,73.0,66.7,58.4,58.4,63.1 2003.353.07:06:18.98/wx/-18.1,958.6,74.7 2003.353.07:06:19.14/cable/+3.82977E-02 2003.353.07:06:19.20/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38224,28056,0,1pps 2003.353.07:06:19.26/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13023,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:06:19.34/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16327,16009,545,1pps 2003.353.07:06:19.42/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16191,16287,554,1pps 2003.353.07:06:19.51/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16258,16368,550,1pps 2003.353.07:06:20.08?ERROR mc -5 Interface fm failed to handshake on monitor. 2003.353.07:06:21.02#setcl#time/316031709,1,2003,353,07,06,21.00,0.132,12.733,2 2003.353.07:06:21.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:06:23.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:06:23.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:06:23.21:!2003.353.07:08:34 2003.353.07:08:34.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:08:34.00:et 2003.353.07:08:34.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:08:37.05:tape 2003.353.07:08:37.12/tape/low,16992,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:08:37.12:postob 2003.353.07:08:37.13:scan_name=353-0710b 2003.353.07:08:37.14:source=0458-020,045841.3,-020333.9,1950.0 2003.353.07:08:43.65:midtp 2003.353.07:08:46.37/tpzero/210,341,259,328,279,285,321,324,645,207 2003.353.07:08:46.45/tpzero/314,317,314,346,279,275,433 2003.353.07:08:47.17/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,0.974 2003.353.07:08:47.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.07:08:47.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.07:08:47.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.914 2003.353.07:08:47.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.07:08:47.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.19 2003.353.07:08:47.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.07:08:47.83:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:08:52.85/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:09:01.99:fastf=0m30s 2003.353.07:09:32.09:!+5s 2003.353.07:09:37.10:!2003.353.07:10:37 2003.353.07:10:37.00:tape 2003.353.07:10:37.07/tape/low,17666,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:10:37.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:10:37.12:!2003.353.07:10:37 2003.353.07:10:37.12:preob 2003.353.07:10:39.88/tpical/21673,20850,21780,21971,21755,22645,22779,23008,51922,18206 2003.353.07:10:39.96/tpical/19971,19259,19132,19150,19920,19638,36814 2003.353.07:10:40.04:!2003.353.07:10:47 2003.353.07:10:47.00:tape 2003.353.07:10:47.07/tape/low,17550,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:10:47.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:10:47.08:midob 2003.353.07:10:47.19/tpi/17018,16372,16835,17008,16831,16776,16858,17102,40407,13792 2003.353.07:10:47.27/tpi/16877,16433,16707,16546,16780,16513,31322 2003.353.07:10:47.85/tsys1/65.0,64.4,60.3,60.5,60.5,50.6,50.3,51.1,62.2,55.4 2003.353.07:10:47.86/tsys2/69.6,74.1,87.9,80.9,68.3,67.6,73.1 2003.353.07:10:52.28/wx/-17.6,958.6,76.3 2003.353.07:10:52.42/cable/+3.82977E-02 2003.353.07:10:52.48/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40418,31257,0,1pps 2003.353.07:10:52.53/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13798,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:10:52.61/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.57,lock,15552,16058,545,1pps 2003.353.07:10:52.70/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16360,16253,554,1pps 2003.353.07:10:52.79/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16280,16019,550,1pps 2003.353.07:10:53.29/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:10:54.02#setcl#time/316059009,1,2003,353,07,10,54.00,0.131,12.809,2 2003.353.07:10:54.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:10:56.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.07:10:56.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:10:56.21:!2003.353.07:13:03 2003.353.07:13:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:13:03.00:et 2003.353.07:13:03.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:13:06.05:tape 2003.353.07:13:06.12/tape/low,15721,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:13:06.12:postob 2003.353.07:13:06.13:scan_name=353-0715 2003.353.07:13:06.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.07:13:12.65:check80r 2003.353.07:13:45.38/parity/10.,10.,4.,8.,8.,6.,8.,4.,20.,38.,392.,10.,36.,20. 2003.353.07:13:45.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.07:14:10.96:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:14:15.60/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:14:24.74:!2003.353.07:15:22 2003.353.07:15:22.00:tape 2003.353.07:15:22.07/tape/low,15720,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:15:22.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:15:22.12:!2003.353.07:15:22 2003.353.07:15:22.12:preob 2003.353.07:15:24.88/tpical/20635,20765,21755,21935,21743,22613,22707,22487,51768,18179 2003.353.07:15:24.96/tpical/19118,19291,19040,19176,19503,19660,37355 2003.353.07:15:25.04:!2003.353.07:15:32 2003.353.07:15:32.00:tape 2003.353.07:15:32.07/tape/low,15605,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:15:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:15:32.08:midob 2003.353.07:15:32.19/tpi/15671,15747,16247,16340,16203,16080,16180,16071,38933,13259 2003.353.07:15:32.27/tpi/15796,16073,16214,16162,16060,16191,31185 2003.353.07:15:32.85/tsys1/56.1,55.3,52.2,51.5,51.7,43.5,43.7,44.2,53.7,47.8 2003.353.07:15:32.86/tsys2/60.6,63.7,73.1,68.2,59.6,59.6,64.8 2003.353.07:15:37.05/wx/-17.5,958.5,76.4 2003.353.07:15:37.07/cable/+3.82966E-02 2003.353.07:15:37.13/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38933,31234,0,1pps 2003.353.07:15:37.18/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13260,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:15:37.26/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15741,15457,545,1pps 2003.353.07:15:37.35/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16095,16009,554,1pps 2003.353.07:15:37.43/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.57,lock,16236,15933,550,1pps 2003.353.07:15:37.93/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:15:38.03#setcl#time/316087409,1,2003,353,07,15,38.00,0.130,12.888,1 2003.353.07:15:38.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:15:40.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:15:40.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.07:15:40.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.07:15:40.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.07:15:40.23:!2003.353.07:21:20 2003.353.07:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.07:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.353.07:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.07:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.07:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.914 2003.353.07:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.07:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.60 2003.353.07:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.07:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.07:17:28.33/wx/-17.8,958.5,75.2 2003.353.07:21:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:21:20.00:et 2003.353.07:21:20.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:21:23.05:tape 2003.353.07:21:23.12/tape/low,10949,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:21:23.12:postob 2003.353.07:21:23.13:scan_name=353-0722 2003.353.07:21:23.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.07:21:29.65:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:21:34.29/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:21:43.43:!2003.353.07:22:25 2003.353.07:22:25.00:tape 2003.353.07:22:25.07/tape/low,10949,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:22:25.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:22:25.12:!2003.353.07:22:25 2003.353.07:22:25.12:preob 2003.353.07:22:27.88/tpical/21593,20991,22030,22136,21480,23316,23210,23356,49454,17163 2003.353.07:22:27.96/tpical/19309,19277,19371,19401,19891,19752,34299 2003.353.07:22:28.04:!2003.353.07:22:35 2003.353.07:22:35.00:tape 2003.353.07:22:35.07/tape/low,10832,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:22:35.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:22:35.08:midob 2003.353.07:22:35.19/tpi/16231,15770,16284,16296,15743,16217,16204,16320,36795,12302 2003.353.07:22:35.27/tpi/15868,15989,16438,16299,16274,16187,28597 2003.353.07:22:35.85/tsys1/53.8,53.2,50.2,49.2,48.5,40.4,40.8,40.9,51.4,44.8 2003.353.07:22:35.86/tsys2/58.8,62.0,71.5,66.9,57.5,58.0,64.2 2003.353.07:22:40.91/wx/-17.6,958.3,76.1 2003.353.07:22:41.07/cable/+3.83010E-02 2003.353.07:22:41.13/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36806,28638,0,1pps 2003.353.07:22:41.18/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12309,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.07:22:41.26/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15770,16320,545,1pps 2003.353.07:22:41.35/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16232,16086,554,1pps 2003.353.07:22:41.44/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16137,16182,550,1pps 2003.353.07:22:41.94/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:22:44.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.07:22:44.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:22:44.22:!2003.353.07:24:13 2003.353.07:22:45.02#setcl#time/316130108,1,2003,353,07,22,45.00,0.148,13.007,2 2003.353.07:22:45.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:24:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:24:13.00:et 2003.353.07:24:13.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:24:16.05:tape 2003.353.07:24:16.12/tape/low,09510,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:24:16.12:postob 2003.353.07:24:16.13:scan_name=353-0725 2003.353.07:24:16.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.07:24:22.65:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:24:27.29/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:24:36.43:!2003.353.07:25:40 2003.353.07:25:40.00:tape 2003.353.07:25:40.07/tape/low,09510,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:25:40.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:25:40.12:!2003.353.07:25:40 2003.353.07:25:40.12:preob 2003.353.07:25:42.88/tpical/21430,21833,21895,22112,21574,23481,23334,23080,49107,17196 2003.353.07:25:42.96/tpical/19457,19373,19079,19526,19960,19886,35074 2003.353.07:25:43.04:!2003.353.07:25:50 2003.353.07:25:50.00:tape 2003.353.07:25:50.07/tape/low,09394,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:25:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:25:50.08:midob 2003.353.07:25:50.19/tpi/15962,16248,16033,16154,15729,16260,16193,16078,36282,12256 2003.353.07:25:50.27/tpi/15822,15921,16028,16205,16165,16132,29187 2003.353.07:25:50.85/tsys1/51.9,51.3,48.4,47.8,47.6,39.8,40.0,40.5,50.0,43.9 2003.353.07:25:50.86/tsys2/55.5,58.8,67.0,62.1,54.4,54.9,63.5 2003.353.07:25:55.66/wx/-17.4,958.3,76.4 2003.353.07:25:55.78/cable/+3.83015E-02 2003.353.07:25:55.84/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36287,29146,0,1pps 2003.353.07:25:55.89/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12261,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:25:55.97/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16253,16027,545,1pps 2003.353.07:25:56.06/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16269,16053,554,1pps 2003.353.07:25:56.15/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16031,16121,550,1pps 2003.353.07:25:56.65/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:25:59.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:25:59.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:25:59.22:!2003.353.07:30:11 2003.353.07:26:00.02#setcl#time/316149608,1,2003,353,07,26,00.00,0.147,13.061,2 2003.353.07:26:00.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:30:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:30:11.00:et 2003.353.07:30:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:30:14.05:tape 2003.353.07:30:14.12/tape/low,05898,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:30:14.12:postob 2003.353.07:30:14.13:scan_name=353-0731 2003.353.07:30:14.14:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.07:30:20.65:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:30:25.29/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:30:34.43:!2003.353.07:31:05 2003.353.07:31:05.00:tape 2003.353.07:31:05.07/tape/low,05898,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:31:05.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:31:05.12:!2003.353.07:31:05 2003.353.07:31:05.12:preob 2003.353.07:31:07.88/tpical/21262,21649,22222,22197,22386,23163,23445,23218,48622,16982 2003.353.07:31:07.96/tpical/19374,19255,19423,19339,20012,20002,33961 2003.353.07:31:08.04:!2003.353.07:31:15 2003.353.07:31:15.00:tape 2003.353.07:31:15.07/tape/low,05782,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:31:15.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:31:15.08:midob 2003.353.07:31:15.19/tpi/15811,16066,16207,16169,16238,15991,16213,16119,35808,12051 2003.353.07:31:15.27/tpi/15753,15807,16282,16015,16164,16191,28141 2003.353.07:31:15.85/tsys1/51.5,50.7,47.7,47.3,46.7,39.4,39.6,40.0,49.4,43.2 2003.353.07:31:15.86/tsys2/55.4,58.4,66.1,61.3,53.7,54.3,61.9 2003.353.07:31:19.68/wx/-17.2,958.2,76.6 2003.353.07:31:19.79/cable/+3.82987E-02 2003.353.07:31:19.85/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35808,28085,0,1pps 2003.353.07:31:19.91/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12058,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:31:19.99/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16072,15836,545,1pps 2003.353.07:31:20.07/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15997,16236,554,1pps 2003.353.07:31:20.16/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.01,lock,16279,16010,550,1pps 2003.353.07:31:20.66/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:31:21.03#setcl#time/316181709,1,2003,353,07,31,21.00,0.128,13.150,1 2003.353.07:31:21.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:31:23.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:31:23.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:31:23.22:!2003.353.07:32:53 2003.353.07:32:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:32:53.00:et 2003.353.07:32:53.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:32:56.05:tape 2003.353.07:32:56.12/tape/low,04460,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:32:56.12:postob 2003.353.07:32:56.13:scan_name=353-0739 2003.353.07:32:56.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.07:33:02.65:sx4cb=18 2003.353.07:33:07.29/pass/18,,auto,110.0,,110.0,,0.0, 2003.353.07:33:16.43:!2003.353.07:38:54 2003.353.07:38:54.00:tape 2003.353.07:38:54.07/tape/low,04460,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:38:54.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.07:38:54.12:!2003.353.07:38:54 2003.353.07:38:54.12:preob 2003.353.07:38:56.88/tpical/20277,20069,20805,21171,20755,21795,21816,21797,55407,19431 2003.353.07:38:56.96/tpical/19168,18886,18797,19100,19394,19438,37095 2003.353.07:38:57.04:!2003.353.07:39:04 2003.353.07:39:04.00:tape 2003.353.07:39:04.07/tape/low,04344,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:39:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:39:04.08:midob 2003.353.07:39:04.19/tpi/15740,15553,15903,16164,15839,15966,15960,16041,42599,14494 2003.353.07:39:04.27/tpi/15989,15882,16158,16285,16102,16145,31289 2003.353.07:39:04.85/tsys1/61.6,60.6,57.4,56.9,57.0,48.4,48.1,49.1,59.0,52.1 2003.353.07:39:04.86/tsys2/64.1,67.4,78.0,73.6,62.5,62.7,69.1 2003.353.07:39:09.36/wx/-17.2,958.1,76.8 2003.353.07:39:09.39/cable/+3.82893E-02 2003.353.07:39:09.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42589,31367,0,1pps 2003.353.07:39:09.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14485,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:39:09.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15568,16058,545,1pps 2003.353.07:39:09.67/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.86, 0.49,lock,15955,16244,554,1pps 2003.353.07:39:09.76/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16165,16211,550,1pps 2003.353.07:39:10.26/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:39:11.02#setcl#time/316228708,1,2003,353,07,39,11.00,0.145,13.281,2 2003.353.07:39:11.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:39:13.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:39:13.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.07:39:13.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.07:39:13.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.07:39:13.23:!2003.353.07:42:39 2003.353.07:39:33.54;oso 2003.353.07:39:33.67?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.07:39:33.67?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.07:39:33.68/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.07:42:39.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:42:39.00:et 2003.353.07:42:39.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:42:42.05:tape 2003.353.07:42:42.12/tape/low,01460,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:42:42.12:postob 2003.353.07:42:42.13:scan_name=353-0745 2003.353.07:42:42.14:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.07:42:48.65:midtp 2003.353.07:42:51.37/tpzero/200,334,249,314,272,279,312,315,674,217 2003.353.07:42:51.45/tpzero/311,319,309,338,268,267,449 2003.353.07:42:52.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.353.07:42:52.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.07:42:52.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.07:42:52.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.914 2003.353.07:42:52.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.07:42:52.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.84 2003.353.07:42:52.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.07:42:52.83:sx4ca=19 2003.353.07:42:58.04/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.07:43:07.18:fastr=0m55s 2003.353.07:44:02.28:!+5s 2003.353.07:44:07.29:!2003.353.07:45:21 2003.353.07:45:21.00:tape 2003.353.07:45:21.07/tape/low,00222,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:45:21.07:st=for,160 2003.353.07:45:21.12:!2003.353.07:45:21 2003.353.07:45:21.12:preob 2003.353.07:45:23.88/tpical/21838,21931,22127,22553,21678,23201,23408,23171,54865,19235 2003.353.07:45:23.96/tpical/20310,19616,19355,19751,20438,20151,36077 2003.353.07:45:24.04:!2003.353.07:45:31 2003.353.07:45:31.00:tape 2003.353.07:45:31.07/tape/low,00337,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:45:31.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:45:31.08:midob 2003.353.07:45:31.19/tpi/17226,17293,17160,17477,16753,17133,17276,17171,42622,14463 2003.353.07:45:31.27/tpi/17001,16555,16682,16823,16957,16717,30340 2003.353.07:45:31.85/tsys1/66.5,65.8,61.3,60.9,60.2,50.0,49.8,50.6,61.7,53.7 2003.353.07:45:31.86/tsys2/65.6,69.0,79.6,73.2,62.3,62.3,67.7 2003.353.07:45:35.57/wx/-17.1,958.0,76.7 2003.353.07:45:35.63/cable/+3.82994E-02 2003.353.07:45:35.69/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42613,30296,0,1pps 2003.353.07:45:35.74/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14463,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.07:45:35.82/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15549,16057,545,1pps 2003.353.07:45:35.91/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.49,lock,16297,16102,554,1pps 2003.353.07:45:35.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.45,lock,16263,16042,550,1pps 2003.353.07:45:36.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:45:39.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:45:39.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:45:39.22:!2003.353.07:47:09 2003.353.07:45:40.02#setcl#time/316267608,1,2003,353,07,45,40.00,0.143,13.389,2 2003.353.07:45:40.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:47:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:47:09.00:et 2003.353.07:47:09.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:47:12.05:tape 2003.353.07:47:12.12/tape/low,01661,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:47:12.12:postob 2003.353.07:47:12.13:scan_name=353-0749 2003.353.07:47:12.13:source=0642+449,064253.0,445430.9,1950.0 2003.353.07:47:18.65:check80f 2003.353.07:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.07:47:28.49/wx/-17.5,958.0,75.6 2003.353.07:47:51.38/parity/12.,6.,12.,10.,6.,4.,6.,18.,8.,14.,208.,4.,12.,30. 2003.353.07:47:51.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.07:48:16.96:sx4ca=19 2003.353.07:48:21.60/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.07:48:30.74:!2003.353.07:49:22 2003.353.07:49:22.00:tape 2003.353.07:49:22.07/tape/low,01661,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:49:22.07:st=for,160 2003.353.07:49:22.12:!2003.353.07:49:22 2003.353.07:49:22.12:preob 2003.353.07:49:24.88/tpical/21547,20968,22034,22112,21626,23000,23005,23169,49341,17216 2003.353.07:49:24.96/tpical/19256,19223,18784,19402,19550,19736,34124 2003.353.07:49:25.04:!2003.353.07:49:32 2003.353.07:49:32.00:tape 2003.353.07:49:32.07/tape/low,01776,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:49:32.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:49:32.08:midob 2003.353.07:49:32.19/tpi/16121,15656,16185,16209,15793,15992,16011,16220,36544,12298 2003.353.07:49:32.27/tpi/15778,15885,15903,16257,15955,16146,28304 2003.353.07:49:32.85/tsys1/52.8,51.9,49.0,48.5,47.9,40.4,40.4,41.2,50.5,44.2 2003.353.07:49:32.86/tsys2/57.8,60.6,70.4,65.8,56.7,57.5,62.2 2003.353.07:49:37.78/wx/-17.5,957.9,75.5 2003.353.07:49:37.87/cable/+3.82993E-02 2003.353.07:49:37.93/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36541,28298,0,1pps 2003.353.07:49:37.98/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12294,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:49:38.06/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15663,16167,545,1pps 2003.353.07:49:38.15/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,15978,16139,554,1pps 2003.353.07:49:38.24/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15905,16013,550,1pps 2003.353.07:49:38.74/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:49:41.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:49:41.22?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.07:49:41.22?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.07:49:41.23/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.07:49:41.23:!2003.353.07:51:10 2003.353.07:49:42.03#setcl#time/316291809,1,2003,353,07,49,42.00,0.125,13.456,1 2003.353.07:49:42.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:51:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.07:51:10.00:et 2003.353.07:51:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.07:51:13.05:tape 2003.353.07:51:13.12/tape/low,03101,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:51:13.12:postob 2003.353.07:51:13.13:scan_name=353-0759 2003.353.07:51:13.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.07:51:19.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.07:51:24.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.07:51:33.43:!2003.353.07:59:01 2003.353.07:59:01.00:tape 2003.353.07:59:01.07/tape/low,03101,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:59:01.07:st=for,160 2003.353.07:59:01.12:!2003.353.07:59:01 2003.353.07:59:01.12:preob 2003.353.07:59:03.88/tpical/21341,21774,21844,22303,21459,23387,23292,23080,48852,17086 2003.353.07:59:03.96/tpical/19831,19704,19063,19115,19608,19863,33589 2003.353.07:59:04.04:!2003.353.07:59:11 2003.353.07:59:11.00:tape 2003.353.07:59:11.07/tape/low,03216,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.07:59:11.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.07:59:11.08:midob 2003.353.07:59:11.19/tpi/15904,16213,15994,16252,15641,16222,16208,16141,36091,12179 2003.353.07:59:11.27/tpi/16210,16238,16112,15975,15973,16202,27766 2003.353.07:59:11.85/tsys1/52.0,51.4,48.4,47.4,47.5,40.1,40.4,41.1,50.0,43.9 2003.353.07:59:11.86/tsys2/57.1,59.7,69.6,64.7,56.2,56.6,61.0 2003.353.07:59:17.10/wx/-17.0,957.9,76.6 2003.353.07:59:17.23/cable/+3.82953E-02 2003.353.07:59:17.29/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36087,27763,0,1pps 2003.353.07:59:17.34/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12181,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.07:59:17.42/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16215,15972,545,1pps 2003.353.07:59:17.51/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16226,16015,554,1pps 2003.353.07:59:17.60/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16122,16155,550,1pps 2003.353.07:59:18.10/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.07:59:19.04#setcl#time/316349510,1,2003,353,07,59,19.00,0.106,13.616,0 2003.353.07:59:19.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.07:59:21.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.07:59:21.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.07:59:21.22:!2003.353.08:00:49 2003.353.08:00:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:00:49.00:et 2003.353.08:00:49.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:00:52.05:tape 2003.353.08:00:52.12/tape/low,04540,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:00:52.12:postob 2003.353.08:00:52.13:scan_name=353-0810 2003.353.08:00:52.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.08:00:58.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:01:03.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:01:12.43:!2003.353.08:09:58 2003.353.08:09:58.00:tape 2003.353.08:09:58.07/tape/low,04540,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:09:58.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:09:58.12:!2003.353.08:09:58 2003.353.08:09:58.12:preob 2003.353.08:10:00.88/tpical/21610,21059,22122,22191,21653,23527,23438,23161,49480,17234 2003.353.08:10:00.96/tpical/19347,19304,18876,19468,19625,19835,34188 2003.353.08:10:01.04:!2003.353.08:10:08 2003.353.08:10:08.00:tape 2003.353.08:10:08.07/tape/low,04656,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:10:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:10:08.08:midob 2003.353.08:10:08.19/tpi/16190,15743,16278,16263,15831,16341,16330,16184,36697,12320 2003.353.08:10:08.27/tpi/15916,15973,15987,16334,16049,16227,28416 2003.353.08:10:08.85/tsys1/53.1,52.2,49.4,48.4,48.1,40.2,40.6,40.9,50.7,44.3 2003.353.08:10:08.86/tsys2/59.1,61.1,70.5,66.4,57.4,57.5,63.0 2003.353.08:10:13.33/wx/-16.7,957.8,76.9 2003.353.08:10:13.39/cable/+3.82988E-02 2003.353.08:10:13.45/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36709,28523,0,1pps 2003.353.08:10:13.50/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12317,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.08:10:13.58/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15754,16274,545,1pps 2003.353.08:10:13.67/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16355,16147,554,1pps 2003.353.08:10:13.76/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16047,16106,550,1pps 2003.353.08:10:14.26/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:10:15.02#setcl#time/316415108,1,2003,353,08,10,15.00,0.139,13.798,2 2003.353.08:10:15.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:10:17.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:10:17.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:10:17.22:!2003.353.08:11:46 2003.353.08:11:22.92;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.08:11:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:11:46.00:et 2003.353.08:11:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:11:49.05:tape 2003.353.08:11:49.12/tape/low,05978,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:11:49.12:postob 2003.353.08:11:49.13:scan_name=353-0813 2003.353.08:11:49.14:source=0201+113,020106.0,112022.8,1950.0 2003.353.08:11:55.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:12:00.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:12:09.43:!2003.353.08:13:37 2003.353.08:13:37.00:tape 2003.353.08:13:37.07/tape/low,05978,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:13:37.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:13:37.12:!2003.353.08:13:37 2003.353.08:13:37.12:preob 2003.353.08:13:39.88/tpical/21448,21910,22009,22252,21794,23220,23196,23390,49303,17336 2003.353.08:13:39.96/tpical/19867,19684,19013,19542,19977,19845,33688 2003.353.08:13:40.04:!2003.353.08:13:47 2003.353.08:13:47.00:tape 2003.353.08:13:47.07/tape/low,06094,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:13:47.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:13:47.08:midob 2003.353.08:13:47.19/tpi/15998,16329,16120,16255,15903,16131,16118,16331,36428,12371 2003.353.08:13:47.27/tpi/16231,16223,16017,16290,16264,16153,27891 2003.353.08:13:47.85/tsys1/52.2,51.6,48.5,47.8,47.8,40.3,40.2,40.8,50.0,44.1 2003.353.08:13:47.86/tsys2/56.9,59.7,68.2,63.8,56.0,55.9,61.5 2003.353.08:13:52.61/wx/-16.6,957.8,77.2 2003.353.08:13:52.74/cable/+3.83000E-02 2003.353.08:13:52.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36432,27815,0,1pps 2003.353.08:13:52.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12369,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.08:13:52.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16322,16088,545,1pps 2003.353.08:13:53.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16128,16266,554,1pps 2003.353.08:13:53.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16029,16071,550,1pps 2003.353.08:13:53.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:13:54.03#setcl#time/316437009,1,2003,353,08,13,54.00,0.121,13.859,1 2003.353.08:13:54.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:13:56.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:13:56.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:13:56.22:!2003.353.08:15:25 2003.353.08:15:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:15:25.00:et 2003.353.08:15:25.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:15:28.05:tape 2003.353.08:15:28.12/tape/low,07416,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:15:28.12:postob 2003.353.08:15:28.13:scan_name=353-0818 2003.353.08:15:28.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.08:15:34.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:15:39.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:15:48.43:!2003.353.08:18:21 2003.353.08:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.08:17:28.63/wx/-16.5,957.8,77.1 2003.353.08:18:21.00:tape 2003.353.08:18:21.07/tape/low,07416,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:18:21.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:18:21.12:!2003.353.08:18:21 2003.353.08:18:21.12:preob 2003.353.08:18:23.88/tpical/21722,21146,22216,22340,21736,23594,23494,23194,49719,17313 2003.353.08:18:23.96/tpical/19421,19485,18919,19425,19915,19766,34628 2003.353.08:18:24.04:!2003.353.08:18:31 2003.353.08:18:31.00:tape 2003.353.08:18:31.07/tape/low,07533,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:18:31.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:18:31.08:midob 2003.353.08:18:31.19/tpi/16283,15830,16338,16336,15841,16337,16323,16171,36866,12362 2003.353.08:18:31.27/tpi/15922,16147,16019,16271,16250,16162,28775 2003.353.08:18:31.85/tsys1/53.2,52.5,49.3,48.0,47.5,39.8,40.2,40.6,50.7,44.2 2003.353.08:18:31.86/tsys2/58.0,61.6,70.4,65.7,56.7,57.3,62.9 2003.353.08:18:35.72/wx/-16.5,957.8,77.1 2003.353.08:18:35.78/cable/+3.83024E-02 2003.353.08:18:35.84/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36868,28746,0,1pps 2003.353.08:18:35.89/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12362,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.08:18:35.97/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15833,16355,545,1pps 2003.353.08:18:36.05/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16339,16183,554,1pps 2003.353.08:18:36.13/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,15993,16091,550,1pps 2003.353.08:18:36.63/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:18:39.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:18:39.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:18:39.22:!2003.353.08:20:09 2003.353.08:18:40.02#setcl#time/316465608,1,2003,353,08,18,40.00,0.138,13.939,2 2003.353.08:18:40.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:20:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:20:09.00:et 2003.353.08:20:09.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:20:12.05:tape 2003.353.08:20:12.12/tape/low,08855,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:20:12.12:postob 2003.353.08:20:12.13:scan_name=353-0822b 2003.353.08:20:12.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.08:20:18.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:20:23.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:20:32.43:!2003.353.08:22:49 2003.353.08:22:49.00:tape 2003.353.08:22:49.07/tape/low,08855,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:22:49.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:22:49.12:!2003.353.08:22:49 2003.353.08:22:49.12:preob 2003.353.08:22:51.88/tpical/21090,21344,21651,22131,21132,23199,23174,22917,50318,17713 2003.353.08:22:51.96/tpical/19890,19738,19055,19298,20116,20064,33459 2003.353.08:22:52.04:!2003.353.08:22:59 2003.353.08:22:59.00:tape 2003.353.08:22:59.07/tape/low,08971,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:22:59.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:22:59.08:midob 2003.353.08:22:59.19/tpi/15855,16024,15983,16344,15559,16290,16303,16202,37460,12767 2003.353.08:22:59.27/tpi/16257,16296,16041,16081,16333,16304,27614 2003.353.08:22:59.85/tsys1/53.8,53.1,50.0,49.9,49.4,41.7,41.9,42.6,51.5,45.7 2003.353.08:22:59.86/tsys2/57.1,60.3,67.9,63.6,55.2,55.4,60.4 2003.353.08:23:04.10/wx/-16.9,957.7,76.0 2003.353.08:23:04.26/cable/+3.82948E-02 2003.353.08:23:04.32/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37454,27622,0,1pps 2003.353.08:23:04.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12766,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.08:23:04.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16026,15702,545,1pps 2003.353.08:23:04.54/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16279,15991,554,1pps 2003.353.08:23:04.63/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16052,16147,550,1pps 2003.353.08:23:05.13/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:23:08.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:23:08.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:23:08.22:!2003.353.08:24:37 2003.353.08:23:09.02#setcl#time/316492508,1,2003,353,08,23,09.00,0.137,14.013,2 2003.353.08:23:09.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:24:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:24:37.00:et 2003.353.08:24:37.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:24:40.05:tape 2003.353.08:24:40.12/tape/low,10294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:24:40.12:postob 2003.353.08:24:40.13:scan_name=353-0827 2003.353.08:24:40.13:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.08:24:46.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:24:51.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:25:00.43:!2003.353.08:27:05 2003.353.08:27:05.00:tape 2003.353.08:27:05.07/tape/low,10294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:27:05.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:27:05.12:!2003.353.08:27:05 2003.353.08:27:05.12:preob 2003.353.08:27:07.88/tpical/21386,20568,21527,21850,21631,23146,23073,22814,51284,18092 2003.353.08:27:07.96/tpical/19174,19041,18819,19329,19696,19802,35058 2003.353.08:27:08.04:!2003.353.08:27:15 2003.353.08:27:15.00:tape 2003.353.08:27:15.07/tape/low,10409,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:27:15.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:27:15.08:midob 2003.353.08:27:15.19/tpi/16162,15540,15990,16227,16070,16368,16331,16218,38402,13134 2003.353.08:27:15.27/tpi/15745,15848,16009,16266,16181,16266,29298 2003.353.08:27:15.85/tsys1/55.0,54.4,51.2,50.9,51.1,42.7,42.8,43.4,52.7,46.9 2003.353.08:27:15.86/tsys2/58.5,63.2,72.6,67.6,58.9,58.8,65.1 2003.353.08:27:21.03/wx/-17.2,957.7,75.2 2003.353.08:27:21.06/cable/+3.82980E-02 2003.353.08:27:21.12/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38407,29157,0,1pps 2003.353.08:27:21.17/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13141,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.08:27:21.25/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15547,16067,545,1pps 2003.353.08:27:21.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,15941,15888,554,1pps 2003.353.08:27:21.43/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,15997,16105,550,1pps 2003.353.08:27:21.93/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:27:24.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:27:24.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:27:24.22:!2003.353.08:28:53 2003.353.08:27:25.02#setcl#time/316518108,1,2003,353,08,27,25.00,0.136,14.084,2 2003.353.08:27:25.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:28:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:28:53.00:et 2003.353.08:28:53.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:28:56.05:tape 2003.353.08:28:56.12/tape/low,11733,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:28:56.12:postob 2003.353.08:28:56.13:scan_name=353-0832 2003.353.08:28:56.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.08:29:02.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:29:07.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:29:16.43:!2003.353.08:32:23 2003.353.08:29:29.67?ERROR ch -236 r1 tape drive shouldn't be moving and it is 2003.353.08:32:23.00:tape 2003.353.08:32:23.07/tape/low,11733,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:32:23.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:32:23.12:!2003.353.08:32:23 2003.353.08:32:23.12:preob 2003.353.08:32:25.88/tpical/21624,21063,22111,22257,21621,23499,23402,23092,49524,17239 2003.353.08:32:25.96/tpical/19147,19272,19153,19185,19678,19570,34208 2003.353.08:32:26.04:!2003.353.08:32:33 2003.353.08:32:33.00:tape 2003.353.08:32:33.07/tape/low,11848,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:32:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:32:33.08:midob 2003.353.08:32:33.19/tpi/16171,15722,16257,16296,15742,16272,16254,16056,36665,12294 2003.353.08:32:33.27/tpi/15639,15914,16165,16001,16032,15993,27944 2003.353.08:32:33.85/tsys1/52.7,51.9,49.2,48.3,47.4,39.8,40.1,40.3,50.4,44.0 2003.353.08:32:33.86/tsys2/56.8,60.4,69.0,64.0,56.2,57.2,57.1 2003.353.08:32:38.50/wx/-17.3,957.7,75.6 2003.353.08:32:38.66/cable/+3.83033E-02 2003.353.08:32:38.72/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36660,27940,0,1pps 2003.353.08:32:38.77/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12299,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.08:32:38.85/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15725,16249,545,1pps 2003.353.08:32:38.94/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16259,16108,554,1pps 2003.353.08:32:39.03/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16165,16218,550,1pps 2003.353.08:32:39.53/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:32:42.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:32:42.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:32:42.22:!2003.353.08:34:11 2003.353.08:32:43.02#setcl#time/316549908,1,2003,353,08,32,43.00,0.135,14.173,2 2003.353.08:32:43.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:34:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:34:11.00:et 2003.353.08:34:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:34:14.05:tape 2003.353.08:34:14.12/tape/low,13171,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:34:14.12:postob 2003.353.08:34:14.13:scan_name=353-0837a 2003.353.08:34:14.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.08:34:20.65:sx4ca=19 2003.353.08:34:25.29/pass/19,,auto,165.0,,164.0,,-1.0, 2003.353.08:34:34.43:!2003.353.08:36:59 2003.353.08:36:59.00:tape 2003.353.08:36:59.07/tape/low,13171,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:36:59.07:st=for,160 2003.353.08:36:59.12:!2003.353.08:36:59 2003.353.08:36:59.12:preob 2003.353.08:37:01.88/tpical/21099,21361,21666,22099,22192,23091,23074,22774,50366,17665 2003.353.08:37:01.96/tpical/19797,19740,18975,19379,19835,19699,33997 2003.353.08:37:02.04:!2003.353.08:37:09 2003.353.08:37:09.00:tape 2003.353.08:37:09.07/tape/low,13286,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:37:09.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:37:09.08:midob 2003.353.08:37:09.19/tpi/15865,16054,16014,16329,16339,16175,16214,16040,37511,12725 2003.353.08:37:09.27/tpi/16203,16284,16018,16121,16120,16023,28059 2003.353.08:37:09.85/tsys1/53.9,53.3,50.2,50.0,49.4,41.4,41.7,42.0,51.6,45.6 2003.353.08:37:09.86/tsys2/57.5,60.1,69.1,63.0,55.5,55.7,60.4 2003.353.08:37:15.07/wx/-17.8,957.5,74.6 2003.353.08:37:15.14/cable/+3.83006E-02 2003.353.08:37:15.20/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37510,28102,0,1pps 2003.353.08:37:15.25/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12720,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.08:37:15.33/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16036,15704,545,1pps 2003.353.08:37:15.42/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16173,16296,554,1pps 2003.353.08:37:15.51/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16009,16083,550,1pps 2003.353.08:37:16.01/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:37:18.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.08:37:18.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:37:18.22:!2003.353.08:40:46 2003.353.08:37:19.02#setcl#time/316577508,1,2003,353,08,37,19.00,0.135,14.249,2 2003.353.08:37:19.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:40:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:40:46.00:et 2003.353.08:40:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:40:49.05:tape 2003.353.08:40:49.12/tape/low,16196,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:40:49.12:postob 2003.353.08:40:49.13:scan_name=353-0843 2003.353.08:40:49.14:source=0014+813,001404.5,811828.2,1950.0 2003.353.08:40:55.65:midtp 2003.353.08:40:58.37/tpzero/207,339,257,329,275,285,324,325,641,206 2003.353.08:40:58.45/tpzero/321,324,313,346,278,274,428 2003.353.08:40:59.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.353.08:40:59.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.08:40:59.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.08:40:59.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.08:40:59.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.08:40:59.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.45 2003.353.08:40:59.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.08:40:59.83:sx4cb=20 2003.353.08:41:04.48/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.08:41:13.62:fastf=1m5s 2003.353.08:42:18.72:!+5s 2003.353.08:42:23.73:!2003.353.08:42:59 2003.353.08:42:59.00:tape 2003.353.08:42:59.07/tape/low,17658,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:42:59.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.08:42:59.12:!2003.353.08:42:59 2003.353.08:42:59.12:preob 2003.353.08:43:01.87/tpical/21034,21313,21553,22133,21849,23251,23185,23375,50066,17423 2003.353.08:43:01.95/tpical/19423,19358,18927,19471,19885,19800,35717 2003.353.08:43:02.03:!2003.353.08:43:09 2003.353.08:43:09.00:tape 2003.353.08:43:09.07/tape/low,17542,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:43:09.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:43:09.08:midob 2003.353.08:43:09.18/tpi/15794,15990,15878,16250,15968,16171,16184,16370,37193,12475 2003.353.08:43:09.25/tpi/15951,16058,16019,16305,16221,16197,29977 2003.353.08:43:09.83/tsys1/53.5,52.9,49.5,48.7,48.0,40.4,40.8,41.2,51.1,44.6 2003.353.08:43:09.84/tsys2/58.5,62.0,70.2,65.5,56.6,57.5,66.9 2003.353.08:43:15.09/wx/-17.9,957.5,74.8 2003.353.08:43:15.14/cable/+3.83005E-02 2003.353.08:43:15.20/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37190,29914,0,1pps 2003.353.08:43:15.25/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12476,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.08:43:15.33/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15961,15644,545,1pps 2003.353.08:43:15.41/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16183,15961,554,1pps 2003.353.08:43:15.49/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16035,16149,550,1pps 2003.353.08:43:15.99/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:43:18.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:43:18.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:43:18.22:!2003.353.08:44:47 2003.353.08:43:19.02#setcl#time/316613508,1,2003,353,08,43,19.00,0.134,14.349,2 2003.353.08:43:19.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.08:44:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.08:44:47.00:et 2003.353.08:44:47.04:!+3s 2003.353.08:44:50.05:tape 2003.353.08:44:50.12/tape/low,16220,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:44:50.12:postob 2003.353.08:44:50.13:scan_name=353-0859a 2003.353.08:44:50.14:source=0201+113,020106.0,112022.8,1950.0 2003.353.08:44:56.65:check80r 2003.353.08:45:29.38/parity/2.,8.,12.,14.,12.,4.,6.,8.,14.,50.,314.,12.,62.,22. 2003.353.08:45:29.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.08:45:54.96:sx4cb=20 2003.353.08:45:59.60/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.08:46:08.74:!2003.353.08:59:13 2003.353.08:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.08:47:28.75/wx/-18.2,957.5,73.8 2003.353.08:55:56.72;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.08:59:13.00:tape 2003.353.08:59:13.07/tape/low,16220,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:59:13.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.08:59:13.12:!2003.353.08:59:13 2003.353.08:59:13.12:preob 2003.353.08:59:15.88/tpical/21595,21020,22105,22092,21927,23368,23315,23092,49611,17445 2003.353.08:59:15.96/tpical/19772,19682,18987,19438,19903,19787,33507 2003.353.08:59:16.04:!2003.353.08:59:23 2003.353.08:59:23.00:tape 2003.353.08:59:23.07/tape/low,16104,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.08:59:23.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.08:59:23.08:midob 2003.353.08:59:23.19/tpi/16134,15686,16225,16191,16046,16305,16290,16190,36736,12494 2003.353.08:59:23.27/tpi/16149,16246,16022,16200,16200,16127,27685 2003.353.08:59:23.85/tsys1/52.5,51.8,48.9,48.4,48.3,40.8,40.9,41.4,50.5,44.7 2003.353.08:59:23.86/tsys2/56.8,60.2,68.9,63.7,55.9,56.3,60.9 2003.353.08:59:28.81/wx/-17.9,957.3,75.4 2003.353.08:59:28.90/cable/+3.83025E-02 2003.353.08:59:28.96/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36734,27695,0,1pps 2003.353.08:59:29.01/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12492,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.08:59:29.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15687,16221,545,1pps 2003.353.08:59:29.19/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16289,16002,554,1pps 2003.353.08:59:29.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16014,16092,550,1pps 2003.353.08:59:29.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.08:59:32.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.08:59:32.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.08:59:32.21:!2003.353.09:01:01 2003.353.08:59:33.04#setcl#time/316710910,1,2003,353,08,59,33.00,0.098,14.620,0 2003.353.08:59:33.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:01:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:01:01.00:et 2003.353.09:01:01.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:01:04.05:tape 2003.353.09:01:04.12/tape/low,14782,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:01:04.12:postob 2003.353.09:01:04.13:scan_name=353-0901 2003.353.09:01:04.14:source=2318+049,231812.1,045723.3,1950.0 2003.353.09:01:10.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:01:15.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:01:24.43:!2003.353.09:01:45 2003.353.09:01:45.00:tape 2003.353.09:01:45.07/tape/low,14782,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:01:45.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:01:45.12:!2003.353.09:01:45 2003.353.09:01:45.12:preob 2003.353.09:01:47.88/tpical/19383,19692,20581,20322,20043,21002,21233,21275,64670,22553 2003.353.09:01:47.96/tpical/19032,18852,18793,18751,19149,19364,40077 2003.353.09:01:48.04:!2003.353.09:01:55 2003.353.09:01:55.00:tape 2003.353.09:01:55.07/tape/low,14665,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:01:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:01:55.08:midob 2003.353.09:01:55.19/tpi/15681,15931,16467,16248,15960,16066,16236,16298,51823,17664 2003.353.09:01:55.27/tpi/16146,16127,16346,16208,16136,16313,34273 2003.353.09:01:55.85/tsys1/75.2,74.6,70.9,70.3,69.1,57.5,57.3,57.8,71.7,64.3 2003.353.09:01:55.86/tsys2/71.3,75.4,85.2,81.1,68.4,68.3,75.8 2003.353.09:02:01.00/wx/-17.7,957.3,76.3 2003.353.09:02:01.06/cable/+3.83038E-02 2003.353.09:02:01.12/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,51872,34307,0,1pps 2003.353.09:02:01.17/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,17687,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:02:01.25/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.53, -5.79,lock,15940,15395,545,1pps 2003.353.09:02:01.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.09, -0.46,lock,16074,16045,554,1pps 2003.353.09:02:01.43/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.86,lock,16358,15925,550,1pps 2003.353.09:02:01.93/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:02:04.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:02:04.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:02:04.21:!2003.353.09:03:33 2003.353.09:02:05.04#setcl#time/316726110,1,2003,353,09,02,05.00,0.098,14.662,0 2003.353.09:02:05.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:03:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:03:33.00:et 2003.353.09:03:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:03:36.05:tape 2003.353.09:03:36.12/tape/low,13343,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:03:36.12:postob 2003.353.09:03:36.13:scan_name=353-0908 2003.353.09:03:36.13:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.09:03:42.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:03:47.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:03:56.43:!2003.353.09:08:18 2003.353.09:08:18.00:tape 2003.353.09:08:18.07/tape/low,13343,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:08:18.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:08:18.12:!2003.353.09:08:18 2003.353.09:08:18.12:preob 2003.353.09:08:20.88/tpical/20940,21227,22275,22101,21790,23192,23159,22883,49943,17388 2003.353.09:08:20.96/tpical/19412,19425,19006,19032,19694,19897,34251 2003.353.09:08:21.04:!2003.353.09:08:28 2003.353.09:08:28.00:tape 2003.353.09:08:28.07/tape/low,13227,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:08:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:08:28.08:midob 2003.353.09:08:28.19/tpi/15713,15923,16443,16236,15954,16151,16159,16035,37133,12462 2003.353.09:08:28.27/tpi/15960,16101,16106,15945,16106,16329,28421 2003.353.09:08:28.85/tsys1/53.4,52.9,50.0,48.8,48.4,40.6,40.7,41.3,51.3,44.8 2003.353.09:08:28.86/tsys2/58.9,61.7,70.8,65.7,57.3,58.5,62.4 2003.353.09:08:33.77/wx/-17.4,957.1,76.4 2003.353.09:08:33.86/cable/+3.82997E-02 2003.353.09:08:33.92/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37135,28433,0,1pps 2003.353.09:08:33.97/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12464,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:08:34.05/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15937,15606,545,1pps 2003.353.09:08:34.13/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16138,16333,554,1pps 2003.353.09:08:34.21/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16100,16170,550,1pps 2003.353.09:08:34.71/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:08:35.02#setcl#time/316765108,1,2003,353,09,08,35.00,0.130,14.771,2 2003.353.09:08:35.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:08:37.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:08:37.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:08:37.21:!2003.353.09:10:06 2003.353.09:10:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:10:06.00:et 2003.353.09:10:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:10:09.05:tape 2003.353.09:10:09.12/tape/low,11904,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:10:09.12:postob 2003.353.09:10:09.13:scan_name=353-0912 2003.353.09:10:09.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.09:10:15.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:10:20.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:10:29.43:!2003.353.09:11:59 2003.353.09:11:59.00:tape 2003.353.09:11:59.07/tape/low,11904,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:11:59.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:11:59.12:!2003.353.09:11:59 2003.353.09:11:59.12:preob 2003.353.09:12:01.88/tpical/21457,20594,21555,21853,21670,22591,22762,22958,51430,18137 2003.353.09:12:01.96/tpical/19169,19572,19112,19099,19844,19578,34588 2003.353.09:12:02.04:!2003.353.09:12:09 2003.353.09:12:09.00:tape 2003.353.09:12:09.07/tape/low,11789,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:12:09.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:12:09.08:midob 2003.353.09:12:09.19/tpi/16209,15564,16018,16232,16067,15990,16133,16317,38526,13170 2003.353.09:12:09.27/tpi/15773,16243,16214,16046,16288,16085,28756 2003.353.09:12:09.85/tsys1/54.9,54.5,51.2,50.9,50.7,42.8,42.9,43.3,52.8,47.0 2003.353.09:12:09.86/tsys2/59.2,62.2,71.3,66.9,58.5,58.8,63.1 2003.353.09:12:14.69/wx/-17.3,957.1,76.3 2003.353.09:12:14.81/cable/+3.83000E-02 2003.353.09:12:14.87/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38536,28725,0,1pps 2003.353.09:12:14.92/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13177,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:12:15.00/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.34,lock,15566,16098,545,1pps 2003.353.09:12:15.09/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16006,15965,554,1pps 2003.353.09:12:15.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.68,lock,16227,15965,550,1pps 2003.353.09:12:15.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:12:18.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:12:18.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:12:18.21:!2003.353.09:13:47 2003.353.09:12:19.01#setcl#time/316787507,1,2003,353,09,12,19.00,0.146,14.833,3 2003.353.09:12:19.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:13:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:13:47.00:et 2003.353.09:13:47.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:13:50.05:tape 2003.353.09:13:50.12/tape/low,10465,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:13:50.12:postob 2003.353.09:13:50.13:scan_name=353-0920 2003.353.09:13:50.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.09:13:56.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:14:01.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:14:10.43:!2003.353.09:20:24 2003.353.09:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.09:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.353.09:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.09:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.09:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.09:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.09:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.05 2003.353.09:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.09:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.09:17:28.91/wx/-17.6,957.1,75.9 2003.353.09:20:24.00:tape 2003.353.09:20:24.07/tape/low,10465,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:20:24.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:20:24.12:!2003.353.09:20:24 2003.353.09:20:24.12:preob 2003.353.09:20:26.88/tpical/21155,21422,21742,21857,21111,23205,23181,22888,50496,17744 2003.353.09:20:26.96/tpical/19914,19770,19032,19358,19737,20099,33755 2003.353.09:20:27.04:!2003.353.09:20:34 2003.353.09:20:34.00:tape 2003.353.09:20:34.07/tape/low,10350,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:20:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:20:34.08:midob 2003.353.09:20:34.19/tpi/15903,16108,16067,16162,15570,16305,16337,16225,37628,12810 2003.353.09:20:34.27/tpi/16305,16335,16080,16108,16029,16345,27940 2003.353.09:20:34.85/tsys1/53.8,53.4,50.1,50.0,49.7,41.8,42.1,43.0,51.7,46.0 2003.353.09:20:34.86/tsys2/57.6,60.6,69.4,63.0,55.2,55.7,61.5 2003.353.09:20:38.74/wx/-17.7,957.0,75.3 2003.353.09:20:38.82/cable/+3.82948E-02 2003.353.09:20:38.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37625,27950,0,1pps 2003.353.09:20:38.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12800,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:20:39.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16089,15763,545,1pps 2003.353.09:20:39.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16315,15985,554,1pps 2003.353.09:20:39.18/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16085,16201,550,1pps 2003.353.09:20:39.68/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:20:42.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:20:42.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.09:20:42.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.09:20:42.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.09:20:42.22:!2003.353.09:23:07 2003.353.09:20:43.02#setcl#time/316837908,1,2003,353,09,20,43.00,0.128,14.973,2 2003.353.09:20:43.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:23:07.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:23:07.00:et 2003.353.09:23:07.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:23:10.05:tape 2003.353.09:23:10.12/tape/low,08294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:23:10.12:postob 2003.353.09:23:10.13:scan_name=353-0925 2003.353.09:23:10.14:source=2152+226,215247.3,223607.8,1950.0 2003.353.09:23:16.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:23:21.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:23:30.43:!2003.353.09:25:05 2003.353.09:25:05.00:tape 2003.353.09:25:05.07/tape/low,08294,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:25:05.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:25:05.12:!2003.353.09:25:05 2003.353.09:25:05.12:preob 2003.353.09:25:07.88/tpical/20198,19795,20920,21147,20293,21895,21952,21907,57806,20205 2003.353.09:25:07.96/tpical/19085,18893,19017,18876,19494,19554,37184 2003.353.09:25:08.04:!2003.353.09:25:15 2003.353.09:25:15.00:tape 2003.353.09:25:15.07/tape/low,08178,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:25:15.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:25:15.08:midob 2003.353.09:25:15.19/tpi/15858,15545,16187,16355,15672,16171,16243,16267,44948,15301 2003.353.09:25:15.27/tpi/15944,15932,16364,16068,16183,16224,31365 2003.353.09:25:15.85/tsys1/64.9,64.4,60.6,60.2,60.0,50.0,50.2,50.9,62.0,55.4 2003.353.09:25:15.86/tsys2/64.7,68.5,78.7,72.8,62.4,62.3,69.1 2003.353.09:25:20.22/wx/-17.3,956.9,76.5 2003.353.09:25:20.26/cable/+3.82988E-02 2003.353.09:25:20.32/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,44965,31279,0,1pps 2003.353.09:25:20.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15307,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:25:20.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.04, -5.04,lock,15564,16039,545,1pps 2003.353.09:25:20.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.74, 0.36,lock,16195,16377,554,1pps 2003.353.09:25:20.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16022,16114,550,1pps 2003.353.09:25:21.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:25:24.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:25:24.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:25:24.21:!2003.353.09:32:00 2003.353.09:25:25.01#setcl#time/316866107,1,2003,353,09,25,25.00,0.144,15.051,3 2003.353.09:25:25.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:32:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:32:00.00:et 2003.353.09:32:00.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:32:03.05:tape 2003.353.09:32:03.12/tape/low,02762,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:32:03.12:postob 2003.353.09:32:03.13:scan_name=353-0935 2003.353.09:32:03.13:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.09:32:09.65:sx4cb=20 2003.353.09:32:14.29/pass/20,,auto,165.0,,165.6,,0.6, 2003.353.09:32:23.43:!2003.353.09:35:26 2003.353.09:35:26.00:tape 2003.353.09:35:26.07/tape/low,02762,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:35:26.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.09:35:26.12:!2003.353.09:35:26 2003.353.09:35:26.12:preob 2003.353.09:35:28.88/tpical/21267,21683,22307,22286,21398,23338,23182,23439,48732,17088 2003.353.09:35:28.96/tpical/19416,19269,19433,19336,20023,20013,34867 2003.353.09:35:29.04:!2003.353.09:35:36 2003.353.09:35:36.00:tape 2003.353.09:35:36.07/tape/low,02646,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:35:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:35:36.08:midob 2003.353.09:35:36.19/tpi/15788,16062,16245,16220,15504,16071,16006,16212,35838,12108 2003.353.09:35:36.27/tpi/15765,15821,16314,16015,16177,16197,29178 2003.353.09:35:36.85/tsys1/51.2,50.3,47.5,47.2,46.5,39.1,39.3,39.6,49.1,43.0 2003.353.09:35:36.86/tsys2/55.0,58.4,66.7,61.3,53.7,54.2,65.7 2003.353.09:35:42.10/wx/-17.2,956.8,76.6 2003.353.09:35:42.18/cable/+3.82971E-02 2003.353.09:35:42.24/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35832,29170,0,1pps 2003.353.09:35:42.29/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12109,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:35:42.37/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16070,15844,545,1pps 2003.353.09:35:42.45/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16067,16304,554,1pps 2003.353.09:35:42.53/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.01,lock,16330,16078,550,1pps 2003.353.09:35:43.03/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:35:44.01#setcl#time/316928007,1,2003,353,09,35,44.00,0.142,15.223,3 2003.353.09:35:44.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:35:46.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:35:46.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:35:46.21:!2003.353.09:37:14 2003.353.09:37:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:37:14.00:et 2003.353.09:37:14.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:37:17.05:tape 2003.353.09:37:17.12/tape/low,01322,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:37:17.12:postob 2003.353.09:37:17.13:scan_name=353-0941 2003.353.09:37:17.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.09:37:23.65:midtp 2003.353.09:37:26.37/tpzero/209,340,264,335,278,289,326,333,629,200 2003.353.09:37:26.45/tpzero/319,320,319,347,285,281,437 2003.353.09:37:27.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.353.09:37:27.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.09:37:27.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.09:37:27.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.913 2003.353.09:37:27.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.09:37:27.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.78 2003.353.09:37:27.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.09:37:27.83:sx4ca=21 2003.353.09:37:33.41/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.09:37:42.55:fastr=0m49s 2003.353.09:38:31.65:!+5s 2003.353.09:38:36.66:!2003.353.09:41:38 2003.353.09:41:38.00:tape 2003.353.09:41:38.07/tape/low,00220,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:41:38.07:st=for,160 2003.353.09:41:38.12:!2003.353.09:41:38 2003.353.09:41:38.12:preob 2003.353.09:41:40.88/tpical/21195,21594,22189,22450,22310,23067,23397,23571,48564,16955 2003.353.09:41:40.96/tpical/19455,19368,19097,19576,19963,19934,34225 2003.353.09:41:41.04:!2003.353.09:41:48 2003.353.09:41:48.00:tape 2003.353.09:41:48.07/tape/low,00335,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:41:48.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:41:48.08:midob 2003.353.09:41:48.19/tpi/15713,16008,16155,16339,16170,15863,16129,16299,35701,12007 2003.353.09:41:48.27/tpi/15806,15909,16065,16282,16190,16197,28466 2003.353.09:41:48.85/tsys1/50.9,50.5,47.4,47.1,46.6,38.9,39.1,39.5,49.1,43.0 2003.353.09:41:48.86/tsys2/55.2,58.6,67.5,62.9,54.8,55.4,63.3 2003.353.09:41:53.59/wx/-17.5,956.8,74.9 2003.353.09:41:53.70/cable/+3.83024E-02 2003.353.09:41:53.76/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35709,28457,0,1pps 2003.353.09:41:53.81/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12003,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:41:53.89/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16028,15780,545,1pps 2003.353.09:41:53.98/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16613,16092,554,1pps 2003.353.09:41:54.07/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16050,16140,550,1pps 2003.353.09:41:54.57/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:41:57.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.09:41:57.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:41:57.21:!2003.353.09:43:26 2003.353.09:41:58.01#setcl#time/316965407,1,2003,353,09,41,58.00,0.141,15.327,3 2003.353.09:41:58.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:43:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:43:26.00:et 2003.353.09:43:26.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:43:29.05:tape 2003.353.09:43:29.12/tape/low,01658,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:43:29.12:postob 2003.353.09:43:29.13:scan_name=353-0953 2003.353.09:43:29.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.09:43:35.65:check80f 2003.353.09:44:08.38/parity/26.,8.,20.,10.,6.,8.,2.,12.,10.,28.,230.,26.,10.,22. 2003.353.09:44:08.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.09:44:33.96:sx4ca=21 2003.353.09:44:38.60/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.09:44:47.74:!2003.353.09:53:37 2003.353.09:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.09:47:27.44/wx/-17.3,956.7,76.3 2003.353.09:53:37.00:tape 2003.353.09:53:37.07/tape/low,01658,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:53:37.07:st=for,160 2003.353.09:53:37.12:!2003.353.09:53:37 2003.353.09:53:37.12:preob 2003.353.09:53:39.88/tpical/21410,21823,21874,22398,21426,23276,23189,23335,49042,17118 2003.353.09:53:39.96/tpical/19653,19577,19298,19270,19713,19625,34166 2003.353.09:53:40.04:!2003.353.09:53:47 2003.353.09:53:47.00:tape 2003.353.09:53:47.07/tape/low,01774,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:53:47.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:53:47.08:midob 2003.353.09:53:47.19/tpi/15952,16230,15982,16319,15557,16051,16030,16201,36192,12170 2003.353.09:53:47.27/tpi/16025,16108,16271,16072,16037,15975,28309 2003.353.09:53:47.85/tsys1/51.9,51.1,48.0,47.3,46.9,39.3,39.5,40.0,49.8,43.5 2003.353.09:53:47.86/tsys2/56.3,59.2,68.5,63.9,55.7,55.9,61.9 2003.353.09:53:52.02/wx/-17.3,956.5,75.9 2003.353.09:53:52.10/cable/+3.83027E-02 2003.353.09:53:52.16/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36195,28296,0,1pps 2003.353.09:53:52.21/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12163,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:53:52.29/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16234,16007,545,1pps 2003.353.09:53:52.38/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16067,15909,554,1pps 2003.353.09:53:52.46/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 1.90,lock,16258,15937,550,1pps 2003.353.09:53:52.96/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:53:55.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:53:55.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:53:55.21:!2003.353.09:55:25 2003.353.09:53:56.01#setcl#time/317037207,1,2003,353,09,53,56.00,0.139,15.526,3 2003.353.09:53:56.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:55:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:55:25.00:et 2003.353.09:55:25.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:55:28.05:tape 2003.353.09:55:28.12/tape/low,03099,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:55:28.12:postob 2003.353.09:55:28.13:scan_name=353-0957 2003.353.09:55:28.13:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.09:55:34.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.09:55:39.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.09:55:48.43:!2003.353.09:57:38 2003.353.09:57:38.00:tape 2003.353.09:57:38.07/tape/low,03099,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:57:38.07:st=for,160 2003.353.09:57:38.12:!2003.353.09:57:38 2003.353.09:57:38.12:preob 2003.353.09:57:40.88/tpical/21305,20720,21831,22202,21378,23263,23215,22964,48839,17038 2003.353.09:57:40.96/tpical/19911,19081,19191,19248,19744,19585,33840 2003.353.09:57:41.04:!2003.353.09:57:48 2003.353.09:57:48.00:tape 2003.353.09:57:48.07/tape/low,03214,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:57:48.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.09:57:48.08:midob 2003.353.09:57:48.19/tpi/15913,15448,15975,16205,15568,16139,16135,16032,36103,12141 2003.353.09:57:48.27/tpi/16306,15748,16225,16121,16095,16008,28020 2003.353.09:57:48.85/tsys1/52.4,51.6,48.3,47.6,47.4,40.0,40.2,40.8,50.1,43.9 2003.353.09:57:48.86/tsys2/57.7,60.2,69.7,65.6,56.3,57.2,61.6 2003.353.09:57:52.59/wx/-17.3,956.4,75.8 2003.353.09:57:52.74/cable/+3.82976E-02 2003.353.09:57:52.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36103,28031,0,1pps 2003.353.09:57:52.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12150,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.09:57:52.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15453,15968,545,1pps 2003.353.09:57:53.01/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16131,15943,554,1pps 2003.353.09:57:53.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16228,16321,550,1pps 2003.353.09:57:53.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.09:57:54.03#setcl#time/317061009,1,2003,353,09,57,54.00,0.108,15.592,1 2003.353.09:57:54.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.09:57:56.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.09:57:56.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.09:57:56.21:!2003.353.09:59:26 2003.353.09:59:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.09:59:26.00:et 2003.353.09:59:26.04:!+3s 2003.353.09:59:29.05:tape 2003.353.09:59:29.12/tape/low,04537,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.09:59:29.12:postob 2003.353.09:59:29.13:scan_name=353-1002a 2003.353.09:59:29.14:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.09:59:35.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.09:59:40.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.09:59:49.43:!2003.353.10:01:54 2003.353.10:01:27.46;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.10:01:54.00:tape 2003.353.10:01:54.07/tape/low,04537,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:01:54.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:01:54.12:!2003.353.10:01:54 2003.353.10:01:54.12:preob 2003.353.10:01:56.88/tpical/21163,21638,22232,22434,21328,23180,23478,23261,48587,16971 2003.353.10:01:56.96/tpical/19780,19002,19163,19255,19788,19623,34150 2003.353.10:01:57.04:!2003.353.10:02:04 2003.353.10:02:04.00:tape 2003.353.10:02:04.07/tape/low,04537,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:02:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:02:04.08:midob 2003.353.10:02:04.19/tpi/15762,16073,16270,16346,15524,16059,16291,16183,35863,12085 2003.353.10:02:04.27/tpi/16178,15670,16197,16104,16149,16029,28385 2003.353.10:02:04.85/tsys1/51.8,50.9,48.3,47.3,47.3,39.9,40.0,40.3,49.8,43.8 2003.353.10:02:04.86/tsys2/57.2,59.9,69.6,65.0,56.7,57.0,63.0 2003.353.10:02:09.53/wx/-17.2,956.3,75.7 2003.353.10:02:09.70/cable/+3.82968E-02 2003.353.10:02:09.75/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35850,28420,0,1pps 2003.353.10:02:09.81/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12078,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.10:02:09.89/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16068,15843,545,1pps 2003.353.10:02:09.97/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16048,16209,554,1pps 2003.353.10:02:10.06/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16190,16185,550,1pps 2003.353.10:02:10.56/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:02:13.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:02:13.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:02:13.21:!2003.353.10:04:48 2003.353.10:02:14.01#setcl#time/317087007,1,2003,353,10,02,14.00,0.138,15.665,3 2003.353.10:02:14.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:02:22.15?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:02:43.87?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:03:05.59?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:03:27.31?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:03:49.03?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:04:10.75?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:04:32.47?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.10:04:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:04:48.00:et 2003.353.10:04:48.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:04:51.05:tape 2003.353.10:04:51.12/tape/low,04537,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:04:51.12:postob 2003.353.10:04:51.13:scan_name=353-1007 2003.353.10:04:51.14:source=0202+149,020207.4,145950.8,1950.0 2003.353.10:04:57.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.10:05:02.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.10:05:11.43:!2003.353.10:07:43 2003.353.10:07:43.00:tape 2003.353.10:07:43.07/tape/low,04537,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:07:43.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:07:43.12:!2003.353.10:07:43 2003.353.10:07:43.12:preob 2003.353.10:07:45.88/tpical/21717,21122,21483,22185,21958,23399,23365,23129,49895,17508 2003.353.10:07:45.96/tpical/19827,19732,19043,19435,19890,19741,33649 2003.353.10:07:46.04:!2003.353.10:07:53 2003.353.10:07:53.00:tape 2003.353.10:07:53.07/tape/low,04653,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:07:53.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:07:53.08:midob 2003.353.10:07:53.19/tpi/16286,15834,15822,16313,16134,16353,16328,16248,37078,12576 2003.353.10:07:53.27/tpi/16212,16275,16060,16210,16183,16066,27831 2003.353.10:07:53.85/tsys1/53.3,52.7,49.5,49.0,49.0,41.0,40.9,41.6,51.2,45.2 2003.353.10:07:53.86/tsys2/57.2,60.0,68.6,63.9,55.8,55.8,61.2 2003.353.10:07:58.12/wx/-17.1,956.1,76.3 2003.353.10:07:58.18/cable/+3.83006E-02 2003.353.10:07:58.24/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37081,27914,0,1pps 2003.353.10:07:58.29/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12577,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.10:07:58.37/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15836,15509,545,1pps 2003.353.10:07:58.45/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16362,16066,554,1pps 2003.353.10:07:58.54/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16054,16123,550,1pps 2003.353.10:07:59.04/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:08:00.04#setcl#time/317121609,1,2003,353,10,08,00.00,0.107,15.761,0 2003.353.10:08:00.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:08:02.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:08:02.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:08:02.22:!2003.353.10:09:31 2003.353.10:09:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:09:31.00:et 2003.353.10:09:31.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:09:34.05:tape 2003.353.10:09:34.12/tape/low,05975,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:09:34.12:postob 2003.353.10:09:34.13:scan_name=353-1010 2003.353.10:09:34.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.10:09:40.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.10:09:45.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.10:09:54.43:!2003.353.10:10:12 2003.353.10:10:12.00:tape 2003.353.10:10:12.07/tape/low,05975,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:10:12.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:10:12.12:!2003.353.10:10:12 2003.353.10:10:12.12:preob 2003.353.10:10:14.88/tpical/20821,20954,21934,21876,21893,22801,22993,22762,52233,18362 2003.353.10:10:14.96/tpical/19843,19048,18817,19131,19866,19610,35020 2003.353.10:10:15.04:!2003.353.10:10:22 2003.353.10:10:22.00:tape 2003.353.10:10:22.07/tape/low,06092,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:10:22.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:10:22.08:midob 2003.353.10:10:22.19/tpi/15851,15937,16422,16346,16353,16279,16444,16322,39385,13433 2003.353.10:10:22.27/tpi/16361,15852,16003,16106,16297,16097,29164 2003.353.10:10:22.85/tsys1/56.7,56.0,52.8,52.1,52.2,44.1,44.3,44.7,54.3,48.3 2003.353.10:10:22.86/tsys2/59.9,63.2,72.5,67.7,58.3,58.5,63.8 2003.353.10:10:27.04/wx/-17.1,956.0,76.5 2003.353.10:10:27.15/cable/+3.82996E-02 2003.353.10:10:27.21/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39381,29170,0,1pps 2003.353.10:10:27.26/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13433,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.10:10:27.34/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15935,15629,545,1pps 2003.353.10:10:27.43/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16290,16255,554,1pps 2003.353.10:10:27.52/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16022,16288,550,1pps 2003.353.10:10:28.02/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:10:29.02#setcl#time/317136507,1,2003,353,10,10,29.00,0.137,15.802,2 2003.353.10:10:29.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:10:31.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:10:31.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:10:31.22:!2003.353.10:12:00 2003.353.10:12:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:12:00.00:et 2003.353.10:12:00.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:12:03.05:tape 2003.353.10:12:03.12/tape/low,07414,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:12:03.12:postob 2003.353.10:12:03.13:scan_name=353-1021 2003.353.10:12:03.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.10:12:09.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.10:12:14.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.10:12:23.43:!2003.353.10:21:13 2003.353.10:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.10:17:27.63/wx/-17.2,956.0,75.6 2003.353.10:21:13.00:tape 2003.353.10:21:13.07/tape/low,07414,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:21:13.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:21:13.12:!2003.353.10:21:13 2003.353.10:21:13.12:preob 2003.353.10:21:15.88/tpical/21790,21205,21592,22133,21796,23192,23191,23363,50005,17422 2003.353.10:21:15.96/tpical/19388,19381,18936,19494,19965,19832,34191 2003.353.10:21:16.04:!2003.353.10:21:23 2003.353.10:21:23.00:tape 2003.353.10:21:23.07/tape/low,07530,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:21:23.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:21:23.08:midob 2003.353.10:21:23.19/tpi/16353,15896,15891,16240,15933,16116,16148,16309,37139,12468 2003.353.10:21:23.27/tpi/15925,16040,16051,16340,16309,16241,28318 2003.353.10:21:23.85/tsys1/53.4,52.7,49.3,48.6,48.1,40.3,40.4,40.8,51.1,44.6 2003.353.10:21:23.86/tsys2/58.6,61.2,70.9,65.9,57.0,57.8,61.7 2003.353.10:21:28.20/wx/-17.4,955.8,74.9 2003.353.10:21:28.26/cable/+3.83000E-02 2003.353.10:21:28.32/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37148,28324,0,1pps 2003.353.10:21:28.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12465,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.10:21:28.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15913,15600,545,1pps 2003.353.10:21:28.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16107,16307,554,1pps 2003.353.10:21:28.61/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16048,16143,550,1pps 2003.353.10:21:29.11/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:21:32.09/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.10:21:32.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:21:32.22:!2003.353.10:23:01 2003.353.10:21:33.02#setcl#time/317202907,1,2003,353,10,21,33.00,0.135,15.987,2 2003.353.10:21:33.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:23:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:23:01.00:et 2003.353.10:23:01.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:23:04.05:tape 2003.353.10:23:04.12/tape/low,08852,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:23:04.12:postob 2003.353.10:23:04.13:scan_name=353-1024 2003.353.10:23:04.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.10:23:10.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.10:23:15.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.10:23:24.43:!2003.353.10:24:20 2003.353.10:24:20.00:tape 2003.353.10:24:20.07/tape/low,08852,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:24:20.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:24:20.12:!2003.353.10:24:20 2003.353.10:24:20.12:preob 2003.353.10:24:22.88/tpical/21531,21620,21831,21871,21329,22856,22600,22868,53922,18915 2003.353.10:24:22.96/tpical/19296,19400,19124,19469,20127,19883,35359 2003.353.10:24:23.04:!2003.353.10:24:30 2003.353.10:24:30.00:tape 2003.353.10:24:30.07/tape/low,08968,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:24:30.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:24:30.08:midob 2003.353.10:24:30.19/tpi/16790,16825,16732,16760,16307,16700,16505,16789,41547,14175 2003.353.10:24:30.27/tpi/16095,16321,16460,16535,16664,16465,29814 2003.353.10:24:30.85/tsys1/63.0,61.9,58.1,57.8,57.5,48.0,47.8,48.7,59.5,53.1 2003.353.10:24:30.86/tsys2/64.1,67.6,78.8,71.7,61.5,61.6,68.9 2003.353.10:24:34.76/wx/-17.5,955.8,75.0 2003.353.10:24:34.82/cable/+3.82976E-02 2003.353.10:24:34.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41572,29796,0,1pps 2003.353.10:24:34.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14182,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.10:24:35.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,15983,15635,545,1pps 2003.353.10:24:35.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.61,lock,16319,16183,554,1pps 2003.353.10:24:35.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16032,16188,550,1pps 2003.353.10:24:35.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:24:38.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:24:38.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:24:38.22:!2003.353.10:26:08 2003.353.10:24:39.02#setcl#time/317221507,1,2003,353,10,24,39.00,0.135,16.038,2 2003.353.10:24:39.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:26:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:26:08.00:et 2003.353.10:26:08.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:26:11.05:tape 2003.353.10:26:11.12/tape/low,10291,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:26:11.12:postob 2003.353.10:26:11.13:scan_name=353-1027 2003.353.10:26:11.13:source=1053+815,105336.1,813036.0,1950.0 2003.353.10:26:17.65:sx4ca=21 2003.353.10:26:22.29/pass/21,,auto,220.0,,220.3,,0.3, 2003.353.10:26:31.43:!2003.353.10:27:38 2003.353.10:27:38.00:tape 2003.353.10:27:38.07/tape/low,10291,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:27:38.07:st=for,160 2003.353.10:27:38.12:!2003.353.10:27:38 2003.353.10:27:38.12:preob 2003.353.10:27:40.88/tpical/20997,21251,21568,22108,21790,23213,23211,23369,49998,17405 2003.353.10:27:40.96/tpical/19496,19421,18988,19540,19901,19808,34489 2003.353.10:27:41.04:!2003.353.10:27:48 2003.353.10:27:48.00:tape 2003.353.10:27:48.07/tape/low,10407,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:27:48.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:27:48.08:midob 2003.353.10:27:48.19/tpi/15743,15926,15889,16199,15955,16158,16189,16361,37161,12474 2003.353.10:27:48.27/tpi/15991,16066,16056,16367,16214,16187,28623 2003.353.10:27:48.85/tsys1/53.2,52.7,49.5,48.3,48.4,40.5,40.7,41.2,51.2,44.8 2003.353.10:27:48.86/tsys2/58.1,61.0,69.8,65.6,56.2,57.1,62.5 2003.353.10:27:52.79/wx/-17.5,955.8,74.8 2003.353.10:27:52.90/cable/+3.82988E-02 2003.353.10:27:52.96/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37175,28627,0,1pps 2003.353.10:27:53.01/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12479,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.10:27:53.10/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15947,15615,545,1pps 2003.353.10:27:53.18/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.10,lock,16185,15950,554,1pps 2003.353.10:27:53.26/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16067,16181,550,1pps 2003.353.10:27:53.76/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:27:56.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:27:56.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:27:56.21:!2003.353.10:30:26 2003.353.10:27:57.04#setcl#time/317241309,1,2003,353,10,27,57.00,0.104,16.093,0 2003.353.10:27:57.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:30:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:30:26.00:et 2003.353.10:30:26.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:30:29.05:tape 2003.353.10:30:29.12/tape/low,12530,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:30:29.12:postob 2003.353.10:30:29.13:scan_name=353-1036 2003.353.10:30:29.14:source=1101+384,110140.6,382843.3,1950.0 2003.353.10:30:35.65:midtp 2003.353.10:30:38.37/tpzero/208,339,258,332,282,289,327,329,641,203 2003.353.10:30:38.45/tpzero/320,322,313,349,279,276,436 2003.353.10:30:39.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.37 2003.353.10:30:39.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.10:30:39.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.10:30:39.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.909 2003.353.10:30:39.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.10:30:39.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.58 2003.353.10:30:39.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.10:30:39.83:sx4cb=22 2003.353.10:30:44.85/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,219.6,,-0.4, 2003.353.10:30:53.99:fastf=2m5s 2003.353.10:32:59.09:!+5s 2003.353.10:33:04.10:!2003.353.10:36:26 2003.353.10:36:26.00:tape 2003.353.10:36:26.07/tape/low,15343,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:36:26.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.10:36:26.12:!2003.353.10:36:26 2003.353.10:36:26.12:preob 2003.353.10:36:28.87/tpical/21308,20742,21870,22251,21435,23360,23317,23126,48892,17089 2003.353.10:36:28.95/tpical/19889,19044,19160,19172,19665,19903,33821 2003.353.10:36:29.03:!2003.353.10:36:36 2003.353.10:36:36.00:tape 2003.353.10:36:36.07/tape/low,15226,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:36:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:36:36.08:midob 2003.353.10:36:36.19/tpi/15904,15443,16044,16279,15641,16230,16228,16156,36164,12196 2003.353.10:36:36.26/tpi/16275,15720,16191,16034,16030,16238,28005 2003.353.10:36:36.84/tsys1/52.3,51.3,48.8,48.1,47.7,40.2,40.4,40.9,50.2,44.1 2003.353.10:36:36.85/tsys2/57.4,60.2,69.5,65.0,56.3,56.6,61.6 2003.353.10:36:41.39/wx/-17.2,955.5,76.2 2003.353.10:36:41.54/cable/+3.82942E-02 2003.353.10:36:41.60/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36157,28058,0,1pps 2003.353.10:36:41.65/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12196,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.10:36:41.73/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15449,15992,545,1pps 2003.353.10:36:41.82/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16244,16028,554,1pps 2003.353.10:36:41.91/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16260,16270,550,1pps 2003.353.10:36:42.41/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:36:43.03#setcl#time/317293908,1,2003,353,10,36,43.00,0.118,16.239,1 2003.353.10:36:43.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:36:45.09/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:36:45.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:36:45.22:!2003.353.10:44:10 2003.353.10:44:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:44:10.00:et 2003.353.10:44:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:44:13.05:tape 2003.353.10:44:13.12/tape/low,09157,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:44:13.12:postob 2003.353.10:44:13.13:scan_name=353-1051 2003.353.10:44:13.13:source=1308+326,130807.6,323640.6,1950.0 2003.353.10:44:19.65:check80r 2003.353.10:44:52.38/parity/26.,8.,12.,18.,0.,6.,6.,2.,12.,22.,592.,10.,58.,36. 2003.353.10:44:52.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.10:45:17.96:sx4cb=22 2003.353.10:45:22.60/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,219.6,,-0.4, 2003.353.10:45:31.74:!2003.353.10:51:07 2003.353.10:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.10:47:27.82/wx/-16.0,955.4,78.8 2003.353.10:51:07.00:tape 2003.353.10:51:07.07/tape/low,09156,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:51:07.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.10:51:07.12:!2003.353.10:51:07 2003.353.10:51:07.12:preob 2003.353.10:51:09.88/tpical/21102,21382,21742,21985,20979,23020,22481,22774,50375,17603 2003.353.10:51:09.96/tpical/19563,19515,19107,19067,19717,19899,34609 2003.353.10:51:10.04:!2003.353.10:51:17 2003.353.10:51:17.00:tape 2003.353.10:51:17.07/tape/low,09040,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:51:17.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:51:17.08:midob 2003.353.10:51:17.19/tpi/15903,16106,16132,16266,15510,16238,15924,16172,37672,12743 2003.353.10:51:17.27/tpi/16074,16184,16225,16015,16132,16302,28738 2003.353.10:51:17.85/tsys1/54.3,53.8,50.9,50.2,50.1,42.3,42.8,43.2,52.5,46.4 2003.353.10:51:17.86/tsys2/58.7,61.9,71.8,66.7,57.5,57.9,62.7 2003.353.10:51:21.84/wx/-15.4,955.3,79.7 2003.353.10:51:21.86/cable/+3.82924E-02 2003.353.10:51:21.92/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37668,28743,0,1pps 2003.353.10:51:21.97/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12745,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.10:51:22.05/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16104,15798,545,1pps 2003.353.10:51:22.14/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16256,16311,554,1pps 2003.353.10:51:22.23/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16197,16286,550,1pps 2003.353.10:51:22.73/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:51:25.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:51:25.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:51:25.21:!2003.353.10:55:49 2003.353.10:51:26.04#setcl#time/317382209,1,2003,353,10,51,26.00,0.102,16.485,0 2003.353.10:51:26.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.10:55:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.10:55:49.00:et 2003.353.10:55:49.04:!+3s 2003.353.10:55:52.05:tape 2003.353.10:55:52.12/tape/low,05397,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:55:52.12:postob 2003.353.10:55:52.13:scan_name=353-1059 2003.353.10:55:52.13:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.10:55:58.65:sx4cb=22 2003.353.10:56:03.29/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,220.4,,0.4, 2003.353.10:56:12.43:!2003.353.10:59:35 2003.353.10:59:35.00:tape 2003.353.10:59:35.07/tape/low,05397,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:59:35.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.10:59:35.12:!2003.353.10:59:35 2003.353.10:59:35.12:preob 2003.353.10:59:37.88/tpical/21066,21292,21631,21962,22013,22930,22889,22617,50204,17560 2003.353.10:59:37.96/tpical/19221,19190,19203,19062,19837,19729,35183 2003.353.10:59:38.04:!2003.353.10:59:45 2003.353.10:59:45.00:tape 2003.353.10:59:45.07/tape/low,05282,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.10:59:45.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.10:59:45.08:midob 2003.353.10:59:45.19/tpi/15876,16029,16020,16260,16294,16162,16198,16061,37536,12717 2003.353.10:59:45.27/tpi/15760,15870,16244,15937,16168,16089,29302 2003.353.10:59:45.85/tsys1/54.3,53.7,50.6,50.3,50.4,42.2,42.7,43.2,52.4,46.5 2003.353.10:59:45.86/tsys2/58.0,60.9,70.0,64.8,56.3,56.5,63.8 2003.353.10:59:50.81/wx/-14.2,955.1,80.8 2003.353.10:59:50.82/cable/+3.82904E-02 2003.353.10:59:50.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37519,29318,0,1pps 2003.353.10:59:50.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12718,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.10:59:51.01/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16024,15693,545,1pps 2003.353.10:59:51.10/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16172,16281,554,1pps 2003.353.10:59:51.19/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.79,lock,16234,15922,550,1pps 2003.353.10:59:51.69/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.10:59:54.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.10:59:54.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.10:59:54.21:!2003.353.11:02:26 2003.353.10:59:55.04#setcl#time/317433109,1,2003,353,10,59,55.00,0.101,16.626,0 2003.353.10:59:55.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:02:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:02:26.00:et 2003.353.11:02:26.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:02:29.05:tape 2003.353.11:02:29.12/tape/low,03119,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:02:29.12:postob 2003.353.11:02:29.13:scan_name=353-1104a 2003.353.11:02:29.14:source=0202+149,020207.4,145950.8,1950.0 2003.353.11:02:35.65:sx4cb=22 2003.353.11:02:40.29/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,219.6,,-0.4, 2003.353.11:02:49.43:!2003.353.11:04:13 2003.353.11:02:59.51;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.11:04:13.00:tape 2003.353.11:04:13.07/tape/low,03119,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:04:13.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.11:04:13.12:!2003.353.11:04:13 2003.353.11:04:13.12:preob 2003.353.11:04:15.88/tpical/21235,21500,21810,22156,22152,22980,22949,22656,50704,17656 2003.353.11:04:15.96/tpical/19972,19891,19187,19544,19930,19777,34774 2003.353.11:04:16.04:!2003.353.11:04:23 2003.353.11:04:23.00:tape 2003.353.11:04:23.07/tape/low,03003,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:04:23.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:04:23.08:midob 2003.353.11:04:23.19/tpi/16054,16274,16228,16453,16424,16255,16273,16104,38018,12824 2003.353.11:04:23.27/tpi/16413,16473,16245,16377,16286,16187,28996 2003.353.11:04:23.85/tsys1/55.1,54.9,51.5,50.9,50.7,42.7,43.0,43.3,53.0,47.0 2003.353.11:04:23.86/tsys2/58.8,61.4,70.4,65.8,57.1,57.6,64.3 2003.353.11:04:29.03/wx/-12.3,955.0,83.0 2003.353.11:04:29.06/cable/+3.82994E-02 2003.353.11:04:29.12/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,38034,29043,0,1pps 2003.353.11:04:29.17/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12830,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:04:29.25/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16278,15931,545,1pps 2003.353.11:04:29.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16264,16315,554,1pps 2003.353.11:04:29.43/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16255,16310,550,1pps 2003.353.11:04:29.93/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:04:32.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:04:32.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.11:04:32.22:!2003.353.11:06:01 2003.353.11:04:33.02#setcl#time/317460907,1,2003,353,11,04,33.00,0.129,16.703,2 2003.353.11:04:33.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:06:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:06:01.00:et 2003.353.11:06:01.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:06:04.05:tape 2003.353.11:06:04.12/tape/low,01679,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:06:04.12:postob 2003.353.11:06:04.13:scan_name=353-1109b 2003.353.11:06:04.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.11:06:10.65:sx4cb=22 2003.353.11:06:15.29/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,219.6,,-0.4, 2003.353.11:06:24.43:!2003.353.11:09:20 2003.353.11:09:20.00:tape 2003.353.11:09:20.07/tape/low,01679,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:09:20.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.11:09:20.12:!2003.353.11:09:20 2003.353.11:09:20.12:preob 2003.353.11:09:22.88/tpical/20530,20448,21104,21667,21099,22618,22357,22121,53560,18692 2003.353.11:09:22.96/tpical/19200,19317,18644,18911,19670,19340,35102 2003.353.11:09:23.04:!2003.353.11:09:30 2003.353.11:09:30.00:tape 2003.353.11:09:30.07/tape/low,01563,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:09:30.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:09:30.08:midob 2003.353.11:09:30.19/tpi/15791,15730,15993,16414,15988,16355,16176,16080,40854,13865 2003.353.11:09:30.27/tpi/15928,16128,15959,15978,16201,15959,29343 2003.353.11:09:30.85/tsys1/59.2,58.7,55.4,55.1,55.3,46.2,46.2,46.9,57.0,50.9 2003.353.11:09:30.86/tsys2/62.0,64.4,75.8,69.3,59.7,60.3,65.3 2003.353.11:09:35.07/wx/-10.9,954.9,81.6 2003.353.11:09:35.14/cable/+3.82998E-02 2003.353.11:09:35.20/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,40852,29417,0,1pps 2003.353.11:09:35.25/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13860,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:09:35.33/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.57,lock,15737,16251,545,1pps 2003.353.11:09:35.42/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16361,16241,554,1pps 2003.353.11:09:35.51/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,15985,16080,550,1pps 2003.353.11:09:36.01/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:09:38.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.11:09:38.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.11:09:38.21:!2003.353.11:11:08 2003.353.11:09:39.04#setcl#time/317491509,1,2003,353,11,09,39.00,0.100,16.788,0 2003.353.11:09:39.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:11:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:11:08.00:et 2003.353.11:11:08.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:11:11.05:tape 2003.353.11:11:11.12/tape/low,00241,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:11:11.12:postob 2003.353.11:11:11.13:scan_name=353-1121 2003.353.11:11:11.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.11:11:17.65:sx4cb=22 2003.353.11:11:22.29/pass/22,,auto,220.0,,219.6,,-0.4, 2003.353.11:11:31.43:!2003.353.11:21:33 2003.353.11:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.11:17:20.75/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,0.949 2003.353.11:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.11:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.11:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.353.11:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.11:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.65 2003.353.11:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.11:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.11:17:28.04/wx/-9.1,954.8,77.3 2003.353.11:21:33.00:tape 2003.353.11:21:33.07/tape/low,00241,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:21:33.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.11:21:33.12:!2003.353.11:21:33 2003.353.11:21:33.12:preob 2003.353.11:21:35.88/tpical/21776,21299,21874,22409,21845,23576,23561,23424,47833,16585 2003.353.11:21:35.96/tpical/19755,19525,19035,19377,19958,19979,33220 2003.353.11:21:36.04:!2003.353.11:21:43 2003.353.11:21:43.00:tape 2003.353.11:21:43.07/tape/low,00238,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:21:43.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:21:43.08:midob 2003.353.11:21:43.19/tpi/16171,15799,15944,16288,15832,16242,16275,16224,35200,11767 2003.353.11:21:43.27/tpi/16032,15989,15934,16054,16147,16179,27433 2003.353.11:21:43.85/tsys1/51.3,50.6,47.6,46.9,46.5,39.2,39.4,39.7,49.2,43.2 2003.353.11:21:43.86/tsys2/54.9,57.6,65.5,61.4,54.1,54.4,60.6 2003.353.11:21:48.25/wx/-9.0,954.7,74.5 2003.353.11:21:48.42/cable/+3.83035E-02 2003.353.11:21:48.48/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35204,27437,0,1pps 2003.353.11:21:48.53/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11762,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:21:48.61/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15781,15575,545,1pps 2003.353.11:21:48.70/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16252,16157,554,1pps 2003.353.11:21:48.78/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,15947,16046,550,1pps 2003.353.11:21:49.28/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:21:52.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:21:52.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.11:21:52.21:!2003.353.11:23:21 2003.353.11:21:53.01#setcl#time/317564906,1,2003,353,11,21,53.00,0.141,16.992,3 2003.353.11:21:53.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:21:54.01?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:22:15.58?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:22:37.30?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:22:59.02?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:23:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:23:21.00:et 2003.353.11:23:21.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:23:24.05:tape 2003.353.11:23:24.12/tape/low,00238,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:23:24.12:postob 2003.353.11:23:24.13:scan_name=353-1131 2003.353.11:23:24.13:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.353.11:23:30.65:midtp 2003.353.11:23:33.37/tpzero/211,337,267,339,282,291,331,335,623,197 2003.353.11:23:33.45/tpzero/323,322,316,348,286,282,430 2003.353.11:23:34.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.353.11:23:34.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.11:23:34.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.11:23:34.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.904 2003.353.11:23:34.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.11:23:34.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.05 2003.353.11:23:34.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.11:23:34.83:sx4ca=23 2003.353.11:23:40.04/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.11:23:49.18:fastr=0m40s 2003.353.11:24:03.50?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:24:25.22?ERROR ch -233 r1 tape drive should be moving and it isn't 2003.353.11:24:29.28:!+5s 2003.353.11:24:34.29:!2003.353.11:31:14 2003.353.11:31:14.00:tape 2003.353.11:31:14.07/tape/low,00234,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:31:14.07:st=for,160 2003.353.11:31:14.12:!2003.353.11:31:14 2003.353.11:31:14.12:preob 2003.353.11:31:16.88/tpical/20815,20750,20874,21130,21219,22049,21836,22115,54135,18728 2003.353.11:31:16.96/tpical/18507,18279,18560,18442,19264,19051,40163 2003.353.11:31:17.04:!2003.353.11:31:24 2003.353.11:31:24.00:tape 2003.353.11:31:24.07/tape/low,00349,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:31:24.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:31:24.08:midob 2003.353.11:31:24.19/tpi/16097,16043,15896,16086,16117,16062,15917,16181,41555,13977 2003.353.11:31:24.27/tpi/15735,15666,16187,15951,16245,16081,34346 2003.353.11:31:24.85/tsys1/60.6,60.1,56.5,56.2,55.9,47.4,47.4,48.1,58.6,52.2 2003.353.11:31:24.86/tsys2/72.3,76.3,86.9,81.4,68.7,69.2,75.8 2003.353.11:31:29.22/wx/-9.6,954.5,70.8 2003.353.11:31:29.38/cable/+3.82957E-02 2003.353.11:31:29.44/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41541,34306,0,1pps 2003.353.11:31:29.49/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13976,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:31:29.57/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16051,15694,545,1pps 2003.353.11:31:29.65/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.74,lock,16050,16325,554,1pps 2003.353.11:31:29.73/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16205,16194,550,1pps 2003.353.11:31:30.23/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:31:33.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:31:33.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.11:31:33.21:!2003.353.11:38:08 2003.353.11:31:34.01#setcl#time/317623006,1,2003,353,11,31,34.00,0.140,17.154,3 2003.353.11:31:34.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:38:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:38:08.00:et 2003.353.11:38:08.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:38:11.05:tape 2003.353.11:38:11.12/tape/low,05754,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:38:11.12:postob 2003.353.11:38:11.13:scan_name=353-1144 2003.353.11:38:11.13:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.11:38:17.65:check80f 2003.353.11:38:50.38/parity/16.,46.,4.,6.,6.,2.,2.,8.,4.,2.,194.,8.,2.,30. 2003.353.11:38:50.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.11:39:15.96:sx4ca=23 2003.353.11:39:20.60/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.11:39:29.74:!2003.353.11:43:57 2003.353.11:43:57.00:tape 2003.353.11:43:57.07/tape/low,05754,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:43:57.07:st=for,160 2003.353.11:43:57.12:!2003.353.11:43:57 2003.353.11:43:57.12:preob 2003.353.11:43:59.88/tpical/21813,21278,21790,22319,21757,23489,23432,23297,47738,16525 2003.353.11:43:59.96/tpical/19837,19579,19092,19454,19664,20012,32585 2003.353.11:44:00.04:!2003.353.11:44:07 2003.353.11:44:07.00:tape 2003.353.11:44:07.07/tape/low,05870,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:44:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:44:07.08:midob 2003.353.11:44:07.18/tpi/16204,15799,15880,16221,15799,16208,16202,16165,35151,11733 2003.353.11:44:07.25/tpi/16114,16044,16031,16123,15917,16224,26840 2003.353.11:44:07.82/tsys1/51.3,50.8,47.6,46.9,46.9,39.3,39.5,40.0,49.4,43.3 2003.353.11:44:07.82/tsys2/55.1,57.8,66.7,61.6,54.2,54.7,59.8 2003.353.11:44:11.83/wx/-8.6,954.3,73.0 2003.353.11:44:11.93/cable/+3.83024E-02 2003.353.11:44:11.99/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35162,26819,0,1pps 2003.353.11:44:12.04/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11735,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.11:44:12.12/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15781,15569,545,1pps 2003.353.11:44:12.20/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16206,16111,554,1pps 2003.353.11:44:12.28/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16018,16116,550,1pps 2003.353.11:44:12.78/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:44:13.01#setcl#time/317698906,1,2003,353,11,44,13.00,0.138,17.364,3 2003.353.11:44:13.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:44:15.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:44:15.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.11:44:15.21:!2003.353.11:45:45 2003.353.11:45:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:45:45.00:et 2003.353.11:45:45.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:45:48.05:tape 2003.353.11:45:48.12/tape/low,07192,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:45:48.12:postob 2003.353.11:45:48.13:scan_name=353-1147 2003.353.11:45:48.14:source=1308+326,130807.6,323640.6,1950.0 2003.353.11:45:54.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.11:45:59.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.11:46:08.43:!2003.353.11:47:30 2003.353.11:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.11:47:28.21/wx/-8.4,954.3,71.8 2003.353.11:47:30.00:tape 2003.353.11:47:30.07/tape/low,07192,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:47:30.07:st=for,160 2003.353.11:47:30.12:!2003.353.11:47:30 2003.353.11:47:30.12:preob 2003.353.11:47:32.88/tpical/21467,20887,21922,21914,21348,23191,23021,22805,49061,16995 2003.353.11:47:32.96/tpical/19844,19663,19122,19118,19890,19764,33521 2003.353.11:47:33.04:!2003.353.11:47:40 2003.353.11:47:40.00:tape 2003.353.11:47:40.07/tape/low,07309,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:47:40.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:47:40.08:midob 2003.353.11:47:40.19/tpi/16132,15657,16214,16159,15717,16296,16200,16111,36549,12245 2003.353.11:47:40.27/tpi/16273,16296,16190,16030,16268,16177,27809 2003.353.11:47:40.85/tsys1/53.7,52.7,50.3,49.5,49.3,41.8,41.9,42.4,51.7,45.7 2003.353.11:47:40.86/tsys2/58.1,61.7,70.4,66.0,57.4,57.6,62.3 2003.353.11:47:44.58/wx/-8.5,954.3,71.3 2003.353.11:47:44.74/cable/+3.83014E-02 2003.353.11:47:44.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36549,27806,0,1pps 2003.353.11:47:44.86/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12245,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:47:44.94/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15664,16219,545,1pps 2003.353.11:47:45.03/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16278,16015,554,1pps 2003.353.11:47:45.12/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16185,16222,550,1pps 2003.353.11:47:45.62/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:47:48.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:47:48.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.11:47:48.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.11:47:48.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.11:47:48.22:!2003.353.11:49:18 2003.353.11:47:49.02#setcl#time/317720507,1,2003,353,11,47,49.00,0.124,17.424,2 2003.353.11:47:49.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:49:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.11:49:18.00:et 2003.353.11:49:18.04:!+3s 2003.353.11:49:21.05:tape 2003.353.11:49:21.12/tape/low,08631,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:49:21.12:postob 2003.353.11:49:21.13:scan_name=353-1158 2003.353.11:49:21.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.11:49:27.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.11:49:32.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.11:49:41.43:!2003.353.11:58:42 2003.353.11:58:42.00:tape 2003.353.11:58:42.07/tape/low,08631,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:58:42.07:st=for,160 2003.353.11:58:42.12:!2003.353.11:58:42 2003.353.11:58:42.12:preob 2003.353.11:58:44.88/tpical/20935,21003,21165,21662,20478,22477,22096,22366,52120,18104 2003.353.11:58:44.96/tpical/19245,19262,18643,19004,19709,19426,35080 2003.353.11:58:45.04:!2003.353.11:58:52 2003.353.11:58:52.00:tape 2003.353.11:58:52.07/tape/low,08747,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.11:58:52.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.11:58:52.08:midob 2003.353.11:58:52.19/tpi/16045,16085,15980,16307,15408,16203,15975,16201,39589,13358 2003.353.11:58:52.27/tpi/15969,16111,15908,16087,16261,16030,29325 2003.353.11:58:52.85/tsys1/58.3,57.6,54.5,53.7,53.7,45.7,46.0,46.3,56.0,49.9 2003.353.11:58:52.86/tsys2/62.1,65.1,74.1,70.1,60.2,60.3,65.3 2003.353.11:58:57.17/wx/-8.0,954.1,71.6 2003.353.11:58:57.21/cable/+3.82961E-02 2003.353.11:58:57.27/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39573,29307,0,1pps 2003.353.11:58:57.32/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13358,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.11:58:57.40/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,16082,15802,545,1pps 2003.353.11:58:57.49/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16205,16142,554,1pps 2003.353.11:58:57.58/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,15927,16079,550,1pps 2003.353.11:58:58.08/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.11:58:59.02#setcl#time/317787507,1,2003,353,11,58,59.00,0.123,17.611,2 2003.353.11:58:59.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.11:59:01.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.11:59:01.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.11:59:01.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.11:59:01.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.11:59:01.22:!2003.353.12:00:30 2003.353.12:00:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:00:30.00:et 2003.353.12:00:30.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:00:33.05:tape 2003.353.12:00:33.12/tape/low,10069,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:00:33.12:postob 2003.353.12:00:33.13:scan_name=353-1203 2003.353.12:00:33.14:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.12:00:39.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.12:00:44.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:00:53.43:!2003.353.12:03:04 2003.353.12:03:04.00:tape 2003.353.12:03:04.07/tape/low,10069,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:03:04.07:st=for,160 2003.353.12:03:04.12:!2003.353.12:03:04 2003.353.12:03:04.12:preob 2003.353.12:03:06.88/tpical/21085,21428,22007,22142,21925,22672,22907,23107,48077,16652 2003.353.12:03:06.96/tpical/19288,19135,18902,19229,19858,19806,33270 2003.353.12:03:07.04:!2003.353.12:03:14 2003.353.12:03:14.00:tape 2003.353.12:03:14.07/tape/low,10185,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:03:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:03:14.08:midob 2003.353.12:03:14.19/tpi/15723,15982,16120,16197,16002,15738,15956,16166,35567,11891 2003.353.12:03:14.27/tpi/15735,15735,15909,15999,16093,16121,27500 2003.353.12:03:14.85/tsys1/52.1,51.7,48.5,48.0,47.8,40.1,40.5,41.1,50.3,44.2 2003.353.12:03:14.86/tsys2/56.4,58.9,67.7,63.0,54.6,55.9,61.0 2003.353.12:03:19.01/wx/-7.3,954.1,68.8 2003.353.12:03:19.14/cable/+3.83015E-02 2003.353.12:03:19.19/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35571,27500,0,1pps 2003.353.12:03:19.24/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11893,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:03:19.32/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15996,15765,545,1pps 2003.353.12:03:19.41/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,15758,15963,554,1pps 2003.353.12:03:19.49/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15914,16072,550,1pps 2003.353.12:03:19.99/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:03:22.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:03:22.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:03:22.21:!2003.353.12:06:52 2003.353.12:03:23.01#setcl#time/317813906,1,2003,353,12,03,23.00,0.136,17.684,3 2003.353.12:03:23.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:03:35.42;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.12:06:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:06:52.00:et 2003.353.12:06:52.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:06:55.05:tape 2003.353.12:06:55.12/tape/low,13108,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:06:55.12:postob 2003.353.12:06:55.13:scan_name=353-1208 2003.353.12:06:55.14:source=cta26,033658.9,-015616.9,1950.0 2003.353.12:07:01.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.12:07:06.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:07:15.43:!2003.353.12:08:40 2003.353.12:08:40.00:tape 2003.353.12:08:40.07/tape/low,13108,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:08:40.07:st=for,160 2003.353.12:08:40.12:!2003.353.12:08:40 2003.353.12:08:40.12:preob 2003.353.12:08:42.88/tpical/20506,21199,21107,21929,21516,22376,22328,22285,58380,20194 2003.353.12:08:42.96/tpical/19197,18945,19151,18985,19503,19533,37776 2003.353.12:08:43.04:!2003.353.12:08:50 2003.353.12:08:50.00:tape 2003.353.12:08:50.07/tape/low,13224,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:08:50.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:08:50.08:midob 2003.353.12:08:50.19/tpi/16215,16755,16474,17085,16730,16720,16684,16699,45733,15416 2003.353.12:08:50.27/tpi/16097,16039,16548,16240,16274,16314,32105 2003.353.12:08:50.85/tsys1/67.1,66.5,63.0,62.2,61.9,52.3,52.2,52.7,64.2,57.3 2003.353.12:08:50.86/tsys2/66.1,70.3,81.1,75.3,64.4,64.7,72.6 2003.353.12:08:56.14/wx/-6.7,954.1,66.8 2003.353.12:08:56.25/cable/+3.83053E-02 2003.353.12:08:56.31/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,45789,32188,0,1pps 2003.353.12:08:56.36/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15446,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:08:56.44/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.04, -5.04,lock,15868,16357,545,1pps 2003.353.12:08:56.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.74, 0.23,lock,16293,15950,554,1pps 2003.353.12:08:56.62/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16202,16268,550,1pps 2003.353.12:08:57.12/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:09:00.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:09:00.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:09:00.21:!2003.353.12:10:28 2003.353.12:09:01.01#setcl#time/317847706,1,2003,353,12,09,01.00,0.135,17.778,3 2003.353.12:09:01.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:10:28.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:10:28.00:et 2003.353.12:10:28.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:10:31.05:tape 2003.353.12:10:31.12/tape/low,14547,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:10:31.12:postob 2003.353.12:10:31.13:scan_name=353-1211 2003.353.12:10:31.13:source=0202+149,020207.4,145950.8,1950.0 2003.353.12:10:37.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.12:10:42.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:10:51.43:!2003.353.12:11:09 2003.353.12:11:09.00:tape 2003.353.12:11:09.07/tape/low,14547,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:11:09.07:st=for,160 2003.353.12:11:09.12:!2003.353.12:11:09 2003.353.12:11:09.12:preob 2003.353.12:11:11.88/tpical/20843,20735,21345,21809,21100,22465,22139,22334,54079,18678 2003.353.12:11:11.96/tpical/19146,19256,18967,19279,19516,19573,34950 2003.353.12:11:12.04:!2003.353.12:11:19 2003.353.12:11:19.00:tape 2003.353.12:11:19.07/tape/low,14662,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:11:19.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:11:19.08:midob 2003.353.12:11:19.19/tpi/16152,16060,16276,16629,16075,16379,16142,16351,41563,13961 2003.353.12:11:19.27/tpi/15892,16130,16235,16311,16110,16183,29368 2003.353.12:11:19.85/tsys1/61.2,60.5,56.8,56.6,56.6,47.6,47.5,48.2,58.9,52.5 2003.353.12:11:19.86/tsys2/62.2,65.7,75.7,69.9,60.4,61.0,67.4 2003.353.12:11:25.06/wx/-6.3,954.1,65.9 2003.353.12:11:25.21/cable/+3.83063E-02 2003.353.12:11:25.27/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41578,29352,0,1pps 2003.353.12:11:25.32/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13976,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:11:25.40/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16080,15718,545,1pps 2003.353.12:11:25.49/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.10, 0.74,lock,16000,16297,554,1pps 2003.353.12:11:25.58/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.57,lock,16225,16019,550,1pps 2003.353.12:11:26.08/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:11:27.02#setcl#time/317862307,1,2003,353,12,11,27.00,0.121,17.818,2 2003.353.12:11:27.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:11:29.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:11:29.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:11:29.21:!2003.353.12:12:57 2003.353.12:12:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:12:57.00:et 2003.353.12:12:57.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:13:00.05:tape 2003.353.12:13:00.12/tape/low,15985,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:13:00.12:postob 2003.353.12:13:00.13:scan_name=353-1215 2003.353.12:13:00.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.12:13:06.65:sx4ca=23 2003.353.12:13:11.29/pass/23,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:13:20.43:!2003.353.12:15:04 2003.353.12:15:04.00:tape 2003.353.12:15:04.07/tape/low,15985,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:15:04.07:st=for,160 2003.353.12:15:04.12:!2003.353.12:15:04 2003.353.12:15:04.12:preob 2003.353.12:15:06.88/tpical/21873,21418,22003,22185,21974,23668,23574,23431,48076,16650 2003.353.12:15:06.96/tpical/19343,19816,18999,19538,19865,19788,32795 2003.353.12:15:07.04:!2003.353.12:15:14 2003.353.12:15:14.00:tape 2003.353.12:15:14.07/tape/low,16101,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:15:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:15:14.08:midob 2003.353.12:15:14.19/tpi/16284,15912,16092,16190,15995,16402,16350,16327,35490,11860 2003.353.12:15:14.27/tpi/15793,16309,16022,16313,16197,16143,27096 2003.353.12:15:14.85/tsys1/51.8,50.9,48.2,47.6,47.3,39.9,39.9,40.5,49.9,43.8 2003.353.12:15:14.86/tsys2/56.7,59.3,68.6,64.4,56.4,56.6,60.8 2003.353.12:15:19.08/wx/-6.2,954.1,63.7 2003.353.12:15:19.13/cable/+3.83049E-02 2003.353.12:15:19.19/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35496,27115,0,1pps 2003.353.12:15:19.24/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11861,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:15:19.32/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15942,15702,545,1pps 2003.353.12:15:19.41/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.45,lock,16409,16256,554,1pps 2003.353.12:15:19.50/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16013,16077,550,1pps 2003.353.12:15:20.00/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:15:22.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:15:22.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:15:22.21:!2003.353.12:16:52 2003.353.12:15:23.01#setcl#time/317885906,1,2003,353,12,15,23.00,0.134,17.884,3 2003.353.12:15:23.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:16:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:16:52.00:et 2003.353.12:16:52.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:16:55.05:tape 2003.353.12:16:55.12/tape/low,17424,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:16:55.12:postob 2003.353.12:16:55.13:scan_name=353-1219 2003.353.12:16:55.14:source=0642+449,064253.0,445430.9,1950.0 2003.353.12:17:01.65:midtp 2003.353.12:17:04.37/tpzero/212,339,261,339,283,293,332,335,624,198 2003.353.12:17:04.45/tpzero/318,325,315,349,282,278,418 2003.353.12:17:05.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.353.12:17:05.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.12:17:05.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.12:17:05.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.905 2003.353.12:17:05.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.953 2003.353.12:17:05.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.51 2003.353.12:17:05.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.12:17:05.83:sx4cb=24 2003.353.12:17:10.85/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:17:19.99:fastf=0m11s 2003.353.12:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.12:17:28.37/wx/-6.2,954.0,63.3 2003.353.12:17:31.09:!+5s 2003.353.12:17:36.10:!2003.353.12:19:09 2003.353.12:19:09.00:tape 2003.353.12:19:09.07/tape/low,17671,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:19:09.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.12:19:09.12:!2003.353.12:19:09 2003.353.12:19:09.12:preob 2003.353.12:19:11.87/tpical/21477,20874,21906,22178,22111,23768,23034,23140,48995,16803 2003.353.12:19:11.95/tpical/19718,19564,18940,19390,19666,19584,33174 2003.353.12:19:12.03:!2003.353.12:19:19 2003.353.12:19:19.00:tape 2003.353.12:19:19.07/tape/low,17555,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:19:19.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:19:19.08:midob 2003.353.12:19:19.19/tpi/16108,15653,16144,16277,16168,16528,16042,16162,36420,12032 2003.353.12:19:19.27/tpi/16179,16178,16028,16238,16077,16037,27521 2003.353.12:19:19.85/tsys1/53.3,52.8,49.6,48.6,48.1,40.4,40.4,40.8,51.2,44.6 2003.353.12:19:19.86/tsys2/58.3,60.9,70.1,65.5,57.2,57.8,62.3 2003.353.12:19:24.56/wx/-6.3,954.0,63.1 2003.353.12:19:24.58/cable/+3.83073E-02 2003.353.12:19:24.63/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36434,27503,0,1pps 2003.353.12:19:24.68/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12033,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:19:24.76/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15640,16207,545,1pps 2003.353.12:19:24.84/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,15804,16002,554,1pps 2003.353.12:19:24.92/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16019,16127,550,1pps 2003.353.12:19:25.42/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:19:26.03#setcl#time/317910208,1,2003,353,12,19,26.00,0.107,17.951,1 2003.353.12:19:26.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:19:28.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:19:28.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:19:28.21:!2003.353.12:20:57 2003.353.12:20:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:20:57.00:et 2003.353.12:20:57.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:21:00.05:tape 2003.353.12:21:00.12/tape/low,16233,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:21:00.12:postob 2003.353.12:21:00.13:scan_name=353-1223 2003.353.12:21:00.14:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.12:21:06.65:check80r 2003.353.12:21:39.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 25 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.12:21:39.38/parity/18.,14.,8.,12.,6.,22.,24.,10.,10.,64.,1006.,10.,52.,34. 2003.353.12:21:39.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0 2003.353.12:22:04.96:sx4cb=24 2003.353.12:22:09.60/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:22:18.74:!2003.353.12:23:10 2003.353.12:23:10.00:tape 2003.353.12:23:10.07/tape/low,16233,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:23:10.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.12:23:10.12:!2003.353.12:23:10 2003.353.12:23:10.12:preob 2003.353.12:23:12.88/tpical/21696,21255,21871,22287,21737,23419,23401,23232,47731,16491 2003.353.12:23:12.96/tpical/19215,19080,18893,19411,19771,19707,32665 2003.353.12:23:13.04:!2003.353.12:23:20 2003.353.12:23:20.00:tape 2003.353.12:23:20.07/tape/low,16116,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:23:20.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:23:20.08:midob 2003.353.12:23:20.19/tpi/16125,15776,15960,16199,15760,16127,16158,16104,35143,11699 2003.353.12:23:20.26/tpi/15649,15690,15938,16214,16105,16048,27014 2003.353.12:23:20.83/tsys1/51.4,50.7,47.8,46.9,46.6,39.1,39.3,39.8,49.4,43.2 2003.353.12:23:20.83/tsys2/55.9,58.9,68.7,64.5,56.1,56.0,61.2 2003.353.12:23:25.14/wx/-6.5,953.9,63.3 2003.353.12:23:25.22/cable/+3.83055E-02 2003.353.12:23:25.27/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35137,26932,0,1pps 2003.353.12:23:25.32/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11693,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.12:23:25.40/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15756,15540,545,1pps 2003.353.12:23:25.48/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16137,16018,554,1pps 2003.353.12:23:25.56/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15928,16002,550,1pps 2003.353.12:23:26.06/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:23:29.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:23:29.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:23:29.21:!2003.353.12:26:00 2003.353.12:23:30.01#setcl#time/317934606,1,2003,353,12,23,30.00,0.133,18.019,3 2003.353.12:23:30.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:26:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:26:00.00:et 2003.353.12:26:00.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:26:03.05:tape 2003.353.12:26:03.12/tape/low,13968,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:26:03.12:postob 2003.353.12:26:03.13:scan_name=353-1230 2003.353.12:26:03.13:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.12:26:09.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.12:26:14.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:26:23.43:!2003.353.12:30:41 2003.353.12:30:41.00:tape 2003.353.12:30:41.07/tape/low,13968,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:30:41.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.12:30:41.12:!2003.353.12:30:41 2003.353.12:30:41.12:preob 2003.353.12:30:43.88/tpical/21607,20966,22052,22065,21428,22791,23114,22939,49295,17096 2003.353.12:30:43.96/tpical/19796,19590,18977,19319,20019,19960,34236 2003.353.12:30:44.04:!2003.353.12:30:51 2003.353.12:30:51.00:tape 2003.353.12:30:51.07/tape/low,13851,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:30:51.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:30:51.08:midob 2003.353.12:30:51.19/tpi/16260,15754,16316,16326,15834,16079,16349,16281,36789,12359 2003.353.12:30:51.27/tpi/16233,16188,16049,16159,16344,16289,28603 2003.353.12:30:51.85/tsys1/54.0,53.2,50.4,50.1,50.0,42.3,42.6,43.1,52.1,46.2 2003.353.12:30:51.86/tsys2/58.1,60.6,69.9,65.0,56.8,56.7,65.0 2003.353.12:30:56.82/wx/-7.5,953.9,67.0 2003.353.12:30:56.90/cable/+3.82971E-02 2003.353.12:30:56.95/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36789,28597,0,1pps 2003.353.12:30:57.00/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12355,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.12:30:57.08/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15751,16307,545,1pps 2003.353.12:30:57.17/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16066,16184,554,1pps 2003.353.12:30:57.26/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16051,16156,550,1pps 2003.353.12:30:57.76/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:31:00.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:31:00.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:31:00.21:!2003.353.12:33:33 2003.353.12:31:01.01#setcl#time/317979706,1,2003,353,12,31,01.00,0.132,18.144,3 2003.353.12:31:01.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:33:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:33:33.00:et 2003.353.12:33:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:33:36.05:tape 2003.353.12:33:36.12/tape/low,11675,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:33:36.12:postob 2003.353.12:33:36.13:scan_name=353-1239 2003.353.12:33:36.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.12:33:42.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.12:33:47.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,274.3,,-0.7, 2003.353.12:33:56.43:!2003.353.12:38:54 2003.353.12:36:22.03?ERROR ch -236 r1 tape drive shouldn't be moving and it is 2003.353.12:38:54.00:tape 2003.353.12:38:54.07/tape/low,11675,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:38:54.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.12:38:54.12:!2003.353.12:38:54 2003.353.12:38:54.12:preob 2003.353.12:38:56.88/tpical/21063,21454,22032,22407,21817,23485,23506,23311,48111,16574 2003.353.12:38:56.96/tpical/19241,19128,18879,19342,19669,19634,32657 2003.353.12:38:57.04:!2003.353.12:39:04 2003.353.12:39:04.00:tape 2003.353.12:39:04.07/tape/low,11560,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:39:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:39:04.08:midob 2003.353.12:39:04.19/tpi/15701,15988,16131,16364,15861,16230,16277,16175,35552,11791 2003.353.12:39:04.27/tpi/15696,15744,15895,16108,15981,15967,26957 2003.353.12:39:04.85/tsys1/52.0,51.5,48.4,47.7,47.1,39.5,39.7,40.0,50.1,43.6 2003.353.12:39:04.86/tsys2/56.4,59.2,67.9,63.3,55.3,55.6,60.5 2003.353.12:39:09.43/wx/-6.4,953.6,65.3 2003.353.12:39:09.53/cable/+3.83086E-02 2003.353.12:39:09.59/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35554,26958,0,1pps 2003.353.12:39:09.64/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11794,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:39:09.72/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16002,15778,545,1pps 2003.353.12:39:09.81/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16221,16140,554,1pps 2003.353.12:39:09.90/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15890,16002,550,1pps 2003.353.12:39:10.40/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:39:13.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:39:13.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.12:39:13.21:!2003.353.12:40:42 2003.353.12:39:14.01#setcl#time/318029006,1,2003,353,12,39,14.00,0.131,18.281,3 2003.353.12:39:14.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.12:40:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.12:40:42.00:et 2003.353.12:40:42.04:!+3s 2003.353.12:40:45.05:tape 2003.353.12:40:45.12/tape/low,10237,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:40:45.12:postob 2003.353.12:40:45.13:scan_name=353-1257 2003.353.12:40:45.13:source=1023+131,102316.3,130905.7,1950.0 2003.353.12:40:51.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.12:40:56.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.12:41:05.43:!2003.353.12:57:07 2003.353.12:46:25.55;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.12:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.12:47:28.58/wx/-6.3,953.3,62.1 2003.353.12:57:07.00:tape 2003.353.12:57:07.07/tape/low,10237,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:57:07.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.12:57:07.12:!2003.353.12:57:07 2003.353.12:57:07.12:preob 2003.353.12:57:09.88/tpical/21228,21639,21765,22109,21206,23036,23267,23070,48651,16904 2003.353.12:57:09.96/tpical/19606,19505,18900,19408,19751,19611,35048 2003.353.12:57:10.04:!2003.353.12:57:17 2003.353.12:57:17.00:tape 2003.353.12:57:17.07/tape/low,10121,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.12:57:17.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.12:57:17.08:midob 2003.353.12:57:17.18/tpi/15877,16160,16013,16224,15577,16125,16292,16226,36103,12128 2003.353.12:57:17.25/tpi/16081,16124,15991,16266,16154,16035,29260 2003.353.12:57:17.82/tsys1/52.7,52.0,49.3,48.6,48.9,41.2,41.2,41.8,50.9,45.0 2003.353.12:57:17.82/tsys2/58.1,60.7,70.1,65.9,57.4,57.3,64.8 2003.353.12:57:22.67/wx/-6.0,953.3,62.1 2003.353.12:57:22.82/cable/+3.83014E-02 2003.353.12:57:22.87/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36108,29242,0,1pps 2003.353.12:57:22.92/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12127,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.12:57:23.00/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16168,15955,545,1pps 2003.353.12:57:23.08/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16122,16221,554,1pps 2003.353.12:57:23.16/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15993,16047,550,1pps 2003.353.12:57:23.66/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.12:57:26.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.12:57:26.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.12:57:26.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.12:57:26.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.12:57:26.22:!2003.353.13:02:55 2003.353.12:57:27.02#setcl#time/318138306,1,2003,353,12,57,27.00,0.129,18.585,2 2003.353.12:57:27.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:02:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:02:55.00:et 2003.353.13:02:55.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:02:58.05:tape 2003.353.13:02:58.12/tape/low,05598,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:02:58.12:postob 2003.353.13:02:58.13:scan_name=353-1305 2003.353.13:02:58.14:source=1611+343,161147.9,342020.0,1950.0 2003.353.13:03:04.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.13:03:09.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,275.1,,0.1, 2003.353.13:03:18.43:!2003.353.13:05:10 2003.353.13:05:10.00:tape 2003.353.13:05:10.07/tape/low,05598,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:05:10.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.13:05:10.12:!2003.353.13:05:10 2003.353.13:05:10.12:preob 2003.353.13:05:12.88/tpical/21173,21452,21754,21863,21769,22586,22593,22863,50362,17376 2003.353.13:05:12.96/tpical/19380,19314,18912,19388,19731,19566,34189 2003.353.13:05:13.04:!2003.353.13:05:20 2003.353.13:05:20.00:tape 2003.353.13:05:20.07/tape/low,05483,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:05:20.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:05:20.08:midob 2003.353.13:05:20.19/tpi/16066,16257,16243,16266,16195,16074,16083,16341,37877,12662 2003.353.13:05:20.27/tpi/15959,16053,16087,16305,16191,16046,28410 2003.353.13:05:20.85/tsys1/55.9,55.2,52.2,51.2,51.4,43.6,43.6,44.2,53.7,47.6 2003.353.13:05:20.86/tsys2/59.4,62.7,72.6,67.3,58.4,58.2,63.0 2003.353.13:05:25.46/wx/-5.8,953.2,60.0 2003.353.13:05:25.54/cable/+3.82981E-02 2003.353.13:05:25.60/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37869,28430,0,1pps 2003.353.13:05:25.65/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12665,71,4059,1pps 2003.353.13:05:25.73/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16233,15935,545,1pps 2003.353.13:05:25.82/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16079,16114,554,1pps 2003.353.13:05:25.91/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.22, 1.79,lock,16094,16171,550,1pps 2003.353.13:05:26.41/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:05:27.02#setcl#time/318186306,1,2003,353,13,05,27.00,0.128,18.718,2 2003.353.13:05:27.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:05:29.08/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.13:05:29.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:05:29.21:!2003.353.13:08:10 2003.353.13:08:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:08:10.00:et 2003.353.13:08:10.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:08:13.05:tape 2003.353.13:08:13.12/tape/low,03199,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:08:13.12:postob 2003.353.13:08:13.13:scan_name=353-1310 2003.353.13:08:13.13:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.13:08:19.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.13:08:24.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,274.3,,-0.7, 2003.353.13:08:33.43:!2003.353.13:09:55 2003.353.13:09:55.00:tape 2003.353.13:09:55.07/tape/low,03199,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:09:55.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.13:09:55.12:!2003.353.13:09:55 2003.353.13:09:55.12:preob 2003.353.13:09:57.88/tpical/21895,21454,22055,22259,22032,22750,22975,23128,48222,16743 2003.353.13:09:57.96/tpical/19460,19865,19017,19482,19800,20082,32650 2003.353.13:09:58.04:!2003.353.13:10:05 2003.353.13:10:05.00:tape 2003.353.13:10:05.07/tape/low,03084,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:10:05.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:10:05.08:midob 2003.353.13:10:05.19/tpi/16336,15997,16185,16278,16125,15797,15985,16174,35678,11969 2003.353.13:10:05.27/tpi/15917,16374,16040,16279,16123,16360,26942 2003.353.13:10:05.85/tsys1/52.2,51.6,48.8,48.0,48.3,40.1,40.3,41.0,50.3,44.4 2003.353.13:10:05.86/tsys2/57.2,59.8,68.7,64.7,56.0,56.2,60.4 2003.353.13:10:10.22/wx/-5.9,953.1,60.1 2003.353.13:10:10.34/cable/+3.83039E-02 2003.353.13:10:10.40/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35684,26943,0,1pps 2003.353.13:10:10.46/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11967,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.13:10:10.54/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15974,15749,545,1pps 2003.353.13:10:10.63/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16533,15959,554,1pps 2003.353.13:10:10.72/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16038,16134,550,1pps 2003.353.13:10:11.22/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:10:12.04#setcl#time/318214808,1,2003,353,13,10,12.00,0.102,18.797,0 2003.353.13:10:12.04#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:10:15.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:10:15.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:10:15.22:!2003.353.13:11:43 2003.353.13:11:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:11:43.00:et 2003.353.13:11:43.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:11:46.05:tape 2003.353.13:11:46.12/tape/low,01759,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:11:46.12:postob 2003.353.13:11:46.13:scan_name=353-1315 2003.353.13:11:46.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.13:11:52.65:sx4cb=24 2003.353.13:11:57.29/pass/24,,auto,275.0,,274.3,,-0.7, 2003.353.13:12:06.43:!2003.353.13:15:09 2003.353.13:15:09.00:tape 2003.353.13:15:09.07/tape/low,01759,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:15:09.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.13:15:09.12:!2003.353.13:15:09 2003.353.13:15:09.12:preob 2003.353.13:15:11.88/tpical/21480,20863,21938,22184,22139,22815,23158,23285,49051,16859 2003.353.13:15:11.96/tpical/19073,18990,19083,19043,19741,19643,33532 2003.353.13:15:12.04:!2003.353.13:15:19 2003.353.13:15:19.00:tape 2003.353.13:15:19.07/tape/low,01644,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:15:19.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:15:19.08:midob 2003.353.13:15:19.19/tpi/16138,15655,16176,16312,16215,15876,16181,16302,36501,12080 2003.353.13:15:19.27/tpi/15671,15715,16140,15983,16126,16115,27814 2003.353.13:15:19.85/tsys1/53.7,52.9,49.7,49.0,48.4,40.4,40.9,41.2,51.5,44.8 2003.353.13:15:19.86/tsys2/58.7,61.1,69.9,66.4,57.0,58.4,62.3 2003.353.13:15:24.45/wx/-5.9,953.0,60.8 2003.353.13:15:24.58/cable/+3.83079E-02 2003.353.13:15:24.64/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36501,27856,0,1pps 2003.353.13:15:24.69/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12089,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.13:15:24.77/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15654,16206,545,1pps 2003.353.13:15:24.86/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15899,16087,554,1pps 2003.353.13:15:24.95/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16156,16266,550,1pps 2003.353.13:15:25.45/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:15:26.03#setcl#time/318246207,1,2003,353,13,15,26.00,0.114,18.885,1 2003.353.13:15:26.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:15:28.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:15:28.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:15:28.21:!2003.353.13:16:57 2003.353.13:16:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:16:57.00:et 2003.353.13:16:57.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:17:00.05:tape 2003.353.13:17:00.12/tape/low,00321,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.13:17:00.12:postob 2003.353.13:17:00.13:scan_name=353-1329 2003.353.13:17:00.13:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.353.13:17:06.65:unlod 2003.353.13:17:06.65&unlod/bell 2003.353.13:17:06.66&unlod/!+5s 2003.353.13:17:06.66&unlod/enable=, 2003.353.13:17:06.67&unlod/check=*,-rc 2003.353.13:17:06.67&unlod/tape=off 2003.353.13:17:06.68&unlod/rec=unload 2003.353.13:17:06.68&unlod/xdisp=on 2003.353.13:17:06.68&unlod/"**dismount this tape now**" 2003.353.13:17:06.69&unlod/wakeup 2003.353.13:17:06.69&unlod/xdisp=off 2003.353.13:17:06.70&unlod/!+40s 2003.353.13:17:06.70&unlod/rel 2003.353.13:17:06.71&unlod/clocks 2003.353.13:17:06.71&bell/mat=#aa=d8000002$ 2003.353.13:17:06.72&bell/!+7s 2003.353.13:17:06.72&bell/mat=#aa=d8000000$ 2003.353.13:17:19.54/ !!!! wake up !!!! 2003.353.13:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.13:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.353.13:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.13:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.13:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.904 2003.353.13:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.13:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.31 2003.353.13:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.13:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.13:17:28.83/wx/-5.8,953.0,60.7 2003.353.13:17:59.56&rel/rec=release 2003.353.13:17:59.56&rel/!+3s 2003.353.13:17:59.57&rel/rec=release 2003.353.13:18:02.64:ready 2003.353.13:18:03.31/tpi/15835,15896,15816,16295,15895,16193,16159,16044,39182,13098 2003.353.13:18:03.39/tpi/15667,16247,16319,16121,16159,16114,32976 2003.353.13:18:05.54/tpzero/210,340,255,328,283,287,323,326,661,210 2003.353.13:18:05.62/tpzero/313,322,311,342,267,266,481 2003.353.13:18:07.84/tpical/20731,20830,21021,21730,21241,22611,22530,22315,51696,17830 2003.353.13:18:07.92/tpical/18489,19049,18766,18750,19221,19180,38653 2003.353.13:18:08.57/tsys1/57.4,56.8,53.8,52.9,52.6,44.6,44.7,45.1,55.4,49.0 2003.353.13:18:08.58/tsys2/70.7,73.9,85.0,78.0,67.5,67.2,74.4 2003.353.13:18:08.71/rx/-1(undef),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,0.925 2003.353.13:18:08.82/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,2.366 2003.353.13:18:08.93/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.13:18:09.04/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.904 2003.353.13:18:09.15/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.775 2003.353.13:18:09.26/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.04 2003.353.13:18:09.37/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.13:18:09.37/newtape/"to continue, use label command 2003.353.13:21:51.14;label=vlba0307,4a25 2003.353.13:22:15.32/label/VLBA0307,4A25 2003.353.13:22:15.37/rec/123,17744,114,17858,8 2003.353.13:22:15.37:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:22:23.33/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:22:32.47:!2003.353.13:29:19 2003.353.13:29:19.00:tape 2003.353.13:29:19.07/tape/low,00123,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:29:19.07:st=for,160 2003.353.13:29:19.12:!2003.353.13:29:19 2003.353.13:29:19.12:preob 2003.353.13:29:21.88/tpical/20695,20758,21671,21665,21184,22486,22445,22242,51547,17789 2003.353.13:29:21.96/tpical/19329,19108,18741,18703,19170,19120,38468 2003.353.13:29:22.04:!2003.353.13:29:29 2003.353.13:29:29.00:tape 2003.353.13:29:29.07/tape/low,00239,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:29:29.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:29:29.08:midob 2003.353.13:29:29.19/tpi/15807,15849,16316,16242,15844,16085,16050,15947,39031,13040 2003.353.13:29:29.26/tpi/16354,16300,16294,16115,16109,16058,32775 2003.353.13:29:29.83/tsys1/57.4,56.9,54.0,52.8,52.5,44.4,44.3,44.7,55.2,48.6 2003.353.13:29:29.83/tsys2/70.1,74.0,84.9,79.2,67.3,67.0,73.7 2003.353.13:29:33.85/wx/-5.4,952.8,57.3 2003.353.13:29:34.02/cable/+3.83023E-02 2003.353.13:29:34.07/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39040,32724,0,1pps 2003.353.13:29:34.12/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13050,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.13:29:34.20/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15864,15600,545,1pps 2003.353.13:29:34.28/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16093,16070,554,1pps 2003.353.13:29:34.36/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 0.98,lock,16308,15961,550,1pps 2003.353.13:29:34.86/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:29:37.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:29:37.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.13:29:37.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.13:29:37.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.13:29:37.22:!2003.353.13:34:21 2003.353.13:29:38.02#setcl#time/318331406,1,2003,353,13,29,38.00,0.126,19.121,2 2003.353.13:29:38.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:29:47.25;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.13:29:50.28;oso 2003.353.13:29:50.49/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:34:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:34:21.00:et 2003.353.13:34:21.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:34:24.05:tape 2003.353.13:34:24.12/tape/low,04150,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:34:24.12:postob 2003.353.13:34:24.13:scan_name=353-1336 2003.353.13:34:24.14:source=0718+793,071808.7,791722.7,1950.0 2003.353.13:34:30.65:check80f 2003.353.13:35:03.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 24 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.13:35:03.38/parity/24.,34.,40.,18.,4.,36.,18.,52.,16.,22.,1049.,14.,4.,30. 2003.353.13:35:03.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0 2003.353.13:35:28.96:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:35:33.60/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:35:42.74:!2003.353.13:36:34 2003.353.13:36:34.00:tape 2003.353.13:36:34.07/tape/low,04150,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:36:34.07:st=for,160 2003.353.13:36:34.12:!2003.353.13:36:34 2003.353.13:36:34.12:preob 2003.353.13:36:36.88/tpical/21494,20863,21830,22027,21995,22668,22962,23126,48899,16764 2003.353.13:36:36.96/tpical/19678,19637,19062,19012,19639,19603,33853 2003.353.13:36:37.04:!2003.353.13:36:44 2003.353.13:36:44.00:tape 2003.353.13:36:44.07/tape/low,04266,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:36:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:36:44.08:midob 2003.353.13:36:44.19/tpi/16196,15658,16153,16236,16177,15858,16094,16262,36485,12056 2003.353.13:36:44.27/tpi/16193,16288,16191,15960,16050,16067,28178 2003.353.13:36:44.85/tsys1/54.3,53.0,50.4,49.4,49.2,41.2,41.3,41.8,51.9,45.3 2003.353.13:36:44.86/tsys2/59.2,62.0,71.9,66.5,57.2,58.1,63.4 2003.353.13:36:49.18/wx/-5.4,952.7,55.5 2003.353.13:36:49.22/cable/+3.83071E-02 2003.353.13:36:49.27/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36474,28197,0,1pps 2003.353.13:36:49.32/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12056,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.13:36:49.40/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15662,16202,545,1pps 2003.353.13:36:49.49/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16612,16094,554,1pps 2003.353.13:36:49.58/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16208,16261,550,1pps 2003.353.13:36:50.08/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:36:53.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:36:53.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:36:53.21:!2003.353.13:38:49 2003.353.13:36:54.01#setcl#time/318375005,1,2003,353,13,36,54.00,0.137,19.242,3 2003.353.13:36:54.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:38:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:38:49.00:et 2003.353.13:38:49.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:38:52.05:tape 2003.353.13:38:52.12/tape/low,05949,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:38:52.12:postob 2003.353.13:38:52.13:scan_name=353-1344 2003.353.13:38:52.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.13:38:58.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:39:03.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:39:12.43:!2003.353.13:43:58 2003.353.13:43:58.00:tape 2003.353.13:43:58.07/tape/low,05949,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:43:58.07:st=for,160 2003.353.13:43:58.12:!2003.353.13:43:58 2003.353.13:43:58.12:preob 2003.353.13:44:00.88/tpical/21079,21420,21914,22112,21841,23591,23511,22959,48054,16612 2003.353.13:44:00.96/tpical/19634,19535,19362,19330,19818,19862,32161 2003.353.13:44:01.04:!2003.353.13:44:08 2003.353.13:44:08.00:tape 2003.353.13:44:08.07/tape/low,06065,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:44:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:44:08.08:midob 2003.353.13:44:08.19/tpi/15759,15969,16069,16177,15963,16413,16402,16059,35582,11878 2003.353.13:44:08.27/tpi/15995,16045,16218,16053,16032,16086,26442 2003.353.13:44:08.85/tsys1/52.6,51.6,48.7,48.1,48.0,40.4,40.7,41.0,50.4,44.4 2003.353.13:44:08.86/tsys2/56.0,58.6,65.8,62.3,54.1,54.5,59.0 2003.353.13:44:12.70/wx/-5.5,952.7,56.8 2003.353.13:44:12.74/cable/+3.83063E-02 2003.353.13:44:12.80/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35586,26448,0,1pps 2003.353.13:44:12.85/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11884,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.13:44:12.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15966,15734,545,1pps 2003.353.13:44:13.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.45,lock,16417,16338,554,1pps 2003.353.13:44:13.11/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16051,16220,550,1pps 2003.353.13:44:13.61/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:44:16.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:44:16.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:44:16.21:!2003.353.13:45:46 2003.353.13:44:17.01#setcl#time/318419305,1,2003,353,13,44,17.00,0.136,19.366,3 2003.353.13:44:17.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:45:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:45:46.00:et 2003.353.13:45:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:45:49.05:tape 2003.353.13:45:49.12/tape/low,07387,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:45:49.12:postob 2003.353.13:45:49.13:scan_name=353-1349 2003.353.13:45:49.14:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.13:45:55.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:46:00.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:46:09.43:!2003.353.13:49:15 2003.353.13:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.13:47:27.45/wx/-5.8,952.6,56.8 2003.353.13:49:15.00:tape 2003.353.13:49:15.07/tape/low,07387,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:49:15.07:st=for,160 2003.353.13:49:15.12:!2003.353.13:49:15 2003.353.13:49:15.12:preob 2003.353.13:49:17.88/tpical/21517,21080,22356,22336,21535,23221,23201,23484,47347,16363 2003.353.13:49:17.96/tpical/19588,19499,19130,19139,20099,19753,32161 2003.353.13:49:18.04:!2003.353.13:49:25 2003.353.13:49:25.00:tape 2003.353.13:49:25.07/tape/low,07503,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:49:25.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:49:25.08:midob 2003.353.13:49:25.19/tpi/16005,15643,16302,16245,15610,16016,16052,16279,34858,11608 2003.353.13:49:25.27/tpi/15957,16004,16099,15942,16320,16066,26463 2003.353.13:49:25.85/tsys1/51.6,50.7,47.7,47.0,46.6,39.3,39.6,39.9,49.3,43.1 2003.353.13:49:25.86/tsys2/56.0,58.3,67.7,63.4,55.2,55.7,59.3 2003.353.13:49:30.20/wx/-5.6,952.5,56.8 2003.353.13:49:30.33/cable/+3.83091E-02 2003.353.13:49:30.39/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,34843,26476,0,1pps 2003.353.13:49:30.44/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11602,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.13:49:30.52/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -3.91,lock,15623,16183,545,1pps 2003.353.13:49:30.60/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.57,lock,15991,16288,554,1pps 2003.353.13:49:30.68/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16099,16174,550,1pps 2003.353.13:49:31.18/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:49:32.03#setcl#time/318450807,1,2003,353,13,49,32.00,0.111,19.453,1 2003.353.13:49:32.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:49:34.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:49:34.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:49:34.21:!2003.353.13:52:09 2003.353.13:52:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:52:09.00:et 2003.353.13:52:09.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:52:12.05:tape 2003.353.13:52:12.12/tape/low,09706,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:52:12.12:postob 2003.353.13:52:12.13:scan_name=353-1357 2003.353.13:52:12.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.13:52:18.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:52:23.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:52:32.43:!2003.353.13:57:01 2003.353.13:57:01.00:tape 2003.353.13:57:01.07/tape/low,09706,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:57:01.07:st=for,160 2003.353.13:57:01.12:!2003.353.13:57:01 2003.353.13:57:01.12:preob 2003.353.13:57:03.88/tpical/21652,21166,21726,22435,21544,23226,23204,23504,47523,16386 2003.353.13:57:03.96/tpical/19513,19429,19420,19341,19866,19926,32527 2003.353.13:57:04.04:!2003.353.13:57:11 2003.353.13:57:11.00:tape 2003.353.13:57:11.07/tape/low,09821,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:57:11.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.13:57:11.08:midob 2003.353.13:57:11.19/tpi/16114,15733,15863,16330,15639,16026,16047,16306,35042,11640 2003.353.13:57:11.27/tpi/15853,15936,16332,16077,16091,16143,26888 2003.353.13:57:11.85/tsys1/51.7,51.0,47.9,47.2,46.8,39.3,39.5,40.0,49.6,43.4 2003.353.13:57:11.86/tsys2/55.2,58.1,67.4,62.7,54.5,54.6,60.9 2003.353.13:57:16.63/wx/-5.6,952.7,57.5 2003.353.13:57:16.73/cable/+3.83106E-02 2003.353.13:57:16.79/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35047,26877,0,1pps 2003.353.13:57:16.84/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11639,69,4059,1pps 2003.353.13:57:16.92/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -3.91,lock,15736,16298,545,1pps 2003.353.13:57:17.01/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.57,lock,16024,16336,554,1pps 2003.353.13:57:17.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16336,16038,550,1pps 2003.353.13:57:17.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.13:57:20.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.13:57:20.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.13:57:20.21:!2003.353.13:58:49 2003.353.13:57:21.01#setcl#time/318497705,1,2003,353,13,57,21.00,0.135,19.583,3 2003.353.13:57:21.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.13:58:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.13:58:49.00:et 2003.353.13:58:49.04:!+3s 2003.353.13:58:52.05:tape 2003.353.13:58:52.12/tape/low,11144,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.13:58:52.12:postob 2003.353.13:58:52.13:scan_name=353-1400 2003.353.13:58:52.14:source=1308+326,130807.6,323640.6,1950.0 2003.353.13:58:58.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.13:59:03.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.13:59:12.43:!2003.353.14:00:24 2003.353.14:00:24.00:tape 2003.353.14:00:24.07/tape/low,11144,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:00:24.07:st=for,160 2003.353.14:00:24.12:!2003.353.14:00:24 2003.353.14:00:24.12:preob 2003.353.14:00:26.88/tpical/21840,21378,21981,22304,21816,23581,22768,22987,47959,16558 2003.353.14:00:26.96/tpical/19234,19279,19131,19147,19842,19785,33735 2003.353.14:00:27.04:!2003.353.14:00:34 2003.353.14:00:34.00:tape 2003.353.14:00:34.07/tape/low,11260,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:00:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:00:34.08:midob 2003.353.14:00:34.19/tpi/16320,15936,16108,16301,15919,16391,15863,16075,35505,11827 2003.353.14:00:34.27/tpi/15737,15906,16166,16038,16185,16140,28086 2003.353.14:00:34.85/tsys1/52.5,51.6,48.6,47.9,47.7,40.3,40.5,41.0,50.4,44.2 2003.353.14:00:34.86/tsys2/57.3,60.1,69.5,65.6,56.6,56.6,63.5 2003.353.14:00:39.56/wx/-5.6,952.5,56.8 2003.353.14:00:39.62/cable/+3.83059E-02 2003.353.14:00:39.68/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35512,28035,0,1pps 2003.353.14:00:39.73/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11826,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:00:39.81/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15952,15740,545,1pps 2003.353.14:00:39.90/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16370,16226,554,1pps 2003.353.14:00:39.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16177,16285,550,1pps 2003.353.14:00:40.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:00:43.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:00:43.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.14:00:43.21:!2003.353.14:02:12 2003.353.14:00:44.01#setcl#time/318518005,1,2003,353,14,00,44.00,0.134,19.640,3 2003.353.14:00:44.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:02:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:02:12.00:et 2003.353.14:02:12.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:02:15.05:tape 2003.353.14:02:15.12/tape/low,12583,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:02:15.12:postob 2003.353.14:02:15.13:scan_name=353-1404 2003.353.14:02:15.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.14:02:21.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.14:02:26.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.14:02:35.43:!2003.353.14:03:55 2003.353.14:03:55.00:tape 2003.353.14:03:55.07/tape/low,12583,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:03:55.07:st=for,160 2003.353.14:03:55.12:!2003.353.14:03:55 2003.353.14:03:55.12:preob 2003.353.14:03:57.88/tpical/21151,21579,22146,22288,22111,22798,23071,23272,48438,16783 2003.353.14:03:57.96/tpical/19856,19809,18966,19400,19684,19962,32692 2003.353.14:03:58.04:!2003.353.14:04:05 2003.353.14:04:05.00:tape 2003.353.14:04:05.07/tape/low,12698,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:04:05.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:04:05.08:midob 2003.353.14:04:05.19/tpi/15813,16097,16259,16328,16167,15888,16098,16318,35894,12011 2003.353.14:04:05.27/tpi/16227,16295,16001,16184,16017,16253,26969 2003.353.14:04:05.85/tsys1/52.6,51.7,48.9,48.3,48.1,40.6,40.7,41.4,50.6,44.5 2003.353.14:04:05.86/tsys2/57.0,59.1,68.8,64.0,55.8,56.0,60.2 2003.353.14:04:10.68/wx/-6.0,952.5,57.5 2003.353.14:04:10.82/cable/+3.83069E-02 2003.353.14:04:10.88/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35901,26952,0,1pps 2003.353.14:04:10.93/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12022,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:04:11.02/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16097,15870,545,1pps 2003.353.14:04:11.11/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15902,16040,554,1pps 2003.353.14:04:11.20/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16011,16035,550,1pps 2003.353.14:04:11.70/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:04:12.01#setcl#time/318538805,1,2003,353,14,04,12.00,0.134,19.697,3 2003.353.14:04:12.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:04:14.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:04:14.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.14:04:14.21:!2003.353.14:05:43 2003.353.14:05:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:05:43.00:et 2003.353.14:05:43.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:05:46.05:tape 2003.353.14:05:46.12/tape/low,14021,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:05:46.12:postob 2003.353.14:05:46.13:scan_name=353-1408a 2003.353.14:05:46.14:source=0727-115,072758.1,-113452.5,1950.0 2003.353.14:05:52.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.14:05:57.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.14:06:06.43:!2003.353.14:07:56 2003.353.14:07:56.00:tape 2003.353.14:07:56.07/tape/low,14021,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:07:56.07:st=for,160 2003.353.14:07:56.12:!2003.353.14:07:56 2003.353.14:07:56.12:preob 2003.353.14:07:58.88/tpical/20396,19781,20227,20511,20048,21031,21318,21007,61223,21246 2003.353.14:07:58.96/tpical/18972,18836,18624,18615,19346,19434,38164 2003.353.14:07:59.04:!2003.353.14:08:06 2003.353.14:08:06.00:tape 2003.353.14:08:06.07/tape/low,14137,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:08:06.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:08:06.08:midob 2003.353.14:08:06.19/tpi/16348,15833,16013,16224,15837,16003,16208,16040,48614,16494 2003.353.14:08:06.27/tpi/16078,16071,16191,16051,16261,16345,32539 2003.353.14:08:06.85/tsys1/71.8,70.6,67.3,66.7,66.5,56.3,56.0,56.9,68.5,61.7 2003.353.14:08:06.86/tsys2/70.8,74.0,84.8,79.6,67.4,67.7,74.1 2003.353.14:08:11.26/wx/-6.4,952.5,59.8 2003.353.14:08:11.29/cable/+3.83095E-02 2003.353.14:08:11.35/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,48599,32538,0,1pps 2003.353.14:08:11.40/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,16485,69,4059,1pps 2003.353.14:08:11.48/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.28, -5.28,lock,15849,16317,545,1pps 2003.353.14:08:11.57/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.36, -0.04,lock,15978,15973,554,1pps 2003.353.14:08:11.66/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16205,16206,550,1pps 2003.353.14:08:12.16/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:08:15.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:08:15.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.14:08:15.21:!2003.353.14:09:44 2003.353.14:08:16.01#setcl#time/318563205,1,2003,353,14,08,16.00,0.134,19.765,3 2003.353.14:08:16.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:09:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:09:44.00:et 2003.353.14:09:44.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:09:47.05:tape 2003.353.14:09:47.12/tape/low,15460,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:09:47.12:postob 2003.353.14:09:47.13:scan_name=353-1411 2003.353.14:09:47.14:source=0014+813,001404.5,811828.2,1950.0 2003.353.14:09:53.65:sx4ca=1 2003.353.14:09:58.29/pass/1,,auto,-330.0,,-328.9,,1.1, 2003.353.14:10:07.43:!2003.353.14:11:45 2003.353.14:11:45.00:tape 2003.353.14:11:45.07/tape/low,15460,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:11:45.07:st=for,160 2003.353.14:11:45.12:!2003.353.14:11:45 2003.353.14:11:45.12:preob 2003.353.14:11:47.88/tpical/21432,20780,21738,22281,21950,22626,22892,23051,48737,16714 2003.353.14:11:47.96/tpical/19309,19297,19116,19447,19624,19593,33693 2003.353.14:11:48.04:!2003.353.14:11:55 2003.353.14:11:55.00:tape 2003.353.14:11:55.07/tape/low,15576,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:11:55.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:11:55.08:midob 2003.353.14:11:55.19/tpi/16095,15588,16029,16351,16064,15755,16000,16158,36248,11987 2003.353.14:11:55.27/tpi/15801,15938,16150,16240,15959,15953,27988 2003.353.14:11:55.85/tsys1/53.6,52.9,49.7,48.6,48.3,40.5,40.9,41.3,51.3,44.8 2003.353.14:11:55.86/tsys2/57.4,60.4,69.4,64.4,55.7,56.0,62.7 2003.353.14:12:00.38/wx/-6.8,952.4,61.2 2003.353.14:12:00.42/cable/+3.83078E-02 2003.353.14:12:00.47/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36257,27979,0,1pps 2003.353.14:12:00.52/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11985,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:12:00.60/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15590,16102,545,1pps 2003.353.14:12:00.68/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16497,15988,554,1pps 2003.353.14:12:00.77/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16168,16269,550,1pps 2003.353.14:12:01.27/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:12:02.03#setcl#time/318585807,1,2003,353,14,12,02.00,0.109,19.828,1 2003.353.14:12:02.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:12:04.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:12:04.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.14:12:04.21:!2003.353.14:13:33 2003.353.14:13:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:13:33.00:et 2003.353.14:13:33.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:13:36.05:tape 2003.353.14:13:36.12/tape/low,16898,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:13:36.12:postob 2003.353.14:13:36.13:scan_name=353-1420 2003.353.14:13:36.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.14:13:42.65:midtp 2003.353.14:13:45.38/tpzero/211,335,260,339,285,285,328,334,632,199 2003.353.14:13:45.46/tpzero/319,322,318,349,281,277,430 2003.353.14:13:46.18/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.353.14:13:46.29/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.14:13:46.40/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.19 2003.353.14:13:46.51/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.904 2003.353.14:13:46.62/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.14:13:46.73/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.46 2003.353.14:13:46.84/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.14:13:46.84:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:13:51.86/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:14:01.00:fastf=0m30s 2003.353.14:14:31.10:!+5s 2003.353.14:14:36.11:!2003.353.14:20:31 2003.353.14:15:42.05;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.14:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.14:17:27.70/wx/-7.3,952.3,65.8 2003.353.14:20:31.00:tape 2003.353.14:20:31.07/tape/low,17574,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:20:31.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:20:31.12:!2003.353.14:20:31 2003.353.14:20:31.12:preob 2003.353.14:20:33.88/tpical/21117,21479,22041,22102,21952,22665,22938,23167,48154,16663 2003.353.14:20:33.96/tpical/19320,19293,19160,19116,19758,19713,33057 2003.353.14:20:34.04:!2003.353.14:20:41 2003.353.14:20:41.00:tape 2003.353.14:20:41.07/tape/low,17457,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:20:41.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:20:41.08:midob 2003.353.14:20:41.19/tpi/15793,16043,16186,16202,16080,15838,16062,16331,35721,11949 2003.353.14:20:41.27/tpi/15820,15933,16185,15946,16093,16073,27368 2003.353.14:20:41.85/tsys1/52.7,52.0,49.0,48.4,48.4,41.0,41.2,42.1,50.8,44.9 2003.353.14:20:41.86/tsys2/57.6,60.4,69.3,64.0,56.1,56.4,61.6 2003.353.14:20:45.73/wx/-7.5,952.2,67.4 2003.353.14:20:45.85/cable/+3.83030E-02 2003.353.14:20:45.91/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35731,27404,0,1pps 2003.353.14:20:45.96/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11949,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:20:46.04/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16043,15846,545,1pps 2003.353.14:20:46.13/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,15831,16002,554,1pps 2003.353.14:20:46.22/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16178,16269,550,1pps 2003.353.14:20:46.72/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:20:49.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:20:49.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.14:20:49.21:!2003.353.14:23:21 2003.353.14:20:50.01#setcl#time/318638605,1,2003,353,14,20,50.00,0.132,19.975,3 2003.353.14:20:50.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:23:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:23:21.00:et 2003.353.14:23:21.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:23:24.05:tape 2003.353.14:23:24.12/tape/low,15308,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:23:24.12:postob 2003.353.14:23:24.13:scan_name=353-1426 2003.353.14:23:24.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.14:23:30.65:check80r 2003.353.14:24:03.38/parity/18.,34.,8.,14.,6.,2.,20.,6.,4.,28.,394.,6.,26.,14. 2003.353.14:24:03.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.14:24:28.96:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:24:33.60/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:24:42.74:!2003.353.14:26:18 2003.353.14:26:18.00:tape 2003.353.14:26:18.07/tape/low,15308,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:26:18.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:26:18.11:!2003.353.14:26:18 2003.353.14:26:18.11:preob 2003.353.14:26:20.86/tpical/20322,20095,20760,20961,20374,21954,21768,21746,55313,19141 2003.353.14:26:20.93/tpical/18798,18663,18630,18869,19354,19415,36464 2003.353.14:26:21.01:!2003.353.14:26:28 2003.353.14:26:28.00:tape 2003.353.14:26:28.07/tape/low,15192,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:26:28.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:26:28.07:midob 2003.353.14:26:28.18/tpi/15882,15672,16009,16139,15697,16244,16111,16137,42851,14447 2003.353.14:26:28.25/tpi/15745,15742,16064,16118,16127,16182,30796 2003.353.14:26:28.82/tsys1/63.5,62.4,59.7,59.0,59.3,50.3,50.2,50.7,61.0,54.6 2003.353.14:26:28.82/tsys2/65.7,68.6,79.8,74.5,63.8,64.0,69.6 2003.353.14:26:32.69/wx/-7.4,952.2,69.2 2003.353.14:26:32.73/cable/+3.83012E-02 2003.353.14:26:32.79/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,42835,30816,0,1pps 2003.353.14:26:32.84/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,14447,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:26:32.92/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.80, -4.80,lock,15672,16214,545,1pps 2003.353.14:26:33.01/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.98, 0.49,lock,16230,15968,554,1pps 2003.353.14:26:33.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16056,16088,550,1pps 2003.353.14:26:33.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:26:36.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:26:36.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.14:26:36.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:26:36.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:26:36.22:!2003.353.14:28:06 2003.353.14:26:37.02#setcl#time/318673306,1,2003,353,14,26,37.00,0.120,20.071,2 2003.353.14:26:37.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:28:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:28:06.00:et 2003.353.14:28:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:28:09.05:tape 2003.353.14:28:09.12/tape/low,13869,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:28:09.12:postob 2003.353.14:28:09.13:scan_name=353-1431 2003.353.14:28:09.14:source=oq208,140445.6,284129.5,1950.0 2003.353.14:28:15.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:28:20.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:28:29.43:!2003.353.14:31:35 2003.353.14:31:35.00:tape 2003.353.14:31:35.07/tape/low,13869,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:31:35.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:31:35.12:!2003.353.14:31:35 2003.353.14:31:35.12:preob 2003.353.14:31:37.88/tpical/21007,21398,21976,22270,21817,22522,23516,22976,47993,16564 2003.353.14:31:37.96/tpical/19338,19350,18799,19271,19577,19896,33653 2003.353.14:31:38.04:!2003.353.14:31:45 2003.353.14:31:45.00:tape 2003.353.14:31:45.07/tape/low,13754,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:31:45.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:31:45.08:midob 2003.353.14:31:45.19/tpi/15702,15990,16149,16327,15948,15684,16406,16117,35587,11857 2003.353.14:31:45.27/tpi/15831,15984,15894,16131,15966,16276,27981 2003.353.14:31:45.85/tsys1/52.6,52.1,49.1,48.4,48.0,40.5,40.7,41.4,50.7,44.6 2003.353.14:31:45.86/tsys2/57.5,60.5,69.7,65.3,56.5,57.5,63.1 2003.353.14:31:50.19/wx/-7.6,952.1,70.3 2003.353.14:31:50.33/cable/+3.83044E-02 2003.353.14:31:50.39/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35589,27906,0,1pps 2003.353.14:31:50.44/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11857,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:31:50.52/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15971,15775,545,1pps 2003.353.14:31:50.61/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.45,lock,16423,16285,554,1pps 2003.353.14:31:50.70/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15896,15976,550,1pps 2003.353.14:31:51.20/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:31:54.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:31:54.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.14:31:54.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:31:54.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:31:54.22:!2003.353.14:33:23 2003.353.14:31:55.02#setcl#time/318705106,1,2003,353,14,31,55.00,0.119,20.159,2 2003.353.14:31:55.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:33:23.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:33:23.00:et 2003.353.14:33:23.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:33:26.05:tape 2003.353.14:33:26.12/tape/low,12431,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:33:26.12:postob 2003.353.14:33:26.13:scan_name=353-1439 2003.353.14:33:26.14:source=1357+769,135742.2,765753.8,1950.0 2003.353.14:33:32.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:33:37.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:33:46.43:!2003.353.14:38:54 2003.353.14:38:54.00:tape 2003.353.14:38:54.07/tape/low,12431,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.14:38:54.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:38:54.12:!2003.353.14:38:54 2003.353.14:38:54.12:preob 2003.353.14:38:56.88/tpical/21445,20818,21807,22022,22061,22685,22959,23105,48849,16771 2003.353.14:38:56.96/tpical/19678,19648,19083,19067,19683,19645,33498 2003.353.14:38:57.04:!2003.353.14:39:04 2003.353.14:39:04.00:tape 2003.353.14:39:04.07/tape/low,12316,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:39:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:39:04.08:midob 2003.353.14:39:04.19/tpi/16171,15672,16137,16231,16229,15885,16104,16273,36470,12075 2003.353.14:39:04.27/tpi/16196,16311,16212,16027,16119,16126,27848 2003.353.14:39:04.85/tsys1/54.5,53.6,50.4,49.4,49.2,41.3,41.4,42.0,52.1,45.5 2003.353.14:39:04.86/tsys2/59.3,62.3,72.0,67.0,57.8,58.5,63.1 2003.353.14:39:08.79/wx/-8.1,952.1,72.5 2003.353.14:39:08.89/cable/+3.83073E-02 2003.353.14:39:08.95/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36461,27858,0,1pps 2003.353.14:39:09.00/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12073,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:39:09.08/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15677,16206,545,1pps 2003.353.14:39:09.17/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15879,16079,554,1pps 2003.353.14:39:09.25/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16203,16268,550,1pps 2003.353.14:39:09.75/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:39:12.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:39:12.20?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.14:39:12.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:39:12.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:39:12.21:!2003.353.14:40:42 2003.353.14:39:13.01#setcl#time/318748905,1,2003,353,14,39,13.00,0.130,20.281,3 2003.353.14:39:13.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:40:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:40:42.00:et 2003.353.14:40:42.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:40:45.05:tape 2003.353.14:40:45.12/tape/low,10993,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:40:45.12:postob 2003.353.14:40:45.13:scan_name=353-1443 2003.353.14:40:45.13:source=3c371,180718.6,694857.2,1950.0 2003.353.14:40:51.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:40:56.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:41:05.43:!2003.353.14:43:42 2003.353.14:43:42.00:tape 2003.353.14:43:42.07/tape/low,10993,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:43:42.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:43:42.12:!2003.353.14:43:42 2003.353.14:43:42.12:preob 2003.353.14:43:44.88/tpical/21272,20605,22092,22120,21878,23631,22765,22970,48379,16655 2003.353.14:43:44.96/tpical/19266,19242,19109,19505,19709,19649,33328 2003.353.14:43:45.04:!2003.353.14:43:52 2003.353.14:43:52.00:tape 2003.353.14:43:52.07/tape/low,10876,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:43:52.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:43:52.08:midob 2003.353.14:43:52.19/tpi/15971,15462,16305,16256,16060,16503,15950,16137,35994,11952 2003.353.14:43:52.27/tpi/15769,15898,16151,16312,16059,16045,27672 2003.353.14:43:52.85/tsys1/53.5,52.9,49.9,48.9,48.8,41.0,41.3,41.6,51.4,45.0 2003.353.14:43:52.86/tsys2/57.4,60.6,69.6,65.0,56.2,56.9,62.6 2003.353.14:43:56.83/wx/-8.0,951.9,73.0 2003.353.14:43:56.89/cable/+3.83060E-02 2003.353.14:43:56.95/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35988,27721,0,1pps 2003.353.14:43:57.00/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11952,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:43:57.08/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15449,15964,545,1pps 2003.353.14:43:57.17/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16497,15963,554,1pps 2003.353.14:43:57.26/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16154,16287,550,1pps 2003.353.14:43:57.76/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:44:00.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:44:00.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.14:44:00.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:44:00.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:44:00.21:!2003.353.14:47:29 2003.353.14:44:01.01#setcl#time/318777705,1,2003,353,14,44,01.00,0.130,20.361,3 2003.353.14:44:01.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.14:47:27.94/wx/-7.8,951.9,73.6 2003.353.14:47:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:47:29.00:et 2003.353.14:47:29.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:47:32.05:tape 2003.353.14:47:32.12/tape/low,07967,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:47:32.12:postob 2003.353.14:47:32.13:scan_name=353-1451 2003.353.14:47:32.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.353.14:47:38.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:47:43.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:47:52.43:!2003.353.14:51:28 2003.353.14:51:28.00:tape 2003.353.14:51:28.07/tape/low,07967,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:51:28.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:51:28.12:!2003.353.14:51:28 2003.353.14:51:28.12:preob 2003.353.14:51:30.88/tpical/21368,20736,21731,22217,21953,23627,22829,22964,48690,16690 2003.353.14:51:30.96/tpical/19716,18960,19122,19123,19410,19700,33853 2003.353.14:51:31.04:!2003.353.14:51:38 2003.353.14:51:38.00:tape 2003.353.14:51:38.07/tape/low,07851,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:51:38.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:51:38.08:midob 2003.353.14:51:38.19/tpi/16115,15604,16068,16388,16146,16523,16007,16137,36346,12006 2003.353.14:51:38.27/tpi/16209,15737,16240,16069,15886,16174,28067 2003.353.14:51:38.85/tsys1/54.5,53.6,50.2,49.6,49.2,41.1,41.4,41.7,52.1,45.4 2003.353.14:51:38.86/tsys2/58.9,62.2,71.8,66.9,57.6,58.6,62.1 2003.353.14:51:43.25/wx/-7.3,951.9,72.4 2003.353.14:51:43.29/cable/+3.83090E-02 2003.353.14:51:43.35/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36352,27923,0,1pps 2003.353.14:51:43.40/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12009,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:51:43.48/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15610,16158,545,1pps 2003.353.14:51:43.57/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,15778,15982,554,1pps 2003.353.14:51:43.66/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16245,16262,550,1pps 2003.353.14:51:44.16/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:51:47.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.14:51:47.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.14:51:47.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:51:47.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:51:47.22:!2003.353.14:53:16 2003.353.14:51:48.02#setcl#time/318824406,1,2003,353,14,51,48.00,0.117,20.491,2 2003.353.14:51:48.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.14:53:16.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.14:53:16.00:et 2003.353.14:53:16.04:!+3s 2003.353.14:53:19.05:tape 2003.353.14:53:19.12/tape/low,06529,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:53:19.12:postob 2003.353.14:53:19.13:scan_name=353-1458a 2003.353.14:53:19.13:source=1308+326,130807.6,323640.6,1950.0 2003.353.14:53:25.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.14:53:30.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.14:53:39.43:!2003.353.14:58:26 2003.353.14:58:26.00:tape 2003.353.14:58:26.07/tape/low,06529,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.14:58:26.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.14:58:26.12:!2003.353.14:58:26 2003.353.14:58:26.12:preob 2003.353.14:58:28.88/tpical/21280,20662,21618,22172,21886,23548,22748,22872,48533,16647 2003.353.14:58:28.96/tpical/19464,19460,18878,19364,19613,19509,33623 2003.353.14:58:29.04:!2003.353.14:58:36 2003.353.14:58:36.00:tape 2003.353.14:58:36.07/tape/low,06412,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.14:58:36.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.14:58:36.08:midob 2003.353.14:58:36.19/tpi/15987,15505,15976,16306,16050,16414,15906,16057,36143,11942 2003.353.14:58:36.27/tpi/15976,16131,16009,16249,16047,15970,27762 2003.353.14:58:36.85/tsys1/53.6,52.9,50.1,49.0,48.6,40.7,41.0,41.5,51.6,44.9 2003.353.14:58:36.86/tsys2/58.4,61.7,71.1,66.4,57.5,57.6,60.6 2003.353.14:58:40.57/wx/-6.9,951.7,70.8 2003.353.14:58:40.73/cable/+3.83091E-02 2003.353.14:58:40.79/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36129,27759,0,1pps 2003.353.14:58:40.84/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11944,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.14:58:40.92/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15495,16051,545,1pps 2003.353.14:58:41.01/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.45,lock,16430,16343,554,1pps 2003.353.14:58:41.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,15987,16065,550,1pps 2003.353.14:58:41.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.14:58:44.07/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.14:58:44.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.14:58:44.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.14:58:44.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.14:58:44.22:!2003.353.15:00:14 2003.353.14:58:45.02#setcl#time/318866106,1,2003,353,14,58,45.00,0.116,20.607,2 2003.353.14:58:45.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:00:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:00:14.00:et 2003.353.15:00:14.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:00:17.05:tape 2003.353.15:00:17.12/tape/low,05090,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:00:17.12:postob 2003.353.15:00:17.13:scan_name=353-1501 2003.353.15:00:17.14:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.15:00:23.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.15:00:28.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.15:00:37.43:!2003.353.15:01:43 2003.353.15:01:40.47;"x axis hydros shutoff trying to reset now 2003.353.15:01:43.00:tape 2003.353.15:01:43.07/tape/low,05090,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:01:43.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.15:01:43.12:!2003.353.15:01:43 2003.353.15:01:43.12:preob 2003.353.15:01:45.88/tpical/21422,20793,21761,21953,21971,23659,22840,22957,48785,16710 2003.353.15:01:45.96/tpical/19690,18935,19091,19112,19698,19693,33690 2003.353.15:01:46.04:!2003.353.15:01:53 2003.353.15:01:53.00:tape 2003.353.15:01:53.07/tape/low,04974,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:01:53.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:01:53.08:midob 2003.353.15:01:53.19/tpi/16145,15632,16110,16188,16159,16554,16002,16149,36404,12019 2003.353.15:01:53.27/tpi/16205,15719,16220,16078,16149,16159,28027 2003.353.15:01:53.85/tsys1/54.4,53.4,50.5,49.5,49.2,41.2,41.3,41.8,52.0,45.4 2003.353.15:01:53.86/tsys2/59.3,62.2,72.0,67.4,58.1,58.4,63.4 2003.353.15:01:58.60/wx/-6.5,951.6,68.7 2003.353.15:01:58.65/cable/+3.83085E-02 2003.353.15:01:58.71/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36414,28026,0,1pps 2003.353.15:01:58.77/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12023,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:01:58.85/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15636,16177,545,1pps 2003.353.15:01:58.93/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.34,lock,15797,15987,554,1pps 2003.353.15:01:59.02/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16218,16247,550,1pps 2003.353.15:01:59.52/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:02:00.01#setcl#time/318885605,1,2003,353,15,02,00.00,0.128,20.661,3 2003.353.15:02:00.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:02:02.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:02:02.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.15:02:02.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:02:02.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:02:02.22:!2003.353.15:03:31 2003.353.15:03:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:03:31.00:et 2003.353.15:03:31.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:03:31.31;oso 2003.353.15:03:31.53/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:03:34.05:tape 2003.353.15:03:34.12/tape/low,03652,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.15:03:34.12:postob 2003.353.15:03:34.13:scan_name=353-1505 2003.353.15:03:34.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.15:03:40.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.15:03:45.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.15:03:54.09;"x axis hydros back on line 2003.353.15:03:54.43:!2003.353.15:05:05 2003.353.15:05:05.00:tape 2003.353.15:05:05.08/tape/low,03652,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:05:05.08:st=rev,160 2003.353.15:05:05.13:!2003.353.15:05:05 2003.353.15:05:05.13:preob 2003.353.15:05:07.89/tpical/21944,21456,21965,22130,21914,23611,22768,23439,48192,16649 2003.353.15:05:07.97/tpical/19675,19563,19169,19566,20074,20073,32453 2003.353.15:05:08.05:!2003.353.15:05:15 2003.353.15:05:15.00:tape 2003.353.15:05:15.07/tape/low,03536,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:05:15.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:05:15.08:midob 2003.353.15:05:15.19/tpi/16560,16181,16302,16371,16209,16622,16079,16593,36041,12042 2003.353.15:05:15.27/tpi/16130,16210,16251,16394,16407,16447,27283 2003.353.15:05:15.85/tsys1/54.7,54.1,51.0,50.1,50.2,42.1,42.4,42.7,52.5,46.3 2003.353.15:05:15.86/tsys2/58.0,61.6,71.0,65.8,57.2,58.0,67.5 2003.353.15:05:19.90/wx/-6.4,951.6,68.1 2003.353.15:05:19.93/cable/+3.83095E-02 2003.353.15:05:19.99/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36054,27262,0,1pps 2003.353.15:05:20.04/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12058,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:05:20.12/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16177,15952,545,1pps 2003.353.15:05:20.21/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15913,16047,554,1pps 2003.353.15:05:20.30/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16263,16350,550,1pps 2003.353.15:05:20.80/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:05:23.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:05:23.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:05:23.20:!2003.353.15:06:53 2003.353.15:05:24.03#setcl#time/318906007,1,2003,353,15,05,24.00,0.104,20.717,1 2003.353.15:05:24.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:06:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:06:53.00:et 2003.353.15:06:53.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:06:56.05:tape 2003.353.15:06:56.12/tape/low,02213,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:06:56.12:postob 2003.353.15:06:56.13:scan_name=353-1513 2003.353.15:06:56.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.15:07:02.65:sx4cb=2 2003.353.15:07:07.29/pass/2,,auto,-330.0,,-329.7,,0.3, 2003.353.15:07:16.43:!2003.353.15:13:00 2003.353.15:13:00.00:tape 2003.353.15:13:00.08/tape/low,02213,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:13:00.08:st=rev,160 2003.353.15:13:00.13:!2003.353.15:13:00 2003.353.15:13:00.13:preob 2003.353.15:13:02.89/tpical/21188,21530,22024,22224,21988,22706,22891,23147,48299,16734 2003.353.15:13:02.97/tpical/19636,19473,19048,19278,20067,20134,32472 2003.353.15:13:03.05:!2003.353.15:13:10 2003.353.15:13:10.00:tape 2003.353.15:13:10.07/tape/low,02098,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:13:10.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:13:10.08:midob 2003.353.15:13:10.19/tpi/15862,16091,16179,16332,16128,15886,16058,16287,35858,12007 2003.353.15:13:10.27/tpi/16028,16050,16033,16043,16284,16364,26846 2003.353.15:13:10.85/tsys1/52.9,52.1,49.0,48.9,48.7,41.2,41.4,41.9,51.0,45.0 2003.353.15:13:10.86/tsys2/56.6,59.7,67.8,63.1,55.0,55.5,61.0 2003.353.15:13:16.15/wx/-5.9,951.4,64.3 2003.353.15:13:16.25/cable/+3.83057E-02 2003.353.15:13:16.31/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35866,26829,0,1pps 2003.353.15:13:16.36/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12011,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:13:16.44/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,16097,15877,545,1pps 2003.353.15:13:16.53/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,15892,16054,554,1pps 2003.353.15:13:16.62/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16024,16146,550,1pps 2003.353.15:13:17.12/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:13:20.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:13:20.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:13:20.20:!2003.353.15:14:48 2003.353.15:13:21.03#setcl#time/318953707,1,2003,353,15,13,21.00,0.104,20.850,1 2003.353.15:13:21.03#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:14:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:14:48.00:et 2003.353.15:14:48.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:14:51.05:tape 2003.353.15:14:51.12/tape/low,00773,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:14:51.12:postob 2003.353.15:14:51.13:scan_name=353-1516 2003.353.15:14:51.14:source=1726+455,172601.2,453304.7,1950.0 2003.353.15:14:57.65:midtp 2003.353.15:15:00.37/tpzero/207,339,261,335,282,284,326,333,625,199 2003.353.15:15:00.45/tpzero/321,322,316,347,286,284,414 2003.353.15:15:01.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.353.15:15:01.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:15:01.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:15:01.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.908 2003.353.15:15:01.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.15:15:01.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.58 2003.353.15:15:01.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,57.66 2003.353.15:15:01.83:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:15:07.04/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:15:16.18:fastr=0m29s 2003.353.15:15:45.28:!+5s 2003.353.15:15:50.29:!2003.353.15:16:19 2003.353.15:16:19.00:tape 2003.353.15:16:19.07/tape/low,00200,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:16:19.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:16:19.12:!2003.353.15:16:19 2003.353.15:16:19.12:preob 2003.353.15:16:21.88/tpical/21843,21373,21878,22184,21697,23473,22685,22884,47845,16507 2003.353.15:16:21.96/tpical/19937,19151,19033,19445,19701,19626,32660 2003.353.15:16:22.04:!2003.353.15:16:29 2003.353.15:16:29.00:tape 2003.353.15:16:29.07/tape/low,00316,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:16:29.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:16:29.08:midob 2003.353.15:16:29.19/tpi/16340,15965,16069,16248,15912,16395,15870,16120,35491,11831 2003.353.15:16:29.27/tpi/16333,15813,16087,16276,16066,16042,27005 2003.353.15:16:29.85/tsys1/52.8,52.0,49.0,48.3,48.6,41.0,41.1,42.0,50.8,44.8 2003.353.15:16:29.86/tsys2/57.8,60.3,69.6,65.3,56.4,57.2,61.1 2003.353.15:16:34.17/wx/-5.9,951.4,63.6 2003.353.15:16:34.33/cable/+3.83055E-02 2003.353.15:16:34.39/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35488,27000,0,1pps 2003.353.15:16:34.44/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11817,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:16:34.52/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15938,15738,545,1pps 2003.353.15:16:34.61/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,15644,16253,554,1pps 2003.353.15:16:34.70/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16093,16143,550,1pps 2003.353.15:16:35.20/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:16:36.02#setcl#time/318973206,1,2003,353,15,16,36.00,0.115,20.904,2 2003.353.15:16:36.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:16:38.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:16:38.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:16:38.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:16:38.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:16:38.21:!2003.353.15:20:55 2003.353.15:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.15:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.353.15:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.907 2003.353.15:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.953 2003.353.15:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.72 2003.353.15:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.15:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.15:17:28.18/wx/-5.9,951.4,63.6 2003.353.15:20:45.81;oso 2003.353.15:20:45.94?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:20:45.94?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:20:45.95/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:20:51.64;oso 2003.353.15:20:51.77?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:20:51.77?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:20:51.78/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:20:53.86;oso 2003.353.15:20:53.99?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:20:53.99?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:20:54.00/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:20:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:20:55.00:et 2003.353.15:20:55.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:20:58.05:tape 2003.353.15:20:58.12/tape/low,03881,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.15:20:58.12:postob 2003.353.15:20:58.13:scan_name=353-1523 2003.353.15:20:58.13:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.15:21:04.65:check80f 2003.353.15:21:37.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 20 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.15:21:37.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 24 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.15:21:37.39/parity/34.,10.,34.,20.,14.,16.,2.,14.,1069.,14.,877.,16.,6.,8. 2003.353.15:21:37.40/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,2,0,0,0 2003.353.15:22:02.96:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:22:07.61/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:22:16.75:!2003.353.15:23:08 2003.353.15:23:08.00:tape 2003.353.15:23:08.07/tape/low,03881,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:23:08.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:23:08.12:!2003.353.15:23:08 2003.353.15:23:08.12:preob 2003.353.15:23:10.88/tpical/21596,21102,22332,22320,21497,23191,23161,23455,47358,16353 2003.353.15:23:10.95/tpical/19395,19275,19312,19267,19804,19848,32141 2003.353.15:23:11.02:!2003.353.15:23:18 2003.353.15:23:18.00:tape 2003.353.15:23:18.07/tape/low,03997,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:23:18.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:23:18.07:midob 2003.353.15:23:18.18/tpi/16074,15691,16324,16275,15624,16049,16054,16333,34945,11636 2003.353.15:23:18.25/tpi/15777,15847,16216,16009,16062,16112,26508 2003.353.15:23:18.82/tsys1/51.7,51.1,48.1,47.5,47.0,39.7,39.8,40.4,49.8,43.6 2003.353.15:23:18.82/tsys2/55.5,58.9,66.8,62.5,54.8,55.1,60.2 2003.353.15:23:23.32/wx/-5.7,951.2,61.6 2003.353.15:23:23.45/cable/+3.83093E-02 2003.353.15:23:23.50/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,34951,26490,0,1pps 2003.353.15:23:23.55/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11638,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.15:23:23.63/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -3.91,lock,15672,16231,545,1pps 2003.353.15:23:23.71/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.57,lock,16063,16322,554,1pps 2003.353.15:23:23.79/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16216,15959,550,1pps 2003.353.15:23:24.29/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:23:27.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:23:27.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:23:27.20:!2003.353.15:26:09 2003.353.15:23:28.00#setcl#time/319014404,1,2003,353,15,23,28.00,0.137,21.019,4 2003.353.15:23:28.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:26:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:26:09.00:et 2003.353.15:26:09.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:26:12.05:tape 2003.353.15:26:12.12/tape/low,06293,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:26:12.12:postob 2003.353.15:26:12.13:scan_name=353-1530 2003.353.15:26:12.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.15:26:18.65:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:26:23.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:26:32.43:!2003.353.15:30:44 2003.353.15:30:44.00:tape 2003.353.15:30:44.07/tape/low,06293,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:30:44.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:30:44.12:!2003.353.15:30:44 2003.353.15:30:44.12:preob 2003.353.15:30:46.88/tpical/21728,21217,22391,22138,21535,23219,23128,23446,47543,16393 2003.353.15:30:46.96/tpical/19326,19243,19217,19606,19982,20045,33607 2003.353.15:30:47.04:!2003.353.15:30:54 2003.353.15:30:54.00:tape 2003.353.15:30:54.07/tape/low,06409,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:30:54.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:30:54.08:midob 2003.353.15:30:54.19/tpi/16175,15782,16391,16139,15657,16072,16034,16317,35120,11678 2003.353.15:30:54.27/tpi/15699,15786,16123,16256,16149,16215,27971 2003.353.15:30:54.85/tsys1/51.8,51.1,48.4,47.4,47.1,39.8,39.9,40.4,50.0,43.8 2003.353.15:30:54.86/tsys2/55.1,58.2,66.4,61.7,53.8,54.1,63.6 2003.353.15:30:59.93/wx/-5.4,951.0,60.2 2003.353.15:31:00.09/cable/+3.83109E-02 2003.353.15:31:00.15/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35128,27961,0,1pps 2003.353.15:31:00.20/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11680,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.15:31:00.28/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -3.91,lock,15774,16325,545,1pps 2003.353.15:31:00.37/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16073,15960,554,1pps 2003.353.15:31:00.46/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.22,lock,16133,16264,550,1pps 2003.353.15:31:00.96/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:31:02.02#setcl#time/319059806,1,2003,353,15,31,02.00,0.114,21.145,2 2003.353.15:31:02.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:31:04.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:31:04.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:31:04.20:!2003.353.15:32:32 2003.353.15:32:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:32:32.00:et 2003.353.15:32:32.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:32:35.05:tape 2003.353.15:32:35.12/tape/low,07732,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:32:35.12:postob 2003.353.15:32:35.13:scan_name=353-1534 2003.353.15:32:35.13:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.15:32:41.65:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:32:46.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:32:55.43:!2003.353.15:34:47 2003.353.15:34:47.00:tape 2003.353.15:34:47.07/tape/low,07732,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:34:47.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:34:47.12:!2003.353.15:34:47 2003.353.15:34:47.12:preob 2003.353.15:34:49.88/tpical/20796,20884,20999,21733,21282,22079,22605,22416,51766,17895 2003.353.15:34:49.96/tpical/19613,19044,18962,18870,19506,19635,35407 2003.353.15:34:50.04:!2003.353.15:34:57 2003.353.15:34:57.00:tape 2003.353.15:34:57.07/tape/low,07847,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:34:57.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:34:57.08:midob 2003.353.15:34:57.19/tpi/15951,15999,15886,16395,16076,15971,16349,16277,39395,13234 2003.353.15:34:57.27/tpi/16292,15939,16237,16005,16129,16240,29789 2003.353.15:34:57.85/tsys1/58.5,57.7,55.0,54.2,54.6,46.2,46.1,46.7,56.4,50.3 2003.353.15:34:57.86/tsys2/62.5,65.4,76.0,71.0,61.0,61.1,68.0 2003.353.15:35:02.15/wx/-5.2,950.9,58.7 2003.353.15:35:02.16/cable/+3.83071E-02 2003.353.15:35:02.22/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,39381,29748,0,1pps 2003.353.15:35:02.27/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13229,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:35:02.35/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.34, -4.57,lock,15998,15718,545,1pps 2003.353.15:35:02.44/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.98,lock,15960,16357,554,1pps 2003.353.15:35:02.53/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16219,16367,550,1pps 2003.353.15:35:03.03/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:35:04.00#setcl#time/319084004,1,2003,353,15,35,04.00,0.136,21.212,4 2003.353.15:35:04.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:35:06.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:35:06.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:35:06.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:35:06.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:35:06.21:!2003.353.15:40:27 2003.353.15:35:16.22;oso 2003.353.15:35:16.38?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:35:16.38?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:35:16.39/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:35:18.03;toso 2003.353.15:36:10.38;oso 2003.353.15:36:10.55?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:36:10.55?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:36:10.56/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:36:13.13;toso 2003.353.15:40:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:40:27.00:et 2003.353.15:40:27.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:40:30.05:tape 2003.353.15:40:30.12/tape/low,12263,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.15:40:30.12:postob 2003.353.15:40:30.13:scan_name=353-1545 2003.353.15:40:30.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.15:40:36.65:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:40:41.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:40:50.43:!2003.353.15:45:13 2003.353.15:45:13.00:tape 2003.353.15:45:13.07/tape/low,12263,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:45:13.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:45:13.12:!2003.353.15:45:13 2003.353.15:45:13.12:preob 2003.353.15:45:15.88/tpical/21807,21329,21852,22225,21682,23314,23218,23074,47851,16470 2003.353.15:45:15.96/tpical/19893,19118,18995,19064,19772,19708,33276 2003.353.15:45:16.04:!2003.353.15:45:23 2003.353.15:45:23.00:tape 2003.353.15:45:23.07/tape/low,12380,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:45:23.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:45:23.08:midob 2003.353.15:45:23.19/tpi/16305,15941,16048,16281,15816,16193,16165,16095,35471,11775 2003.353.15:45:23.27/tpi/16294,15783,16039,15959,16154,16108,27725 2003.353.15:45:23.85/tsys1/52.7,52.1,49.0,48.3,47.7,40.2,40.4,40.7,50.7,44.4 2003.353.15:45:23.86/tsys2/57.7,60.3,69.1,65.4,57.0,57.1,64.0 2003.353.15:45:28.96/wx/-5.4,950.8,57.1 2003.353.15:45:29.04/cable/+3.83094E-02 2003.353.15:45:29.10/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35489,27380,0,1pps 2003.353.15:45:29.15/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11776,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:45:29.23/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15956,15746,545,1pps 2003.353.15:45:29.32/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16203,16081,554,1pps 2003.353.15:45:29.41/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16039,16132,550,1pps 2003.353.15:45:29.91/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:45:32.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:45:32.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:45:32.20:!2003.353.15:47:01 2003.353.15:45:33.00#setcl#time/319146904,1,2003,353,15,45,33.00,0.135,21.387,4 2003.353.15:45:33.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:47:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:47:01.00:et 2003.353.15:47:01.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:47:04.05:tape 2003.353.15:47:04.12/tape/low,13702,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:47:04.12:postob 2003.353.15:47:04.13:scan_name=353-1549 2003.353.15:47:04.13:source=1318+225,131846.9,223153.9,1950.0 2003.353.15:47:10.65:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:47:15.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.15:47:28.43/wx/-5.4,950.8,56.9 2003.353.15:47:28.43:!2003.353.15:49:04 2003.353.15:49:04.00:tape 2003.353.15:49:04.07/tape/low,13702,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:49:04.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:49:04.12:!2003.353.15:49:04 2003.353.15:49:04.12:preob 2003.353.15:49:06.88/tpical/21646,21189,21713,22374,21646,23346,23202,23087,47540,16418 2003.353.15:49:06.96/tpical/19877,19123,19024,19107,19830,19736,35854 2003.353.15:49:07.04:!2003.353.15:49:14 2003.353.15:49:14.00:tape 2003.353.15:49:14.07/tape/low,13818,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:49:14.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:49:14.08:midob 2003.353.15:49:14.19/tpi/16158,15775,15916,16372,15817,16231,16164,16130,35178,11727 2003.353.15:49:14.27/tpi/16260,15821,16091,16023,16224,16140,30232 2003.353.15:49:14.85/tsys1/52.3,51.3,48.6,48.1,48.0,40.3,40.5,40.9,50.3,44.2 2003.353.15:49:14.86/tsys2/57.3,61.0,69.9,66.1,57.5,57.3,68.9 2003.353.15:49:19.73/wx/-5.4,950.7,56.8 2003.353.15:49:19.77/cable/+3.83083E-02 2003.353.15:49:19.83/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35182,30224,0,1pps 2003.353.15:49:19.88/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11728,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.15:49:19.96/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15799,15577,545,1pps 2003.353.15:49:20.05/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16232,16079,554,1pps 2003.353.15:49:20.14/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16097,16156,550,1pps 2003.353.15:49:20.64/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:49:23.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:49:23.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.15:49:23.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.15:49:23.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.15:49:23.22:!2003.353.15:51:59 2003.353.15:49:24.02#setcl#time/319170005,1,2003,353,15,49,24.00,0.123,21.451,2 2003.353.15:49:24.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:49:31.09;oso 2003.353.15:49:31.22/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:51:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:51:59.00:et 2003.353.15:51:59.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:52:02.05:tape 2003.353.15:52:02.12/tape/low,16034,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:52:02.12:postob 2003.353.15:52:02.13:scan_name=353-1555 2003.353.15:52:02.14:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.353.15:52:08.65:sx4ca=3 2003.353.15:52:13.29/pass/3,,auto,-275.0,,-274.2,,0.8, 2003.353.15:52:22.43:!2003.353.15:55:29 2003.353.15:55:29.00:tape 2003.353.15:55:29.07/tape/low,16034,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:55:29.07:st=for,160 2003.353.15:55:29.12:!2003.353.15:55:29 2003.353.15:55:29.12:preob 2003.353.15:55:31.88/tpical/20910,21143,21400,21803,21428,22635,22862,22998,49700,17095 2003.353.15:55:31.96/tpical/19307,18464,18618,18796,19139,19432,38222 2003.353.15:55:32.04:!2003.353.15:55:39 2003.353.15:55:39.00:tape 2003.353.15:55:39.07/tape/low,16150,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:55:39.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:55:39.08:midob 2003.353.15:55:39.19/tpi/15831,16026,15939,16210,15897,15998,16167,16359,37336,12414 2003.353.15:55:39.27/tpi/16286,15698,16141,16145,16065,16304,32666 2003.353.15:55:39.85/tsys1/55.4,55.2,51.7,51.1,50.8,42.6,42.6,43.5,53.4,47.0 2003.353.15:55:39.86/tsys2/68.7,72.3,83.1,77.5,66.7,66.6,75.5 2003.353.15:55:44.34/wx/-5.6,950.6,58.0 2003.353.15:55:44.41/cable/+3.83084E-02 2003.353.15:55:44.47/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37296,32752,0,1pps 2003.353.15:55:44.52/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12407,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.15:55:44.60/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15992,15685,545,1pps 2003.353.15:55:44.69/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,15986,16067,554,1pps 2003.353.15:55:44.78/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.68, 1.22,lock,16162,16287,550,1pps 2003.353.15:55:45.28/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:55:46.01#setcl#time/319208204,1,2003,353,15,55,46.00,0.134,21.557,3 2003.353.15:55:46.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.15:55:48.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:55:48.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:55:48.21:!2003.353.15:57:17 2003.353.15:57:17.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.15:57:17.00:et 2003.353.15:57:17.04:!+3s 2003.353.15:57:20.05:tape 2003.353.15:57:20.12/tape/low,17473,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:57:20.12:postob 2003.353.15:57:20.13:scan_name=353-1558 2003.353.15:57:20.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.15:57:26.65:midtp 2003.353.15:57:29.37/tpzero/211,337,259,337,281,292,330,334,623,197 2003.353.15:57:29.45/tpzero/317,318,311,343,269,273,422 2003.353.15:57:30.17/rx/-1(undef),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,0.968 2003.353.15:57:30.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:57:30.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.15:57:30.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.908 2003.353.15:57:30.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.864 2003.353.15:57:30.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.85 2003.353.15:57:30.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.05 2003.353.15:57:30.83:sx4cb=4 2003.353.15:57:35.85/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.15:57:44.99:fastf=0m8s 2003.353.15:57:53.09:!+5s 2003.353.15:57:58.10:!2003.353.15:58:48 2003.353.15:58:48.00:tape 2003.353.15:58:48.07/tape/low,17653,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.15:58:48.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.15:58:48.12:!2003.353.15:58:48 2003.353.15:58:48.12:preob 2003.353.15:58:50.88/tpical/21603,20975,21966,22011,21321,23061,23270,23045,49314,17033 2003.353.15:58:50.96/tpical/19931,19830,18982,19343,19961,19892,33707 2003.353.15:58:51.04:!2003.353.15:58:58 2003.353.15:58:58.00:tape 2003.353.15:58:58.07/tape/low,17536,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.15:58:58.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.15:58:58.08:midob 2003.353.15:58:58.19/tpi/16334,15820,16323,16315,15779,16313,16448,16367,36946,12348 2003.353.15:58:58.27/tpi/16343,16393,16075,16210,16303,16266,28140 2003.353.15:58:58.85/tsys1/55.1,54.1,51.2,50.5,50.3,42.7,42.5,43.2,52.9,46.7 2003.353.15:58:58.86/tsys2/58.1,60.8,70.5,65.8,57.0,57.3,64.7 2003.353.15:59:04.00/wx/-5.9,950.6,58.4 2003.353.15:59:04.09/cable/+3.83111E-02 2003.353.15:59:04.15/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36949,28281,0,1pps 2003.353.15:59:04.21/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12351,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.15:59:04.29/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15825,16346,545,1pps 2003.353.15:59:04.38/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16304,16045,554,1pps 2003.353.15:59:04.47/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,16056,16122,550,1pps 2003.353.15:59:04.97/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.15:59:07.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.15:59:07.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.15:59:07.21:!2003.353.16:00:36 2003.353.15:59:08.01#setcl#time/319228404,1,2003,353,15,59,08.00,0.133,21.613,3 2003.353.15:59:08.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:00:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:00:36.00:et 2003.353.16:00:36.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:00:39.05:tape 2003.353.16:00:39.12/tape/low,16214,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:00:39.12:postob 2003.353.16:00:39.13:scan_name=353-1607 2003.353.16:00:39.14:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.16:00:45.65:check80r 2003.353.16:01:18.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 21 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.16:01:18.38/parity/32.,32.,10.,22.,26.,50.,32.,8.,613.,52.,404.,10.,58.,54. 2003.353.16:01:18.39/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.16:01:43.96:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:01:48.60/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:01:57.74:!2003.353.16:07:42 2003.353.16:07:42.00:tape 2003.353.16:07:42.07/tape/low,16214,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:07:42.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:07:42.12:!2003.353.16:07:42 2003.353.16:07:42.12:preob 2003.353.16:07:44.88/tpical/21744,21252,21751,22373,21581,23331,23278,23200,47613,16411 2003.353.16:07:44.96/tpical/19803,19057,18912,19394,19590,19545,32565 2003.353.16:07:45.04:!2003.353.16:07:52 2003.353.16:07:52.00:tape 2003.353.16:07:52.07/tape/low,16097,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:07:52.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:07:52.08:midob 2003.353.16:07:52.19/tpi/16242,15876,15952,16371,15751,16243,16242,16235,35265,11727 2003.353.16:07:52.27/tpi/16192,15726,15969,16185,15944,15931,26918 2003.353.16:07:52.85/tsys1/52.4,52.0,48.7,48.1,47.8,40.5,40.7,41.1,50.5,44.3 2003.353.16:07:52.86/tsys2/57.2,60.1,69.2,64.2,55.9,56.3,61.0 2003.353.16:07:57.54/wx/-6.4,950.5,64.1 2003.353.16:07:57.69/cable/+3.83076E-02 2003.353.16:07:57.75/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35271,26912,0,1pps 2003.353.16:07:57.80/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11727,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:07:57.88/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15854,15658,545,1pps 2003.353.16:07:57.97/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16222,16121,554,1pps 2003.353.16:07:58.06/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.42, 2.01,lock,15973,16048,550,1pps 2003.353.16:07:58.56/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:07:59.02#setcl#time/319281505,1,2003,353,16,07,59.00,0.121,21.761,2 2003.353.16:07:59.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:08:01.08/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:08:01.21/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.16:08:01.21:!2003.353.16:10:27 2003.353.16:08:51.64;"weather - clear skies 2003.353.16:10:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:10:27.00:et 2003.353.16:10:27.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:10:30.05:tape 2003.353.16:10:30.12/tape/low,14015,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:10:30.12:postob 2003.353.16:10:30.13:scan_name=353-1625 2003.353.16:10:30.14:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.16:10:36.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:10:41.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:10:50.43:!2003.353.16:25:38 2003.353.16:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.16:17:28.71/wx/-6.4,950.3,66.3 2003.353.16:25:38.00:tape 2003.353.16:25:38.07/tape/low,14015,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:25:38.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:25:38.12:!2003.353.16:25:38 2003.353.16:25:38.12:preob 2003.353.16:25:40.88/tpical/21790,21302,21739,22232,21704,23442,23311,23191,47754,16507 2003.353.16:25:40.96/tpical/19396,19323,19305,19244,19773,19802,32724 2003.353.16:25:41.04:!2003.353.16:25:48 2003.353.16:25:48.00:tape 2003.353.16:25:48.07/tape/low,13899,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:25:48.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:25:48.08:midob 2003.353.16:25:48.19/tpi/16274,15885,15954,16271,15856,16299,16244,16238,35356,11793 2003.353.16:25:48.26/tpi/15797,15906,16240,15997,16062,16090,27137 2003.353.16:25:48.83/tsys1/52.4,51.7,48.8,48.1,47.9,40.3,40.5,41.2,50.4,44.3 2003.353.16:25:48.83/tsys2/55.9,59.3,67.6,62.7,55.3,55.4,62.2 2003.353.16:25:52.79/wx/-6.3,950.1,64.8 2003.353.16:25:52.90/cable/+3.83129E-02 2003.353.16:25:52.95/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35364,27127,0,1pps 2003.353.16:25:53.00/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11795,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:25:53.08/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15883,15655,545,1pps 2003.353.16:25:53.16/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16309,16154,554,1pps 2003.353.16:25:53.24/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16243,15980,550,1pps 2003.353.16:25:53.74/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:25:56.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:25:56.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.16:25:56.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:25:56.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:25:56.22:!2003.353.16:28:43 2003.353.16:25:57.02#setcl#time/319389305,1,2003,353,16,25,57.00,0.120,22.060,2 2003.353.16:25:57.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:26:03.47;oso 2003.353.16:26:03.60?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.16:26:03.60?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:26:03.61/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:28:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:28:43.00:et 2003.353.16:28:43.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:28:46.05:tape 2003.353.16:28:46.12/tape/low,11550,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:28:46.12:postob 2003.353.16:28:46.13:scan_name=353-1632 2003.353.16:28:46.14:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.16:28:52.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:28:57.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:28:58.56;"x axis down again 2003.353.16:29:06.43:!2003.353.16:32:24 2003.353.16:32:24.00:tape 2003.353.16:32:24.07/tape/low,11550,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:32:24.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:32:24.12:!2003.353.16:32:24 2003.353.16:32:24.12:preob 2003.353.16:32:26.88/tpical/21824,21302,21727,22239,21718,23439,23305,23176,47751,16507 2003.353.16:32:26.96/tpical/19411,19321,19304,19255,19784,19813,32537 2003.353.16:32:27.04:!2003.353.16:32:34 2003.353.16:32:34.00:tape 2003.353.16:32:34.07/tape/low,11434,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.16:32:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:32:34.08:midob 2003.353.16:32:34.18/tpi/16283,15885,15931,16285,15849,16303,16241,16216,35352,11794 2003.353.16:32:34.25/tpi/15820,15886,16245,16014,16060,16099,26958 2003.353.16:32:34.82/tsys1/52.2,51.7,48.7,48.2,47.7,40.4,40.5,41.1,50.4,44.3 2003.353.16:32:34.82/tsys2/56.1,58.9,67.7,62.9,55.1,55.4,61.8 2003.353.16:32:38.67/wx/-6.4,949.9,65.2 2003.353.16:32:38.81/cable/+3.83128E-02 2003.353.16:32:38.87/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35346,26967,0,1pps 2003.353.16:32:38.92/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11790,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:32:39.00/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15887,15649,545,1pps 2003.353.16:32:39.08/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16294,16164,554,1pps 2003.353.16:32:39.16/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16239,15968,550,1pps 2003.353.16:32:39.66/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:32:42.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:32:42.21?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.16:32:42.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:32:42.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:32:42.22:!2003.353.16:34:12 2003.353.16:32:43.02#setcl#time/319429905,1,2003,353,16,32,43.00,0.119,22.173,2 2003.353.16:32:43.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:33:13.07;"can't get x restarted, took a look at antenna structure and see hydraulic fluid on it. not sure if we'll get it back up. 2003.353.16:34:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:34:12.01:et 2003.353.16:34:12.05:!+3s 2003.353.16:34:15.06:tape 2003.353.16:34:15.13/tape/low,10111,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:34:15.13:postob 2003.353.16:34:15.14:scan_name=353-1635 2003.353.16:34:15.15:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.16:34:21.66:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:34:26.30/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:34:35.44:!2003.353.16:35:34 2003.353.16:35:34.00:tape 2003.353.16:35:34.07/tape/low,10111,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:35:34.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:35:34.12:!2003.353.16:35:34 2003.353.16:35:34.12:preob 2003.353.16:35:36.88/tpical/21801,21269,21709,22206,21698,23416,23291,23144,47703,16493 2003.353.16:35:36.96/tpical/19352,19293,19307,19244,19766,19798,32758 2003.353.16:35:37.04:!2003.353.16:35:44 2003.353.16:35:44.00:tape 2003.353.16:35:44.07/tape/low,09995,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:35:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:35:44.08:midob 2003.353.16:35:44.19/tpi/16292,15878,15905,16266,15833,16291,16225,16211,35329,11788 2003.353.16:35:44.27/tpi/15791,15871,16246,16010,16058,16087,27096 2003.353.16:35:44.85/tsys1/52.5,51.9,48.5,48.3,47.7,40.4,40.5,41.2,50.5,44.3 2003.353.16:35:44.86/tsys2/56.5,59.1,67.7,63.0,55.4,55.4,61.2 2003.353.16:35:50.15/wx/-6.4,949.9,63.9 2003.353.16:35:50.17/cable/+3.83128E-02 2003.353.16:35:50.23/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35334,27328,0,1pps 2003.353.16:35:50.28/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11787,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:35:50.36/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15885,15661,545,1pps 2003.353.16:35:50.45/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16278,16161,554,1pps 2003.353.16:35:50.54/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16253,15976,550,1pps 2003.353.16:35:51.04/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:35:54.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:35:54.20?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.16:35:54.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:35:54.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:35:54.21:!2003.353.16:37:22 2003.353.16:35:55.01#setcl#time/319449104,1,2003,353,16,35,55.00,0.130,22.226,3 2003.353.16:35:55.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:37:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:37:22.00:et 2003.353.16:37:22.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:37:25.05:tape 2003.353.16:37:25.12/tape/low,08672,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:37:25.12:postob 2003.353.16:37:25.13:scan_name=353-1639 2003.353.16:37:25.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.16:37:31.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:37:36.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:37:45.43:!2003.353.16:39:16 2003.353.16:39:16.00:tape 2003.353.16:39:16.07/tape/low,08672,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:39:16.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:39:16.12:!2003.353.16:39:16 2003.353.16:39:16.12:preob 2003.353.16:39:18.88/tpical/21812,21280,21669,22211,21696,23410,23240,23163,47713,16490 2003.353.16:39:18.96/tpical/19362,19285,19299,19236,19782,19794,32714 2003.353.16:39:19.04:!2003.353.16:39:26 2003.353.16:39:26.00:tape 2003.353.16:39:26.07/tape/low,08557,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:39:26.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:39:26.08:midob 2003.353.16:39:26.19/tpi/16281,15878,15899,16263,15845,16285,16221,16189,35325,11783 2003.353.16:39:26.27/tpi/15767,15849,16225,15988,16052,16086,27060 2003.353.16:39:26.85/tsys1/52.3,51.8,48.8,48.2,47.9,40.4,40.8,40.9,50.4,44.3 2003.353.16:39:26.86/tsys2/55.9,58.8,67.3,62.6,55.0,55.4,61.2 2003.353.16:39:31.09/wx/-6.6,949.8,65.5 2003.353.16:39:31.13/cable/+3.83134E-02 2003.353.16:39:31.19/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35321,27061,0,1pps 2003.353.16:39:31.24/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11782,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:39:31.32/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15882,15671,545,1pps 2003.353.16:39:31.41/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16291,16149,554,1pps 2003.353.16:39:31.49/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16221,15945,550,1pps 2003.353.16:39:31.99/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:39:34.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:39:34.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.16:39:34.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:39:34.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:39:34.22:!2003.353.16:42:06 2003.353.16:39:35.02#setcl#time/319471105,1,2003,353,16,39,35.00,0.118,22.287,2 2003.353.16:39:35.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:42:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:42:06.00:et 2003.353.16:42:06.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:42:09.05:tape 2003.353.16:42:09.12/tape/low,06407,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:42:09.12:postob 2003.353.16:42:09.13:scan_name=353-1644 2003.353.16:42:09.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.16:42:15.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:42:20.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:42:29.43:!2003.353.16:44:19 2003.353.16:44:19.00:tape 2003.353.16:44:19.07/tape/low,06407,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:44:19.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:44:19.12:!2003.353.16:44:19 2003.353.16:44:19.12:preob 2003.353.16:44:21.89/tpical/21797,21238,21649,22182,21673,23381,23192,23060,47645,16470 2003.353.16:44:21.97/tpical/19361,19302,19296,19225,19753,19776,32743 2003.353.16:44:22.05:!2003.353.16:44:29 2003.353.16:44:29.00:tape 2003.353.16:44:29.07/tape/low,06292,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:44:29.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:44:29.08:midob 2003.353.16:44:29.19/tpi/16255,15873,15877,16240,15834,16267,16184,16161,35292,11777 2003.353.16:44:29.27/tpi/15776,15879,16213,15993,16060,16077,27051 2003.353.16:44:29.85/tsys1/52.1,52.1,48.7,48.2,47.9,40.4,40.7,41.3,50.5,44.4 2003.353.16:44:29.86/tsys2/56.1,59.1,67.1,62.9,55.6,55.5,60.8 2003.353.16:44:33.86/wx/-7.0,949.6,65.0 2003.353.16:44:34.01/cable/+3.83136E-02 2003.353.16:44:34.07/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35287,27054,0,1pps 2003.353.16:44:34.12/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11765,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.16:44:34.20/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15850,15638,545,1pps 2003.353.16:44:34.28/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16269,16118,554,1pps 2003.353.16:44:34.36/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16222,15955,550,1pps 2003.353.16:44:34.86/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:44:35.02#setcl#time/319501105,1,2003,353,16,44,35.00,0.118,22.371,2 2003.353.16:44:35.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:44:37.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:44:37.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.16:44:37.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:44:37.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:44:37.21:!2003.353.16:46:07 2003.353.16:46:07.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:46:07.00:et 2003.353.16:46:07.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:46:10.05:tape 2003.353.16:46:10.12/tape/low,04969,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:46:10.12:postob 2003.353.16:46:10.13:scan_name=353-1648 2003.353.16:46:10.14:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.353.16:46:16.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:46:21.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:46:30.43:!2003.353.16:48:23 2003.353.16:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.16:47:28.98/wx/-6.9,949.6,67.2 2003.353.16:48:23.00:tape 2003.353.16:48:23.07/tape/low,04969,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:48:23.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:48:23.12:!2003.353.16:48:23 2003.353.16:48:23.12:preob 2003.353.16:48:25.88/tpical/21805,21259,21618,22165,21644,23374,23206,23041,47637,16459 2003.353.16:48:25.96/tpical/19380,19297,19286,19250,19775,19796,32464 2003.353.16:48:26.04:!2003.353.16:48:33 2003.353.16:48:33.00:tape 2003.353.16:48:33.07/tape/low,04853,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:48:33.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:48:33.08:midob 2003.353.16:48:33.19/tpi/16273,15847,15862,16228,15807,16236,16156,16123,35271,11760 2003.353.16:48:33.27/tpi/15783,15872,16246,16009,16076,16113,26891 2003.353.16:48:33.85/tsys1/52.3,51.6,48.8,48.2,47.9,40.2,40.4,41.1,50.4,44.3 2003.353.16:48:33.86/tsys2/55.9,59.0,68.1,62.8,55.6,55.9,61.7 2003.353.16:48:37.71/wx/-6.7,949.6,68.3 2003.353.16:48:37.85/cable/+3.83134E-02 2003.353.16:48:37.91/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35267,26986,0,1pps 2003.353.16:48:37.96/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11758,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:48:38.04/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15849,15630,545,1pps 2003.353.16:48:38.13/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16232,16111,554,1pps 2003.353.16:48:38.22/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16254,15964,550,1pps 2003.353.16:48:38.72/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:48:41.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:48:41.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.16:48:41.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:48:41.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:48:41.21:!2003.353.16:50:11 2003.353.16:48:42.01#setcl#time/319525804,1,2003,353,16,48,42.00,0.128,22.439,3 2003.353.16:48:42.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:50:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:50:11.00:et 2003.353.16:50:11.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:50:14.05:tape 2003.353.16:50:14.12/tape/low,03530,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:50:14.12:postob 2003.353.16:50:14.13:scan_name=353-1655 2003.353.16:50:14.14:source=0059+581,005943.5,580804.5,1950.0 2003.353.16:50:20.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:50:25.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:50:34.43:!2003.353.16:55:33 2003.353.16:55:33.00:tape 2003.353.16:55:33.07/tape/low,03530,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:55:33.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:55:33.12:!2003.353.16:55:33 2003.353.16:55:33.12:preob 2003.353.16:55:35.88/tpical/21778,21213,22281,22153,21603,23295,23125,22996,47560,16421 2003.353.16:55:35.96/tpical/19351,19274,19291,19213,19762,19754,32465 2003.353.16:55:36.04:!2003.353.16:55:43 2003.353.16:55:43.00:tape 2003.353.16:55:43.07/tape/low,03414,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:55:43.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:55:43.08:midob 2003.353.16:55:43.19/tpi/16250,15846,16366,16203,15780,16221,16088,16076,35232,11737 2003.353.16:55:43.27/tpi/15757,15843,16212,15997,16042,16058,26928 2003.353.16:55:43.85/tsys1/52.2,52.0,49.0,48.0,47.9,40.5,40.3,40.9,50.5,44.3 2003.353.16:55:43.86/tsys2/55.8,58.8,67.1,63.3,55.1,55.5,62.2 2003.353.16:55:48.14/wx/-7.0,949.5,69.3 2003.353.16:55:48.25/cable/+3.83137E-02 2003.353.16:55:48.31/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35235,26957,0,1pps 2003.353.16:55:48.37/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11740,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.16:55:48.45/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15844,15629,545,1pps 2003.353.16:55:48.54/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16205,16084,554,1pps 2003.353.16:55:48.63/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16222,15941,550,1pps 2003.353.16:55:49.13/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:55:52.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:55:52.21?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.16:55:52.21?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:55:52.22/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:55:52.22:!2003.353.16:57:21 2003.353.16:55:53.02#setcl#time/319568905,1,2003,353,16,55,53.00,0.117,22.559,2 2003.353.16:55:53.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:57:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.16:57:21.00:et 2003.353.16:57:21.04:!+3s 2003.353.16:57:24.05:tape 2003.353.16:57:24.12/tape/low,02092,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:57:24.12:postob 2003.353.16:57:24.13:scan_name=353-1659 2003.353.16:57:24.14:source=2201+315,220101.5,313105.7,1950.0 2003.353.16:57:30.65:sx4cb=4 2003.353.16:57:35.29/pass/4,,auto,-275.0,,-274.9,,0.1, 2003.353.16:57:44.43:!2003.353.16:59:34 2003.353.16:59:34.00:tape 2003.353.16:59:34.07/tape/low,02092,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:59:34.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.16:59:34.12:!2003.353.16:59:34 2003.353.16:59:34.12:preob 2003.353.16:59:36.88/tpical/21762,21186,22273,22147,21580,23295,23063,22950,47536,16413 2003.353.16:59:36.96/tpical/19358,19294,19307,19240,19790,19770,32522 2003.353.16:59:37.04:!2003.353.16:59:44 2003.353.16:59:44.00:tape 2003.353.16:59:44.07/tape/low,01976,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.16:59:44.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.16:59:44.08:midob 2003.353.16:59:44.19/tpi/16261,15839,16361,16198,15789,16205,16084,16053,35223,11737 2003.353.16:59:44.27/tpi/15764,15878,16229,15995,16086,16093,26913 2003.353.16:59:44.85/tsys1/52.5,52.2,49.0,48.0,48.2,40.4,40.6,41.0,50.6,44.4 2003.353.16:59:44.86/tsys2/55.9,59.2,67.2,62.7,55.5,55.9,61.4 2003.353.16:59:48.72/wx/-7.0,949.3,68.6 2003.353.16:59:48.73/cable/+3.83137E-02 2003.353.16:59:48.79/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35216,26913,0,1pps 2003.353.16:59:48.84/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11735,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.16:59:48.93/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15840,15636,545,1pps 2003.353.16:59:49.02/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16197,16063,554,1pps 2003.353.16:59:49.11/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16243,15965,550,1pps 2003.353.16:59:49.61/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.16:59:50.01#setcl#time/319592604,1,2003,353,16,59,50.00,0.127,22.625,3 2003.353.16:59:50.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.16:59:52.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.16:59:52.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.16:59:52.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.16:59:52.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.16:59:52.21:!2003.353.17:01:22 2003.353.17:01:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:01:22.00:et 2003.353.17:01:22.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:01:25.05:tape 2003.353.17:01:25.12/tape/low,00652,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:01:25.12:postob 2003.353.17:01:25.13:scan_name=353-1713 2003.353.17:01:25.14:source=1300+580,130047.1,580443.6,1950.0 2003.353.17:01:31.65:midtp 2003.353.17:01:34.37/tpzero/214,338,266,339,281,292,330,335,625,197 2003.353.17:01:34.45/tpzero/321,322,322,348,285,282,419 2003.353.17:01:35.17/rx/-1(undef),on,off,on,on,on,off,locked,1.041 2003.353.17:01:35.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.17:01:35.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.17:01:35.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.17:01:35.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,6.042 2003.353.17:01:35.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.93 2003.353.17:01:35.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.17:01:35.83:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:01:41.04/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:01:50.18:fastr=0m20s 2003.353.17:02:10.28:!+5s 2003.353.17:02:15.29:!2003.353.17:12:54 2003.353.17:12:54.00:tape 2003.353.17:12:54.07/tape/low,00202,low,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:12:54.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:12:54.12:!2003.353.17:12:54 2003.353.17:12:54.12:preob 2003.353.17:12:56.88/tpical/21768,21202,22228,22065,21533,23223,23008,23278,47471,16376 2003.353.17:12:56.96/tpical/19344,19258,19274,19268,19739,19755,32435 2003.353.17:12:57.04:!2003.353.17:13:04 2003.353.17:13:04.00:tape 2003.353.17:13:04.07/tape/low,00317,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:13:04.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:13:04.08:midob 2003.353.17:13:04.19/tpi/16248,15833,16331,16167,15744,16149,16035,16306,35186,11718 2003.353.17:13:04.26/tpi/15748,15837,16200,16070,16066,16064,26864 2003.353.17:13:04.83/tsys1/52.3,51.9,49.0,48.3,48.1,40.3,40.5,41.2,50.6,44.5 2003.353.17:13:04.83/tsys2/55.8,59.0,67.1,63.9,55.9,55.6,61.7 2003.353.17:13:09.03/wx/-6.7,949.2,67.4 2003.353.17:13:09.05/cable/+3.83137E-02 2003.353.17:13:09.10/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35184,26883,0,1pps 2003.353.17:13:09.15/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11715,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:13:09.23/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15832,15623,545,1pps 2003.353.17:13:09.31/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16167,16027,554,1pps 2003.353.17:13:09.39/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16213,15932,550,1pps 2003.353.17:13:09.89/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:13:12.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:13:12.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.17:13:12.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.17:13:12.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.17:13:12.21:!2003.353.17:14:42 2003.353.17:13:13.01#setcl#time/319672904,1,2003,353,17,13,13.00,0.126,22.848,3 2003.353.17:13:13.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:14:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:14:42.00:et 2003.353.17:14:42.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:14:45.05:tape 2003.353.17:14:45.12/tape/low,01640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:14:45.12:postob 2003.353.17:14:45.13:scan_name=353-1723 2003.353.17:14:45.13:source=0743+259,074323.0,255625.1,1950.0 2003.353.17:14:51.65:check80f 2003.353.17:15:24.38/parity/8.,16.,14.,8.,16.,12.,500.,8.,8.,20.,345.,4.,8.,12. 2003.353.17:15:24.38/parity/0,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,1,0,0,0 2003.353.17:15:49.96:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:15:54.60/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:16:03.74:!2003.353.17:23:36 2003.353.17:17:20.63@rxmon 2003.353.17:17:20.75/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.353.17:17:20.86/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.17:17:20.97/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.17:17:21.08/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.17:17:21.19/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,6.042 2003.353.17:17:21.30/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.73 2003.353.17:17:21.41/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.17:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.17:17:27.62/wx/-6.9,949.2,67.4 2003.353.17:23:36.00:tape 2003.353.17:23:36.07/tape/low,01640,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:23:36.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:23:36.12:!2003.353.17:23:36 2003.353.17:23:36.12:preob 2003.353.17:23:38.88/tpical/21766,21187,22216,22067,21523,23195,22969,23252,47435,16368 2003.353.17:23:38.95/tpical/19287,19209,19231,19184,19709,19689,32751 2003.353.17:23:39.02:!2003.353.17:23:46 2003.353.17:23:46.00:tape 2003.353.17:23:46.07/tape/low,01756,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:23:46.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:23:46.07:midob 2003.353.17:23:46.18/tpi/16257,15847,16322,16162,15736,16162,16011,16272,35179,11709 2003.353.17:23:46.25/tpi/15707,15833,16172,15970,16044,16037,26973 2003.353.17:23:46.82/tsys1/52.4,52.3,49.0,48.2,48.1,40.6,40.6,41.1,50.7,44.5 2003.353.17:23:46.82/tsys2/55.9,59.7,67.4,63.2,55.9,56.1,59.7 2003.353.17:23:50.58/wx/-5.7,949.1,63.0 2003.353.17:23:50.65/cable/+3.83141E-02 2003.353.17:23:50.70/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35186,26918,0,1pps 2003.353.17:23:50.75/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11714,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:23:50.83/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15846,15624,545,1pps 2003.353.17:23:50.91/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16152,16029,554,1pps 2003.353.17:23:50.99/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16184,15905,550,1pps 2003.353.17:23:51.49/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:23:54.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:23:54.20?ERROR an -102 Pointing computer command angles are incorrect. 2003.353.17:23:54.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.17:23:54.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.17:23:54.21:!2003.353.17:26:45 2003.353.17:23:55.01#setcl#time/319737104,1,2003,353,17,23,55.00,0.125,23.026,3 2003.353.17:23:55.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:26:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:26:45.00:et 2003.353.17:26:45.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:26:48.05:tape 2003.353.17:26:48.12/tape/low,04160,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:26:48.12:postob 2003.353.17:26:48.13:scan_name=353-1731 2003.353.17:26:48.13:source=1739+522,173929.1,521310.5,1950.0 2003.353.17:26:54.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:26:59.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:27:08.43:!2003.353.17:31:08 2003.353.17:31:08.00:tape 2003.353.17:31:08.07/tape/low,04160,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:31:08.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:31:08.12:!2003.353.17:31:08 2003.353.17:31:08.12:preob 2003.353.17:31:10.88/tpical/21739,21155,22196,22298,21496,23150,22928,23189,47386,16350 2003.353.17:31:10.96/tpical/19289,19204,19247,19173,19721,19710,32421 2003.353.17:31:11.04:!2003.353.17:31:18 2003.353.17:31:18.00:tape 2003.353.17:31:18.07/tape/low,04276,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:31:18.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:31:18.08:midob 2003.353.17:31:18.19/tpi/16222,15811,16296,16359,15731,16138,16004,16250,35142,11708 2003.353.17:31:18.27/tpi/15716,15798,16195,15964,16049,16043,26854 2003.353.17:31:18.85/tsys1/52.2,52.1,48.9,48.6,48.2,40.7,40.7,41.3,50.7,44.6 2003.353.17:31:18.86/tsys2/56.0,59.1,67.6,63.3,55.8,55.9,61.7 2003.353.17:31:23.92/wx/-5.6,949.0,57.7 2003.353.17:31:24.09/cable/+3.83147E-02 2003.353.17:31:24.15/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,35142,26864,0,1pps 2003.353.17:31:24.20/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11699,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:31:24.28/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15816,15595,545,1pps 2003.353.17:31:24.36/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.90, 1.45,lock,16120,16002,554,1pps 2003.353.17:31:24.44/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16192,15936,550,1pps 2003.353.17:31:24.94/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:31:27.07/gps-fmout/T +1.14E-05 2003.353.17:31:27.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.17:31:27.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.17:31:27.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.17:31:27.21:!2003.353.17:33:41 2003.353.17:31:28.01#setcl#time/319782404,1,2003,353,17,31,28.00,0.124,23.152,3 2003.353.17:31:28.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:33:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:33:41.00:et 2003.353.17:33:41.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:33:44.05:tape 2003.353.17:33:44.12/tape/low,06199,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:33:44.12:postob 2003.353.17:33:44.13:scan_name=353-1736 2003.353.17:33:44.13:source=0552+398,055201.4,394821.9,1950.0 2003.353.17:33:50.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:33:55.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:34:04.43:!2003.353.17:36:24 2003.353.17:35:30.94;toso 2003.353.17:36:24.00:tape 2003.353.17:36:24.07/tape/low,06199,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:36:24.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:36:24.12:!2003.353.17:36:24 2003.353.17:36:24.12:preob 2003.353.17:36:26.87/tpical/21587,20819,21613,21769,21093,22769,22762,22957,48837,16855 2003.353.17:36:26.95/tpical/19687,19639,19180,19477,19974,19954,32433 2003.353.17:36:27.03:!2003.353.17:36:34 2003.353.17:36:34.00:tape 2003.353.17:36:34.07/tape/low,06315,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:36:34.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:36:34.08:midob 2003.353.17:36:34.19/tpi/16290,15752,16059,16157,15599,16075,16092,16279,36605,12217 2003.353.17:36:34.27/tpi/16124,16199,16218,16299,16309,16305,26738 2003.353.17:36:34.85/tsys1/54.6,54.8,51.2,50.7,50.2,42.4,42.5,43.0,52.9,46.6 2003.353.17:36:34.86/tsys2/57.7,60.0,69.8,65.2,56.8,57.1,60.1 2003.353.17:36:39.78/wx/-5.4,949.0,55.3 2003.353.17:36:39.93/cable/+3.83120E-02 2003.353.17:36:39.99/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36616,26731,0,1pps 2003.353.17:36:40.04/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12223,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:36:40.12/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15763,16272,545,1pps 2003.353.17:36:40.21/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16077,16254,554,1pps 2003.353.17:36:40.29/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.53, 2.11,lock,16205,16315,550,1pps 2003.353.17:36:40.79/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:36:43.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:36:43.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.17:36:43.20:!2003.353.17:38:12 2003.353.17:36:44.00#setcl#time/319814003,1,2003,353,17,36,44.00,0.134,23.240,4 2003.353.17:36:44.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:38:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:38:12.00:et 2003.353.17:38:12.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:38:15.05:tape 2003.353.17:38:15.12/tape/low,07637,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.17:38:15.12:postob 2003.353.17:38:15.13:scan_name=353-1739 2003.353.17:38:15.14:source=0748+126,074805.0,123845.6,1950.0 2003.353.17:38:21.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:38:26.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:38:35.43:!2003.353.17:38:57 2003.353.17:38:57.00:tape 2003.353.17:38:57.07/tape/low,07637,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.17:38:57.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:38:57.12:!2003.353.17:38:57 2003.353.17:38:57.12:preob 2003.353.17:38:59.88/tpical/20820,20627,20994,21539,20807,22060,21998,21724,53678,18457 2003.353.17:38:59.96/tpical/19433,18916,18715,19033,19571,19290,34599 2003.353.17:39:00.04:!2003.353.17:39:07 2003.353.17:39:07.00:tape 2003.353.17:39:07.07/tape/low,07753,off,moving,locked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.17:39:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:39:07.08:midob 2003.353.17:39:07.19/tpi/16176,16071,16116,16515,15934,16196,16137,15992,41446,13873 2003.353.17:39:07.27/tpi/16173,15865,16032,16133,16197,15979,29068 2003.353.17:39:07.85/tsys1/61.9,62.2,58.5,58.0,57.8,48.8,48.5,49.2,60.1,53.7 2003.353.17:39:07.86/tsys2/63.2,66.2,76.1,70.8,61.3,61.6,67.3 2003.353.17:39:11.98/wx/-5.6,949.1,55.8 2003.353.17:39:12.09/cable/+3.83122E-02 2003.353.17:39:12.15/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,41465,29114,0,1pps 2003.353.17:39:12.20/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,13883,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:39:12.28/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -4.80,lock,16075,15735,545,1pps 2003.353.17:39:12.37/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.22, 0.74,lock,16194,16076,554,1pps 2003.353.17:39:12.45/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 1.68,lock,16045,16147,550,1pps 2003.353.17:39:12.95/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:39:15.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:39:15.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.17:39:15.20:!2003.353.17:41:30 2003.353.17:39:16.00#setcl#time/319829203,1,2003,353,17,39,16.00,0.134,23.282,4 2003.353.17:39:16.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:39:38.95;"x axis back up, blew an o ring on the hydraulic pump. 2003.353.17:41:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:41:30.00:et 2003.353.17:41:30.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:41:33.05:tape 2003.353.17:41:33.12/tape/low,09675,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.7,85,okay 2003.353.17:41:33.12:postob 2003.353.17:41:33.13:scan_name=353-1746 2003.353.17:41:33.13:source=0133+476,013355.1,473612.5,1950.0 2003.353.17:41:39.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:41:44.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:41:53.43:!2003.353.17:46:14 2003.353.17:46:14.00:tape 2003.353.17:46:14.07/tape/low,09675,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:46:14.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:46:14.12:!2003.353.17:46:14 2003.353.17:46:14.13:preob 2003.353.17:46:16.88/tpical/21203,21329,21410,21787,21751,22487,22629,22418,50112,17375 2003.353.17:46:16.96/tpical/19454,19449,18849,19112,19769,19713,33059 2003.353.17:46:17.04:!2003.353.17:46:24 2003.353.17:46:24.00:tape 2003.353.17:46:24.07/tape/low,09792,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:46:24.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:46:24.08:midob 2003.353.17:46:24.19/tpi/16133,16231,16002,16309,16268,16082,16193,16108,37818,12724 2003.353.17:46:24.27/tpi/16012,16150,16005,16048,16199,16135,27484 2003.353.17:46:24.85/tsys1/56.5,56.1,52.4,52.5,52.5,44.4,44.4,45.0,54.5,48.5 2003.353.17:46:24.86/tsys2/59.3,62.4,71.7,66.6,58.0,57.6,63.1 2003.353.17:46:28.95/wx/-5.8,949.0,57.7 2003.353.17:46:29.05/cable/+3.83067E-02 2003.353.17:46:29.11/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37817,27482,0,1pps 2003.353.17:46:29.16/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12721,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.17:46:29.25/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,16243,15917,545,1pps 2003.353.17:46:29.34/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16085,16137,554,1pps 2003.353.17:46:29.43/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16008,16072,550,1pps 2003.353.17:46:29.93/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:46:31.02#setcl#time/319872705,1,2003,353,17,46,31.00,0.113,23.403,2 2003.353.17:46:31.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:46:33.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:46:33.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.17:46:33.20:!2003.353.17:48:02 2003.353.17:47:23.64@wx 2003.353.17:47:27.87/wx/-5.9,949.0,58.8 2003.353.17:48:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:48:02.00:et 2003.353.17:48:02.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:48:05.05:tape 2003.353.17:48:05.12/tape/low,11115,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:48:05.12:postob 2003.353.17:48:05.13:scan_name=353-1750 2003.353.17:48:05.14:source=3c274,122817.6,124002.0,1950.0 2003.353.17:48:11.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:48:16.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:48:25.43:!2003.353.17:50:09 2003.353.17:50:09.00:tape 2003.353.17:50:09.07/tape/low,11115,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:50:09.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:50:09.12:!2003.353.17:50:09 2003.353.17:50:09.12:preob 2003.353.17:50:11.88/tpical/21450,20922,21924,22347,22351,23334,23485,23588,46829,16110 2003.353.17:50:11.96/tpical/19414,19320,18979,19509,19701,19659,32139 2003.353.17:50:12.04:!2003.353.17:50:19 2003.353.17:50:19.00:tape 2003.353.17:50:19.07/tape/low,11230,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:50:19.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:50:19.08:midob 2003.353.17:50:19.19/tpi/16135,15758,16219,16578,16573,16483,16582,16729,35030,11683 2003.353.17:50:19.27/tpi/16281,16465,16626,16986,16744,16778,27387 2003.353.17:50:19.85/tsys1/53.9,53.7,50.3,50.7,50.8,42.5,42.4,43.0,52.5,46.7 2003.353.17:50:19.86/tsys2/66.2,73.5,90.1,85.7,72.4,74.4,73.8 2003.353.17:50:24.63/wx/-5.6,948.9,59.0 2003.353.17:50:24.73/cable/+3.83096E-02 2003.353.17:50:24.79/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,37112,31442,0,1pps 2003.353.17:50:24.84/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12317,70,4059,1pps 2003.353.17:50:24.92/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.34,lock,15990,15681,545,1pps 2003.353.17:50:25.01/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16132,16275,554,1pps 2003.353.17:50:25.10/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.22,lock,16293,16039,550,1pps 2003.353.17:50:25.60/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:50:26.00#setcl#time/319896203,1,2003,353,17,50,26.00,0.133,23.468,4 2003.353.17:50:26.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.17:50:28.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:50:28.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.17:50:28.20:!2003.353.17:51:57 2003.353.17:51:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.17:51:57.00:et 2003.353.17:51:57.04:!+3s 2003.353.17:52:00.05:tape 2003.353.17:52:00.12/tape/low,12553,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:52:00.12:postob 2003.353.17:52:00.13:scan_name=353-1756 2003.353.17:52:00.14:source=1606+106,160623.4,103700.0,1950.0 2003.353.17:52:06.65:sx4ca=5 2003.353.17:52:11.29/pass/5,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.17:52:20.43:!2003.353.17:55:59 2003.353.17:54:52.98;"weather - clear skys 2003.353.17:55:59.00:tape 2003.353.17:55:59.07/tape/low,12553,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:55:59.07:st=for,160 2003.353.17:55:59.12:!2003.353.17:55:59 2003.353.17:55:59.12:preob 2003.353.17:56:01.88/tpical/21359,20697,21520,21943,21036,22709,22728,22902,48536,16757 2003.353.17:56:01.96/tpical/19439,19510,18982,19024,19444,19620,33317 2003.353.17:56:02.04:!2003.353.17:56:09 2003.353.17:56:09.00:tape 2003.353.17:56:09.07/tape/low,12669,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.17:56:09.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.17:56:09.08:midob 2003.353.17:56:09.19/tpi/16095,15595,15963,16256,15560,16030,16051,16249,36312,12138 2003.353.17:56:09.27/tpi/16024,16203,16139,16040,15998,16146,27797 2003.353.17:56:09.85/tsys1/54.3,53.8,50.8,50.4,50.2,42.4,42.4,43.1,52.5,46.5 2003.353.17:56:09.86/tsys2/59.8,62.4,72.3,68.4,59.3,59.4,64.5 2003.353.17:56:14.86/wx/-5.8,948.9,58.4 2003.353.17:56:14.97/cable/+3.83075E-02 2003.353.17:56:15.03/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,36319,27801,0,1pps 2003.353.17:56:15.08/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,12139,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.17:56:15.16/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.12, -4.12,lock,15612,16154,545,1pps 2003.353.17:56:15.25/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 1.79, 1.34,lock,16041,16159,554,1pps 2003.353.17:56:15.34/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.32, 1.90,lock,16131,16171,550,1pps 2003.353.17:56:15.84/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.17:56:18.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.17:56:18.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.17:56:18.20:!2003.353.18:02:02 2003.353.17:56:19.00#setcl#time/319931503,1,2003,353,17,56,19.00,0.132,23.566,4 2003.353.17:56:19.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:02:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.18:02:02.00:et 2003.353.18:02:02.04:!+3s 2003.353.18:02:05.05:tape 2003.353.18:02:05.12/tape/low,17392,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:02:05.12:postob 2003.353.18:02:05.13:scan_name=353-1804 2003.353.18:02:05.14:source=0955+476,095508.5,473928.6,1950.0 2003.353.18:02:11.65:midtp 2003.353.18:02:14.37/tpzero/208,333,262,338,276,286,325,332,628,199 2003.353.18:02:14.45/tpzero/318,322,314,344,279,275,426 2003.353.18:02:15.17/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.33 2003.353.18:02:15.28/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.353.18:02:15.39/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.353.18:02:15.50/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.913 2003.353.18:02:15.61/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,6.042 2003.353.18:02:15.72/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.72 2003.353.18:02:15.83/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,58.35 2003.353.18:02:15.83:sx4cb=6 2003.353.18:02:20.85/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.18:02:29.99:fastf=0m11s 2003.353.18:02:41.09:!+5s 2003.353.18:02:46.10:!2003.353.18:03:58 2003.353.18:03:58.00:tape 2003.353.18:03:58.07/tape/low,17639,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:03:58.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.18:03:58.12:!2003.353.18:03:58 2003.353.18:03:58.12:preob 2003.353.18:04:00.88/tpical/21532,20985,21952,22350,22247,23250,23408,23120,46862,16054 2003.353.18:04:00.96/tpical/19991,19107,19107,19131,19676,19682,32235 2003.353.18:04:01.04:!2003.353.18:04:08 2003.353.18:04:08.00:tape 2003.353.18:04:08.07/tape/low,17523,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:04:08.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.18:04:08.08:midob 2003.353.18:04:08.19/tpi/16029,15631,16051,16299,16153,16022,16194,16029,34609,11412 2003.353.18:04:08.27/tpi/16281,15700,16092,15936,15984,16015,26720 2003.353.18:04:08.85/tsys1/51.7,51.4,48.2,47.5,46.9,39.2,39.6,39.8,49.9,43.5 2003.353.18:04:08.86/tsys2/55.9,58.7,68.0,63.4,55.3,55.8,62.0 2003.353.18:04:12.76/wx/-5.7,948.8,61.8 2003.353.18:04:12.89/cable/+3.83127E-02 2003.353.18:04:12.95/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,34630,26659,0,1pps 2003.353.18:04:13.00/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11422,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.18:04:13.08/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -4.12,lock,15632,15442,545,1pps 2003.353.18:04:13.17/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16063,15982,554,1pps 2003.353.18:04:13.25/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.22,lock,16086,16202,550,1pps 2003.353.18:04:13.75/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.18:04:14.00#setcl#time/319979003,1,2003,353,18,04,14.00,0.132,23.698,4 2003.353.18:04:14.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:04:16.06/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.18:04:16.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.18:04:16.20:!2003.353.18:05:46 2003.353.18:05:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.18:05:46.00:et 2003.353.18:05:46.04:!+3s 2003.353.18:05:49.05:tape 2003.353.18:05:49.12/tape/low,16201,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:05:49.12:postob 2003.353.18:05:49.13:scan_name=353-1808 2003.353.18:05:49.14:source=1156+295,115657.8,293126.1,1950.0 2003.353.18:05:55.65:check80r 2003.353.18:06:28.38?ERROR qg -303 Track 9 parity errors exceed threshold. 2003.353.18:06:28.38/parity/34.,119.,1159.,16.,0.,6.,2.,4.,10.,24.,302.,2.,40.,24. 2003.353.18:06:28.39/parity/0,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0 2003.353.18:06:53.96:sx4cb=6 2003.353.18:06:58.60/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-219.4,,0.6, 2003.353.18:07:07.74:!2003.353.18:07:59 2003.353.18:07:59.00:tape 2003.353.18:07:59.07/tape/low,16200,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:07:59.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.18:07:59.12:!2003.353.18:07:59 2003.353.18:07:59.12:preob 2003.353.18:08:01.88/tpical/21486,20952,21969,22388,22309,23296,23510,23214,46852,16094 2003.353.18:08:01.96/tpical/19307,19223,19323,19354,19880,19910,31968 2003.353.18:08:02.04:!2003.353.18:08:09 2003.353.18:08:09.00:tape 2003.353.18:08:09.07/tape/low,16084,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:08:09.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.18:08:09.08:midob 2003.353.18:08:09.19/tpi/15975,15570,16056,16307,16215,16091,16263,16096,34579,11436 2003.353.18:08:09.27/tpi/15744,15819,16259,16134,16200,16207,26436 2003.353.18:08:09.85/tsys1/51.5,51.0,48.1,47.3,47.1,39.5,39.6,39.9,49.8,43.4 2003.353.18:08:09.86/tsys2/56.3,59.2,67.7,63.7,56.2,55.9,61.1 2003.353.18:08:14.98/wx/-5.5,948.6,57.7 2003.353.18:08:15.12/cable/+3.83131E-02 2003.353.18:08:15.18/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,34576,26388,0,1pps 2003.353.18:08:15.23/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,11435,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.18:08:15.31/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -3.91, -3.91,lock,15586,16140,545,1pps 2003.353.18:08:15.40/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 2.01, 1.57,lock,16101,16003,554,1pps 2003.353.18:08:15.49/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 2.63, 2.11,lock,16265,15988,550,1pps 2003.353.18:08:15.99/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.18:08:18.06/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.18:08:18.19/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.18:08:18.19:!2003.353.18:09:47 2003.353.18:08:19.02#setcl#time/320003505,1,2003,353,18,08,19.00,0.111,23.766,2 2003.353.18:08:19.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:09:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.18:09:47.00:et 2003.353.18:09:47.04:!+3s 2003.353.18:09:50.05:tape 2003.353.18:09:50.12/tape/low,14762,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:09:50.12:postob 2003.353.18:09:50.13:scan_name=353-1815 2003.353.18:09:50.14:source=1741-038,174120.6,-034848.9,1950.0 2003.353.18:09:56.65:sx4cb=6 2003.353.18:10:01.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.353.18:10:10.43:!2003.353.18:15:00 2003.353.18:15:00.00:tape 2003.353.18:15:00.07/tape/low,14762,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:15:00.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.18:15:00.12:!2003.353.18:15:00 2003.353.18:15:00.12:preob 2003.353.18:15:02.88/tpical/19582,20180,20554,20501,20269,21240,21141,21198,58497,20181 2003.353.18:15:02.96/tpical/18745,18586,18521,18581,18953,19000,37879 2003.353.18:15:03.04:!2003.353.18:15:10 2003.353.18:15:10.00:tape 2003.353.18:15:10.07/tape/low,14645,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:15:10.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.18:15:10.08:midob 2003.353.18:15:10.19/tpi/15572,16061,16181,16071,15909,16041,15972,16067,46158,15563 2003.353.18:15:10.27/tpi/15853,15848,16107,16043,15961,15988,32285 2003.353.18:15:10.85/tsys1/69.0,68.7,65.5,63.9,64.5,54.5,54.5,55.2,66.4,59.9 2003.353.18:15:10.86/tsys2/69.8,73.7,85.0,80.4,68.1,67.8,74.0 2003.353.18:15:15.59/wx/-5.1,948.7,54.3 2003.353.18:15:15.60/cable/+3.83056E-02 2003.353.18:15:15.66/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,46162,32371,0,1pps 2003.353.18:15:15.71/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,15563,71,4063,1pps 2003.353.18:15:15.79/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.04, -5.28,lock,16056,15622,545,1pps 2003.353.18:15:15.88/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,16038,16122,554,1pps 2003.353.18:15:15.97/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.57, 1.10,lock,16095,16080,550,1pps 2003.353.18:15:16.47/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.18:15:17.02#setcl#time/320045305,1,2003,353,18,15,17.00,0.111,23.882,2 2003.353.18:15:17.02#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:15:19.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.18:15:19.20/onsource/TRACKING 2003.353.18:15:19.20:!2003.353.18:22:26 2003.353.18:17:23.64@wx 2003.353.18:17:28.15/wx/-5.1,948.6,54.5 2003.353.18:22:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.18:22:26.00:et 2003.353.18:22:26.04:!+3s 2003.353.18:22:29.05:tape 2003.353.18:22:29.12/tape/low,08816,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:22:29.12:postob 2003.353.18:22:29.13:scan_name=353-1825 2003.353.18:22:29.13:source=2136+141,213637.4,141000.5,1950.0 2003.353.18:22:35.65:sx4cb=6 2003.353.18:22:40.29/pass/6,,auto,-220.0,,-220.2,,-0.2, 2003.353.18:22:49.43:!2003.353.18:24:57 2003.353.18:24:57.00:tape 2003.353.18:24:57.07/tape/low,08816,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:24:57.07:st=rev,160 2003.353.18:24:57.12:!2003.353.18:24:57 2003.353.18:24:57.12:preob 2003.353.18:24:59.88/tpical/19079,19251,19946,20158,20389,20703,20943,20667,62843,21592 2003.353.18:24:59.95/tpical/19005,18873,18539,18504,18846,19109,39875 2003.353.18:25:00.02:!2003.353.18:25:07 2003.353.18:25:07.00:tape 2003.353.18:25:07.07/tape/low,08700,off,moving,locked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:25:07.07:data_valid=on 2003.353.18:25:07.07:midob 2003.353.18:25:07.18/tpi/15453,15605,15967,16131,16317,15986,16135,15978,50515,16996 2003.353.18:25:07.25/tpi/16217,16242,16251,16109,16018,16245,34345 2003.353.18:25:07.82/tsys1/75.7,75.4,71.0,70.6,70.9,59.9,59.2,60.1,72.8,65.8 2003.353.18:25:07.82/tsys2/74.1,78.7,90.6,85.6,72.4,72.5,79.7 2003.353.18:25:12.95/wx/-5.6,948.4,56.4 2003.353.18:25:13.04/cable/+3.83050E-02 2003.353.18:25:13.10/ifdab/0,0,nor,nor,1,50479,34286,0,1pps 2003.353.18:25:13.15/ifdcd/0,0,nor,nor,1,16985,70,4063,1pps 2003.353.18:25:13.23/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.53, -5.53,lock,15604,16103,545,1pps 2003.353.18:25:13.31/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.23, -0.32,lock,15965,15911,554,1pps 2003.353.18:25:13.39/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.34, 0.86,lock,16268,16158,550,1pps 2003.353.18:25:13.89/form/c,8,1:1,off,1,2.92,a000,ok,a000,ok,ok 2003.353.18:25:16.07/gps-fmout/T +1.13E-05 2003.353.18:25:16.20?ERROR an -103 Pointing computer tracking errors are too large. 2003.353.18:25:16.20?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.353.18:25:16.21/onsource/SLEWING 2003.353.18:25:16.21:!2003.353.18:28:58 2003.353.18:25:17.01#setcl#time/320105304,1,2003,353,18,25,17.00,0.120,24.049,3 2003.353.18:25:17.01#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:28:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.353.18:28:58.00:et 2003.353.18:28:58.04:!+3s 2003.353.18:29:01.05:tape 2003.353.18:29:01.12/tape/low,05604,off,stopped,unlocked,ready,10.6,85,okay 2003.353.18:29:01.12:postob 2003.353.18:29:01.13:fastr=4m1s 2003.353.18:33:02.23:unlod 2003.353.18:33:15.04/ !!!! wake up !!!! 2003.353.18:33:58.12:sched_end 2003.353.18:33:58.13&sched_end/"end of session from gilmore creek 2003.353.18:33:58.13:*end of schedule 2003.353.18:35:33.69;bread 2003.353.18:35:33.78/bbc01/612.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -4.57, -5.79,lock,15407,16140,540,1pps 2003.353.18:35:33.87/bbc02/652.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -5.28, -5.28,lock,15688,16232,545,1pps 2003.353.18:35:33.96/bbc03/752.89,a,4,4,1,agc, -0.90, -0.04,lock,15732,15925,542,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.05/bbc04/912.89,a,4,4,1,agc, 5.27, 4.66,lock,16127,16046,548,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.14/bbc05/652.99,c,4,4,1,agc, -5.79, -4.80,lock,15476,15411,556,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.23/bbc06/772.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 0.49, 0.09,lock,16116,16122,554,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.31/bbc07/832.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 2.11, 2.22,lock,16106,15996,544,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.40/bbc08/852.99,c,4,4,1,agc, 2.73, 2.63,lock,15907,16246,551,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.49/bbc09/687.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -2.91, -3.49,lock,16163,16269,546,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.58/bbc10/697.89,b,4,4,1,agc, -2.01, -2.91,lock,16184,15954,549,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.67/bbc11/717.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 1.45, 0.98,lock,16045,15975,550,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.76/bbc12/772.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 0.61, 0.23,lock,15897,16169,553,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.85/bbc13/807.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 4.26, 3.66,lock,16038,15990,543,1pps 2003.353.18:35:34.94/bbc14/812.89,b,4,4,1,agc, 3.02, 3.92,lock,15959,15916,552,1pps 2003.353.18:35:43.94;rxmon 2003.353.18:35:44.06/rx/00(front),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.353.18:35:44.17/rx/02(lo),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.353.18:35:44.28/rx/03(dcal),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.353.18:35:44.39/rx/0E(lo5mhz),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,1.911 2003.353.18:35:44.50/rx/17(pres),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,5.953 2003.353.18:35:44.61/rx/1E(20k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.97 2003.353.18:35:44.72/rx/1F(70k),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,59.74 2003.353.18:35:56.81;sxcts 2003.353.18:35:57.48/tpi/15374,15657,15703,16106,15464,16075,16065,16210,47855,16073 2003.353.18:35:57.56/tpi/16142,16135,16015,15868,16012,15936,32895 2003.353.18:35:59.71/tpzero/203,334,248,305,276,279,312,316,740,239 2003.353.18:35:59.79/tpzero/320,321,306,337,263,262,478 2003.353.18:36:02.01/tpical/19226,19544,19798,20346,19508,21078,21076,21222,60180,20654 2003.353.18:36:02.09/tpical/19023,18887,18353,18350,18963,18871,38538 2003.353.18:36:02.74/tsys1/70.9,71.0,67.9,67.1,67.6,56.8,56.6,57.1,68.8,62.2 2003.353.18:36:02.75/tsys2/71.4,74.7,87.3,81.3,69.4,69.4,74.7 2003.353.18:36:03.18;cable 2003.353.18:36:03.24/cable/+3.83063E-02 2003.353.18:36:20.19;wx 2003.353.18:36:23.96/wx/36.1,948.4,55.4 2003.353.18:36:27.35;wx 2003.353.18:36:32.15/wx/-5.5,948.4,55.5 2003.353.18:36:46.00#setcl#time/320174203,1,2003,353,18,36,46.00,0.129,24.240,4 2003.353.18:36:46.00#setcl#model/old,1068657287,-2316,311447716,0.084,37.275,rate 2003.353.18:43:35.07;"Session r4102 stop message for Gilmore Creek. 2003.353.18:43:35.10;"--------------------------------------------- 2003.353.18:43:35.12;"Comments: 2003.353.18:43:35.13;"220 of 238 scans completed. 2003.353.18:43:35.15;"missed scans from 142618z to 150331z due to x-axis hydraulics offline. 2003.353.18:43:35.16;"missed scans from 162538z to 173341z due to x-axis hydraulics offline. problem was fixed we had blown an o-ring and low fluid levels tripped motor offline. 2003.353.18:43:35.18;" 2003.353.18:43:35.19;"Tape Inventory: 15 thin 2003.353.18:43:35.20;"Observation finished at: 182858 UT 2003.353.18:45:26.49;stow 2003.353.18:45:26.49&stow/antenna=aux,sto 2003.353.18:45:26.52/antenna/ACK 2003.353.18:45:46.98;log=wx353
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254619
# Presentation: 254619 ## Reducing Emissions from Compressor Seals **Lessons Learned** **from Natural Gas STAR** **Transmission Technology Transfer Workshop** **Duke Energy Gas Transmission** **Interstate Natural Gas Association of America (INGAA) and** **EPA’s Natural Gas STAR Program** **September 22, 2004** ## Compressor Seals: Agenda - Methane Losses - Methane Recovery - Is Recovery Profitable? - Industry Experience - Discussion Questions ## Methane Losses from Transmission and Storage - Transmission and storage sector responsible for 96 billion cubic feet (Bcf) in methane emissions **Trans & Storage ** **96 Bcf ** **Production ** **149 Bcf** **Processing ** **36 Bcf ** **Distribution ** **77 Bcf** **26 Bcf** **5 Bcf** **20 Bcf** **1 Bcf** **Oil Downstream ** **2 Bcf ** - Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks 1990 - 2002 **Notes:** Emissions from 2002 inventory of natural gas systems and petroleum systems. iSTAR reductions data taken in September 2004. ## Methane Losses from Compressor Seals **Methane Losses from ****Compressor Seals** - Compressor seals contribute 50% of transmission and storage emissions **40 Bcf from reciprocating compressors** **8 Bcf from centrifugal compressors** **Pneumatic Devices** **11 Bcf** **Centrifugal Compressors** **8 Bcf** **Pipeline Leaks** **7 Bcf ** **Gas Engine Exhaust** **11 Bcf** **Reciprocating** **Compressors ** **40 Bcf** **Station Venting** **7 Bcf** **Other Sources ** **5 Bcf** **Station Fugitives** **7 Bcf** - Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks 1990 - 2002 **Notes:** Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks 1990 - 2002 ## Compressor Seals What is the problem? - Compressor seals account for 13% of natural gas industry emissions **Over 45,000 compressors in the natural gas industry** **Over 8,500 compressors in gas transmission sector** **Notes:** Compressors are found throughout the natural gas industry. At the well-head of gas and crude oil with associated gas production where the well-head flowing pressure has declined There are about 25,000 production compressors in the U.S. Gathering/booster stations pick-up the gas from several wells and boost it into gas processing plants. Most of the gas processing operations are carried out at elevated pressures to induce condensation of gas liquids at ambient temperatures Residue gas, primarily methane with some ethane, is compressed for delivery to the transmission cross-country transmission systems There are about 5,000 methane compressors in the U.S. processing sector Transmission pipelines re-compress the gas every few hundred miles as it is economically transported from remote production regions to industrial, commercial and residential centers for consumption Gas is sometimes stored in underground caverns or depleted reservoirs near the consumer locations, for re-production during peak demands There are about 8,500 transmission and storage compressors The distribution systems do not usually operate compressors, but rather control the pressure reduction and delivery up to the consumer’s meter. ## Methane Losses from Reciprocating Compressors - Reciprocating compressor rod packing leaks some gas by design **Newly installed packing may leak 60 cubic feet per hour (cf/h)** **Worn packing has been reported to leak up to 900 cf/h** **Notes:** Numbers from Rod Packing LL ## Reciprocating Compressor Rod Packing - A series of flexible rings fit around the shaft to prevent leakage - Leakage still occurs through nose gasket, between packing cups, around the rings and between rings and shaft ## Gas STAR Partners Reduce Emission with Economic Rod Packing Replacement - Compare current leak rate to initial leak rateto determine leak reduction expected - Monitor and record baseline packing leakage and piston rod wear - Assess costs of replacements - Determine economic replacement threshold - Replace packing and rods where cost-effective - Decision Process ## Methane Recovery Through Economic Rod Packing Replacement - Step 1: Monitor and record baseline leakage and rod wear **Establishing baseline leak rates and monitoring rod wear can help to track leakage and evaluate economics** - Step 2: Compare current leak rate to initial leak rate to determine leak reduction expected **Leak Reduction Expected (LRE) = Current Leak Rate (CL) – Initial Leak Rate (IL)** **Example: The current leak rate is measured as 100 cf/h, the same component leaked 11.5 cf/h when first installed** ** **** **** **** ****LRE = 100 cf/h – 11.5 cf/h**** **** **** ****LRE = 88.5 cf/h** **Notes:** Example from Rod Packing LL ## Methane Recovery Through Economic Rod Packing Replacement - Step 3: Assess costs of replacements **A set of rings:**** **** ****$ 500**** **** to **** ****$ 800**** ****(with cups and case)**** ****$1500**** **** to **** ****$2500** **Rods:**** **** **** **** ****$1800**** **** to**** ****$3500** - Step 4: Determine economic replacement threshold **Partners can determine economic threshold for all replacements** - @ interest *i* **Notes:** Numbers from Rod Packing LL ## Is Recovery Profitable? - Step 5: Replace packing and rods when cost-effective **Example:** **Rod and Rings** - Rings: $1,200 - Rod: $7,000 - Gas: $3/Mcf - Operating: 8,000 hrs/yr **Rings Only** - Rings: $1,200 - Rod: $0 - Gas: $3/Mcf - Operating: 8,000 hrs/yr - Based on 10% interest rate - Mcf = thousand cubic feet, scfh = standard cubic feet per hour **Notes:** Numbers from Rod Packing LL ## Industry Experience - One partner reported replacing worn rod packing rings on 15 compressor units - Estimated gas savings of 7,000 Mcf or $21,000 @ $3/Mcf - Cost including materials and labor of $17,000 - Payback period of less than one year **Notes:** Partner experience from Rod Packing LL ## Methane Losses from Centrifugal Compressors - Centrifugal compressor wet seals leak little gas at the seal face **Seal oil degassing may vent 40 to 200 cubic feet per minute (cf/m) to the atmosphere** **A Natural Gas STAR partner reported wet seal emissions of 75 Mcf/day (52 cf/m)** **Shaft****Seal** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Centrifugal Compressor Wet Seals - High pressure seal oil is circulates between rings around the compressor shaft - Gas absorbs in the oil on the inboard side - Little gas leaks through the oil seal - Seal oil degassingvents methane to the atmosphere ## Gas STAR Partners Reduce Emissions with Dry Seals - Dry seal springs press the stationary ring in the seal housing against the rotating ring when the compressor is not rotating - At high rotation speed, gas is pumped between the seal rings creating a high pressure barrier to leakage - Only a very smallamount of gas escapes through the gap - 2 seals are often used in tandem ## Methane Recovery with Dry Seals - Dry seals typically leak at a rate of only 0.5 to 3 cf/m **Significantly less than the 40 to 200 cf/m emissions from wet seals** - These savings translate to approximately $48,960 to $279,360 in annual gas value **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Other Benefits with Dry Seals - Aside from gas savings and reduced emissions, dry seals also: **Lower operating cost** **Dry seals do not require seal oil make-up** **Reduced power consumption** **Wet seals require 50 to 100 kiloWatt hours (kW/hr) for ancillary equipment while dry seals need only 5 kW/hr** **Improve reliability** **More compressor downtime is due to wet seals** **Eliminate seal oil leakage into the pipelines** **Dry seals lower drag in pipelines (and horsepower to overcome)** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Gas STAR Partners Reduce Emissions with Dry Seal Replacement - Estimate savings of dry seal retrofit - Identify candidates for wet seal replacement - Determine costs for conversion to dry seals - Compare costs to savings - Decision Process ## Decision Process to Replace Seals - Step 1: Identify candidates for replacement **Dry seals are routinely used for compressors operating up to 1,500 pounds per square inch (psi), up to 400o Fahrenheit** - Step 2: Estimate savings from a dry seal **Gas savings between 34 to 196 cf/m** **Other dry seal benefits ≈ $63,000/yr** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Decision Process to Replace Seals - Step 3: Determine dry seal conversion costs **Dry seals cost $5,000 to $6,000 per inch of shaft diameter or $8,000 to $10,000 for tandem seals** **Beam compressors require two seals, one at each end** **Overhung compressors require one seal at the inboard end** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Decision Process to Replace Seals - Step 4: Compare costs and savings for a 6-inch shaft beam compressor **Flowserve Corporation** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Is Recovery Profitable? - Replacing wet seals in a 6 inch shaft beam compressor operating 8,000 hr/yr **Net Present Value = $531,940** **Assuming a 10% discount over 5 years** **Internal Rate of Return = 86%** **Payback Period = 14 months** **Ranges from 8 to 24 months based on wet seal leakage rate** - Economics are better for new installations **Vendors report that 90% of compressors sold to the natural gas industry are centrifugal with dry seals** **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Industry Experience - One Gas STAR partner replaced a wet seal with a dry seal and reduced emissions by 97% - Dry seal leaked 2 Mcf/d versus wet seal emissions of 75 Mcf/d **Notes:** Numbers from Wet/Dry Seal LL ## Discussion Questions - To what extent have you replaced rod packing or seals in your reciprocating and centrifugal compressors? - How can the Lessons Learned study be improved upon or altered for use in your operation(s)? - What are the barriers (technological, economic, lack of information, regulatory, etc.) that are preventing you from implementing this technology?
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2006 Highway Motorcycle Certification Data Engine Family Manufacturer Engine OEM Certificate No. # of Cylinders Displacement 1 Displacement 2 Displacement 3 Displacement 4 Fuel System Aspiration Models Test Number Test Model Displacement EDV_VIN Test Fuel Catalyst Y/N EGR_Y/N # of Carb. Charge Air Cooler Electronic Control Air Injection Engine Code Rated Power Unit @ Engine RPM EIM (kg) ROAD_LOAD_(nt) Transmission Type N/V Emision Unit HC Test NOX Test HC_NOX test CO Test CO2 test DF Type HC DF NOX DF HC_NOX DF CO DF HC UL NOX UL HC_NOX UL CO UL HC cert NOX cert HC_NOX cert CO cert Class I 6CHMC0.05NFG Chuanl Motorcycle USA Co. Ltd. TAIZHOU CHUANL MOTORCYCLE MANUFACTURING CO LTD 6CHMC0.05NFG-001 1 50 CARB NA "LB50QT-15, LB50QT-2, LB50QT-20, LB50QT-21, LB50QT-22, LB50QT-23, LB50QT-3, LB50QT-4, LB50QT-5, LB50QT-6, LB50QT-7" 4 LB50QT-2 50 CHL0502006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA CHL-050-2006 2.2 kW 7500 200 115.1 CV 39.2 G/KM 0.63 7.169 M 1.085 1.065 0.679 0.679 7.588 0.7 7.6 6CLTC.049DQT "Caltestco, Ltd." "Luoyang Northern Ek Chor Motorcycle Co., Ltd." 6CLTC.049DQT-001-R01 1 49.4 CARB NA "DY50QT, DY50QT-2, DY50QT-3" 4 DY50QT 49 LATTCBY158010513 INDOLENE Y N 1 A ICM NA N/A 2.2 kW 7000 170 109 A 144 G/KM 0.18 3.62 M 1 1.94 1 1 0.44 3.62 0.18 0.26 3.6 6CLTC.150MT4 "Caltestco, Ltd." 6CLTC.150MT4-002 1 103 124.6 149.6 CARB NA "DY100T, DY125T-20, DY125T-21, DY125T-4A, DY125T-5A, DY125T-7, DY150T, DY150T-4, DY150T-5" 4 DY150T-4 149 LATTCKPY758082607 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA N/A 6.8 kW 7000 200 115.1 A 94.03 G/KM 0.17 0.16 0.33 2.4 52.6 M 1.32 1 1 1 0.23 0.16 0.39 2.4 0.23 0.16 2.4 6DDIC0.05JNK "Dealer's Distributing, Inc." GUANGZHOU PANYU HUANAN MOTORS INDUSTRY CO LTD 6DDIC0.05JNK-001 1 50 CARB NA "F50 KEYWEST, FD50 DAYTONA" 4 F50 KEYWEST 50 DDIC050006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA DDIC-O50-JNK 2.3 kW 7500 160 107 CV 23.3 G/KM 0.632 7.002 M 1.104 1.104 1.033 0.693 0.693 7.37 0.7 7.2 6DFRC.1109KA Dafier Inc. 6DFRC.1109KA-003 1 108 50 CARB NA "QM110GY, QM110GY-1, QM110GY-2, QM110GY-3, QM50GY, QM50GY-1, QM50GY-2, QM50GY-3" 4 QM110GY 108 LAEKWZ4006B030001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA M125FMH 5.1 kW 8000 200 8.7 M 174 G/KM 0.576 0.25 0.828 4.7 36 M 1.09 1.837 1.359 1 0.583 0.53 1.135 0.1 0.63 0.46 4.7 6DFRC.1509FA "Dafier, Inc." Jinan Qingqi Motorcycle Co. Ltd. 6DFRC.1509FA-002-R01 1 124.5 149.6 CARB NA "QM125T-10A, QM125T-10D, QM125T-10E, QM125T-10H, QM125T-10K, QM125T-10V, QM150T-10A, QM150T-10D, QM150T-10E, QM150T-10H, QM150T-10K, QM150T-10V" 4 QM150T-10A 149 1161-1 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR I2 6 kW 7000 A G/KM 0.2 0.12 0.32 2.95 37 0.32 2.95 2.9 6DLMC0.10NFG Daelim Motor USA DAELIM MOTOR CO LTD 6DLMC0.10NFG-001 1 100 CARB NA DELFINO 4 DELFINO 100 KMY0SH1004C048631 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA DLM-100-06 6.3 kW 7000 160 107 A 23 G/KM 0.594 9.707 M 1.071 1.071 1.005 0.636 0.636 9.756 0.6 9.8 6DLMC0.12JNK Daelim Motor USA DAELIM MOTOR CO LTD 6DLMC0.12JNK-003 1 124 CARB NA "DAYSTAR, ROADWIN" 4 DAYSTAR 124 KMYBA4BLS4C002072 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA DLM-125-02 9.8 kW 9000 240 123.3 M 22.5 G/KM 0.527 7.781 M 1.097 1.097 1 0.578 0.578 7.781 0.6 7.8 6DLMC0.12NFG Daelim Motor USA DAELIM MOTOR CO LTD 6DLMC0.12NFG-002 1 125 CARB NA "HISTORY, NS125 DLX, S2 125" 4 S2 125 124 KMYSG125FK4415224 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA 125-01-06 8.4 kW 8500 220 119.2 A 18.7 G/KM 0.474 8.502 M 1.117 1.117 1.04 0.529 0.529 8.845 0.5 8.8 6GMIC0.05GSV "GMI-RSM Ventures, L.L.C." 6GMIC0.05GSV-001 1 49.4 CARB NA "Euro Turbo, GMI 101, GMI 102, GMI 104, GMI 105, GMI 106, Graduate, MT50QT-10A, MT50QT-13, MT50QT-15A, MT50QT-15B, MT50QT-16, MT50QT-18, MT50QT-18A, MT50QT-2, MT50QT-20, MT50QT-3, Metro Duo, Metro Retro, Metro Sport, SC50" 4 MT50QT-13 49 LYK5131375S130538 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 1.8 kW 7000 170 109 A 108 G/KM 0.16 0.09 0.25 4.7 28.8 M 1 1 1 1 0.16 0.09 0.25 4.7 0.16 0.09 4.7 6HBMC0.12NFG Hi-Bird Motorcycle USA CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6HBMC0.12NFG-001 1 125 CARB NA QH-125-10 4 QH-125-10 125 HBM125005 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA HBM-CI-125 7 kW 7000 170 109 M 31.3 G/KM 0.604 9.236 M 1.205 1.048 0.753 0.753 9.614 0.7 9.7 6HNXC0.05AJA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.05AJA-011 1 49 CARB NA "Metropolitan, RUCKUS" 4 NPS50 49 JH2AF58096K300001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR 6AA1 3.2 kW 8000 170 109 CV 134.2 G/KM 0.63 0.14 8.1 33 0.63 0.14 8.1 0.6 8.1 6HNXC0.08AAA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda de Mexico, S.A. de C.V." 6HNXC0.08AAA-006 1 80 CARB NA CH80 5 CH80 80 JH2HF0318FS000001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA FAD2 3.7 kW 7500 170 109 CV 118.9 G/KM 0.72 0.0001 0.72 7 32.2 M 1 1 1 1 0.72 0.001 0.0001 7 0.7 7 6HYOC0.05SF5 "Hyosung Motors America, Inc." 6HYOC0.05SF5-001 1 49 CARB NA "SF50 Prima, SF50R Rally, X-Peed 50R" 5 SF50R 49 300547 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR N/A 2.6 kW 6800 175 109 A 137 G/KM 0.96 0.1 1.06 1.01 63.5 M 1.05 1 1 1.11 0.95 1.11 1.05 1.44 0.95 0.11 1.4 6JNYC0.05NFG Jonway Motorcycle USA JONWAY GROUP CO LTD 6JNYC0.05NFG-001 1 50 CARB NA "YY50QT-16, YY50QT-20, YY50QT-28, YY50QT-5, YY50QT-6, YY50QT-8" 4 YY50QT-5 50 JNY050 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA JNY-HMC-050 2.5 kW 7500 170 109 CV 27.2 G/KM 0.808 10.916 M 1.03 1.03 1.011 0.832 0.832 11.036 0.8 11 6JNYC0.15NFG Jonway Motorcycle USA JONWAY GROUP CO LTD 6JNYC0.15NFG-002 1 150 CARB NA "YY150T-12, YY150T-2, YY150T-22, YY150T-28, YY150T-2A, YY150T-4" 4 YY150T-2A 150 JNY150006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA JNY-150-2006 5.8 kW 7000 220 119.2 CV 24.5 G/KM 0.611 9.001 M 1.089 1 1.089 1.086 0.665 0.629 9.885 0.7 9.8 6JSHC0.05NFG System Launch Associates JIANGMEN SINO-HONGKONG BAOTIAN MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRIAL CO LTD 6JSHC0.05NFG-001 1 50 CARB NA "BT49QT-10, BT49QT-11, BT49QT-12, BT49QT-13, BT49QT-15, BT49QT-2, BT49QT-7, BT49QT-9, BT49QT-90, BT50QT-11, BT50QT-9" 4 BT49QT-7 50 JSH049001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA 049-01 2.2 kW 7500 170 109 CV 22.2 G/KM 0.554 6.357 M 1.124 1 0.623 0.623 6.357 0.6 6.4 6KEEC0.05NFG Keen Perception Industries RHINO POWER SPORTS MFG CO LTD 6KEEC0.05NFG-001 1 50 72 CARB NA "badboyCX, bb70" 4 MB70 72 KEE050HMC INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA HMC001 3.3 kW 7500 160 107 M 25 G/KM 0.883 0.661 1.544 10.909 M 1 1.08 1 1 0.87 0.71 1.6 10.9 0.9 10.8 6KEEC0.12NFG Keen Perception Industries RHINO POWER SPORTS MFG CO LTD 6KEEC0.12NFG-002 1 107 124 97 CARB NA "bb100, bb110, bb125" 4 MB125 124 KEE124DB INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA HMC002 8.3 kW 8000 160 107 M 26.6 G/KM 0.751 8.295 M 1.008 1.008 1 0.757 1.4 8.3 0.8 8.3 6KNGC.080HZH "Kangchao Group (USA), Inc." Zhejiang Health Ascend Industry Co. Ltd. 6KNGC.080HZH-001-R01 1 50 72 CARB NA "BDR50, LUV50, MOE80, NCE80, PWM80, QTV80, SCK80, SSR50, XTR50, XXR50" 4 SCK80 72 1196-1 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR HZH 3.4 kW 7500 210 107 A 114.3 G/KM 0.123 3.271 0.123 0.18 0.303 3.271 0.12 0.18 3.3 6KYMC0.05VAP Kymco USA 6KYMC0.05VAP-001 1 49.4 CARB NA "Agility 50, People S 50, Vitality 50" 4 Vitality 50 49 RFBB200103230009 INDOLENE Y N 1 N NA NA N/A 2.6 kW 7500 170 109 A 111.4 G/KM 0.83 0.23 1.06 5.45 54 M 1 1 1 1 0.83 0.23 1.059 5.45 0.83 5.5 6LSMC.049LSM LS Motorsports "Zhejiang Lingyun Motorcycle Co., Ltd." 6LSMC.049LSM-001 1 49 CARB NA "Aero, Retro" 4 Aero GTX 49 L1ETBJP436A100001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA 50S 3.2 bhp 8000 190 113.1 CV 1 G/KM 0.23 0.384 0.298 M 1 1 1 1 0.2 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.3 6MODC0.15FKD MOD Cycles Corporation DE CELESTE SA 6MODC0.15FKD-001 1 149 CARB NA SUNTRIKE 150 4 SUNTRIKE 150 149 9UATB910851000101 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA MOD-150-06 8 kW 8000 250 125.3 CV 34 G/KM 0.662 9.567 M 1.107 1.107 1.023 0.733 0.733 9.784 0.7 9.8 6ODSC.150LHM ODES Motorcycle Industry Corporation Chongqing Loncin Industry Co. Ltd. 6ODSC.150LHM-002 1 124 147 49 CARB NA "ODES125, ODES150, ODES50" 4 ODES150 147 1196-1 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR LHM 6 kW 7000 G/KM 0.12 0.18 0.3 3.27 49 0.3 3.27 3.3 6ODSC.175HDA ODES Motorcycle Industry Corporation Chongqing Dajiang Motorcycle Co. Ltd. 6ODSC.175HDA-001 1 124 147 168 CARB NA "DJ125GJ-A, DJ150GYII, DJ175GY" 4 DJ175GY 168 1196 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR I2 10 kW 7500 M G/KM 0.6 4.7 0.9 4.7 4.7 6PACC0.15SCH "Pacific Cycle, Inc." GUANGZHOU PANYU HUANAN MOTORS GROUP CO LTD 6PACC0.15SCH-001 1 149 CARB NA "SCHWINN GRADUATE 150, SCHWINN SPORT LX" 4 FY125T-3A 149 LE8TGJP3421004606 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA PAC-06-01 7.4 kW 5500 190 113.1 CV 20.1 G/KM 0.664 6.402 M 1.1386 1.1386 1.015 0.76 0.76 6.5 0.8 6 6PVMC.049C38 "Piaggio Group Americas, Inc." Piaggio & C. S.p.A 6PVMC.049C38-002 1 49.4 CARB NA Vespa LX 50 4 Vespa LX 50 49 ZAPC386B565000999 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ECM PAIR N/A 3.1 kW 8750 190 113.1 A 139.2 G/KM 0.32 0.09 0.41 8.5 45.9 M 1.1 1 1 1.2 0.34 0.09 0.43 9.8 0.34 0.09 9.8 6PVMC0.15M42 "Piaggio Group Americas, Inc." Piaggio & C. S.p.A 6PVMC0.15M42-001 1 149 CARB NA "Derbi Boulevard, Fly 150, LX 150" 4 Piaggio Fly 150 149 ZAPM428F765000999 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ECM PAIR N/A 8.7 kW 7750 200 115.1 A 87.8 G/KM 0.15 0.14 0.28 3.9 75.9 M 1 1 1 1.4 0.15 0.14 0.28 5.5 0.15 0.14 5.5 6QMGC0.05QJ2 "Qianjiang USA,Inc" Qianjiang Motorcycles Group 6QMGC0.05QJ2-001 1 49.3 CARB NA "50QT-2, 50QT-21M, 50QT-21N, 50QT-22, 50QT-5, B05, B08, BR50, Dino, Focus, GMI107, GMI108, GMI109, Hurricane, Ideo, Matrix, Moto Uptown, Raptor, Rex, SC50, Strada RX8, Strada RX8i, Venus, Xor" 4 Raptor 49 LAWTAAMT26V100429 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR N/A 2.1 kW 6000 180 111.1 A 98.7 G/KM 0.56 0.04 0.6 4.2 50.1 M 1 1.22 1 1 0.56 0.05 4.2 0.56 0.05 4.2 6SCEC.125PAL Genuine Scooter "Motive Power Industry Co., Ltd." 6SCEC.125PAL-001 1 110 124.5 CARB NA "Buddy, My Bubu" 4 My Bubu 124 RFVPAC20941000028 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA 50S 9.2 bhp 8000 180 111 CV 1 G/KW-HR 0.608 0.193 5.255 50.4 M 1.038 1 1 1 0.629 0.001 5.215 0.6 5 6SCEC.150CPL Genuine Scooter "Motive Power Industry Co., Ltd." 6SCEC.150CPL-002 1 147.5 148 CARB NA "Blur, TO-Rex, TR3" 4 T-Rex 147 RFVCPC50141000081 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA 50S 11.4 bhp 7500 200 129.2 CV 1 G/KW-HR 0.434 0.2 6.856 51.7 M 1 1 1 1 0.629 0.001 5.215 0.4 7 6SIAC.150HLH "Sun Right International of America,Inc" JIANGSU LINHAI POWER MACHINERY GROUP CORPORATION 6SIAC.150HLH-001 1 147 CARB NA "AEOLUS150, LH150, POWERMAXX150, SR150" 4 LH150 147 1175 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR HLH 6 kW 7000 200 98 A 103 G/KM 0.468 0.32 0.788 1.94 37 M 6.985 1 0.468 0.32 0.788 1.94 0.47 1.9 6SUNC.150SCA "SunL Group, Inc." JIANGSU LINHAI POWER MACHINERY GROUP CORPORATION 6SUNC.150SCA-001 1 147 CARB NA "SL-150T-12, SL-150T-18, SL-150T-19, SL-150T-21, SL-150T-26, SL-150T-27, SL-150T-6" 4 SL-150T-6 147 1124 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR LIN 6.4 kW 7500 200 98 A 103 G/KM 0.576 0.252 0.828 4.705 0.576 0.252 0.828 4.705 0.58 0.25 4.7 6SYGC.049T67 Expert International Trading Inc. 6SYGC.049T67-002 1 49 CARB NA "BL05W, BS05W" 4 BL05W 49 6844 INDOLENE Y N 1 N NA NA 1 2.8 kW 6000 150 104.9 A 31 G/KM 0.799 3.63 1.045 9.322 2.2 6SYGC.049TAW Expert International Trading Inc. 6SYGC.049TAW-003 1 49 CARB NA "FA05U, FT05W" 4 FT05V 49 FT1002 INDOLENE Y N 1 N NA NA 1 2.2 kW 6750 150 104.9 A 29 G/KM 0.62 2.6 0.9 3.9 2.3 6TKSC0.05STR Tank Sports KTMMEX S.A. DE C.V. 6TKSC0.05STR-001 1 49.3 CARB NA "Classic 50, Customs 50, Econo 50, Racer 50, Retro 50, Rough Rider 50, Sporty 50, Touring 50, Urban 50" 4 Mini Customs 50 49 3CG2C1A2853200157 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA N/A 1.8 kW 7500 180 111 M 71.8 G/KM 0.69 0.24 0.92 5.9 31.4 M 1.2 1.8 1 1 0.83 0.42 1.3 5.9 0.83 0.42 5.9 6TKSC0.15001 "Tank Sports, Inc." 6TKSC0.15001-002 1 100 150 CARB NA "Classic 100, Econo 100, Pronto 100, Racer TK 150, Sporty 100, Sporty TK 150, Touring TK 150, Urban 100, Urban TK 150" 4 Touring TK 150 150 3GCTCKPD443000202 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR N/A 5.8 kW 7500 180 111 A 104.6 G/KM 0.28 0.16 0.44 5.2 55.8 M 1.22 1 1 1 0.34 0.16 0.5 5.2 0.34 0.16 5.2 6TOMC0.04A79 tomos doo Tomos doo 6TOMC0.04A79-001 1 49 CARB NA "Arrow kick, Arrow pedal, Revival TS kick, Revival TS pedal, Streetmate kick, Streetmate pedal" 4 A79 49 ZZ1A791215K120552 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA A52 2.3 kW 5700 150 104.9 A 23.7 G/KM 0.978 0.034 1.012 0.757 50.1 M 1.045 1.211 1.051 1.448 1.022 0.041 1.063 1.096 1.02 0.04 1.1 6WLDC0.05JNK Wildfire Motors Corporation CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.05JNK-004 1 49 CARB NA WF50-M 4 WF50-M 49 WLD049008 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLD-049-005 3.7 kW 7000 140 102.9 A 23.3 G/KM 0.831 10.289 M 1.012 1.02 0.855 0.855 10.381 0.8 10.5 6WLDC0.05MME Wildfire Motors Corporation ZHEJIANG HUAWIN MOTORCYCLE CO LTD 6WLDC0.05MME-007 1 49 CARB NA WFH50-S2 4 WFH50-S2 49 WLDCWF0087 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLD-049-MME 3.7 kW 7000 180 111 CV 28.7 G/KM 0.527 6.915 M 1.063 1.014 0.574 0.574 7.012 0.6 7.1 6WLDC0.11NFG Wildfire Motors Corporation CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.11NFG-001 1 107 CARB NA WF110-M 4 WF110-M 107 WLD0107004 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLD-107-CI 5 kW 7000 150 104.9 M 20 G/KM 0.751 7.384 M 1.116 1.025 0.83 0.83 7.55 0.8 7.6 6WLDC0.15JNK Wildfire Motors Corporation CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.15JNK-002 1 125 149 CARB NA "WF125-M, WFG-150LDB" 4 WFG-150LDB 149 WLDC0149003 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-149-003 7.4 kW 7000 180 111 M 25.1 G/KM 0.897 11.016 M 1.042 1.042 1 0.939 0.939 10.823 0.9 11 6WLDC0.15MME Wildfire Motors Corporation ZHEJIANG HUAWIN MOTORCYCLE CO LTD 6WLDC0.15MME-009 1 100 149 CARB NA "WFH100-S, WFH150-D, WFH150-S, WFH150-T" 4 WFH150-T 149 WLDC00150 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-150-MME 7.5 kW 7500 190 113.1 CV 16.6 G/KM 0.73 10.613 M 1.04 1.021 0.791 0.791 10.708 0.8 10.8 Engine Family Manufacturer Engine OEM Certificate No. # of Cylinders Displacement 1 Displacement 2 Displacement 3 Displacement 4 Fuel System Aspiration Models Test Number Test Model Displacement EDV_VIN Test Fuel Catalyst Y/N EGR_Y/N # of Carb. Charge Air Cooler Electronic Control Air Injection Engine Code Rated Power Unit @ Engine RPM EIM (kg) ROAD_LOAD_(nt) Transmission Type N/V Emision Unit HC Test NOX Test HC_NOX test CO Test CO2 test DF Type HC DF NOX DF HC_NOX DF CO DF HC UL NOX UL HC_NOX UL CO UL HC cert NOX cert HC_NOX cert CO cert Class II 6CGXC.249MY6 MV Agusta MV Agusta Motor S.p.A 6CGXC.249MY6-001 1 249 CARB NA "SM 250 Street Legal, TE 250 Street Legal" 6 TE 510 501 ZCGH803CA5V000001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ECM NA N/A 11.5 kW 7500 210 117.1 M 91.7 G/KM 0.19 0.28 0.47 4.2 137.9 M 1 1 1 1 0.19 0.28 0.47 4.2 0.19 0.28 4.2 6DFRC.2004MA Dafier Inc. 6DFRC.2004MA-001 1 199 CARB NA "QM200-2A, QM200-2B, QM200-2C, QM200-2V, QM200GY, QM200GY-1" 4 QM200-2A 199 LAEMM14006B030001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA K166 11.5 kW 8000 230 121.2 M 117 G/KM 0.829 0.138 6.172 43.2 M 1.68 1 1.259 1.33 0.01 8.73 0.14 7.8 6HBMC0.20NFG Hi-Bird Motorcycle USA CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6HBMC0.20NFG-002 1 198 CARB NA QH-200GY 4 QH-200GY 198 HBMC1982006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA HBMC-198 12.5 kW 7000 230 121.2 M 27 G/KM 0.872 11.404 M 1 1 1.025 0.872 0.872 11.689 0.9 12 6HNXC0.23AAA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.23AAA-021 2 234 CARB NA Rebel 4 CMX250C 234 JH2MC1318FK001713 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA 86BC-01 16.4 kW 8500 230 121.2 M 71.2 G/KM 0.93 0.0001 0.93 8.4 48.8 M 1.044 1 1 1 0.971 0.001 0.0001 8.4 1 8.4 6HNXC0.23AAB "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.23AAB-014 2 234 CARB NA NIGHTHAWK 4 CB250 234 JH2MC2415MK000004 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA MBE2 14.4 kW 8500 230 121.2 M 70 G/KM 0.69 9.99 9.99 7.8 53.5 M 1.184 9.999 9.999 1.073 0.82 9.99 9.99 8.4 0.8 9.9 8.4 6HNXC0.24AAA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.24AAA-005 1 244 CARB NA CN250 4 CN250 244 JH2MF0206GK000006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA GBB4 15.7 kW 7500 250 125.3 CV 71.4 G/KM 0.88 0.0001 0.88 9.3 68.3 M 1 1 1 1 0.88 0.001 0.0001 9.3 0.9 9 6HNXC0.25AJA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.25AJA-020 1 249 CARB NA "Big Ruckus, Reflex" 4 NSS250A 249 JH2MF06431K000002 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR 01BA-01 13.7 kW 6750 270 129.3 CV 66.7 G/KM 0.44 6.9 69.7 M 1.059 9.999 1.061 0.4659 9.9999 7.321 0.5 7.3 6JNYC0.25NFG Jonway Motorcycle USA JONWAY GROUP CO LTD 6JNYC0.25NFG-003 1 244 CARB NA "YY250T, YY250T-12, YY250T-2, YY250T-2A" 4 YY250T 244 JNYC2442006 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA JNYC-244-2006 13.6 kW 7000 230 121.2 CV 33.9 G/KM 0.805 9.634 M 1.06 1.004 0.853 0.441 9.673 0.9 9.7 6KYMC0.25202 STR Motorsports Inc. dba Kymco USA 6KYMC0.25202 2 249 CARB NA Venox 250 4 Venox 250 249 RFBRAKCGY2B120101 INDOLENE Y N 2 N ICM NA N/A 20 kW 10500 250 125.3 M 58.7 G/KM 0.63 0.42 1.05 8.11 75.6 M 1 1 1 1.2 0.63 0.42 1.05 9.8 0.63 0.42 9.8 6LSXC.250JPC johnnypag.com Lifeng Group Company Ltd. 6LSXC.250JPC-001 2 233 CARB NA 250 Spyder 4 Pagsta 233 LFUE3NLF23A001928 INDOLENE N N 2 N ICM NA 50S 26 bhp 8500 245 123.2 M 1 G/KM 0.692 0.39 5.606 55.3 M 1.173 1.058 1 1 0.8 0.4 6 0.8 0.4 6 6PVMC.198M31 "Piaggio Group Americas, Inc." Piaggio & C. S.p.A. 6PVMC.198M31-004 1 198 CARB NA Vespa GT 200 4 Vespa GT 200 198 2205/S INDOLENE Y N 1 N ECM PAIR N/A 14.2 kW 9000 230 121.2 A 79.7 G/KM 0.31 0.23 0.54 3.9 72.3 M 1 1 1 1 0.31 0.23 0.54 3.9 0.31 0.23 3.9 6PVMC.244M45 "Piaggio Group Americas, Inc." Piaggio & C. S.p.A 6PVMC.244M45-003 1 244 TBI NA Vespa GTS 250 4 Vespa GTS 250 244 ZAPM459L865000998 INDOLENE Y N N ICM NA N/A 15.7 kW 8500 240 123.2 A 73 G/KM 0.22 0.23 0.45 1.6 84.7 M 1.6 1.1 1 1.13 0.35 0.25 0.59 1.8 0.35 0.25 1.8 6TKSC0.25001 "Tank Sports, Inc." 6TKSC0.25001-004 2 234 CARB NA "Trail 250, Trail 250 Deluxe Edition, Trail 250 HRC, Trail 250 Raceline, Trail 250 SM, Trail 250 TopLine, Vision 250, Vision 250 Deluxe Edition, Vision 250 Limited Editio, Vision 250 TopLine" 4 Vision 234 LFUE3NLF43A000928 INDOLENE Y N 2 N ICM PAIR N/A 12 kW 8500 250 125.3 M 61.3 G/KM 0.58 0.25 0.83 8.3 49.2 M 1.05 1 1 1 0.61 0.25 0.86 8.3 0.61 0.25 8.3 6TKSC0.25STR "Tank Sports, Inc." 6TKSC0.25STR-003 1 244 CARB NA "Racer 250, Racer 250 DE, Sporty 250, Sporty 250 DE, Touring 250, Touring 250 DE, Trail 250, Two Fifty Super Sports, Urban 250, Urban 250 DE" 4 Touring 250 DE 244 3CGTCNZE263000001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR N/A 13 kW 8600 250 125.3 A 50 G/KM 0.43 0.28 0.71 9.7 74.3 M 1.05 1.21 1 1 0.45 0.34 0.79 9.7 0.45 0.34 9.7 6WLDC0.20NFG Wildfire Motors Corporation CHONGQING HI-BIRD MOTORCYCLE INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.20NFG-003 1 198 CARB NA "WF200-R, WFG-200LDB" 4 WF200-R 198 WLDC0198002 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-198-01 12.5 kW 7000 180 111 M 18.9 G/KM 0.652 7.288 M 1.079 1.079 1.017 0.704 0.704 7.412 0.7 7.4 6WLDC0.23NFG Wildfire Motors Corporation ZHEJIANG LEIKE MACHINERY INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.23NFG-006-R01 2 233 CARB NA WF250-C 4 WF250-C 233 WLDC233001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-233-01 13.3 kW 7000 230 121.2 M 21.6 G/KM 0.716 10.826 M 1.021 1 0.737 0.737 10.819 0.7 10.8 6WLDC0.25MME Wildfire Motors Corporation ZHEJIANG HUAWIN MOTORCYCLE CO LTD 6WLDC0.25MME-008 1 248 CARB NA WFH250-T2 4 WF250-T2 248 WLDC0248001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-248-01 13.5 kW 7500 230 121.2 CV 26.4 G/KM 0.802 9.066 M 1.019 1.013 0.801 0.801 9.303 0.8 9.2 6WLDC0.25NFG Wildfire Motors Corporation ZHEJIANG LEIKE MACHINERY INDUSTRY CO LTD 6WLDC0.25NFG-005 1 248 CARB NA WF250-T2 4 WF250-T2 248 WLDC0248001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA WLDC-248-01 13.5 kW 7500 230 121.2 CV 26.4 G/KM 0.802 9.066 M 1.019 1.013 0.801 0.801 9.303 0.8 9.2 Engine Family Manufacturer Engine OEM Certificate No. # of Cylinders Displacement 1 Displacement 2 Displacement 3 Displacement 4 Fuel System Aspiration Models Test Number Test Model Displacement EDV_VIN Test Fuel Catalyst Y/N EGR_Y/N # of Carb. Charge Air Cooler Electronic Control Air Injection Engine Code Rated Power Unit @ Engine RPM EIM (kg) ROAD_LOAD_(nt) Transmission Type N/V Emision Unit HC Test NOX Test HC_NOX test CO Test CO2 test DF Type HC DF NOX DF HC_NOX DF CO DF HC UL NOX UL HC_NOX UL CO UL HC cert NOX cert HC_NOX cert CO cert Class III 6APCC01.6APC American Performance Cycle S&S Cycle 6APCC01.6APC 2 1573 CARB NA "Big Boy, High Roller 240, High Roller 280, High Roller S, Hustler 240, Spirit S, Wild Card 240, Wild Card 280" 5 Hustler 240 1573 1A9USWDG55N428800 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 68 kW 5300 530 173.9 M 22.7 G/KM 0.43 0.58 1 4.5 167.1 M 1 1.08 1 1 0.66 0.65 1.3 6.1 0.66 0.65 6.1 6APCC2.03APD American Performance Cycle S&S Cycle 6APCC2.03APD 2 1807 1917 2026 CARB NA "Big Boy, Evil Spirit, High Roller, Hustler, Spirit, Wild Card" 5 Hustler 240 2026 1A9USDVMFU5N42899 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 80.9 kW 5300 530 173.9 M 22.7 G/KM 0.87 0.37 1.2 3.9 160.9 M 1 1 1 1 0.87 0.37 1.2 3.9 0.58 0.43 8.9 6BBCC1.85BBC "Big Bear American Made Choppers, Inc." S&S Cycle 6BBCC1.85BBC 2 1639 1754 1852 CARB NA "Devil's Advocate, Devils Advocate, Merc, Reaper, Sled, Venom" 5 Venom 1852 1B9SD21024B631454 INDOLENE N N 1 A ICM NA N/A 76.4 kW 5300 360 131.4 M 22.4 G/KM 0.7 0.37 1.07 7.6 170.6 M 1 1 1 1 0.59 0.46 1.04 11.7 0.59 0.46 11.7 6BBCC2.03BBC "Big Bear American Made Choppers, Inc." S&S Cycle 6BBCC2.03BBC 2 1807 1917 2026 CARB NA "Devils Advocate Chopper, Devils Advocate Pro Stree, Merc Rigid, Merc Soft Tail, Reaper, Screamin Demon, The Sled Chopper 250, The Sled Chopper 300, The Sled Pro Street 250, The Sled Pro Street 300, Venom Chopper, Venom Pro Street" 5 Chopper 300 2026 1B9SD21075B631676 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 80.9 kW 5300 430 147.7 M 22.4 G/KM 0.84 0.39 1.2 8.6 119.5 M 1 1 1 1 0.58 0.43 1 8.9 0.58 0.43 8.9 6BLXC.492101 Buell Motorcycle Company "HARLEY-DAVIDSON, INC." 6BLXC.492101 1 492 CARB NA BLAST 4 BLAST 492 KPYD0034 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 25.4 kW 6500 260 127.3 M 44.1 G/KM 0.26 0.79 1.05 3.08 M 1 1.03 1 1 0.26 0.79 1.05 3.08 0.26 0.81 3.1 6BLXC01.2XB1 Buell Motorcycle Company "HARLEY-DAVIDSON, INC." 6BLXC01.2XB1 2 1203 984 MFI NA "FIREBOLT XB12R, FIREBOLT XB9R, ULYSSES XB12X, XB12Rss LIGHTNING, XB12S LIGHTNING, XB12Scg LIGHTNING, XB9SX Lightning City X" 5 XB9 1203 AX2C950025 INDOLENE N N N ECM NA N/A 68.6 kW 7500 310 137.5 M 37.5 G/KM 0.5 0.3 0.8 2.98 118.5 M 1 1 1 1 1.07 0.16 1.23 4.16 1.07 0.16 4.2 6BMIC01.9BMC BMC Motorcycle Company S&S Cycle 6BMIC01.9BMC-002 2 1639 1754 1852 CARB NA "918 Big Daddy, 918 Big Daddy ST, Bobber 88, Hooligan 541, Hooligan 541/240, Hooligan 541/240 ST, Pro Sport" 5 918 Big Daddy 1852 565308 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 76.4 kW 5300 530 177.3 M 26.3 G/KM 1.1 0.19 9.1 111.5 M 1.01 1 1 1 0.59 0.46 11.7 0.59 0.46 11.7 6BNAC1.13201 Benelli America BENELLI Q.J. srl 6BNAC1.13201-001 3 1131 TBI NA "CAFE 1130 RACER, TITANIUM, TORNADO NAKED TRE 1130, TORNADO NAKED TRE SPORT" 4 TNT 1131 ZBNTN00004P100012 INDOLENE Y N ECM NA N/A 101 kW 9500 290 133.4 M 36.8 G/KM 0.39 0.1 2.68 M 1.24 1 1 3.83 0.49 0.1 10.3 10.3 6CGXC.501MY6 MV Agusta 6CGXC.501MY6-002 1 449 501 CARB NA "Husqvarna SM450R, Husqvarna SM510R, Husqvarna TE450R, Husqvarna TE510R" 6 TE 510 501 ZCGH803CA5V000001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 13.5 kW 7500 210 119.2 M 63.6 G/KM 0.19 0.28 0.47 4.2 137.9 M 1 1 1 1 0.19 0.28 0.47 4.2 0.19 0.28 4.2 6CGXC.576MY6 MV Agusta 6CGXC.576MY6-003 1 576 CARB NA "Husqvarna SM610, Husqvarna TE610" 6 SM610 576 ZCGA100AB5V000002 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM NA N/A 39 kW 7750 220 119.2 M 61.2 G/KM 0.23 0.32 0.55 1.3 129.6 M 1 1.08 1 1 0.23 0.34 0.58 1.3 0.23 0.34 1.3 6CGXC.998MV4 Cagiva USA 6CGXC.998MV4-004-R01 4 1078 748 909 998 MFI NA "Brutale 750 S, Brutale 910S, F4 1000S, F4 100CC, F4 750S" 7 F4 1000S 998 ZCGAKFGM14V500000 INDOLENE Y N N ECM NA N/A 122 kW 11750 290 133.4 M 48.9 G/KM 0.21 0.14 0.35 1.4 209.5 M 1.09 1.24 1 1.11 0.23 0.18 0.4 1.5 0.23 0.18 1.5 6DUCC.992M10 "Ducati North America, Inc." Ducati North America Inc 6DUCC.992M10-002 2 802 992 SFI NA "800SS, MTS1000DS, S2R800 / S2R800dark" 6 MTS1000DS 992 ZDM1VABP83B000010 INDOLENE N N N ECM NA 1 55 kW 8250 290 133.4 M 31.2 G/KM 0.932 0.221 1.153 8.138 75.2 M 1.142 1.078 1.112 1.221 1.065 0.238 1.304 9.939 1.3 9.9 6DUCC.998S4R "Ducati North America, Inc." Ducati Motor Holding SpA 6DUCC.998S4R-001 2 998 SFI NA S4Rs / S4R 6 S4Rs 998 ZDM1RB5T76B090502 INDOLENE Y N L ECM NA 1 89 kW 9250 290 133.4 M 31.9 G/KM 0.204 0.064 0.268 1.277 152 M 1.049 1.312 1.106 1.066 0.215 0.075 0.291 1.392 0.21 0.08 1.4 6HDBC01.6098 Hardbikes LLC S&S Cycle 6HDBC01.6098-002 2 1290 1311 1439 CARB NA "HR 330 High Roller, NB 330 Neo Bobber, PS 330 ProStreet, RB 200 Bobber, RC 200 Chopper, SC 330 Chopper" 5 Chopper 1565 1P92166PSL3932166 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 70.8 kW 5500 560 177.3 M 21.1 G/KM 0.56 0.52 1.08 2.9 174.4 M 1 1.11 1 1 0.66 0.67 1.3 6.1 0.66 0.67 6.1 6HDBC2.03MY6 Hardbikes LLC S&S Cycle 6HDBC2.03MY6-001 2 1807 1917 2026 CARB NA "200 RB Bobber, 200 RC Chopper, 200 SB Bobber, 200 SC Bobber, 200 SC Chopper, 250 VC Vintage Cruiser, 300 HR High Roller, 300 NB Neo Bobber, 300 PS Pro Street, 300 SC Chopper, 330 EL Eliminator, 330 HR High Roller, 330 NB Neo Bobber, 330 PS Pro Street, 330 RB Rigid Bobber, 330 RC Rigid Chopper, 330 SC Chopper" 5 Chopper 2026 1P92166PSL3932166 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 80.9 kW 5300 560 177.3 M 22.4 G/KM 0.69 0.46 1.15 9.3 195.3 M 1 1 1 1 0.58 0.43 1.01 8.9 0.58 0.43 8.9 6HNXC0.58AKA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.58AKA-010 2 582 SFI NA "Silver Wing, Silver Wing ABS" 6 FSC600 582 JH2PF01152K002510 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 03CA-01 37.3 kW 7000 350 53.9 A 60.3 G/KM 0.38 0.19 0.57 5.1 110.8 M 1.117 1 9.999 1.18 0.424 0.19 0.614 6.018 0.6 6 6HNXC0.58CBA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.58CBA-004 2 583 CARB NA "Shadow VLX, Shadow VLX Deluxe" 7 VT600C 583 JH2PC21144M500001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM PAIR 4CD1 28.3 kW 6500 320 139.5 M 41.6 G/KM 0.54 0.49 1.03 7.3 73.9 M 1.081 1.078 9.999 1 0.54 0.49 1.05 7.3 1.1 7.3 6HNXC0.60AFA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.60AFA-026 4 599 SFI NA CBR600F4i 7 CBR600F4 599 JH2PC35101M200001 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 1CF1 79 kW 12000 290 133.4 M 53.7 G/KM 0.3 0.07 0.37 1.4 115.3 M 1.138 1 9.999 1.267 0.34 0.07 0.41 1.77 0.4 1.8 6HNXC0.60CPA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.60CPA-027 4 600 CARB NA "600, 699" 7 CB600F 600 ZDCPC36103F000002 INDOLENE Y N 4 N ICM PAIR 4BJ1 69.4 kW 11500 290 133.4 M 49.7 G/KM 0.73 0.14 0.87 2.3 117.9 M 1.022 1 9.999 1.268 0.75 0.14 0.89 2.92 0.9 2.9 6HNXC0.64ABA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.64ABA-007 1 644 CARB NA XR650L 7 XR650L 644 JH2RD06123M100357 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM PAIR 4CW2 29.8 kW 6000 250 125.3 M 42.7 G/KM 0.32 0.31 0.63 8.3 89.7 M 1.145 1 9.999 1.104 0.37 0.31 0.68 9.16 0.7 9.2 6HNXC0.74CAA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.74CAA-002 2 745 CARB NA Shadow Spirit 750 7 VT750DC 745 JH2RC44855M800001 INDOLENE N N 2 N ICM NA 5AU1 33.6 kW 5500 340 143.6 M 36.9 G/KM 0.5 0.52 1.02 6.2 86.5 M 1 1 9.999 1 0.5 0.52 1.02 6.2 1 6.2 6HNXC0.75ABA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.75ABA-003 2 745 CARB NA Shadow Aero 7 VT750C 745 JH2RC50454M000001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM PAIR 4DR2 34.3 kW 5500 370 149.7 M 38.6 G/KM 0.73 0.47 1.2 8 80.4 M 1.013 1 9.999 1.058 0.74 0.47 1.21 8.5 1.2 8.5 6HNXC0.78AFA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.78AFA-022 4 782 SFI NA "Intercepetor, Interceptor" 7 VFR800 782 JH2RC46152M400001 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 2DF1 79.8 kW 10500 350 145.6 M 44.1 G/KM 0.263 0.09 0.353 1.2 136.1 M 1.207 1 9.999 1 0.32 0.09 0.41 1.2 0.4 1.2 6HNXC0.92CKA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC0.92CKA-023 4 919 SFI NA 919 7 CB900F 919 JH2SC48112M000001 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 2DJ1 80.5 kW 9000 310 137.5 M 38.9 G/KM 0.64 0.09 0.73 5.8 115.4 M 1.098 1.14 9.999 1 0.7 0.1 0.8 5.8 0.8 5.8 6HNXC01.0AEB "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC01.0AEB-025 2 999 SFI NA RC51 6 RVT1000R 999 JH2SC45403M300385 INDOLENE N N N ECM PAIR 4EJ1 95.4 kW 9000 310 137.5 M 35.8 G/KM 0.46 0.16 0.62 5.4 129.3 M 1.146 1 9.999 1.075 0.53 0.16 0.69 5.81 0.7 5.8 6HNXC01.0AEC "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC01.0AEC-015 4 998 SFI NA CBR1000RR 7 CBR1000RR 998 JH2SC57096M200001 INDOLENE N N N ECM PAIR 6DE1 123 kW 10250 300 135.4 M 41.7 G/KM 1.02 0.13 1.15 6.1 132.7 M 1.097 1 9.999 1.019 1.12 0.13 1.25 6.22 1.2 6.2 6HNXC01.3ANA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda Motor Co., Ltd." 6HNXC01.3ANA-024 4 1261 SFI NA ST1300 6 ST1300A 1261 JH2SC51433M100001 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 3DK1 93.2 kW 8000 420 159.9 M 34.6 G/KM 0.271 0.181 0.452 2.3 145.2 M 1.175 1 9.999 1.256 0.32 0.18 0.5 2.9 0.5 2.9 6HNXC01.3CJA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda of America Mfg., Inc." 6HNXC01.3CJA-009 2 1312 CARB NA VTX1300 7 VTX1300S 1312 1HFSC52113A000001 INDOLENE Y N 1 N ICM PAIR 3CR1 56.7 kW 5000 440 163.7 M 30.9 G/KM 0.55 0.45 1 7.3 116.5 M 1 1 9.999 1.162 0.55 0.45 1 8.48 1 8.5 6HNXC01.8AFA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda of America Mfg., Inc." 6HNXC01.8AFA-012 6 1832 SFI NA GOLDWING 7 GL1800A 1832 1HFSC47421A000377 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 2EH1 88 kW 5500 520 172.8 M 27.1 G/KM 0.211 0.066 0.277 2.8 152.3 M 1.153 1.14 9.999 1.257 0.24 0.08 0.32 3.5 0.3 3.5 6HNXC01.8AKC "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda of America Mfg., Inc." 6HNXC01.8AKC-016 2 1795 SFI NA VTX1800C 7 VTX1800C 1795 1HFSC46096A400002 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 6EP1 79.8 kW 5000 460 166 M 27.3 G/KM 0.13 0.08 0.21 2.3 137.1 M 1 1 9.999 1.203 0.13 0.08 0.21 2.8 0.2 2.8 6HNXC01.8AKD "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda of America Mfg., Inc." 6HNXC01.8AKD-017 2 1795 SFI NA "VTX1800F, VTX1800N, VTX1800R, VTX1800S" 7 VTX1800R 1795 1HFSC49026A400001 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 6ET1 79 kW 5000 490 169.4 M 27.3 G/KM 0.2 0.17 0.37 2.7 135.4 M 1 1.047 9.999 1.095 0.2 0.18 0.38 3 0.4 3 6HNXC01.8ASA "American Honda Motor Co., Inc." "Honda of America Mfg., Inc." 6HNXC01.8ASA-008-R01 6 1832 SFI NA GOLDWING 7 GL1800-VI 1832 1HFSC47J96A500012 INDOLENE Y N N ECM PAIR 6EG1 88 kW 5500 520 172.8 M 27.1 G/KM 0.188 0.084 0.272 0.9 151.3 M 1.16 1 9.999 1 0.22 0.08 0.3 0.9 0.3 0.9 6HYOC.647GTH "Hyosung Motors America, Inc." 6HYOC.647GTH-002 2 647 CARB NA "GT 650, GT 650 R, GT 650 S, GV 650, V2C 650S, V2C 650T, V2S 650, V2S 650R, V2S 650S" 6 GT 650 647 100604 INDOLENE N 2 N ICM PAIR N/A 57 kW 9000 280 131.4 M 43.3 G/KM 0.72 0.38 1.1 5.2 90.8 M 1 1.1 1 1.2 0.72 0.44 1.2 6.2 0.96 0.21 11.4 6KAXC.498AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC.498AAA-001 2 498 CARB NA NINJA 500 6 EX500-A1 498 EX500AE000005 INDOLENE N N 2 L ICM AIR EX500AE 44 kW 9800 320 139.5 M 51.6 G/KM 0.72 0.25 0.97 7.7 M 1.048 1 1 1.091 0.97 7.7 0.72 1 7.7 6KAXC.599AAD "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC.599AAD-002 4 599 CARB NA ZZR600 6 ZX600J 599 ZX600FE000015 INDOLENE Y N 4 L ICM AIR ZX600FE 81.6 kW 12000 330 141.6 M 50.16 G/KM 0.75 0.26 1.01 7.1 M 1.089 1 1.034 1 1.04 7.1 7.1 6KAXC.649AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC.649AAA-012 2 649 SFI NA NINJA 650R 6 EX650A6 649 ER650AE000046 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR ER650AE 53 kW 8500 330 141.6 M 47.3 G/KM 0.3 0.11 0.41 2.1 M 1 1 1 1.218 0.41 2.6 0.3 0.4 2.1 6KAXC.651AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "KAWASAKI MOTORS ENTERPRISE(THAILAND) CO., LTD." 6KAXC.651AAA-003 1 651 CARB NA KLR650 6 KL650-A1 651 KL650AE000010 INDOLENE N N 1 L ICM NA KL650AE 35.3 kW 6500 270 129.3 M 42.23 G/KM 0.36 0.41 0.77 6.6 M 1 1 1 1.033 0.77 0.68 6.6 6KAXC.998AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC.998AAA-013 4 998 SFI NA NINJA ZX-10R 6 ZX1000D6 998 ZXT00DE000005 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR ZXT00DE 128.7 kW 11500 330 141.6 M 41.9 G/KM 0.45 0.08 0.53 2.9 M 1.178 1.162 1.156 1.041 0.61 3 0.5 0.5 2.9 6KAXC1.35AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd" 6KAXC1.35AAA-011 4 1352 SFI NA NINJA ZX-14 6 ZX1400A6 1352 ZXT30AE00019 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR ZXT40AE 140 kW 9500 370 149.7 M 33.4 G/KM 0.44 0.1 0.54 2.3 S 1.314 1 1.239 1 0.68 2.3 0.4 0.5 2.3 6KAXC1.47AAD "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC1.47AAD-004 2 1470 SFI NA VULCAN 1500 CLASSIC 6 VN1500-J1 1470 VNT50AE065223 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR VNT50AE 48.5 kW 5000 460 166 M 29.49 G/KM 0.57 0.38 0.95 5.7 M 1 1 1 1.049 0.95 6 5.7 6KAXC1.55AAA "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC1.55AAA-005 2 1553 SFI NA VULCAN 1600 6 VN1600-A1 1553 VNT60AE000012 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR VNT60AE 50 kW 5000 460 166 M 26.24 G/KM 0.48 0.49 0.97 5.1 M 1.196 1.176 1.188 1.081 1.1 5.5 5.1 6KAXC1.55AAC "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC1.55AAC-010 2 1553 SFI NA VULCAN 1600 NOMAD 6 VN1600-D1 1553 VNT60AE015089 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR VN1600AE 49 kW 4700 460 166 M 29.24 G/KM 0.19 0.3 0.49 4.8 M 1.105 1.062 1.081 1 0.52 4.8 4.8 6KAXC2.05AAB "Kawasaki Motors Corporation, U.S.A." "Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd." 6KAXC2.05AAB-007 2 2053 SFI NA VULCAN 2000 6 VN2000-A1 2053 VNW00AE000018 INDOLENE Y N L ECM AIR VN2000AE 85 kW 5000 480 168.3 M 25.66 G/KM 0.77 0.1 0.87 5.8 M 1 1.127 1 1.393 0.87 8.08 5.8 6KTXC.942LC8 "KTM North America,Inc" 6KTXC.942LC8-001 2 942 CARB NA "950 Adventure, 950 Supermoto" 4 950 Adventure 942 VBKVA44093M900086 INDOLENE Y N 2 N ICM NA N/A 72 kW 8500 300 135.4 M 36 G/KM 0.31 0.26 0.57 6.2 168.3 M 1.21 1 1 1.34 0.37 0.26 0.63 8.3 0.37 0.26 8.3 6KTXC0.62RXC "KTM North America,Inc" 6KTXC0.62RXC-002 1 625 CARB NA "625 SMC, 640 Adventure" 6 400 RXC 398 VBKRXH403SM304400 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 36 kW 5700 290 133.4 M 48.4 G/KM 0.56 0.57 1.1 5.7 103 M 1.13 1.16 1 1.06 0.64 0.66 1.3 6 0.64 0.66 6 6MGXC0.74LLC moto guzzi Moto Guzzi S.p.A. 6MGXC0.74LLC-002 2 744 TBI NA "BREVA 750, NEVADA 750" 4 Breva 750 744 ZGULLC0003M111110 INDOLENE Y N N ECM NA 90 deg V-twin 35.5 kW 6800 280 131.4 M 40.4 G/KM 0.618 0.319 0.937 2.077 112 M 1.138 1.252 1.173 1 0.703 0.399 1.102 2.077 0.7 0.4 2.1 6MGXC1.06LPC moto guzzi Moto Guzzi S.p.A. 6MGXC1.06LPC-003 2 1064 SFI NA BREVA 1100 4 Breva 1100 1064 ZGULPC0066M111127 INDOLENE Y N N ECM NA 90 deg V-twin 63 kW 7500 330 141.6 M 35.8 G/KM 0.522 0.113 0.635 3.789 160.6 M 1.277 1.57 1.331 1 0.666 0.177 0.843 3.789 0.7 0.2 4 6NMCC2.03124 "Ness Motorcycles, LLC" S&S Cycle 6NMCC2.03124 2 1807 1917 2032 CARB NA "High Liner, Low Liner, Speed Liner" 5 High Liner 2032 1N9DC208850239001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ECM NA N/A 80.9 kW 5300 430 161.9 M 26.3 G/KM 0.59 0.44 1.02 7.6 140 M 1 1 1 1 0.58 0.43 1 8.9 0.58 0.43 8.9 6PMIC2.02PRR "Pro One Performance Manufacturing, Inc." TP Engineering 6PMIC2.02PRR 2 1860 1975 2024 CARB NA "California Sport, California Vintage, Californian, Custom, Dominator, Hyper4, Millenium, Rogue, Vapor" 5 Californian 2024 1P9PV19976P336676 INDOLENE N N 1 N NA NA N/A 92 kW 5500 390 153.8 M 32.1 G/KM 0.61 0.36 0.97 6.6 175 M 1 1 1 1 0.68 0.5 1.2 9.9 0.68 0.51 9.9 6PRPC01.8PC1 "Proper Chopper, Inc." S&S Cycle 6PRPC01.8PC1-001 2 1639 1754 1852 CARB NA "240 R, 300R" 5 240 R 1852 1P9H1264C522001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 76.4 kW 5300 530 173.9 M 23.1 G/KM 0.81 0.34 1.1 4.5 172.5 M 1.02 1 1 1 0.59 0.46 1 11.7 0.59 0.46 11.7 6PRSC01.9MPC "Powers Auto & Custom Bikes, Inc." Global Motorsports 6PRSC01.9MPC 2 1442 1639 1803 CARB NA "Lady Tamer Chopper, Lady Teaser Pro Street" 5 Chopper 1803 1P9SC21175B555001 INDOLENE N N 1 N ICM NA N/A 86 kW 5200 440 163.7 M 24.6 G/KM 0.28 0.46 0.74 4.8 198.7 M 1.06 1.04 1 1 0.99 0.39 1.4 8.3 0.99 0.39 8.3 6WCCC1.85MJJ west Coast Choppers S&S Cycle 6WCCC1.85MJJ 2 1639 1754 1852 CARB NA "CFL, Dominator, Dragon, El Diablo" 5 CFL 1852 Proto 0001 INDOLENE N N 1 N NA NA N/A 76.4 kW 5300 390 153.8 M 24.9 G/KM 0.54 0.35 0.89 4.5 145.6 M 1.02 1 1 1 0.59 0.46 11.7 0.59 0.46 11.7 6WNSC2.03SBP Patriot Motorcycle Corp "S & S Cycle, Inc." 6WNSC2.03SBP-001 2 1807 1917 2026 CARB NA "Patriot Bagger, Patriot ProStreet, SBP Appaloosa, SBP Bobber, SBP Bronco, SBP Clydesdale, SBP Quarterhorse, SBP Sintaur, SBP Thoroughbred" 5 STEED 2026 1P9XCTPA96P417001 INDOLENE N N 1 N NA NA N/A 80.9 kW 5300 430 161.9 M 26.3 G/KM 0.611 0.281 0.9 7.9 167.2 M 1 1 2 1 1 8.857 0.58 0.43 8.9
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+---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | **Job Number: SHSD- JRA- | **P | * | * | * | ** | ** | | 16** | oint | *1** | *2** | *3** | 4** | 5** | | | V | | | | | | | **Job Title: Ozone | alue | | | | | | | Generation during IAQ | →** | | | | | | | Remediations** | | | | | | | | | **P | | | | | | | | aram | | | | | | | | eter | | | | | | | | ↓** | | | | | | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | **Job Description:** | * | * | ** | * | **[ | * | | Operation of an ozone | *Fre | *[\< | [\<] | *[\< | \<] | *\> | | generator to treat viable | quen | ]{.u | {.un | ]{.u | {.u | onc | | microbes in indoor air | cy** | nder | derl | nder | nde | e/s | | and on surfaces. | | line | ine} | line | rli | hif | | | **( | }onc | once | }onc | ne} | t** | | | B)** | e/ye | /mon | e/we | onc | | | | | ar** | th** | ek** | e/s | | | | | | | | hif | | | | | | | | t** | | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | **Name(s) of Specific | **Se | **F | * | ** | **P | * | | Application Risk Team | veri | irst | *Med | Lost | art | *De | | Members:** | ty** | Aid | ical | Ti | ial | ath | | | | On | Tre | me** | Dis | or | | R. Wilson, R. Selvey, M. | **( | ly** | atme | | abi | Per | | Rankine, J. Allen, J. | C)** | | nt** | | lit | man | | Peters, F. Horn | | | | | y** | ent | | | | | | | | Dis | | | | | | | | abi | | | | | | | | lit | | | | | | | | y** | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | **Training Procedures | ** | ** | **Un | **Po | **P | **M | | List (Optional):** | Like | Very | like | ssib | rob | ult | | | liho | Un | ly** | le** | abl | ipl | | Applicable Standard | od** | like | | | e** | e** | | Operating Procedures: | | ly** | | | | | | [IH97300](http:/ | **( | | | | | | | /www.bnl.gov/esh/shsd/SOP | D)** | | | | | | | /pdf/IH_SOPS/IH97300.pdf) | | | | | | | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | Approved by: R. Selvey | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Date: 05/17/07 Rev. #: 1 | | | | | | | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ | **Stressors (if | | **Re | | | * | | | applicable, please list | | ason | | | *Co | | | all)** | | for | | | mme | | | | | Revi | | | nts | | | **Hypersensitive | | sion | | | :** | | | Individuals to mold and | | (if | | | | | | other IAQ allergens** | | ap | | | | | | | | plic | | | | | | | | able | | | | | | | | ):** | | | | | | | | Revi | | | | | | | | ewed | | | | | | | | JRA | | | | | | | | for | | | | | | | | c | | | | | | | | onti | | | | | | | | nued | | | | | | | | ap | | | | | | | | plic | | | | | | | | abil | | | | | | | | ity. | | | | | | | | Upd | | | | | | | | ated | | | | | | | | to | | | | | | | | re | | | | | | | | move | | | | | | | | note | | | | | | | | from | | | | | | | | "ad | | | | | | | | diti | | | | | | | | onal | | | | | | | | Cont | | | | | | | | rol" | | | | | | | | col | | | | | | | | umn. | | | | | +---------------------------+------+------+------+------+-----+-----+ <table> <colgroup> <col style="width: 12%" /> <col style="width: 11%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 4%" /> <col style="width: 16%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 3%" /> <col style="width: 10%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> <col style="width: 3%" /> <col style="width: 2%" /> </colgroup> <thead> <tr class="header"> <th></th> <th></th> <th colspan="5">Without Controls</th> <th colspan="7"><strong>Before Additional Controls</strong></th> <th colspan="7">After Additional Controls</th> <th></th> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <th><strong>Activity</strong></th> <th><strong>Hazard</strong></th> <th><blockquote> <p># of People A</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Frequency B</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Severity C</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Likelihood D</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Risk* AxBxCxD</p> </blockquote></th> <th><strong>Control(s)</strong></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong>Stressor</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong># of People A</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong>Frequency B</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong>Severity C</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong>Likelihood D</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p><strong>Risk* AxBxCxD</strong></p> </blockquote></th> <th><h1 id="controls-added-to-reduce-risk">Control(s) Added to Reduce Risk</h1></th> <th><h1 id="stressors">Stressors</h1></th> <th><blockquote> <p># of People A</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Frequency B</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Severity C</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Likelihood D</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>Risk* AxBxCxD</p> </blockquote></th> <th><blockquote> <p>% Risk Reduction</p> </blockquote></th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr class="odd"> <td><p>Loading equipment into and out of the transportation vehicle</p> <p>(ozone generator, signs, power cord)</p></td> <td>ergonomics- lifting injury, slips, trips, falls</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td>Equipment is not heavy and has handles for lifting</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Driving to and from the test site</td> <td>Automobile accident- impact injury</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>See driving JRA for site. SHSD has no additional risk in our operation.</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td>-</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td rowspan="2">Exposure to IAQ in areas of concern</td> <td rowspan="2">Inhalation of irritants, allergens, toxic mold spores</td> <td rowspan="2">1</td> <td rowspan="2">2</td> <td rowspan="2">3</td> <td rowspan="2">3</td> <td rowspan="2">18</td> <td>Limited time in area, access by normal occupants as an indicator of exposure potential, respiratory protective equipment if necessary.</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Hypersensitive individuals- another non-sensitive IKH evaluator conducts the ozonation.</td> <td>Y</td> <td>1</td> <td>1</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>6</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td rowspan="5">Operation of the ozone generator</td> <td>toxic gas – ozone and by-products of oxidization of room materials</td> <td>2</td> <td>2</td> <td>5</td> <td>5</td> <td>100</td> <td>SOP limits occupancy during gas generation, procedures limits exposure to the operator to a few seconds at the start of generation, posting, barrier tape, access control, required delay time before occupancy, test strips for ozone for re-occupancy, leave exhausting HVAC on, Isolating multiple room HVAC systems, Timer on the unit, remove plants and food stuff from area prior to ozonation.</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Electrical Shock</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>3</td> <td>18</td> <td>Sealed Unit, grounded cord, fuse. <strong>[NOT UL listed.]</strong></td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Moving Parts</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>1</td> <td>6</td> <td>Fan has metal grill preventing access by body parts</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>2</td> <td>1</td> <td>4</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>UV light from ozone generation lamp</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td>Unit designs shield most light, no direct path to eye</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>2</td> <td>2</td> <td>8</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Noise</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>3</td> <td>2</td> <td>12</td> <td>Unit makes less than 65dBA by design.</td> <td>N</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td>1</td> <td>1</td> <td>2</td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> <td></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | **Further Description of Controls Added to Reduce Risk:** | | | | - Need to have AHJ analysis on meter for electrical safety. Call | | mfgr regarding UL listing. If not, AHJ evaluation will be needed. | | {Status: All equipment was evaluated and manufacturers called | | when applicable.\] | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | **Lesson Learned from this Risk Assessment:** | | | | - Ozone generator is not UL listed. | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ ------------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------- **\*Risk:** **0 to 20** **21 to 40** **41-60** **61 to 80** **81 or greater** **Negligible** **Acceptable** **Moderate** **Substantial** **Intolerable** ------------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------- ----------------- -----------------
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106764
# Presentation: 106764 ## The Cathode Strip Chamber System **Small Wheel C being prepared** **for Installation ** **Designed to handle the high rates (1kHz/cm2) in the forward ATLAS Muon system** **32 4-layer Chambers** **31,000 Radiation Hard Readout** ** ****Channels** **Covers 27% of the Muon Coverage in ** ** ****Pseudorapidity Space** **Spatial Resolution of 60 microns** **Transverse Coordinate to ~1 cm** **CSC Detectors** - for the ATLAS Forward Muon Spectrometer - U.S. ATLAS Americas Physics Workshop - October 2, 2007 ## BNL Involvement and Plans - BNL developed technology originally for E814 and then for GEM at the SSC - Detectors at RHIC, CMS, LHCb also based on this concept - BNL has had the primary responsibility for the ATLAS System - Overall System Responsibility - Designed, developed, constructed all Chambers - Designed, constructed, tested, installed on-board Electronics - Responsible for all Services installation/maintenance - Other Institutions involved: - UCI – Off-Chamber Electronics - U. of Arizona – Calibration - BNL physicists involved: V. Polychronakos, V. Tcherniatine - Must maintain effort for the foreseeable future for finishing installation and commissioning, maintenance, repairs, upgrades - U.S. ATLAS Americas Physics Workshop - October 2, 2007
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Advantages of Diuretics EDWARD D. FREIS, M.D. Washington, D. C. Our recent Veterans Administration Cooperative Study-involving 663 hypertensive male patients-showed that a diuretic was more effective than a beta blocker in controlling hypertension in most respects. In addition, in this study we failed to find evidence that thiazide-induced hypokalemia was associated with increased evi- dence of cardiac arrhythmias in patients without overt heart dis- ease. We are concerned that the current desire to avoid hypokale- mia at all costs may result in the prescription of ineffective dosages of diuretics for the treatment of hypertension. When chlorothiazide became available for clinical trials in 1957, we knew that it was a breakthrough drug [I]. It was a medication that seemed to control blood pressure as well as the strictest no-salt diet, but it was much better tolerated. The diuretics were important not only because they were antihypertensive in themselves, but also because they enhanced the an- tihypertensive activity of other drugs. Thiazide diuretics, therefore, soon became the favored step-one agent and have largely retained that posi- tion ever since. From the Veterans Administration Medical Center and the Department of Medicine, Georgetown Uni- versity School of Medicine, Washington, D.C. Re- quests for reprints should be addressed to Dr. Edward D. Freis, VA Medical Center, 50 Irving St. N.W., Washington, DC. 20422. Hemodynamic studies revealed that thiazides caused a modest but definite reduction in plasma volume and extracellular fluid volume; fur- thermore, this reduction seemed to be involved in the antihypertensive effect of the drug [2]. The early fall in blood pressure was associated with a reduced cardiac output and relatively unchanged total peripheral resist- ance [3]. After several weeks, however, cardiac output returned to normal and total peripheral resistance decreased. This late homeostatic adjust- ment does not seem to be due to a direct vasodilator effect of the drug. The mechanism is unknown but may involve poorly understood autoregu- latory reactions. Interestingly, these hemodynamic reactions are the op- posite of the changes that have been described in the development of volume loading types of experimentally induced hypertension. In any event, the hallmark of the antihypertensive action of diuretics is a reduc- tion in volume that lasts for as long as the diuretic is given [4,5]. The two main characteristics of interest regarding any drug are thera- peutic effectiveness and toxicity. Until recently there was no question about the position of the diuretics as the step-one treatment for hyperten- sion. In recent years, however, their premier position has been chal- lenged. There has been increasing concern that thiazide-induced hypo- kalemia may contribute to cardiac arrhythmias and even to sudden death. On the other hand, beta blockers have been somewhat effective in reduo ing the incidence of sudden death in patients who have already sustained a myocardial infarct. Therefore, some physicians-particularly in Scandi- navia-have been using a beta blocker for step-one treatment and add- October 5, 1994 The American Journal of Medicine 107 NEW CONCEPTS IN HYPERTENSION THERAPY SYMPOSIUM-FREIS ing thiazide second. Furthermore, the thiazide is usually added in smaller doses than in the past to minimize the possibility of hypokalemia developing. What is the relative effectiveness of thiazides versus beta blockers as antihypertensive agents? That question was the subject of a recent VA Cooperative Study, which included 683 male patients with diastolic blood pressure averaging 95 to 114 mm Hg [6]. They were randomly as- signed double-blind to receive either propranolol titrated from 40 to 320 mg twice a day or hydrochlorothiazide 25 to 100 mg twice a day. After six months of treatment, hydrochlorothiazide low- ered blood pressure by an average of 17.5113.1 mm Hg as compared with a lowering of 8.3111.3 mm Hg by proprano- loI. White patients responded better than black patients to propranolol and vice versa. Other indications of a some- what greater effectiveness of the thiazide as compared with propranolol over the long term were as follows: (1) with thiazide, a diastolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg was achieved in 66 percent of the patients compared with 53 percent with propranolol; (2) among those taking the diu- retic, fewer patients required termination for high blood pressure; (3) the need to titrate to high doses with hydro- chlorothiazide was less; (4) escape from blood pressure control during treatment occurred less often with hydro- chlorothiazide; and (5) after withdrawal of treatment, the blood pressure remained lower over the ensuing two weeks in those previously taking the diuretic. None of these advantages of diuretics can be consid- ered major; if beta blockers can be proved effective in the primary prevention of heart attack, this would outweigh all of the considerations cited and justify the use of beta blockers as primary treatment in all patients. The same policy would apply if it could be proved that thiazides in- crease the risk of life-threatening arrhythmias. However, at present no definitive evidence exists to justify either of these assumptions. In considering the risks of hypokalemia, it is important to differentiate between patients who have overt heart dis- ease and those who do not. Obvious impairment of car- diac function, particularly congestive heart failure, may be associated with a reduced potassium content in myocar- dial cells unrelated to diuretic treatment. In patients with asymptomatic hypertension without overt heart disease, the concentrations of potassium in their myocardial cells are normal. The following discussion concerning hypoka- lemic risk pertains to patients without overt heart disease. Changes in the extracellular concentration of potassium do not reliably reflect changes in the intracellular concen- tration of potassium. Most of the studies indicate that even during long-term treatment with thiazide, losses of total body potassium remain small, averaging 5 to IO percent in most reports [7,8]. Thus, the percentage reduction of intracellular potassium is considerably less than the re- duction in extracellular potassium. Recent studies from our clinic do not provide any evi- dence that thiazide-induced hypokalemia leads to the development of increased ventricular arrhythmias [9]. Hypertensive patients with no overt heart disease were chosen for study. All had hypokalemia while taking diuret- ics, with plasma potassium concentrations of 3.2 mEq per liter or less (average 2.8 mEq per liter). Holter monitoring for 24 hours was carried out on each patient during the hypokalemia, as well as after it was corrected with potas- sium supplements and/or triamterene. There was no im- provement in ventricular ectopy after correction of hypo- kalemia. Ventricular ectopic activity improved in five patients but worsened in 10. This response is not too sur- prising since the sensitivity of myocardial cells to disturb- ances in rhythm depends upon the relative concentrations of potassium inside and outside the cell. An increase in this ratio produced either by an increase in intracellular potassium concentration or a decrease in extracellular concentration results in a more negative resting mem- brane potential, that is, the cell becomes more resistant to excitation [lo]. This change should reduce rather than in- crease the incidence of ventricular ectopy. An additional concern has been the small but definite increase in serum cholesterol that occurs with diuretic treatment. Possibly, this could increase the risk of athero- sclerosis over the long term. In the VA trial [6], however, it was found that the elevation did not persist, returning to baseline after one year of treatment. Others have found similar returns to baseline over the long term [l 1 ,121. An important consideration in the choice of initial treat- ment is the racial difference in response to diuretics as compared with beta blockers. Although diuretics are defi- nitely more effective in black people, beta blockers may be as effective or more effective than diuretics in white people. In a recent VA trial of the beta blocker nadolol versus the diuretic bendroflumethiazide, nadolol lowered blood pressure to a greater extent in white people than did the diuretic [13]. In the trial of propranolol versus hydro- chlorothiazide, the reduction of diastolic blood pressure was nearly the same with each drug in white people but not in black people, in whom the diuretic was definitely superior [6]. Are small doses of thiazide diuretics equally as effective as large doses? According to some of the recent reports in the literature they are. It is currently popular, for example, to give 25 mg hydrochlorothiazide or even less once daily and not to increase the dose beyond that point since it is believed that the dose-response curve has already pla- teaued. This does not agree with data from our VA Coop- erative Study [6]. In two-thirds of 312 patients, a diastolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg was attained with hydrochlo- rothiazide titrated from 25 mg twice a day to 100 mg twice a day. Of this number, goal diastolic blood pressure was achieved in 50 percent with the 25 mg twice a day dose (50 mg a day), in an additional 30 percent with 50 mg 108 October 5, 1984 The American Journal of Medicine NEW CONCEPTS IN HYPERTENSION THERAPY SYMPOSIUM-FREIS twice a day, whereas in the remaining 20 percent 100 mg twice a day was required. In a recent study by others, doses as low as 6.25 mg a day have been given [14]. It seems possible that no reduction of plasma volume or extracellular volume would result from such a small dose. A double-blind placebo-treated group would be required to be certain that the decrease in blood pressure was due to drug effects rather than to the gradual downward drift of blood pressure that occurs with repeated visits to the clinic. In summary, diuretics lower blood pressure by reducing plasma and extracellular fluid volume. This is a unique mechanism that is shared by no other antihypertensive agents. Our evidence indicates that thiazide diuretics still are the keystone of antihypertensive drug treatment not only for primary treatment, but also in enhancing antihy- pertensive effectiveness when combined with other drugs. Because of racial differences in response, beta blockers have a slight edge over diuretics for initial treatment of white patients, although diuretics are still the preferred pri- mary treatment for black patients. Also, studies from this clinic failed to find evidence that thiazide-induced hypo- kalemia was associated with an increased incidence of cardiac arrhythmias in patients without overt heart dis- ease. It is possible that, because of the current desire to avoid hypokalemia at all costs, doses of diuretics are being reduced in some cases to below the effective thera- peutic level. 1. Freis ED, Wilson IM: Potentiating effect of chlorothiazide (Diuril) in combination with antihypertensive agents. Med Ann DC. 1957; 26: 468-469. 2. Wilson IM, Freis ED: Relationship between plasma and extra- cellular fluid volume depletion and the antihypertensive effect of chlorothiazide. Circulation 1959; 20: 1028-1036. 3. Shah S, Khatri IM, Freis ED: Mechanisms of antihypertensive effect of thiazide diuretics. Am Heart J 1978; 95: 61 l-618. 4. Tarazi HC, et al: Long-term thiazide therapy in essential hyper- tension Circulation 1970; 41: 709-717. 5. Leth A: Changes in plasma and extracellular fluid volume in pa- tients with essential hypertension during long-term treatment with hydrochlorothiazide. Circulation 1970; 42: 479-485. 6. Veterans Administration Cooperative Study Group on Antihy- pertensive Agents: Comparison of propranolol and hydrochlo- rothiazide for the initial treatment of hypertension. JAMA 1982; 248: 1996-2011. 7. Wilkinson RP, Hesp R, lssler H, et al: Total body potassium dur- ing prolonged thiazide therapy for essential hypertension. Lancet 1975; I: 759-762. 8. Edmonds CS, Jasani B: Total body potassium in hypertensive patients during prolonged diuretic therapy. Lancet 1972; II: 8-12. 9. Papademetriou V, Fletcher R, Khatri IM, et al: Diuretic-induced 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. hypokalemia in uncomplicated systemic hypertension. Effect of plasma potassium correction in cardiac arrhythmias. Am J Cardiol 1983; 52: 1017-1022. Fish C: Relation of electrolyte disturbances to cardiac arrhyth- mias. Circulation 1973; 47: 408-419. Alcazar J, Ruilope L, Ladron de Guevara P, et al: Interrelation- ship between uric acid, cholesterol and triglycerides in essen- tial hypertension, abstract no. 8. Proceedings of the Ninth Meeting of the International Society of Hypertension, Feb. 20- 21, 1982, Mexico City, Mexico. Williams WR, Borhani NO, Schnaper HW, Schneider KA, Slat- koff L: The relationship between diuretics and serum choles- terol in HDFP participants. Presented at the American Col- lege of Cardiology, March 20-24, 1983, New Orleans, Louisiana. Veterans Administration Cooperative Study Group on Antihy- pertensive Agents: Efficacv of nadolol alone and combined with bendroflimethiazide and hydralazine for systemic hyper- tension. Am J Cardiol 1983; 52: 1230-1237. Andren L, Weiner L, Suensson A, et al: Enalapril with either a "very low" or "low" dose of hydrochlorothiazide is equally ef- fective in essential hypertension. A double-blind trial in 100 hypertensive patients. J Hypertens 1983; 1 (suppl 2): 384- 386. October 5, 1994 The American Journal of Medicine 109
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UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OFFICE OF SPECIAL EDUCATION AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES REHABILITATION SERVICES ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20202-2531 [INFORMATION MEMORANDUM]{.underline} RSA-IM-92-34 RSM-002 DATE: 9/30/92 TO : STATE VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AGENCIES (GENERAL) STATE VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AGENCIES (BLIND) CLIENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS REGIONAL REHABILITATION CONTINUING EDUCATION PROGRAMS (RRCEPS) RSA SENIOR MANAGEMENT TEAM SUBJECT : RSA Second Semi-Annual Index of Information Memoranda (IMs), Policy Directives (PDs), Technical Assistance Circulars (TACs) and Manual Transmittals (MTs) for Fiscal Year 1992 CONTENT : Attached, for your information, is a copy of the subject report. I hope this report will be of help to you in keeping an accurate record of IMs, PDs, TACs, and MTs. If you need assistance in bringing your files up-to-date, you may write to Hubert Davis, Director, Planning, Policy and Evaluation Staff, Attention: Ms. Alfreda Reeves, Room 3214, Switzer Building, 330 C Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20202-2550. Ms. Reeves may be reached at (202) 205-9361. Commissioner, CRC Rehabilitation Services Administration Attachment FISCAL YEAR 1992 INFORMATION MEMORANDA (Semi-Annual Report) [IM NO.]{.underline} [SUBJECT]{.underline} [ISSUE DATE]{.underline} RSA-IM-92-13 Exemplary School to Work Program 4/23/92 to Increase Competitive Employment Opportunities for Individuals With Disabilities RSA-IM-92-14 Summary of Statistical Information 4/29/92 of the Randolph-Sheppard Vending Facility Program for Fiscal Year 1991 RSA-IM-92-15 FY 1992 Maintenance of Effort Level 5/18/92 in the Title I Vocational Rehabil- itation (VR) Services Program RSA-IM-92-16 RSA Semi-Annual Index of Information 6/1/92 Memoranda (IMs), Policy Directives (PDs), Technical Assistance Cir- culars (TACs) and Manual Trans- mittals (MTs) for Fiscal Year 1992 RSA-IM-92-17 Coordination of Financial Assistance 6/26/92 for Vocational Rehabilitation Students RSA-IM-92-18 Correction to the FY 1992 Allotment 6/26/92 in the Title I Vocational Rehabil- itation (VR) Services Program RSA-IM-92-19 Cancelled RSA-IM-92-20 FY 1992 Reallotment Schedule for 7/21/92 Formula Grants Under the Rehabil- Act RSA-IM-92-21 Transmittal of Report: Caseload 7/23/92 Statistics, State Vocational Rehabilitation Agencies, Fiscal Year 1991 RSA-IM-92-22 Fiscal Year 1990 Summary of Services 7/30/92 Funded Through the Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA) for Persons Who are Blind or Visually Impaired FISCAL YEAR 1992 INFORMATION MEMORANDA (Semi-Annual Report) RSA-IM-92-23 Cancellation of the First Reallot- 8/4/92 ment for the Supported Employment and Independent Living, Part A Programs - FY 1992 RSA-IM-92-24 Cancellation of the First Client 8/4/92 Assistance Reallotment - FY 1992 RSA-IM-92-25 State Agencies Responsible for 8/12/92 Administering Vocational Rehabilitation Programs RSA-IM-92-26 Central Intelligence Agency 8/13/92 Student Programs RSA-IM-92-27 The First Reallotment for the 8/20/92 Basic Support Program - Fiscal Year 1992 RSA-IM-92-28 RSA Long-Term Training Scholarship 9/1/92 Requirement Information for Students RSA-IM-92-29 The Second Reallotment Under the 9/2/92 Client Assistance Program - Fiscal Year 1992 RSA-IM-92-30 Randolph-Sheppard Vending Facility 9/18/92 Program, FY 1991 Annual Report RSA-IM-92-31 Annual Report to Congress on 9/22/92 Supported Employment RSA-IM-92-32 The Second Scheduled Reallot- 9/30/92 ment for the Supported Employment Program for Fiscal Year 1992 RSA-IM-92-33 The Second Scheduled Reallot- 9/30/92 ment\--Independent Living, Part A Program \--Fiscal Year 1992 RSA-IM-92-34 RSA Second Semi-Annual Index 9/30/92 of Information Memoranda (IMs), Policy Directives (PDs), Technical Assistance Circulars (TACs) and Manual Transmittals (MTs) for Fiscal Year 1992 FISCAL YEAR 1992 POLICY DIRECTIVES (Semi-Annual Report) [PD NO.]{.underline} [SUBJECT]{.underline} [ISSUE DATE]{.underline} RSA-PD-92-07 Transmitting Form RSA-7A, The 4/29/92 Annual Report on State Agency Independent Living Rehabili- tation Services, Title VII, Part A RSA-PD-92-08 Time Periods for the Earning 6/26/92 and Subsequent Obligation of Program Income Funds by State Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) Agencies in the State VR Program RSA-PD-92-09 Federal Financial Participation 7/10/92 in the Payment by States of Arbitration Panel Damages Awards under the Randolph-Sheppard Act RSA-PD-92-10 Promulgation of Revised Reporting 9/11/92 Form for Projects With Industry (PWI) Indicators FISCAL YEAR 1992 TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE CIRCULARS (Semi-Annual Report) [TAC NO.]{.underline} [SUBJECT]{.underline} [ISSUE DATE]{.underline} RSA-TAC-92-01 Documentation of Eligibility for 4/8/92 Services from Projects With Industry RSA-TAC-92-02 Guidance for Preparation of 7/16/92 Attachment 10.6(b)A: Designated State Unit\'s Plans, Policies, and Methods Relating to Transitioning FISCAL YEAR 1992 MANUAL TRANSMITTALS (Semi-Annual Report) [MT NO.]{.underline} [SUBJECT]{.underline} [ISSUE DATE]{.underline} RSA-MT-92-21 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 4/7/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 3515 - Comprehensive Services for Independent Living - Title VII, Part A RSA-MT-92-22 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 5/6/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 4501 - American Indian Vocational Rehabilitation Services RSA-MT-92-23 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 5/6/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 4515 - Centers for Independent Living RSA-MT-92-24 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 5/6/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 4520 - Independent Living Services for Older Blind Individuals RSA-MT-92-25 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 5/6/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 0110 - Formula Grant Monitoring Systems Used by RSA RSA-MT-92-26 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 6/30/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter G2501 - Order of Selection for Services (Guidance) RSA-MT-92-27 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 7/7/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 2005 - Counseling and Guidance RSA-MT-92-28 Transmittal of Rehabilitation 7/29/92 Services Manual (RSM) Chapter Chapter 002 - System for Issuing Policy and Information
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# Presentation: 407882 ## 3D particle tracking in MWS environment - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## We are approaching high power tests. Some phenomena we may - meet happen because of unwanted acceleration and movement of - background or emitted particles by high level RF fields. To study - them we need to track particle motion inside RF devices in presence - of RF fields and may be static external fields. We can use the particle - tracking for: - Multipacting study, which is most interesting application and our - primary goal . - X-ray generation: we could estimate level of radiation or track particles - from hot spot back to probable emission area. - Breakdowns: we can track where the debris fly and look whether - they can damage a surface - Also we can study RF deflectors and beam monitors that use secondary - emission _**Motivation **_ - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## Why MWS? Requirements _**Why MWS? Requirements**_ - Mathematica - Delphi + Pascal - Graphical User Interface – multi-window mode, click events, drag’n’drop, snap-to-grid.... - 2._ Geometry_ – **3D solid model native to the fields** - 3. _Fields_ – 3D, accurate and interpolated for fast integration - 4. Visual feedback – 3D trajectories, dialog boxes with results, cut, zoom, rotate, real time tracking, - display selected trajectories... **?** - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## There must be interpolating function: - Fig.5. Surface plot of Ey component given by MAFIA in plane z=0. Nx, Ny – numbers of mesh lines. **E****y****, Vm** **E****y****, V/m** **x** - y - Fig.6 Smoothed Ey component - 1) No “holes” in fields 2) Minimum calculations at each step of calculations _**Fields**_ - SSR. Snapshot of real time - simulation with 5000 particles - 350 MHz buncher with external - static solenoidal field. Snapshot - of real time scanning over field - level and phase with multiple - collisions. - MWS creates interpolating function automatically - which is very fast. - Some bug has been found though... - Also it provides an easy access to all 3D results. - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## Geometry _**Geometry**_ - Solid model must be “native” to fields - It just impossible to develop homemade - code comparable to modern CAD software - We need to put starting points on a surface - and to define exact moment when a particle - hits a wall. - MWS has many built-in objects to handle - points and boundaries. They are ready to use. - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## Some examples _**Some examples**_ - RT CH 1 - Buncher - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## Field level variation - Initial phase variation - Different starting points _**Playing with coaxial resonator**_ - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006 ## Next steps. - Try to fix the bug in interpolating function object ( with help from CST) - Decide, should we use MWS VBA only or link it with MatLab, - Mathematica, C++... - If yes, what MWS should be – client or server? - Depending on 2 and 3 decision start to develop real GUI - Gennady Romanov - July 27, 2006
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####### INTERNATIONAL TRADE FINANCE ######## RESOURCE GUIDE **For:** **Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico,** **Utah, and Wyoming** **January 2008 Edition** **[Compiled by:]{.underline}** **Dennis R. Chrisbaum** **Regional Manager, International Trade Programs** **U.S. Small Business Administration** **U.S. Export Assistance Center** **1625 Broadway, Suite 680** **Denver, CO 80202** **Tel: (303) 844-6623 x 18** **Fax: (303) 844-5651** **[email protected]** DENVER USEAC'S GUIDE TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE FINANCING RESOURCES [Pages]{.underline} Introduction 3 Banks Providing International Banking Services 4-5 Banks Providing Export Working Capital 5-7 SBA Export Express Lenders 8 Non-Bank Lenders Specializing in Export Financing 8-9 Credit Reports on Overseas Firms 9 Foreign Credit Insurance 9-10 Credit Insurance Brokers 10 Other Government Assistance: U.S. Small Business Administration 11 Export-Import Bank of the United States 11 Overseas Private Investment Corporation 11-12 Multilateral Development Banks (MDB) > U.S. Department of Commerce's Office of MDB Operations 12 > > Multilateral Development Banks' Home Pages 12 **INTRODUCTION** The purpose of this guide is to provide exporters, in the states covered by the Denver U.S. Export Assistance Center (USEAC), information on the various private and public sector organizations that can help a firm with its export financing needs. The Denver USEAC provides trade financing coverage and support to businesses in the five Rocky Mountain/Southwestern states of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. **Export Trade Financing** can be broken down into four major functions or concerns: 1\) The first is the **method of payment,** which includes such options as cash in advance, documentary letters of credit, documentary collections, and open account and may involve foreign currency. International divisions of banks are involved in assisting exporters with these components and can also provide technical advice to help a firm get paid by overseas buyers. 2\) The second is **financing the export transaction cycle**, or **securing the** **working capital** necessary to perform the export transaction. This may include pre-shipment working capital to finance the production cycle (for materials, inventory, labor) and/or post-shipment working capital (to support open account terms). Several banks that provide such financing are listed in this guide. 3\) The third element may involve **extending open account credit terms to overseas buyers**. This guide includes several credit review agencies that can assist you in evaluating buyer risk, as well as insurance companies that insure overseas accounts receivable. A lender will usually advance funds against overseas accounts receivable if (and frequently, only if) they are insured against commercial and political risks. 4\) The fourth element in trade finance, especially for capital goods or larger transactions, is **buyer financing.** The Export-Import Bank of the United States (Eximbank) has a number of finance programs that can assist buyers of U.S. products and services and is listed in this guide. 5\) Not related the trade financing, but a question we often receive calls on is **financing for overseas investment.** The Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) provides both financial and insurance support for U.S. investment in developing countries. Please see pages 11-12 of this guide for additional information. The Denver U.S. Export Assistance Center is ready to assist your firm as it expands into international markets. For **international trade financing information** in the five-state Rocky Mountain/Southwestern region, please call Dennis R. Chrisbaum, SBA\'s Regional Manager for International Trade Programs, at **(303) 844-6623 x 18** or email: **[email protected].** For **international marketing assistance**, please call the Export Assistance Center (EAC) below that is responsible for assisting exporters in your state: [Businesses In Export Assistance Center]{.underline} [Telephone Number]{.underline} Arizona Tucson EAC (520) 670-5540 Arizona Phoenix EAC (602) 640-2513 Colorado or Wyoming Denver USEAC (303) 844-6623 New Mexico Santa Fe EAC (505) 231-0075 Utah Salt Lake City EAC (801) 255-1871 [**Banks Providing** **International Banking Services**]{.underline} Commercial banks in the region that offer international banking services are listed below. These services include opening, confirming and negotiating export or import letters of credit, assistance with documentary collections, wire transfers and foreign exchange. As an exporter, you should contact one of these banks before you even start negotiating method of payment terms and certainly before your buyer opens a letter of credit, in order to specify the exact language and terms that you would like in the Letter of Credit. ######### Arizona JP Morgan Chase, Global Trade Services Wells Fargo HSBC Trade Bank 201 North Central Avenue, 8^th^ Floor 100 W. Washington Street, 25^th^ Floor Phoenix, AZ, 85004 Phoenix, AZ 85003 Contact: Fernando Almeida Contact: Fidela A. Irigoyen, Regional VP Tel: 602.221.1364 Tel: 602.378.1117 U.S. Bank, Global Trade Services One MacDonald Center Mesa, AZ 85201 Contact: Spiro Padadimos, 503.275.4347 ######### COLORADO JP Morgan Chase Premier Bank Global Trade Services 1630 Stout Street 333 S. Grand Avenue, Suite 3600 Denver, CO 80202 Los Angeles, CA 90071 Contact: Kenneth So Contact: Fernando Almeida, 602.221.1364 Tel: (303) 623.8888 U.S. Bank Wells Fargo/HSBC Trade Bank International Banking 1740 Broadway, MAC: C7300-013 918 -- 17^th^ Street, CNBB0540 Denver, CO 80274 Denver, CO 80217 Contact: Fidela Irigayen, 602.378.1117 Contact: Gary DeGrange, (208) 383.7600 Contact: Ester Hammond, 303.863.6925 Vectra Bank Colorado First National Bank International Banking Trade Services 2000 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite 1200 134 South 13^th^ Street Denver, CO 80222 Lincoln, NE 68508 Contact: Nan Hinton, Tel: (720) 947.7655 Laura Pedersen: (402).323.5258 Colorado Business Bank Colorado State Bank & Trust/Bank of Texas 821 17^th^ Street 1401 McKinney, Ste. 1650 Denver, CO 80202 Houston, TX 77010 Contact: Gary Watkins, 720.264.5531 Contact: Mr. M.G. Shetty, 713.289.5817 ###### ###### **UTAH** JP Morgan Chase U.S. Bank of Utah Global Trade Division International Division 80 West Broadway, Suite 200 15 W. South Temple, Suite 600 Salt Lake City, UT 84101 Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1536 Contact: Fernando Almeida Contact: Gary DeGrange Tel: 602.221.1364 Tel: (208) 383.7600; fax: 383-7641 HSBC/Wells Fargo Bank Zions Bank, International Banking 100 W. Washington, 25^th^ Floor 1 South Main Street Phoenix, AZ 85003 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Contact: Fidela Irigoyen, 602.378.1117 Contact: Mark Garfield, 801.594.8287 ######### NEW MEXICO HSBC/Wells Fargo Bank Bank of Albuquerque/Bank of Texas, N.A. 40 First Plaza International Trade Finance Albuquerque, NM 87102 1401 McKinney, Ste. 1650 Contact: Fidela Irigoyen Houston, TX 77010 Tel: (602) 378.1117 Contact: Mr. M.G. Shetty, Tel: (713) 289.5817 #### Banks Providing Export Working Capital Often a U.S. exporter will have an overseas order, even with a relatively secure method of payment such as a documentary letter of credit payable upon shipment, but still lack the working capital necessary to complete the transaction. Unfortunately most banks are reluctant to assume the performance risk involved for an exporter\--by meeting the terms and conditions of an overseas letter of credit, for instance\--before getting paid. Therefore, in order to reduce the lenders' risk and encourage exports, the U.S. government, through both the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) and the Eximbank, provides a 90% guarantee to banks on export working capital loans. Loans can be made for a single transaction, a bundle of transactions, or on a revolving line of credit basis. The SBA can provide a 90% guarantee on loans up to \$2 million with an Eximbank co-guaranty. Eximbank has no upper limit. Loan maturities generally are for 12 months, with an option for renewal. Qualifying businesses must have been in operation for at least one year, although not necessarily engaged in exporting. Loan proceeds must be used to finance the production cycle (labor, inventory, and materials) and/or to finance foreign accounts receivable. Some banks that have expressed a willingness to assist firms with their export working capital needs are listed below. ######### Arizona ######### Arizona Business Bank Bank of Tucson 2600 N. Central Avenue, Ste. 2000 610 No. Morley Avenue Phoenix, AZ 85004 Nogales, AZ 85621 Contact: Lyle D. Frederickson Contact: David A. Esquivel Tel: 602.240.2704 Tel: 520.397.9220 BNC National Bank First Credit Union 17045 North Scottsdale Road 25 S. Arizona Place, Ste. 111 Scottsdale, AZ 85255 Chandler, AZ 85225 Contact: Kamil Najeeb, Tel: 602.508.3713 Contact: Jun Callanta, Tel: 480.786.2360 ######### Alliance Bank of Arizona National Bank of Arizona 4646 E. Van Buren Street 1119 West Southern Avenue Phoenix. AZ 85008 Mesa, AZ 85210 Contact: Barbara Matthews, 602.797.3616 Contact: Lori Stelling, 480.652.8000 ######### Sonoran Bank Zions Small Business Finance 3877 N. 7^th^ Street, Ste. 150 2929 N. Central, Ste. 1200 Phoenix, AZ 85014 Phoenix, AZ 85012 Contact: Carlos Emmermann, 602.393.6950 Contact: Gary D. Miller, 602.241.2209 ######### COLORADO Citywide Banks Colorado State Bank & Trust/Bank of Texas 10660 East Colfax Avenue 1401 McKinney, Ste. 1650 Aurora, CO 80010 Houston, TX 77010 Contact: Stephan Ghadaifchian, 303.365.3622 Contact: Mr. M.G. Shetty, 713.289.5817 Contact: Ines Hsu-Tok, 303.365.4027 Colorado Business Bank First National Bank of Arvada 821 17^th^ Street 7530 Grandview Avenue Denver, CO 80202 Arvada, CO 80002 Contact: Gary Watkins, 720.264.5531 Contact: Matt Gore Boulder: Elissa Curran, 303.244.9753 Tel: (303) 345-2567; fax: 422-1896 Golden: Richard Schell, 720.264.5621 Commerce Bank Wells Fargo Bank 1000 Walnut Street, BB17-1 9350 East Arapahoe, Suite 200 Kansas City, MO 64106 Englewood, CO 80112 Contact: Michael H. Doyle Contact: Steve Sexson, Tel: 303.721.6378 Tel: 816.234.2950 Contact: Bob Martin, Tel: (303) 863.5797 Guaranty Bank and Trust Premier Bank 1331 Seventeenth Street 1630 Stout Street, Denver, CO 80202 Denver, CO 80202 Contact: Marshall Nichols, 720.359.1966 Contact: James Ocken\--303.293.5605 Contact: Jim Swanson, Tel: 303.623.8888 1^st^ National Bank of Durango Vectra Bank Colorado 259 W. 9^th^ Street, P.O. Box 2910 616 E. Speer Blvd., 3^rd^ Floor Durango, CO 81302-2910 Denver, CO 80222 Contact: Beverly Ellis, 970.382.5707 Contact: Mark Abell: Tel: 720.947.7109 Contact: Paul Broderick, 970.382.5798 Contact: Margie Joseph, 720.947.8431 ######### ######### NEW MEXICO Bank of America Bank of Albuquerque Community Development Banking Business Banking P.O. Box 25500, NM1-101-05-10 201 3^rd^ Street, N.W., Suite 1400 Albuquerque, NM 87125-2263 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Contact: (505) 282-4026; Contact: Sandra Leyba, 505.222.8406 Contact: Mr. M.G. Shetty, 713.289.5817 Wells Fargo Bank Bank 1st 200 Lomas Blvd., NE 2900 Louisiana NE, South-Box 31670 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Albuquerque, NM 87190-1670 Contact: Sondra Tye, VP, 505.766.6423 Contact: Richard Burdick: 505.872.6744 First Community Bank New Mexico Bank & Trust 7900 Jefferson NE, P.O. Box 3686 Gold Office, P.O. Box 1048 Albuquerque, NM 87190 Albuquerque, NM 87103 Contact: Bob Furey Contact: Robert W. Eaton, 505.830.8109 Tel: (505) 241-7529; fax: 241-7150 Contact: Michael Gaillour, 505.830.8308 UPS Capital Business Credit Compass Bank 10701 Lomas NE, Suite 219 2444 Louisiana Blvd., NE, Suite 200 Albuquerque, NM 87112 Albuquerque, NM 87110 Contact: Eddie Gutiérrez Contact: Gary Millhollon Tel: 505.259.7545 Tel: 505.888-9074; fax: 888-9176 ######### UTAH Bank of Utah Wells Fargo Bank, SBA Loan Division 711 South State Street 119 South Main Street Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Springville, UT 84663 Contact: Kent Vance, (801) 924.3604 Tel: (801) 491-2060 Celtic Bank Jordan Credit Union 340 East 400 South 9260 S. 300 East Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Sandy, UT 84070 Contact: Daniel Godfrey Contact: Cody Jarrett Phone: (801) 363-6500; Fax: (801) 363-6562 Tel: 801.567.3353 First Community Bank /First State Bank, NM Zions Bank 490 East 500 South One South Main Street Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Contact: Kyle Sprig Contact: Lori Chillingworth, Tel: 801.844.7901 Tel: (801) 424-77807; fax: 801.424.7828 Cecilia \"Cece" Mitchell; Tel: (801) 524-2660 ######### WYOMING First Interstate Bank First Interstate Bank 104 South Wolcott P.O. Box 2007 Casper, WY 82601 Sheridan, WY Contact: Ken King, Tel: (307) 235-4360; Contact: Karen Kendick, Tel: (307) 672-1483 Wells Fargo Bank Rock Springs National Bank Box 1319 Box 880 Rock Springs, WY 82902 Rock Springs, WY 82902 Contact: Ginger Moneyhun; Tel: 307.352.5523 Contact: Heather Anderson, Tel.: 307.352.0444 First National Bank & Trust First Interstate Bank P.O. Box 907 UW Laramie Student Union Bldg. Powell, WY 82435 Laramie, WY 82073-1307 Contact: Lloyd Snyder, Tel: 307.754.2201 Contact: Michael Peck, Tel: 307.677.4019 Jackson State Bank First Interstate Bank P.O. Box 1788 120 E. Broadway, Box 11095 Jackson Hole, WY 83001 Jackson, WY 83002 Peter Lawton, 733-3737; John Freeze: 739.3855 Deeann Mangis, (307) 734.7373 First National Bank of Wyoming Wells Fargo Bank 2020 Grand Avenue 1701 Capitol Avenue, P.O. Box 1768 Laramie, WY 820703 Cheyenne, WY 82001 Contact: Rick Melone Contact: Travis Lawrence. 307.771.3735 Tel: (307) 755-5327 Contact: Rolfe Burgess, 307.771.3785 **SBA Export Express Lenders** By allowing banks to use their own forms, SBA has streamlined the loan approval process for the SBA Export Express program, typically approving a guarantee request within 36 hours. SBA will provide an 85% guaranty on loans up to \$150,000 and a 75% guaranty on loans up to \$250,000, which is the maximum amount allowed under this program. Proceeds can be used for any legitimate business purpose including the acquision of land or equipment, trade show participation, literature translation or other working capital needs. Loan terms will depend on the use of proceeds, but can go out up to 25 years. The applicant must have been in business, although not necessarily exporting, for at least 12 months and must demonstrate that proceeds will assist the firm in expanding in an existing foreign market or entering a new export market. **[Arizona: Phone Numbers]{.underline}** Arizona Business Bank 602.240.2704-Contact Lyle Frederickson JP Morgan Chase 723.780.3383-Contact Sheryl Cameron U.S. Bank 602.257.5376-Contact Rodie Hernandez Wells Fargo 602.977.4714-Contact Jeanine Burke **[Colorado: Phone Numbers]{.underline}** JP Morgan Chase 1-888-LEND-SBA or Robert Crise at 303.244.4152 Bank of the West 801.531.3406 Key Bank 303.662.9027\--Contact Horace McCowan Premier Bank 303.623.8888---Contact Jim Swanson U.S. Bank 303.629-3284\--Contact Holly Jones Vectra Bank 720.947.8525\--Contact: Mark Abell Wells Fargo Bank 303.721.6378\--Contact Steve Sexson **[New Mexico]{.underline}** Bank of America 505.282.4026 Wells Fargo Bank 505.766.6423\--Contact Sondra Tye Bank of Albuquerque 505.222.8406---Contact Sandra Leyba **[Utah]{.underline}** JP Morgan Chase 1-888-LEND-SBA or 801.481.5538\--Contact Dev Nielsen Bank of Utah 801.625.3500 Contact Kelly Goodbar Celtic Bank 801 363-6500 Contact Eric Peterson Far West Bank 801.342.6000 Contact Bill Beck First National Bank, Layton 801.532.5353 Contact Ron Leathem Key Bank 801.535.1056 Contact Janice Tabige State Bank of Southern Utah 435.865.2329 Contact Mike France U.S. Bank 801.534-6164 Wells Fargo Bank 801.491.2060 Zions National Bank 801.594.8417 Contact Jack Posell **[Wyoming]{.underline}** Wells Fargo Bank 307.771.3735 Contact Travis Lawrence First Interstate 307.734.7373 Contact Deeann Mangis **Non-Bank Lenders Specializing in Export Financing** Bristol Trade Finance Meridian Finance Group 4809 Cole Avenue, \# 350-LB126 1247 7^th^ Street, Suite 200 Dallas, TX 75204 Santa Monica, CA 90401 Contact: Cole Stevens Contact: Gary Mendell Tel: (214) 528-2888; Fax: (214) 528-0770 Tel: (310) 260.2130; fax: 260.2140 World Trade Finance, Inc. TFS Trade Finance 515 N. Central Avenue, Ste. B 149 South Barrington Ave., #105 Glendale, CA 91203 Los Angeles, CA 90049 Contact: Bernd Hermann Contact: Ted Landau Tel: (818) 550.0788 Tel: 310.922.2328 **Credit Reports on Overseas Firms** In many instances, a simple background check on your potential customers will reduce your risk and allow you to enter new business relationships with confidence. Information on potential or existing foreign buyers can be obtained through several agencies, both public and private: **International Company Profiles**, a service of the U.S. Department of Commerce, are background reports on overseas firms in selective markets, including their reputation, reliability, and financial status. These reports are produced by Commercial Officers in our embassies and consulates abroad. For further information, please contact the Export Assistance Center covering your state. Several private firms offer information on the credit status and reliability of foreign firms. Prices range from \$200 to significantly more depending on the country, type of report, and the firm's pricing. Below are companies that provide reports on businesses in numerous overseas markets. **Dun and Bradstreet International** **Standard and Poor's Compustat** 988 Eaton Avenue Custom Business Unit Bethlehem, Pa 18025 7400 South Alton Court Tel: (800) 932-0025 Englewood, Colorado 80112-2934 Fax: (610) 882-6005 Tel: (800) 525.3640 x8802; fax: 694-4021 Web: [www.dunandbradstreet.com](http://www.dunandbradstreet.com/) Web: [www.compustat.com](http://www.compustat.com/) **Graydon International, Inc.** **Credit Risk Monitor** 2^nd^Floor, Hygeia Building 704 Executive Blvd., Suite A 66 College Road Valley Cottage, CA 10989 Harrow, Middlesex HA1 1BE Tel: (877) 468.6276 United Kingdom Web: [www.crmz.com](http://www.crmz.com/) Web: [www.graydoninternational.com](http://www.graydoninternational.com/) **Owens OnLine, Inc.** **Coface USA** 4707 - 149^th^ Avenue North, Suite 208 444 Madison Avenue, 24th Floor Clearwater, FL 34622 New York, NY 10022 Tel: (800) 745.4656; fax 535.7786 Tel: (877) 626-3223 Web: [www.owens.com](http://www.owens.com/) Tel: 312.372.7080---Sarah Galer > Web: [www.coface-usa.com](http://www.coface-usa.com/) #### Foreign Credit Insurance Foreign credit insurance is an important tool in helping to mitigate the commercial and country (political and economic) risk inherent in exporting. Commercial credit insurance protects against a buyer's default on an open account sale. Political risk insurance protects against default due to war or adverse sovereign actions. Credit insurance will allow an exporter the marketing advantage of being able to offer open account terms in a competitive situation, the financial advantage of being able to add insured accounts receivable to your borrowing base with a bank, and the health advantage of being able to sleep at night knowing that you will be paid by the insurer in case of default by your buyer. Some of the major underwriters providing credit insurance are listed below. **EULER Hermes ACI** 100 East Pratt Street Baltimore, MD 21202-1008 Tel: (877) 909.3224 Web: [www.eulerhermes.com](http://www.eulerhermes.com/) Local Agent: Ken Jackson, 303.681.9379 **American International Group FCIA Management, Inc.** 70 Pine Street 40 Rector Street New York, NY 20270 New York, NY 10006 Tel: (877) 638.4244 Tel: (212) 885.1500 Web: [www.aig.com](http://www.aig.com/) Web: [www.fcia.com](http://www.fcia.com/) **Coface USA Atradius/Gerling NCM Credit Insurance** 1035 W. Lake, Ste. 201 5026 Campbell Blvd., #C Chicago, IL 60607-1726 Baltimore, MD 21236 Tel: (312) 372.7080---Ms. Sarah Galer Tel: (410) 246.5488 Tel: (303) 627-0900---Zev Barnett Web: [www.atradius.com](http://www.atradius.com/) Web: [www.coface-usa.com](http://www.coface-usa.com/) The **Export-Import Bank of the United States** (Eximbank) also provides credit insurance: [**Western Region** (serving AZ, UT, WY) **Southwest Region** (serving NM, CO)]{.underline} 3300 Irvine Avenue, Ste. 305 1880 S. Dairy Ashford II, #585 Newport Beach, CA 92660 Houston, TX 77077 Contacts: Bob Guthrie (UT), 949.660.1341 x 403 Contact: Joseph Ringer, Tel: (281) 721-0467 Contact: Sandra Donzella (AZ), (619) 557-7091 Contact: David Josephson (WY), 949.660.1341 x 400 **Credit Insurance Brokers** HRH (Hilb Rogal & Hobbs) 720 S. Colorado Blvd., Suite 600N Denver, CO 80246 Tel: (303) 765.1532; fax, (303) 722.0811 Contact: Don Appleby International Risk Consultants, Inc. Penn International Insurance 2526 SW Boundary 1714 Howard Street Portland, OR 97239 San Antonio, TX 78212 Contact: Ken Carraro, Tel: (503) 246.0483 [Contact:]{.underline} Randy Penn, (210) 737-1373 NaviTrade Structured Finance, LLC Meridian Group 6523 West Gould Drive 1247 -- 7^th^ Street, Suite 200 Littleton, CO 80123 Santa Monica, CA 90401 Tel: (303) 652-2400; fax, 632.2690 Tel: (310) 260.2130; fax, (310) 260.2140 Contact: Rajiv D. Narayana Contact: Gary Mendell # # Other Government Financial Assistance **[U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA)]{.underline}** SBA provides start-up business counseling as well as guarantees for a variety of business loans. Among them is the SBA **Export Express Program** (described on page 7) and the **International Trade Loan Program,** which permits SBA to provide guarantees of up to \$1.75 million on loans going to businesses that a) are expanding because of increased export sales, or b) have been adversely impacted by imports and need to retool or diversify to meet foreign competition. Loans can be made for fixed assets, working capital, or a combination, with terms out up to 25 years. Refinancing existing debt is now permitted under this program. For information on these and other SBA loan programs, please contact your banker or the individual offices listed below: James Pipper Lynnette Newman U.S. Small Business Administration U.S. Small Business Administration 2828 N. Central Ave., Ste. 800 721 19th Street, P.O. Box 660 Phoenix, AZ 85004 Denver, CO 80201-0660 Tel: 602.745.7230; fax: 745.7210 Tel: 303.844.2607; fax, 844.6539 Frances Padilla Steven Price U.S. Small Business Administration U.S. Small Business Administration 625 Silver Avenue, S.W., Suite 320 125 South State Street, Room 2237 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Salt Lake City, UT 84138-1195 Tel: (505) 248-8242; Fax: 292-3556 Tel: 801.524.3215; fax: 801.524.4160 Stephen Parker U.S. Small Business Administration 100 East B Street, Room 4001 Casper, WY 82602-2939 Tel: 307.261.6506; fax: 307.261.6535 In addition, SBA's home page has a wealth of information covering its programs and services at: [http://www.sba.gov](http://www.sba.gov/). For international trade information, please see [www.sba.gov/oit](http://www.sba.gov/oit) , as well as the U.S. Department of Commerce's sites: [www.export.gov](http://www.export.gov/) and [www.buyusa.gov](http://www.buyusa.com/). **[Export-Import Bank of the United States (Eximbank)]{.underline}** Eximbank is the primary U.S. agency charged with providing support for American exports through credit risk protection and lending programs. Eximbank programs fall into three major categories: 1\) working capital guaranty program (outlined on page 6); 2) loan guarantees to foreign buyers of U.S. goods and services; and 3) credit insurance on open account sales. For additional information, you may call *1-800-565- EXIM*. To speak with the Eximbank's field representative serving your state, please refer to the office numbers on page 10. Eximbank's home page contains an excellent description of its programs and services and the countries it covers at: [http://www.exim.gov](http://www.exim.gov/)**.** **[Overseas Private Investment Corporation]{.underline}** The Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) provides project financing, insurance on foreign investments and a variety of investor services for U.S. companies investing in some 150 developing countries and emerging markets throughout the world. **Finance** - To foster investment, OPIC offers medium- and long-term project financing for projects having at least 25% U.S. ownership. Direct loans between \$100,000 and \$10 million are available for projects sponsored by American small businesses. For large projects, OPIC will guarantee loans to projects sponsored with U.S. investors, starting at \$2 million per project and generally going as high as \$250 million. OPIC also sponsors several equity funds offering venture capital for investment projects in targeted countries or regions of the world, including Africa. **Insurance** - To mitigate the risks of investing overseas, OPIC will insure U.S. investments in the qualifying countries against political violence, inconvertibility of currency, and expropriation. **Investor Services** - For companies considering overseas investment, OPIC offers a variety of fee-based services including feasibility studies, investment missions, a database of business opportunities, and business outreach. Contact: Overseas Private Investment Corporation > Information Officer > > 1100 New York Avenue, NW > > Washington, DC 20528 > > Tel: (202) 336-8400; fax: (202) 408-9859 Automated basic information: telephone (202) 336-8799. Printed material is available via faxback at: (202) 336-8700. OPIC's home page, which includes an excellent and frequently updated newsletter, is located at: [http://www.opic.gov](http://www.opic.gov/). **Multilateral Development Banks (MDB)** ##### U.S. Department of Commerce The U.S. Department of Commerce counsels U.S. firms on MDB-funded projects, ensuring that project information is available on a timely basis. The MBDs fund projects primarily in developing countries with a focus on infrastructure, social and economic development. The U.S. Department of Commerce maintains liaison officers at each of the institutions to help identify projects at the earliest stage possible and to serve as advocates for U.S. bidders. Banks with DOC liaison officers include: - African Development Bank, Tunis, Tunisia (temporarily from Abidjan) - Asian Development Bank, Manila, The Philippines - European Bank for Reconstruction & Development, London, U.K. - Inter-American Development Bank, Washington, D. C. - The World Bank, Washington, D. C. For additional information and a list of liaison officers in each MBD, please call Dennis Chrisbaum at the U.S. Export Assistance Center, Denver, at 303.844.6623 x 18. **[Multilateral Development Banks' Home Pages:]{.underline}** Africa Development Bank [www.afdb.org](http://www.afdb.org/) Asian Development Bank [www.adb.org](http://www.adb.org/) European Bank for Reconstruction and Development [www.ebrd.org](http://www.ebrd.org/) Inter-American Development Bank [www.iadb.org](http://www.iadb.org/) World Bank [www.worldbank.org](http://www.worldbank.org/)
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![](media/image1.png) **ESTADOS UNIDOS ANUNCIA LA PRIMERA EXTRADICIÓN EN RELACIÓN CON EL CASO AL KASSAR** El Fiscal del Distrito Sur de Nueva York, MICHAEL J. GARCÍA, y la Directora de la Agencia Antidroga de Estados Unidos (DEA), KAREN P. TANDY, han anunciado que TAREQ MOUSA AL GHAZI y LUIS FELIPE MORENO GODOY han llegado el 16 de octubre a Nueva York procedentes de Rumania tras ser extraditados por acusaciones de terrorismo. Ambos están acusados de participar en una conspiración para vender armas valoradas en millones de dólares a las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC) -- organización incluida en la lista de organizaciones terroristas extranjeras del Departamento de Estado -- para que fueran utilizadas para asesinar a estadounidenses en Colombia. Es la primera vez que Rumania extradita a alguien a Estados Unidos por acusaciones de terrorismo. Actualmente, Estados Unidos tiene solicitada a España la extradición de otro acusado en el sumario, MONZER AL KASSAR. Según el procesamiento que consta en el tribunal federal de Manhattan. Entre febrero de 2006 y mayo de 2007, AL GHAZI, MORENO GODOY y AL KASSAR pactaron la venta a las FARC de armas valoradas en millones de dólares, que incluían miles de ametralladoras, millones de cartuchos de munición, lanzagranadas propulsados por cohete y sistemas de misiles tierra-aire. Durante una serie de llamadas telefónicas, correos electrónicos y reuniones personales que se grabaron, AL GHAZI, MORENO GODOY y AL KASSAR acordaron vender esas armas a dos confidentes de la DEA, que se presentaron como interesados en adquirir las armas para las FARC con el planteamiento concreto de que iban a ser utilizadas contra las fuerzas estadounidenses en Colombia. Durante dichas reuniones, AL GHAZI, MORENO GODOY y AL KASSAR proporcionaron a los confidentes, entre otras cosas: (1) un croquis de la embarcación que iba a ser utilizada para transportar las armas; (2) los datos técnicos de los misiles tierra-aire; y (3) cuentas bancarias en España y el Líbano que fueron utilizadas para ocultar más de 400 000 dólares procedentes de cuentas encubiertas de la DEA que los confidentes hicieron creer --y AL GHAZI, MORENO GODOY y AL KASSAR creyeron -- eran ganancias del tráfico de estupefacientes de las FARC para pagar las armas. Durante sus reuniones con los confidentes, AL GHAZI, MORENO GODOY y AL KASSAR revisaron los certificados nicaragüenses de destinatario final obtenidos con el fin de que el trato pareciera legal. AL GHAZI y MORENO GODOY fueron detenidos por las autoridades rumanas el 7 de junio de 2007 en Bucarest, mientras se preparaban para finalizar la operación de venta de armas a las FARC. Simultáneamente, AL KASSAR fue detenido por las autoridades españolas en Madrid. AL GHAZI y MORENO GODOY han sido extraditados por Rumania a Estados Unidos hoy para hacer frente a cuatro acusaciones distintas: - Acusación 1. Conspiración para asesinar a ciudadanos estadounidenses, tipificada en el Título 18 del Código de Estados Unidos, Sección 2332 (b). - Acusación 2. Conspiración para asesinar a funcionarios o empleados de Estados Unidos, tipificada en el Título 18 del Código de Estados Unidos, Secciones 1114 y 1117. - Acusación 3. Conspiración para adquirir y utilizar misiles antiaéreos, tipificada en el Título 18 del Código de Estados Unidos, Sección 2332g. - Acusación 4. Conspiración para prestar apoyo o recursos materiales a una organización incluida en la lista de organizaciones terroristas extranjeras, tipificada en el Título 18 del Código de Estados Unidos, Sección 2339B. Además, MORENO GODOY está sometido a una quinta acusación, de blanqueo de capitales, tipificada en el Título 18 del Código de Estados Unidos, Sección 1956. AL GHAZI y MORENO GODOY comparecerán ante el tribunal estadounidense competente esta tarde, y está previsto que el acto de notificación formal de la acusación ante el Juez Federal de Distrito, JED. S. RAKOFF, en el tribunal federal de Manhattan se celebre el jueves 18 de octubre de 2007, a las 11 de la mañana. El Sr. GARCÍA ha elogiado la labor de la DEA; de la Policía Fronteriza, el Ministerio del Interior y el Ministerio Público de Rumania, y de la Policía Nacional y la Fiscalía de la Audiencia Nacional españolas, y también ha dado las gracias a la Oficina de Asuntos Internacionales de la División Criminal del Departamento de Justicia de Estados Unidos y a la División Antiterrorista del FBI. "TAREQ MOUSA AL GHAZI y LUIS FELIPE MORENO GODOY pactaron la venta de armas peligrosas y de alta potencia para que fueran utilizadas contra las fuerzas estadounidenses", dijo el fiscal MICHAEL J. GARCIA. "Gracias al sobresaliente trabajo de investigación y a una cooperación internacional sin precedentes, han sido acusados, extraditados y llevados ante un tribunal estadounidense". "AL GHAZI y MORENO GODOY están acusados de formar parte de una compleja conspiración con un sencillo objetivo: asesinar a estadounidenses", dijo la Directora de la DEA, KAREN P. TANDY. "La DEA y nuestros socios les han frenado y estos lugartenientes de la red internacional de tráfico de armas de MONZER AL KASSAR se enfrentarán ahora a la administración de justicia de Estados Unidos". Los Fiscales Adjuntos BOYD M. JOHNSON III, LESLIE C. BROWN y BRENDAN R. McGUIRE están encargados de la acusación en el caso. Los cargos contenidos en el auto de procesamiento son meras acusaciones, y los acusados tienen la presunción de inocencia mientras no se demuestre su culpabilidad. 17 de octubre de 2007
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U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin Prison Inmates at Midyear 2007 June 2008, NCJ 221944 ---------------------------------------------------------- This file is text only without graphics and many of the tables. A Zip archive of the tables in this report in spreadsheet format (.csv) and the full report including tables and graphics in .pdf format are available from: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/pim07.htm This report is one in a series. More recent editions may be available. To view a list of all in the series go to http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pubalp2.htm#pjmidyear ----------------------------------------------------------- William J. Sabol, Ph.D. and Heather Couture, BJS Statisticians On June 30, 2007, state and federal correctional authorities had jurisdiction over 1,595,034 prisoners. Of these, 87.5% were under state jurisdiction and 12.5% were under federal jurisdiction (table 1).***State-level prison population data and other detailed informationare available in Appendix tables on the BJS Website at <http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/pim07.pdf.>***More than 95% of prisoners under state and federal jurisdiction were sentenced to more than 1 year. At midyear 2007, the imprisonment rate of persons sentenced to more than 1 year was 509 per 100,000 U.S. residents. Jurisdiction refers to the legal authority over a prisoner regardless of where a prisoner is held. Imprisonment rate refers to the number of persons incarcerated in state and federal prisons per 100,000 U.S. residents. Growth in the prison population slowed slightly during the first six months of 2007 Growth in the number of prisoners under state or federal jurisdiction slowed slightly during the first six months of 2007, compared to the same period in 2006. Between January and June 2007, the prison population increased by 1.6% (or 24,919 prisoners), compared to a 2% increase during the first six months of 2006 (figure 1). The slowdown in the overall growth rate of the prison population during the first half of 2007 was due to a decline in the growth rate of prisoners under state jurisdiction. During the first six months of 2007, the number of prisoners under state jurisdiction grew at a slower rate (1.4%) compared to the same period in 2006 (2%). Prisoners under federal jurisdiction increased more rapidly during the first six months in 2007 (3.1%) compared to the same period in 2006 (1.8%). Growth during the first half of the year generally outpaced growth during the second half More rapid growth during the first six months of the year compared to the second six months was generally observed in the nation's prison population (figure 2). With the exception of 2002, the majority of annual change in the total prison population occurred during the first six months between 2000 and 2006. In 2000 and 2001, almost all of the annual growth in the nation's prison population occurred during the first 6-month periods. Growth in the prison population slowed in the second half of 2000 and decreased between July and December 2001. During 2005 slightly more than half of the annual growth in the prison population occurred during the first half of the year. A little less than half of the growth in 2005 occurred during the second half of the year. Growth during the first half of 2007 slowed in states with the largest prison populations Prison populations in the 10 states with the largest number of prisoners in 2000 increased during 2006 at more than three times (3.2%) the average annual rate of growth (0.9%) from 2000 through 2005.***Prisoners in 2006, BJS Bulletin, December 2007 (p. 3) NCJ 219416.*** During the first half of 2007, growth in the number of prisoners in these states slowed to 0.7%, a 71% decline in the rate of growth from 2006. The 10 states included Texas, California, Florida, New York, Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Louisiana. ***By December 31, 2006, North Carolina replaced Louisiana as the state with the tenth largest prison population.*** Within these 10 states, the majority of the annual growth during 2006 occurred during the first six months of the year (figure 3). Prison populations grew by 2.3% during the 6-month period ending June 30, 2006, and increased by an additional 0.9% during the 6-month period ending December 31, 2006. Growth in the prison population in the remaining 40 states increased by 1.6% during the first six months of 2006 and by 2.2% during the first six months of 2007. All but two (Florida and Pennsylvania) of the10 largest states in 2000 reported slower prison growth during the first six months of 2007 than during the first half of 2006. During the same period, Michigan and Louisiana reported decreases of 1.8% and 0.1%, respectively (appendix table 1). Six-month growth rates in states ranged from increases of more than 8% to decreases of 3% During the first six months of 2007, the prison population increased in 41 states and declined in 8 states (table 2). Wyoming was the only state that did not report a change. Twenty-six of the 41 states that reported an increase exceeded the overall percentage increase (1.4%) in prisoners under jurisdiction of state correctional authorities nationwide. Minnesota (8.6%) reported the largest percentage increase during the first six months of 2007, and Montana (down 2.9%) reported the largest percentage decrease. Florida reported the largest absolute increase (2,109) in the size of its prison population, and Michigan reported the largest absolute decrease (929). Between 2000 and 2006, the prison populations decreased in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, and Illinois; however, during the first six months of 2007, the prison population increased in these states. The largest growth occurred in New Jersey. At midyear 2007, New Jersey reported an increase of 3.7%, up from an annual average decrease of 1.4% from December 2000 to December 2006. For most state prison systems, long-term growth rates (the average annual percent change between yearend 2000 and yearend 2006) differed from short-term growth rates (first six months of 2007). In Massachusetts the long-term growth rate for the prison population increased 0.5%, compared to a 3.7% short-term rate. In Michigan the prison population had an average annual increase of 1.3% between yearend 2000 and yearend 2006, compared to a decline of 1.8% in the first six months of 2007. Growth in sentenced prisoners mirrored growth in all prisoners under jurisdiction The number of prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year increased 1.7% between December 31, 2006 and June 30, 2007, or at about the same rate as the total number of prisoners under jurisdiction (table 3). During the 6-month period ending June 30, 2007, the percentage change in the number of sentenced male and female prisoners increased at about the same rates as the overall percentage change in the number of prisoners under jurisdiction. Female prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year (2.9%) increased at a slightly faster rate than the overall female prison population (2.5%). On June 30, 2007, the imprisonment rate for prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year was 509 per 100,000 U.S. residents, up from 501 at yearend 2006. Male prisoners sentenced to more than 1 year were imprisoned at a rate of 957 per 100,000 male residents; female prisoners were imprisoned at a rate of 69 per 100,000 female residents. Prison admissions growth outpaced growth in releases During 2006 (the most recent data available on prison admissions and releases), the number of sentenced prisoners admitted to state or federal prisons increased to 749,798, up 2.3% over the number admitted in 2005 (table 4). Sentenced prisoners released during 2006 reached 713,473, up 2.1% over the number released in 2005.***To avoid double counting, BJS counts of sentenced admissions and releases exclude transfers, escapes, and AWOLs.*** From yearend 2000 to 2006, the growth in prison admissions (3.1%) exceeded releases (2.8%) (figure 4). The faster rate of growth in the number of admissions was consistent with the general increase of sentenced prisoners between 2000 and 2006. State admissions for parole violations grew more rapidly than new court commitments During 2006, state prisons admitted 692,303 sentenced prisoners, an increase of 2.3% since yearend 2005 (table 5). New court commitments accounted for about 64% of sentenced admissions in 2006, a percentage that has fluctuated between 60% and 64% since 2000. About a third (239,495) of all admissions to state prisons in 2006 were offenders sentenced for violations of parole or conditions of supervised release. This was a 3.1% increase over the 232,229 prisoners admitted for parole violations in 2005. Since 2000, the percentage of state prison admissions for parole violations fluctuated between a high of 36.3% in 2001 to a low of 33.1% in 2003 (figure 5). Parole violators were 34.6% of admissions to prison at yearend 2006. California had both the largest absolute number and percentage increase of admissions for parole violations. In 2006, 64.9% of all admissions in California were for parole violations, down from 68.9% in 2000 (not shown in table). Excluding California, parole violations represented slightly more than a quarter of all state prison admissions in 2006. Use of private facilities and local jails by federal correctional authorities increased 12% At midyear 2007, there were 118,239 prisoners under jurisdiction in privately operated facilities, up 5.4% (6,105 prisoners) from 112,134 at midyear 2006 (table 6). During 2007, the number of prisoners under federal jurisdiction in private facilities increased by 3,271, up 12.1% from June 30, 2006. Between midyear 2006 and midyear 2007, based on reporting from 49 states, the total number of prisoners under jurisdiction in private facilities increased 3.3% (or by 2,834 prisoners). Over a third of this growth was contributed by Arizona. Arizona reported an increase of 957 prisoners which was offset by decreases in other states (appendix table 8). Illinois did not report data in 2007 and did not have offenders in private facilities in 2006. On June 30, 2007, state and federal correctional authorities reported 79,688 prisoners under jurisdiction in local jails, an increase of 2.3% over the 77,903 reported at midyear 2006 (table 7). In both years, 5% of prisoners under state or federal jurisdiction were housed in local jails. During 2007, federal officials increased the number of prisoners housed in local jails by 243 prisoners, up 12.9% from June 30, 2006. State officials increased the number housed in local jails by 1,542 prisoners, up 2.0% from midyear 2006. The majority of this growth can be attributed to the growth in Kentucky (1,588) and Virginia (1,137) (not shown in table). Inmates held in state or federal prison or in local jails increased to nearly 2.3 million On June 30, 2007, an estimated 2.3 million inmates were held in custody in state or federal prison facilities or in local jails (table 8). About two-thirds (66%) of inmates in custody were held in prison, while about a third (34%) were held in local jails. The custody count is defined as all inmates held in state or federal public prison facilities, inmates held in privately operated facilities, and inmates held in local jails, regardless of length of sentence and state holding jurisdiction. It does not include inmates held in U.S. Territories, military facilities, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities, jails in Indian Country, and juvenile facilities. During the first six months of 2007, the custody population grew 1.8% compared to an average annual growth rate of 2.6% from yearend 2000 to yearend 2006. The incarceration rate for inmates in custody increased to 762 persons per 100,000 U.S. residents at midyear 2007, up from 751 at yearend 2006. Incarceration rate refers to the number of inmates held in state or federal prisons or in local jails per 100,000 U.S. residents. Black males ages 30 to 34 had the highest custody incarceration rate of any race, age, or gender group Of the 2.3 million inmates in custody, 2.1 million were men and 208,300 were women (table 9). Black males represented the largest percentage (35.4%) of inmates held in custody, followed by white males (32.9%) and Hispanic males (17.9%). Over a third (33.8%) of the total male custody population was ages 20 to 29 (appendix table 10). The largest percentage of black (35.5%) and Hispanic (39.9%) males held in custody were ages 20 to 29. White males ages 35 to 44 accounted for the largest percentage (30.1%) of the white male custody population. The largest percentage (35.9%) of the female custody population was ages 30 to 39. Over a third of white females (35.9%) were ages 30 and 39. The largest percentage (36.8%) of Hispanic females in custody was ages 20 to 29. The custody incarceration rate for black males was 4,618 per 100,000. Hispanic males were incarcerated at a rate of 1,747 per 100,000. Compared to the estimated numbers of black, white, and Hispanic males in the U.S. resident population, black males (6 times) and Hispanic males (a little more than 2 times) were more likely to be held in custody than white males. At midyear 2007 the estimated incarceration rate of white males was 773 per 100,000. Across all age categories, black males were incarcerated at higher rates than white or Hispanic males. Black males ages 30 to 34 had the highest custody incarceration rate of any race, age, or gender group at midyear 2007 (table 10). At midyear 2007, the incarceration rate of black women held in custody (prison or jail) was 348 per 100,000 U.S. residents compared to 146 Hispanic women and 95 white women. With the exception of females ages 55 to 59, black women were held in custody at higher rates than Hispanic or white women across all age categories. Hispanic and white men accounted for more than half of the increase to the custody population Between 2000 and 2007, the number of inmates in custody in prisons or jails increased by 367,200. Male inmates (315,100) accounted for 86% of the increase to the custody population (table 11). Female inmates (52,100) made up the remaining 14%. From midyear 2000 through midyear 2007, Hispanic men (120,000) represented the largest increase to the custody population. They accounted for a third (32.7%) of the overall change in the number of inmates in prison or jail. White men accounted for a quarter (25.0%), and white women for about a tenth (9.0%) of the overall change during this period. Black men in prison or jail increased by 23,100 and accounted for 6.3% of the overall change to the population. Black women declined by 1,900 during this period. Changes in the incarceration rates for men and women by race were associated with changes to the overall composition of the custody population at midyear 2007. Black men had an incarceration rate of 4,618 per 100,000 U.S. residents at midyear 2007, down from 4,777 at midyear 2000. For white men, the midyear 2007 incarceration rate was 773 per 100,000 U.S. residents, up from 683 at midyear 2000. The ratio of the incarceration rates of black men to white men declined from 7 to 6 during this period. Changes in the incarceration rates for women were more distinct. At midyear 2000, black women were incarcerated at a rate 6 times that of white women (or 380 per 100,000 U.S. residents versus 63 per 100,000 U.S. residents). By June 30, 2007, the incarceration rate for black women declined to 3.7 times that of white women (or 348 versus 95). An 8.4% decline in the incarceration rate for black women and a 51% increase in the rate for white women accounted for the overall decrease in the incarceration rate of black women relative to white women at midyear 2007. Estimated number of non-U.S. citizens and juveniles in state custody increased An estimated 96,703 non-U.S. citizens were held in state or federal custody on June 30, 2007, up an estimated 3.7% from the estimated 93,267 reported to be held in custody on June 30, 2006 (table 12). Three states (Florida, Illinois, and Oregon) not providing data on non-U.S. citizens for midyear 2007 reported holding 8,556 non-U.S. citizens in custody at midyear 2006. The federal system and 40 states reported in both 2006 and 2007. In these 41 jurisdictions the number of non-U.S. citizens increased from 82,497 to 84,942 (not shown in table). California reported an increase of 2,598 non-U.S. citizens; Georgia reported an increase of 1,018. On June 30, 2007, state officials held an estimated 2,639 juveniles (persons under age 18) in custody, a 10.4% increase from the estimated 2,390 juveniles held in custody on June 30, 2006 (table 13). Florida, Illinois, and Oregon did not report data on the number of juveniles held in custody in 2007. In 2006, these three states collectively had custody of 330 juveniles. In the 44 states that reported in 2006 and 2007, the number of juveniles increased by 199, from 2,034 to 2,233 (not shown in table). Alabama (38), Michigan (37), and Mississippi (34) accounted for over half of this growth. Methodology National Prisoner Statistics The National Prisoner Statistics (NPS) program has been collecting statistics on prisoners at midyear and yearend under a Congressional mandate since 1926. The Census Bureau serves as the data collection agent for the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). BJS depends entirely upon the voluntary participation of State Departments of Corrections and the Federal Bureau of Prisons for NPS data. The NPS distinguishes between prisoners in custody and prisoners under jurisdiction. To have custody of a prisoner, a state or the federal system must hold that prisoner in one of its facilities. To have jurisdiction over a prisoner, a state or the federal system must have legal authority over the prisoner. Some states are unable to provide both custody and jurisdiction counts. The NPS jurisdiction counts include inmates held within a jurisdiction's facilities, including prisons, penitentiaries, correctional facilities, halfway houses, boot camps, farms, training/treatment centers, and hospitals. They include inmates who are: *temporarily absent (less than 30 days), out to court, or on work release *held in privately operated facilities, local jails, other state or federal facilities *serving a sentence for a responding jurisdiction and another jurisdiction at the same time. The NPS custody counts include all inmates held within a responding jurisdiction's facilities, including inmates housed for other jurisdictions. The custody counts exclude inmates held in local jails and in other jurisdictions. With a few exceptions for several responding jurisdictions, the NPS custody counts exclude inmates held in privately operated facilities. The NPS counts also include all inmates in state-operated facilities in Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Vermont, which have combined jail-prison systems. Since 2001 NPS prisoner counts have excluded inmates held by the District of Columbia, which as of yearend 2001 operated only a jail system. Prisoners sentenced under the District of Columbia criminal code are housed in federal facilities. Illinois provided its 2007 total jurisdiction count. Combined with the 2006 reported counts for gender and sentenced individuals, ratio estimates were calculated to estimate the 2007 jurisdiction counts for males, females, and sentenced individuals. Illinois, Florida, and Oregon did not provide data for non-U.S. citizens and juveniles held in custody at midyear 2007. Estimated totals were calculated using the custody, non-U.S. citizen, and juvenile information provided at midyear 2006. For more information about the NPS data collection instruments, see <http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/correct.htm#nps>. Other inmate counts With the exception of 2005, data on the number of inmates held in the custody of local jails are from the BJS Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ). The ASJ provides data on inmates in custody at midyear. For more information about the ASJ, see Methodology in Jail Inmates at Midyear 2007 (NCJ 221945). The number of inmates held in the custody of local jails in 2005 are from the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. The 2005 Census of Jail Inmates was the eighth in a series. Previous censuses of jails were conducted in 1970, 1972, 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993 and 1999. To reduce respondent burden and improve data quality and timeliness, the census was split into two parts: the Census of Jail Inmates, 2005, and the Census of Jail Facilities, 2006, (conducted on March 31, 2006). As in previous censuses, the U.S. Census Bureau was the collection agent for BJS. The 2005 Census of Jail Inmates included all locally administered confinement facilities (under the authority of 2,853 local jurisdictions). These facilities are intended for adults but sometimes hold juveniles. They hold inmates beyond arraignment and are staffed by municipal or county employees. The census also included 42 jails that were privately operated under contract for local governments and 65 multi-jurisdiction jails that were administered by two or more local governments. Included in the census, but excluded from this report due to lack of comparability with previous survey years, were 13 facilities maintained by the Federal Bureau of Prisons and functioned as jails. The census excluded temporary holding facilities, such as drunk tanks and police lockups, that do not hold persons after they are formally charged in court (usually within 72 hours of arrest). Also, the census excluded state-operated facilities in Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Vermont, which have combined jail-prison systems. Fourteen locally operated jails in Alaska were included. All jail jurisdictions responded to the census, resulting in a 100% response rate. Estimating age-specific incarceration rates Estimates are provided for the number of persons held in custody in state or federal prisons or in local jails by gender (within genders by age group), race (non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black), and Hispanic origin. The detailed race and Hispanic origin categories exclude estimates of persons identifying two or more races. For 2000 and 2007, estimates were produced separately for inmates under state and federal jurisdiction and then combined to obtain a total estimated population. State estimates were prepared by combining information about the gender of prisoners from the NPS with information on self-reported race and Hispanic origin from the 2004 Survey of Inmates of State Correctional Facilities. To estimate federal prisoners, the distributions of FJSP counts of sentenced federal inmates by gender, age, race, and Hispanic origin on September 30, 2006, were applied to the NPS counts of sentenced federal inmates by gender at midyear 2007. Estimates of the U.S. resident population for July 1, 2007, by age, gender, race, and Hispanic origin, were generated by applying the July 1, 2007 age distributions within gender, race, and Hispanic origin groups to the June 30, 2007 population estimates by gender. The population estimates were provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. Age-specific rates of incarceration for each demographic group were calculated by dividing the estimated number of sentenced prisoners within each age group by the estimated number of U.S. residents in each age group, multiplying the quotient by 100,000, and then rounding to the nearest whole number. Totals by gender include all prisoners and U.S. residents regardless of racial or Hispanic origin, while incarceration rates for detailed race and Hispanic origin groups exclude persons identifying two or more races. NPS jurisdiction notes Alaska--Prisons and jails form one integrated system. All NPS data include jail and prison populations housed in state and out of state. Jurisdictional counts exclude inmates held in local jails that are operated by communities. Arizona--Jurisdiction counts are based on custody data and inmates in contracted beds. California--Non-citizens are defined as inmates held by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Jurisdiction counts include felons and unsentenced inmates who are temporarily housed in local jails or in a hospital. Colorado--Jurisdiction counts include 166 inmates housed in local jails, 4,542 inmates in Colorado contract facilities, and 209 inmates in the Youthful Offender System, which was established primarily for violent juvenile offenders. Counts of inmates with a sentence of more than 1 year include an undetermined number of inmates with a sentence of 1 year or less. Non-citizen is defined as foreign-born. Jurisdiction counts are based on custody counts. Counts for 2006 have been revised to reflect custody counts instead of jurisdiction counts. Connecticut--Prison and jails form one integrated system. All NPS data include jail and prison populations. Delaware--Prisons and jails form one integrated system. All NPS data include jail and prison populations. Federal--Custody counts include inmates housed in secure facilities where the BOP had a direct contract with a private operator or a sub-contract with a private provider at a local government facility. Custody includes 8,025 inmates held in non-secure privately operated community corrections centers (Halfway Houses) and on home confinement. Georgia--Counts are based on custody data. Hawaii--Prisons and jails form one integrated systems. All NPS data include jail and prison populations. Non-citizen data based only on inmates who reported their citizenship. Custody counts exclude inmates held in a state run hospital. Illinois--Data provided only for jurisdiction counts and sentenced prisoner counts. See Methodology. Iowa--Jurisdiction counts are based on custody data. Jurisdiction counts for Inmates with a sentence of more than 1 year include an undetermined number of inmates with a sentence of less than 1 year and unsentenced inmates. Iowa does not differentiate between these groups in its data system. Louisiana--Counts are as of December 27, 2006. Counts include 14,953 males and 1,244 females housed in local jails as a result of a partnership with the Louisiana Sheriffs' Association and local authorities. Custody and jurisdiction counts included evacuees from Hurricane Katrina and other pretrial offenders from Orleans and Jefferson parish jails. Due to the effects of Hurricane Katrina, Orleans and Jefferson parish prison capacities are down. Local jail population is down from the 2004 numbers. Kansas--Jurisdiction counts of inmates with a sentence of more than 1 year include an undetermined number of inmates with a sentence with a sentence of more than 1 year. Citizen counts are estimated. Maryland--Jurisdiction counts by sentence length are estimates extracted from actual sentence length breakdowns from automated data and applied to totals based on manual data. Non-citizen is defined as foreign-born. Massachusetts--By law, offenders may be sentenced to terms of up to 2 years inlocally-operated jails and correctional institutions. Such populations are included in counts and rates for local jails and correctional institutions. About 6,200 inmates with sentences of more than one year were held in local jails. Jurisdiction and custody counts include an undetermined number of inmates who were remanded to court, transferred to the custody of another state, federal, or locally-operated system, and subsequently released. Mississippi--Does not collect citizenship data. Missouri--Non-citizen defined as foreign-born. Nevada--Due to a system conversion, information provided is as of June 4, 2007. New Jersey--Jurisdiction counts of inmates with a sentence of more than 1 year include an undetermined number of inmates with sentences of 1 year. The Department of Corrections has no jurisdiction over inmates with sentences of less than 1 year or over unsentenced inmates. Citizenship data were not collected from every inmate. New York--Reports foreign-born inmates rather than non-citizens. Ohio--Jurisdiction counts of inmates with a sentence of more than 1 year include an undetermined number of inmates with sentences of 1 year or less. Oklahoma--Jurisdiction counts for inmates with sentences of less than 1 year consist mainly of offenders ordered by the court to the Delayed Sentencing Program for Young Adults pursuant to 22 O.S. 996 through 996.3. Non-citizen is defined as any inmate with an ICE detainer. Oregon--Jurisdiction counts include an undetermined number of inmates with sentences of one year or less. County authorities retain jurisdiction over the majority of these types of inmates. Rhode Island--Prisons and jails form one integrated system. All NPS data include jail and prison populations. Tennessee--Non-citizen defined as foreign-born. Vermont--Prisons and jails form one integrated system. All NPS data include jail and prison populations. This report in portable document format (includes 12 appendix tables) and in ASCII and its related statistical data are available at the BJS World Wide Web Internet site: <http://www. ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/pim07.htm> Office of Justice Programs Innovation Partnerships Safer Neighborhoods http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Jeffrey L. Sedgwick is the director. BJS Bulletins present the first release of findings from permanent data collection programs. This Bulletin was written by William J. Sabol, Ph.D., and Heather Couture. Todd D. Minton verified the report. Theresa M. Reitz carried out the data collection and processing under the supervision of Charlene M. Sebold, Governments Division, Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Commerce. Duane H. Cavanaugh provided technical assistance. Georgette Walsh edited the report, Tina Dorsey produced the report, and Jayne E. Robinson prepared the report for final printing under the supervision of Doris J. James. June 2008, NCJ 221944 6/04/2008/JR
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Number range CHAPTERFEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION \+ + + + + INTERNATIONAL AVIATION SAFETY FORUM "SAFETY FROM TOP TO BOTTOM" \+ + + + + GENERAL SESSION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2006 \+ + + + + Westfields Marriott 17450 Conference Center Drive Chantilly, Virginia 20151 ROBERT A. STURGELL Deputy Administrator, Federation Aviation Administration MARY E. PETERS Secretary, Department of Transportation MARION C. BLAKEY Administrator, Federal Aviation Administration ROBERTO KOBEH GONZALEZ President of the Council, International Civil Aviation Organization GIOVANNI BISIGNANI Director General and Chief Executive Officer, International Air Transportation Association JOSEPH H. BOGOSIAN Assistant Administrator for International Aviation, Federal Aviation Administration C-O-N-T-E-N-T-S AGENDA ITEM PAGE Welcome Robert A. Sturgell 3 Mary Peters 8 The Challenge Marion C. Blakey 16 Keynote Address Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez 28 The Global Perspective on Aviation Safety Giovanni Bisignani 42 P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S 8:53 a.m. MR. STURGELL: Great, good morning, everybody. If I could ask you to take your seats, we\'ll get started here. Thanks. I\'d like to welcome everybody to the third annual FAA International Aviation Safety Forum. For those of you joining us for the first time, it\'s a pleasure to have you here, and for our repeat performers, thanks for coming back. We\'ve got a great program lined up. It\'s a privilege to have so many people here from so many parts of the world who are committed to making air travel even safer than it is today. And this International Form would certainly not be possible without the support from the Air Transport Association, and the International Air Transport Association. And I\'d also like to thank our generous corporate sponsors as well, Boeing, Airbus, the National Business Aircraft Association, American Airlines, Bombardier, FedEx, General Electric, Honeywell, Southwest Airlines, UPS, Zuchert Scout & Rasenberger, the Aeronautical Repair Station Association, JetBlue, SAE International, TDG Aerospace and the Airline Pilots Association. Thanks very much to all of you for your continued support and for your commitment to aviation safety. Thanks. (Applause) This morning, we are very privileged to have the President of ICAO, Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez, to deliver the keynote address and also Mr. Giovanni Bisignani of IATA will provide a global perspective on aviation safety. This afternoon, I think we\'ve got a real treat at the luncheon. Elon Musk will be here and he\'s going to talk about the rapidly evolving space tourism industry. After that concurrent panel sessions start at 2:30 and we\'ve got a great group of panelists on hand to talk about such subjects as the safety management system, emerging risks in airport safety, globalized nature of manufacturing and maintenance and an issue that we get asked about a lot here in the United States which is safety and the privatization of air traffic control services. And also, please don\'t forget to check out the exhibits over the next two days that right out here to my right. You\'ll see what\'s on the horizon in terms of research and development, new technologies, procedures, and safety practices. And I think that you\'ll find them most informative. All of the information you need on the exhibits is right in your program so please reference that. I think what is different this year is we\'ve included some more sessions on general aviation and I think that\'s an area that\'s growing worldwide. It\'s certainly a huge population here in the United States and I hope that discussion will be of interest to everybody as well. We\'ve got a very impressive array of international safety talent here today and we\'re looking forward to high level and provocative discussions during both the plenary and breakout panel sessions. Now, to save time, we\'re introducing our panelists in print. So in your registration packet, you\'ll find a booklet with the biographies of today\'s speakers and they\'re all listed in order of their appearance on today\'s program. In addition, we are documenting today\'s proceedings and will be making them available on line. Now, if you have any questions, we\'ve got FAA staff members on hand who are going to be happy to help you. And if you look for the people that are wearing the staff ribbons, that\'s where you need to take your questions. Most important are the evaluation forms that are in your registration packet. We\'ve done this for the last two years and what we rely on are your comments in those evaluations forms to make this conference suitable to your desires and the things you want to get out of it. So please take the time to fill those out for us and drop them in the box just outside of this room. This year, again, because of the great number of international attendance and representation, we\'re providing simultaneous interpretation in five languages; Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish. And also for presentations in any of these languages, you can hear it in English by using the translation equipment. Again, for more information, please reference your program or ask one of the staff members for assistance. If you are using the translation equipment, please leave it in the room as you leave the room. We have that in every one of the rooms where we\'re going to have sessions over the next couple of days. So please leave the equipment behind. And the last thing I\'ll say is if you have cell phones or pagers, please turn then off during the sessions or put them in the silent mode. We\'d appreciate that. Two more housekeeping items here. If you need airport transfers, just check with the hotel desk and we will also be taking questions from the audience during all the sessions over the next two days. We\'ll have microphones on hand so everyone can hear your question and please don\'t be shy. So now, let\'s get to the real reason why we\'re here and that is to talk about safety. Aviation is really an incredible way to travel. But we know we can and we must continue to make air travel safer and that\'s the whole idea behind this conference, assembling the best minds in aviation safety, putting together a provocative program, placing key issues on the table and building safety partnerships. So I\'m very pleased to kick things off by introducing our first speaker who may be new to many of you but she\'s certainly no newcomer to transportation. Mary Peters brings a lifetime of experience to transportation issues from both the private and public sectors. From 2001 to 2005, she served as the head of the Federal Highway Administration where she led efforts to improve safety and security, reduce traffic congestion, and modernize America\'s roads and bridges. She encouraged the use of new technologies that reduced construction time and expense, resulting in safer, longer-lasting highways. On the state level, Mary Peters previously served as the top executive at the Arizona Department of Transportation from 1998 to 2001 where her duties included not just surface transportation, but also responsibility for the state\'s airports, including one of the fastest growing in the region. When President Bush nominated her to become Secretary of Transportation he had this to say, \"She\'s an innovative thinker, she knows how to set priorities and solve problems. Mary will work closely with state and local leaders to insure that America has a state of the art transportation system that meets the needs of our growing economy. So ladies and gentlemen, please join me in welcoming the 15^th^ U.S. Secretary of Transportation, Mary Peters. SECRETARY PETERS: Bobby, thanks so much for that kind introduction and I certainly am very pleased to have the opportunity to be here with you today. I wanted to stress that my one-month anniversary as Secretary is tomorrow, so coming to this event to be with you here today was so important to me that I wanted to make sure it happened in my first month. On behalf of President Bush and on behalf of the United States of America, and of course, the U.S. Department of Transportation, it is my great pleasure to welcome you here today to the third annual International Safety Forum. As we gather here today, news of Sunday\'s tragic crash in Abuja, Nigeria is fresh in our thoughts. This, and other incidents, including the jet that went down in Lexington, Kentucky in August, are reminders of why we must always keep safety clearly on all of our radar screens. So many precious lives can be lost in a single moment and our hearts certain ache for the victims of these tragedies and for their families. I had an opportunity to visit with Senator McConnell shortly after the airline crash in Lexington and he mentioned how the whole community was grieving because so many of those aboard the plane that day were folks well-known throughout the Lexington area. At the same time our resolve to become stronger than ever to make sure that we build safety considerations into every transportation decision, all of us, all of the time. So it\'s an honor to be here with so many leaders from the world aviation community and I would like to especially welcome our distinguished international guests to the United States. I want to also thank Administrator Blakey for all that she and her team, including Deputy Administrator Bobby Sturgell, have done to make sure that this conference is a great success. Congratulations and thank you to both of you as well. As many of you know, as the head of Federal Aviation Administration, Marion Blakey was a driving force in establishing this safety forum. Her background, both at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board, make Marion uniquely qualified to lead this effort and someone who knew how important it was to have this safety forum. When the idea was proposed, three years ago, some asked whether we needed such a forum and whether or not it would add value. Well, today that answer is clear. Looking across this room it is evident that there is a strong interest in all aspects of global aviation in the aviation community coming together to advance safety. In fact, Marion told me that this conference was over-subscribed, more people wanted to come than there was room for even in this great hall here today. Nearly 500 top leaders are attending this conference, representing 50 nations and the breadth of the aviation and aerospace community. As Bobby said, our proceedings are being translated from English into five languages, demonstrating the importance of this conference worldwide. But most important the numbers speak for themselves and the benefit of coordinated industry and government efforts to improve safety. The rate of major aviation accidents has decreased across the globe by 25 percent during the period of 2001 to 2005 as compared to the previous five-year period and even with the recent crashes that I mentioned, 2006 is shaping up to be the safest year ever in aviation around the globe. Here in the United States aviation today has enjoyed an unparalleled safety record. Prior to the Lexington crash a record, 2.7 billion passengers flew without a single onboard fatality on American commercial flights. I owe thanks to all of you for that incredible safety record. But we must continue to raise the bar. When I was honored to become Secretary of Transportation last month, I let our employees know that safety is the top of my list of priorities. We are also committed to improving the performance and the reliability of our nation\'s transportation system and to apply 21^st^ Century solutions for 21^st^ Century transportation challenges, including new approaches to funding to deal with our aging infrastructure across the broad spectrum here in the United States. But I feel that we must always, always put safety first when it comes to transportation priorities. That goes for our roadways, our pipelines, most certainly our runways and our skies as well. Just yesterday I returned from the Midwest where I had the opportunity to sit down with some veteran air traffic controllers and to join some of our newest recruits in training exercises. I came away from that visit with a very deep appreciation for the work that they do. It\'s intense, it\'s complex, and it is absolutely vital to keeping tens of thousands of flights moving through US air space daily without incident. And that job promises to become even more complex and challenging in the future. Passenger volumes in this country are racing to the one billion mark within this decade. Meanwhile companies like Cessna, whose assembly line I also visited in Kansas, are preparing for delivery of thousands of new very light jets, which will usher the largest increase in air traffic since the 1960s. Many of the planes will be operating outside of the United States, as the global demand for aviation continues to climb. So it\'s no coincidence that we have a significant general aviation presence in this forum here today, from participation on panels to tomorrow\'s guest speaker, Phil Boyer, President of the Aircraft Owners and Pilot\'s Association. When President Bush swore me in, he noted that our nation is fast outgrowing our aviation capacity. He charged me with modernizing our airports and our air traffic control system to meet that growing demand and we\'re certainly making steady progress in doing so. The United States Government has plans to hire almost 12,000 new controllers over the next 10 years to keep up with the growing air traffic demand. And we\'re working on equipping these incoming controllers with the best modern technology to help them safely handle the volumes of traffic that they will be charged with. Aviation safety, however, is not a charge that can be answered by any one manufacturer or for that matter, any one airline, or even any single country. Aviation is the most international form of transportation. Countless flights across our borders link nations every day. And the passengers on board on any given flight may have a variety of passports, speak a multitude of languages and of course, the airplanes themselves and many of the parts that go into them have diverse origins as well, and when something goes wrong, the implications effect all of us. So safety is a responsibility that we all must share. Fortunately, because of organizations like ICAO, we have a international standard for safety that is unmatched across transportation modes. ICAO facilitates communication, cooperation, and puts the entire aviation community on the same page, so to speak. I had an opportunity to meet with President Kobeh just yesterday in my office and I\'m excited about the plans for this organization. Both of us are very enthusiastic about the opportunity we have to build upon ICAO\'s strong foundation. Roberto, again, congratulations on your new position and I look forward to working with you and thank you for being here today. The same challenges that we\'re facing in the United States, however, are being mirrored on a global basis. As other nations build their aviation infrastructure and markets, particularly in many parts of Asia, the number of passengers traveling is growing expedentially while air cargo is increasingly a vital part of our domestic and international freight movement. International air travel continues to expand strongly, fueled by the growing liberalization of the aviation markets, a trend that is both desirable and inevitable. In the first eight months of this year alone, traffic among international passenger carriers grew by 6.1 percent compared to the same period last year. The bottom line is this; the modern global economy cannot function without aviation and aviation cannot function without an underlying commitment to safety. Each of you has demonstrated by your presence here today your commitment to safety. The next day and a half you will receive in-depth in the substance and the policies of today\'s safety challenges. I want to close by thanking you all for being here and I look forward to working with all of you as a find ways to work with you to build on aviation\'s tremendous safety record and to advance the safety agenda not only in your country but throughout the world. Thank you again, for your attendance. Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you this morning. I do regret that I\'m not able to stay. Bobby, some of the sessions sound very exciting and I wish I could stay a little longer and spend more time with you today, but alas, I cannot. However, I will look very much forward to speaking with Administrator Blakey about the success of this conference and I wish you all well. Thank you. (Applause) MR. STURGELL: Thank you, Madam Secretary. We appreciate very much those remarks. It\'s now my pleasure to introduce our next speaker, the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration. As Secretary Peters said, Marion Blakey\'s passion for aviation transportation safety led her to conceive this conference three years ago, with a vision of creating a forum that provided the international aviation community a venue to address today\'s cutting edge issues with straight talk, head on. I think that vision is now a reality. Ladies and gentlemen, the Administrator Marion Blakey. (Applause) ADMINISTRATOR BLAKEY: Thank you, Bobby. And I want to reiterate Bobby\'s comments, that we are so very grateful that Secretary Peters took time out of what is really an incredible schedule for her right now to join us here, so that really kicked things off with, I think, setting a picture for us of the challenge ahead. And I do want to thank all of you for being here. You know, I looked it up and apparently as best they can count it, there are 194 countries on this planet and we\'ve got more than 50 of them represented here, 50 very farsighted countries when it comes to aviation. So I want to thank those of you who are new to this forum for coming and joining us and for those of you who have been here before, it\'s great to see you. Now, I\'ve been asked to start things with a safety challenge this morning. And I think as those of us in this business know, safety is just that, it\'s a challenge. The task of moving people and goods safely, efficiently and securely, that\'s tough. Point A to Point B, day in and day out, it\'s a true challenge. And what makes it even more so is that we have been doing it very well. We\'ve been able to amass a safety record that is absolutely unparalleled. So the safety challenge in a nutshell, how do you take it to the next level? What will not only maintain this unparalleled record but what will position us to improve as the operations grow, just as Secretary Peters laid out? I think the answer to that is safety management systems, a topic for us over the next two days, because they allow us to dig deep. They help us uncover things and in so doing, they change the way we look at our own operation. Now, I\'ll tell you a little story because I think it\'s a case in point, and that is about Battery Park in New York City, one of the oldest public spaces in all of Manhattan. Some of you in fact, may have been there at one point or another on your visits because the Battery has been around for centuries. And it\'s an area of about two dozen acres that stretches right there along the shoreline of the Hudson, a really beautiful spot. But recently, the City of New York decided that they were going to have to take steps to replace the subway, creating quite a mess. Now, that subway also has been around for about 100 years. So enter the construction crews, this was December of last year, 2005 and they were digging away in the cold and ice, and they hit a wall, literally a wall that was buried 10 feet below the surface, a wall that unfortunately was perpendicular to the path they needed to go for the subway. So guess what, as you\'d expect, everything stopped. The burning question was, what the heck was this? And needless to say for the crews that were out there in the snow and ice, they put it a little more pointedly than that. The \"it\" turned out to be a wall that the archeologists said was 240 years old. Perhaps it have been built by the British, maybe by the colonists, who took a backseat to what. The answer was they had uncovered a subterranean wall that was three feet high but get this, eight feel thick and 40 feel long. So of course enter the conservationists and rightly so. But while they were making plans for the identification, dismantling, relocation, a second wall was discovered, longer, taller, except that this one was built on logs at its base. Now hitting the wall is an American phrase that comes from marathon runners in the 1970s. You don\'t think of it in terms of construction sites. But in this case, you can imagine how they felt when they hit wall number 3, more than 100 feet long and nine feet thick. So the question remained, why was this wall put there. Considerable conjecture was all around but honestly no one knew. Now, I\'m going to keep that mystery to the end but my point in telling you this story is that the deeper you dig, the more you discover about what\'s going on, about what you\'re doing. You won\'t learn how you operate until you get below the surface, and when you do, you find precious pieces of data. You learn about how things have been done and you learn about the mistakes that were covered over. There\'s a handful of issues that popped up at Battery Park. What was it? How do you preserve it? Where do you put it? How do you dismantle it? Should you dismantle it? Who owns it? Will this jeopardize our funding? Will this information jeopardize our schedule? Maybe we should cover it back up. Let\'s just look the other way. There\'s not one of us here that doesn\'t see parallels in this situation to aviation. We need to be sure we\'re not looking the other way. We need a rigorous and formalized approach to identifying hazards, assessing the related risks and identifying and prioritizing the best way to then intervene. Then, we measure the effectiveness of the actions we\'re taking. It\'s a continuous loop that\'s to a basic safety management systems. And make no mistake about this one; safety management systems are the way to surmount the inevitable walls that seem impenetrable at the time, the walls that just come out of nowhere, some below the surface, just waiting to be discovered. Now, look, I know this is tough to do. When we talk about S and S everybody says, \"Ooh, this it going to be hard\", and that\'s true. But frankly, I don\'t think we have a choice. Right now, the commercial fatal accident rate in the United States is about two fatal accidents for every 10 million takeoffs, and forecasts anticipate that we should expect a doubling or tripling of traffic in the next 10 to 20 years. The question is pretty elementary, isn\'t it? Is it acceptable to us or to the flying public to have a doubling or tripling of accidents? I don\'t think so. We know that the passenger numbers are going to continue to climb. We\'re expecting a billion by 2015. We know, for example, that there may very well be 5,000 very light jets in the system by that year. NetJets, one of the United States\' very successful fractional ownership operations, has a larger fleet now than some US airlines. And we know we\'re going to anticipate the emergence of the unmanned aerial vehicles, unmanned aerial systems, pretty soon up there in the airspace as well. Just last week I attended really an amazing event, a commercial space conference for the X Price Cup out in New Mexico. You know, those are the folks who brought you Spaceship 1, the first private astronauts in space just two years ago. And the guys with rockets, I\'m telling you, they are rapidly seeing their own come into fruition as well. So it\'s another wrinkle to the ever-expanding national and international airspace, aerospace system. So with all that on the table, with a system that\'s growing rapidly, more complex day after day we can no long rely on forensic studies of accidents to determine our next steps. Forensics is a straightforward approach. Accident occurs, we analyze it. Then we take steps to prevent its recurrence. The forensic approach, I think it\'s fair to say got us largely where we are today. And that\'s the world standards for safety. The best of the best. But to get to the next level, we need to move beyond forensics to data analysis, from the analysis of what has happened, to an analysis of what the data show might happened with a high degree of probability. It comes down to managing risk. And you have to know the hazards, the consequences of what can hurt us and then you have to analyze the likelihood that it will happen, the risk, and then, of course, the severity. The purpose of Safety Management Systems is to provide a systematic way to eliminate, mitigate or manage risk and to provide assurance that those actions are going to be effective once we take them. The key to the future of aviation safety, I believe, hinges on data that become information and that information, this is key, it must be shared. We need to remove impediments that would prohibit sharing. ICAO calls this something that I think is a very telling phrase. It\'s a just culture. I think they\'re absolutely right. ICAO reports, and I\'m quoting here, \"The lack of full and open reporting continues to pose a considerable barrier to further safety progress in so many areas\". Let\'s face it, there\'s no place for fear in safety. A safety culture is a just culture. We need to instill a mind set, a mind set that revolved around a safety culture. Continuous efforts on safety improvements have to come from lessons learned from all of us. It\'s the byproduct of a conducive reporting environment, that things are brought to the forefront and often to all of us to learn. That\'s a just culture. With that as context, the information we gather and share is going to require a lot of hard study and analysis as well. It will require that we take a disciplined, a methodical approach, and that we\'re all united against what I think is a part of that fear that some time is lurking over here. The quick, snap judgments or those who would sensationalize the data, we have to stand united against that. It will require a long, hard, continuous look at what\'s happening every day. And I\'m not just talking about airline and airport operations but what happens in our operations as safety oversight authorities, as the regulators, that\'s if we want to take safety to the next level. I\'m proud to say at the FAA, we\'re making that move. In fact, on October 16, just a few days ago, the FAA\'s Aviation Safety Organization was determined by an independent outside auditor to meet the ISO 9001 Standards. We\'re the first government agency of the United States of our size and complexity to achieve certification to this prestigious international standard. That means we\'ve established a system that covers multiple services, includes national and international sites. In this case we\'re talking about 6,462 employees that Mr. Sabatini here supervises. No small thing. As many of you know, ISO is the world\'s largest developer of voluntary international standards and our certification covers areas that are very familiar to all of you; flight standards, aircraft certification, aerospace medicine, rulemaking, accident investigation, air traffic safety and suspected unapproved parts and our quality integration. So I am very proud and Nick, tip of the hat to all of you on your team, that we have taken the next step up. We\'re applying the same rigorous standards to ourselves that we expect business to meet. The regulator and the regulated must toe the same line. And let me say, as hard as that will be going forward, because it\'s not just a question of getting there, you\'ve got to stay there, but that\'s exactly as it should be. I\'m telling you this because data sharing is an important part of our safety message. Sharing safety data is essential to achieving a stronger future for aviation safety. You know, I think as we\'re talking about this the next two days, I think we might as well be honest about a few of the challenges here. We don\'t even know how much safety information there is out there and what\'s truly important and relevant for us to collect; operators, manufacturers, repair stations, suppliers, all the way across the aviation community. Nick tells me he thinks at this point, we\'re probably collecting barely five percent of the available data. Okay, so what about that other 95 percent? We\'re the folks that are going to have to figure out what do we do about that? What\'s relevant and how do we deal with it? But if we\'re going to continue to put downward pressure on the accident rate, we need far more information about emerging trends, precursors. We need to know more about what\'s going on every day in operating, maintenance, manufacturing environments. When we share the information, we move ourselves from the point where diagnostics becomes prognostics. Remember the low hanging fruit is gone and sharing information of what we see, what we find, has got to be the wave of the future. So here\'s where we are. The system is growing in the United States and everywhere you all are. The vehicles are changing. Technology is changing. And from a safety standpoint, we cannot tolerate any increase in accidents despite all this increase. In fact, we have to drive the rate down. Now, let me say in closing that the answer to the safety challenge is not only technology, technology is important and you\'ll see those technologies here on exhibit. As Bobby mentioned a few minutes ago, we do have a great exhibit out there. From NEXGEN to RNF, to RNP, ADS-B and ATOP, a sea of alphabets is out there, but we\'re also going to be looking these two days at international safety policies, the backbone of any global aviation system. So you\'re going to hear about emerging risk of airports, in global manufacturing and maintenance and a performance based air traffic control, the rule of safety certification, recertification and regulation and a privatized ATC. Look, I\'ve covered quite a bit of ground but the story I raised right at the beginning is something we need to keep in the forefront of this conference. The wall that I talked about, archeologists now believe that it came from the original gun fortifications, the battery that gave Battery Park its name. So the deeper you dig, the more you learn. For aviation, the deeper you dig, the more you learn, the safer you get. We can\'t afford to be content with the status quo. For the safest of all time, and as the runners say, \"We can\'t afford to hit the wall\". Thank you very much. (Applause) SECRETARY PETERS: Thank you very much. Now, of course, we are here because safety is paramount around the globe and the desire of each and every one of us in this room to seek cooperation at every level is in the forefront. What I\'ve just described is the vision of our keynote speaker this morning because when it comes to going the extra step, when it comes to making aviation safety the export for everyone to share, his name is mentioned every time. He\'s now the president of the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization since this August and Roberto, I\'m very proud that your first official visit out of Montreal is to this prestigious gathering of safety folks from around the globe. We want to thank you for that. He\'s held a variety of positions over many years including as the Director General of Air Navigation Services for Mexico, a career in aviation that spans five decades, so when it comes to having a historical view, the big context, it doesn\'t get any better. We\'ve very fortunate to have him today and we\'re all eager to share his insights. Please join me in welcoming Mr. Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez, President of ICAO. (Applause) MR. KOBEH GONZALEZ: Thank you very much, Marion for such a warm introduction. It\'s always a pleasure to see you and especially today. As you mentioned, yes, this is my first public presentation since I am taking office as President of the Council of ICAO and I am delighted that this takes place before such a distinguished audience and on a subject of critical importance to global air transport, namely aviation safety. By way of opening remarks, I would like to pay tribute to my dear friend and colleague, Dr. Assad Kotalte, for retired on 31 July of this year after serving for 30 years as President of the Council of ICAO. It is an honor and privilege to succeed such a pillar of the international civilian aviation for whom the promotion of aviation safety was a lifelong issue. I would also like to notice your remarkable contribution of the United States to the cause of aviation safety over the years. Right from the creation of ICAO in 1944, the United States has been one of the most ardent supporters of the organization. When we speak of aviation safety, members of the aviation community may have different perspectives on the subject, yet for all of us this is one common concern, that of saving and protecting the lives of passengers, crews and persons on the ground. Without the excellent safety record that we have worked together so hard to achieve over the past half century and more, we would not enjoy the enormous economic, social and cultural benefits of our vibrant air transport industry. The theme of this symposium, \"Safety from Top to Bottom,\" captures the essence of how to maintain and improve in our remarkable performance, in a few words, what is required is a firm commitment for senior management of airlines, airports, service providers, manufacturers, regulators, and all other stakeholders no matter how small for aircraft operation to be as safe as humanly possible. The commitment to safety must flow down from the top like a waterfall and permeate every part of the organization. Everyone must be focused on safety in the cockpit or behind the traffic control screen, on the assembly line of manufacturers and in the maintenance hangar, on board the aircraft or on the tarmac, in a government office or chief landing body (phonetic) because safety begins in the mind. It is a mind set, an attitude and must be an integral element of the organization\'s culture. In ICAO safety has always been and will remain our top priority. It is enshrined in the Convention of International and Civil Aviation. Fifteen of the 18 annexes deal with safety and efficiency in air navigation. And the annex of security is also related to safety since a flight that is not secure is not safe. Safety is the focus of the first of six objectives contained in our business plan and it calls upon the organization to enhance global civil aviation safety through a number of specific measures based on prevention, cooperation, and the consistent implementation of ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices, SARPs. After more than 40 years in national and international civil aviation, I am convinced that many accidents would not have occurred if ICAO SARPs contained in the annexes would have been implemented uniformly and consistently. I am happy to say that there is now within ICAO, a clear shift in focus toward implementation of the standards. Of course, existing standards will continue to be updated where necessary to keep pace with the evolving aviation industry. And new standards will reflect high level requirements with a clear benefit for safety. Yet, implementation will prevail as a previous part to improve safety. The ICAO Universal Safety Oversight Audit Program, USOAP, will play an integral role in this global effort following the conference of Director General of Civil Aviation in March of this year. In a landmark decision, DCAGs from 153 participating states agree to allow the ICAO to post results from USOAP on the organization\'s public website as soon as possible and no later than March 2008. At present, some 80 states have authorized ICAO to publish the information without its target out in the territories and so many reports can now be consulted online. I am sure that many others will respond positively in the months to come. It is an unprecedented development in terms of increasing transparency and sharing of information among the estates as well as with industry and the traveling public. It should encourage the states to correct more quickly the safety deficiencies and remain in the \-- that remain in the aviation systems and make it easier for estates and donors to provide more rapid and more effective assistance to those that require much needed financial and human resources. Transparency and sharing of information are also at the heart of the unified strategy to solve safety-related deficiencies adopted by the 35^th^ session of the ICAO assembly in 2004. The strategy emphasized that free flow of safety related information must be embraced by everyone involved in air transport at every level and across every discipline. This is essential condition to create or strengthening partnership to resolve deficiencies, essentially in the form of regional or sub-regional safety organizations. ICAO, National Civil Aviation Authorities, industry and the founding institutions must cooperate in the provisional aviation technical and financial assistance and guidance. A good example of the potential of transparency for improving safety is Article 21 of the Chicago Convention. Article 21 prescribes that each contracting state should undertake to supply to any other contraction state or to ICAO, on demand, information regarding registration and ownership of registered aircraft. When this registration data is shared, it can provide a clear picture of the status of any given aircraft. The states can then make more informed decisions regarding operations by the aircraft within the air space. ICAO will help to process along with a proposal to facilitate the exchange of data concerning aircraft registrations and some has already been posted in the ICAO website. At the same time that we are moving in the direction of more openness, the air transport industry is growing consistently, in large part the result of hybridization and exploding markets, most notably in Asia. The International Air Transport Association, IATA, reported earlier that 2006 international passengers traffic for the first half of this year grew 6.7, 6.7 percent over the same period in 2005, and by the year 2015, ICAO expects that passenger traffic will have grown to some 2.8 billion passengers annually and 30 million aircraft movements. Concurrently, the privatization of airlines, airports and air navigation services by making inspections of operations more complex and more labor intensive. It is increasingly difficult to obtain the requisite resources in terms of qualified people to insure proper application of safety oversight practices as the regulatory and industry levels. The answer, of course, lies in safety management system or SMS, the most effective way to respond to the need for effective supervision with relatively smaller force work. Many ICAO member states are implementing or exploring safety management system to compliment the existing regulatory structure. We encourage them to do so and ICAO offers concrete assistance in the form of standards, related guidance material for establishing safety management system including a set of aligned safety management provisions for aircraft operations, air traffic services and air dromes (phonetic) as well as model legislation to make it easier to implement SMS. In all of our communications on the subject, we insist on the fact that safety management is not a matter of individual states alone. It must be carried out in a coordinated and cooperative manner based on the ICAO framework. All practicing both in civil aviation have responsibilities for safety oversight and compliance. I know that there are translation in several languages. Then I am going to shift to Spanish now. La cooperación mundial es esencial para enfrentar, con éxito, los tremendos desafíos del futuro. Yo soy, particularmente, sensible a la tenida escasez de pilotos calificados, y experimentados, que podría sobrevenir, como resultado, del continuo aumento de las operaciones de las líneas aeras, suscitado por el continuo incremento del trafico de pasajeros. A si mismo el cumplimiento de los requisitos relativos a la competencia lingüística que serán aplicables en Marzo del 2008, exigirá esfuerzos intensos para asegurar la instrucción apropria, y la certificación, tanto de los pilotos, como de los controladores de transito aéreo. Cada uno de ustedes enfrentara una amplia rama de desafíos propios de su industria, o de su responsabilidad. A fin de liderar la comunidad aeronáutica mundial en un esfuerzo de cooperación, colaboración, y coordinación, para enfrentar estos desafíos, la WASE, viene desde hace ya algún tiempo, implantando su primer plan de actividades diseñado para modernizar la organización y a aumentar su eficiencia y eficacia. Nos concentraremos en programas e iniciativas basados en el rendimiento. Aquellos que den mayores beneficios por la inversión del recurso humano, de recursos humanos y financieros limitados, mediante métodos de trabajo y practicas de gestión, que lleven a la obtención de resultados identificables. La WASE será mas dinámica en responder a las necesidades y expectativas de su 189 estados contratantes. En pocas palabras, nos centraremos en cumplir con las responsabilidades que nos incumbe, como organización mundial, en los siguientes ámbitos clave. La implementación, a nivel mundial, de los sistemas de gestión de la seguridad operacional, destinados a lograr resultados mesurables, en el ámbito de la seguridad de la aviación. La elaboración, entre los estados, de medidas globales de seguridad de aviación, basadas en el rendimiento. La búsqueda de medidas unificadas y coordinadas para reducir los efectos perjudiciales de la aviación civil en el medio ambiente, y la implantación de sistemas de gestión de transito aérea, armonizados, y de mejoras en la eficiencia basada en el rendimiento. > Muchos de estos temas serán objeto de debate en el próximo periodo de > sesiones ordinario de la Asamblea de la WASE, en 2007. Sé que muchos > de ustedes estarán ahí, y les invito a empezar a reflexionar sobre su > contribución a lo que espero será una asamblea muy constructiva, y con > visión de futuro. Damas y caballeros, el segundo foro anual de Seguridad Operacional de la Aviación de la FAA, celebrado el año pasado, por esta época, contribuyo, significativamente, al debate en torno a la seguridad operacional de la aviación. Espero, con interés, seguir el desarrollo de esta tercera edición, que nos ofrecerá formas igualmente estimulantes, e innovadoras, de promover la causa de cielos operacionalmente mas seguros en todo el mundo. La comunidad de la aviación depende de reuniones como esta para encontrar soluciones realistas, y practicas, ante el reto global de la seguridad operacional. Y estoy convencido de que ustedes sabrán satisfacer sus expectativas para bien de todos nosotros. Les agradezco, de nuevo, su gentileza, y la invitación, y la oportunidad que me brindan, de participar en lo que confió será un foro muy productivo. Muchas gracias. (English translation of Spanish portion immediately above.) Global cooperation is essential to confront, with success, future challenges. I am particularly sensitive to the scarcity of qualified, experienced pilots that could come about with the increased operations, by the airlines, brought about by the increased increment in passenger traffic. I am also aware of the requirements related to linguistic competency that will be applicable in March of 2008, which will require intensive efforts to ensure proper instruction, and the certification of both the pilots and traffic controllers. Each of you will face numerous challenges in your industry, or in your area of responsibilities, in order to lead the global airline industry to cooperate, collaborate, and coordinate the facing of these challenges. WASE has been, since some time back, implementing the first activity plan designed to modernize the organization and to increase efficiency and efficacy. We will concentrate on programs and initiatives based on the rendition of mayor benefits from human resources, and limited financial resources, based on work methods and management practice, which will give us identifiable results. WASE will be more dynamic in responding to the needs and expectations of its 189 contract states. In other words, we will concentrate on fulfilling the responsibilities that are incumbent upon us, as a worldwide organization, in the following key fields. The implementation, on a world-wide basis, of operational security management, destined to result in measurable results, in the aviation security field; the elaboration, between states, of global security aviation measures, based on the findings; The search to reduce the prejudicial effects on the environment by civil aviation, and the implementation of management transit systems, harmonized, and the betterment of efficiencies based on the findings. Many of these themes will be subject to debate in the next period of ordinary sessions of the WASE, in 2007. I know many of you will be there and I invite you to start reflecting on your contribution so that this will be a very productive meeting, and with vision towards the future. Ladies and gentlemen, the second annual forum on Operational Security of the FAA, which took place last year around this time, significantly contributed to the debate on the operational security of aviation. I wait, with interest, to follow the development of the third edition, that will offer us stimulating and innovative ways to promote worldwide safety in our skies. The aviation community depends on meetings such as this to find realistic and practical solutions in the global challenge of operational security. And I am convinced that you will satisfy these expectations for the well being of all of us. I thank you, once again, for giving me the opportunity to participate in what I hope will be a very productive forum. Thank you very much. (Applause) ADMINISTRATOR BLAKEY: What an excellent challenge, what an excellent opportunity we will have in the next assembly. I think we\'re all getting revved up for this. And it\'s, again and indeed a great honor to have with us today the Director General and CEO of the International Air Transport Association. I think many of you know that Giovanni Bisignani brings extensive business experience to IATA. Before being named to his current post in 2002, he launched and directed the first European airline owned online travel agency breaking truly new ground. Let me tell you, he\'s a may with an eye for the next big thing and I have a feeling he can challenge us to that in safety as well, because, of course he knows it long and strong. He was previously the CEO and Managing Director of Air Italia, no small feat itself. In short, our next guest has the broad experience you need to cast the wide net of safety. He also have the drive, the insight and I have to say the creativity to make it happen. Please join me in welcoming our next distinguished guest, the Director and Chief Executive Officer of the International Air Transport Association, Giovanni Bisignani. (Applause.) MR. BISIGNANI: Thank you, Marion, for your kind invitation and for your very kind words. And it\'s a pleasure to be again here with all of you, among great friends in discussing our number 1 priority, safety. IATA, as you know, represents 260 airlines, 94 percent of the scheduled international traffic and our mission is we represent and serve air transport. Safety is at the core of our mission and our industry can be proud on our achievements. Our industry has been in crisis, you all know since 2001. We are bleeding red ink. Between 2001 and 2005 airline lost \$40 billion. The crisis was a catalyst to improve efficiency because since 2001, labor productivity increased 33 percent, sales and distribution dropped 10 percent and non-fuel unit costs reduced by 13 percent. In 2001, the industry fuel bill was 443 billion and it represented 13 percent of our total operating costs. Now, our bill is \$115 billion accounting for 26 percent of our total operating cost. Just in one year we had to increase \-- the bill increased of \$24 billion. But remarkably, airlines will still improve their bottom line from a \$3.2 billion loss last year to a \$1.7 billion loss this year, with US carriers posting operating profits. Next year, we expect a small profit of \$1.9 billion. That\'s just a .4 percent return on \$450 billion, so there\'s no reason to open champagne, but we are moving in the right direction. The crisis in those numbers have not distracted the airlines from safety because numbers tell a great story. The industry hull lost rate for western built jets was cut in half in the last 10 years, .76 hull lost rate per million flights in 2005. IATA carriers benefiting from our program did significantly better, .35 hull losses per millions sectors. In the industry target for 2005, is .65 and we are on track achieving a .62 by the end of September. But these figures are important but ask also some key realities that we have to face and discuss. If we all look \-- if we look at all aircraft types and all accident, the figure is three times higher, 2.1 per million sectors. Later we\'ll discuss the situation in three areas; Africa, Russia and Latin America. My message is clear, we have to do more. We can be proud of our results, but we\'ll have to look ahead and do more and we need a businesslike approach to safety. For IATA, that means first setting achievable tough targets with deadlines. Our target for 2008, that was given us from abroad is to reduce a hull loss rate by a further 25 percent over 2006 and we also have similar targets for all aircraft and for all the regions where we operate. As with any other business, you need a plan to achieve challenging targets. Our plan is a six-point IATA strategy. The first point is to use data effectively to guide our efforts and Marion was very clear in underlining the importance of accurate data and sharing those data. The next three are to take action in areas of infrastructure including ground handling, cargo operation and flying operation. The last two points are to implement the right processes; Safety Management Systems. Marion clearly underlined the importance of this and auditing. Finally, we must focus on the basic principle, global standards and harmonization. These are the three themes for my discussion. Let me start with two success stories, the global aviation safety roadmap and the IATA operation safety audit and then I will address the other two points. Global aviation roadmap; next month the industry will deliver the final part of the global aviation safety roadmap to ICAO. This is a clear vision for an efficient and consistent global approach to safety. It is the heart \-- in it\'s heard a global standard and harmonization. What the role in the commitment of the industry? Eliminating these inconsistencies in safety management systems and strategies, regulatory compliances, and use of best practices. Closing gaps in the use of technology, removing impediments to effective data analysis and insuring the adequate supply of qualified personnel. States must eliminate inconsistencies in application of international standards and oversight practices and implement more effective reporting and investigation of accidents and incidents. Many of you helped in the roadmap and this is a great opportunity to say to all of you, thank you very much but words on paper do not always deliver results and the roadmap is useless if it\'s not followed carefully. I signed the roadmap along with the CEO of Airbus, Boeing, ACI, CANSO, FALPA and the Flight Safety Foundation and IACA\'s acceptance is a commitment by the state. So there is no excuse for anyone to get lost in uncoordinated plans. Airlines are committed and moving forward and we must have no patience for anyone who is not on board. The IATA operational safety audit, IOSA, is an example of an action. IATA developed IOSA working closely with ICAO in individual states, US, Canada, Australia. We appreciate very much your support in the initial stage and many of the players around this table. And it is the first global standard for airline audits and includes safety management systems, a component of the roadmap. By the end of next year we plan to five million in IOSA. And IOSA is at the core of our efforts to raise the bar on safety in rationalized audits. For those less familiar, IOSA was launched in 2003 at our AGM. It measures a collection of industry best practices complying ICAO standards. IOSA standards are offered free of charge for any commercial airline in the world, IATA or not IATA. Audits are conducted by a competitive market of eight independent commercial audit organizations and IATA managed quality to IOSA 9,000 processes. Registration lasts two years and a list of airlines on the registry can be seen on IATA\'s website open, transparent for everybody. And government and airlines can access the entire IOSA audit documentation through a controlled process. In our 2006 annual general meeting, the airlines voted unanimously to make IOSA a condition for IATA membership in 2008. And for our association with 260 members, it is a strong mark of commitment to quality. And IOSA is core to achieving our targets to further improve safety. Already we have 121 airlines on the registry, a quarter of those are non-IATA members and now over 2002 member airlines are on the IOSA process. Alliances around the world are using IOSA as a safety standard for membership and code sharing. The register of audit results has already avoided nearly 400 audits and IOSA compliments ICAO\'s universal safety oversight audit program. And many individual governments are incorporating IOSA in their oversight activities. The FAA accepts IOSA data for US carriers code shares. France includes IOSA in their label horizon program. Switzerland expedites air rights to IOSA registered carriers. In countries as Egypt, Chile, Lebanon, Madagascar and many others have made IOSA a condition for AOC. And AOC made it a criteria for operations two and from the Arab region so I encourage the governments to use IOSA effectively. There is no cost, it\'s open, transparent. It is at your service. And Gunther Mather (phonetic) and his team are eager to explore ways to work together. Another area in which we have started to tackle is ground damage and I\'m pleased to report that we are tackling now the ground damage. That represents \$4 billion for airlines in a similar manner to IOSA. There is no global standard for oversight in auditing of ground handling companies, so IATA is developing one using the IOSA approach. Last week we started developing standards with key stakeholders including logically our great cousins ICAO and the ground handlers, and Boeing AirBus Flight Safety Foundation have provided all the basic data to guide our initial efforts. The target is to start to conduct an audit in 2008. And I\'m sure that I can count on your support to contribute to this development of this initial stage of this audit criteria, and incorporate this valuable tool into oversight programs. That\'s all good news and I want to thank you for your support and I think as an industry we can be proud of the results on safety, but let\'s open, look clearly and frankly to the many challenges that we have, specifically regional differences, foreign operator specification and air traffic management. Let\'s start with regional differences, because in regional differences numbers tell very powerful stories. While the global average for all aircraft accident is 2.1 per million flights, Latin America is 3.4. Russia is 5.9 and Africa is off the chart at 10.2. This is not acceptable. So the first step to a solution is honestly recognizing that we have a big problem in certain important areas of the world. And I applaud to ICAO to the adopting (phonetic) of the IOSA and publication of the results. Roberto mentioned it but it was a great, great step. Europeans recently have implemented black lists as part of their safety programs. To be frank, black lists do not improve safety. In more transparent criteria and efforts as such an example are needed to backup naming decision, but I welcome the strong statement made on the performance of some government, Swaziland, Sierra Leone, Djibouti Congo, their safety record is an embarrassment for this industry. And flags of convenience have no place in a safe industry and we have taken action and I think that everybody has to take action. IATA supports the Safe Skies for Africa Program. But we must see better results from Africa. Our action is to help our members. IATA has taken an action with the limited resources that we have with a Partnership for Safety Program. It prepares all carriers for IOSA by identifying and filling gaps. Our first targets are Africa and Latin America because you saw the figures. In Africa Partnership for Safety has already trained 175 professionals, from 17 civil aviation organizations and 46 airlines and we will have a completed gap analysis on 26 IOTA members by this year. In Latin America, 110 representatives from governments and airlines have been trained and five gap analysis are complete with 13 more scheduled in the following months. I\'ve written to the Minister \-- Russian Minister Levitin and a second time to the President of Nigeria, offering all IATA\'s assistance. IOSA standard includes consideration from Eastern-built aircraft. And we are examining actions under the partnership\'s program. Out budget for partnership for this specific program is limited, 3 million in this last six months but support from partners have been quite frankly disappointing. But I appreciate the support received from Pratt and Whitney and Boeing contributing financially to those efforts. On another point, our industry\'s meek response to the French Government\'s United for Aid proposals is also very disappointing. Why? Alternative funding for drug purchase is a noble action but taxing aviation is counter-productive and contravenes ICAO principles. Aviation taxes must be invested in aviation. We need those funds and regional safety needs are more serious funding commitment for government could be a great opportunity to improve. Another area in which we are a bit disappointed is the proliferating of foreign operator specifications. In addition to long-standing US requirements, China, Russia, Trinidad, Tobago, United Arab Emeritus and other have recently announced their own programs and Europe, Australia and Canada are expected to follow. If we continue to go down this road, we will spend a lot of our budget managing bureaucracy with little positive impact on safety. It makes no sense to add complexity to regulation. Safety is better served by consistency and it is misguided at a time when we have all committed to global standard. As an interim measure, I challenge those countries with specific foreign carriers operation to harmonize. I look forward to seeing results from either the ICAO group comprising of Europe, US, Canada and Australia in this specific area. And ultimately if governments are concerned about safety oversight capabilities of their peers in specific areas, they can use IOSA for specific needs and they can strengthen ICAO\'s role putting even more teeth into the USOAP great program. Air traffic management; safe air traffic management is also critical to this industry. That means standard rules, procedures and technology. Every variation in procedure, every change in unit of measurement and every difference in required equipment is an opportunity for a problem or a disaster. We are working with governments across the globe on implementing RNAV and other ATM enhancements but we need to have a great big picture. The IATA one sky global ATM roadmap initiative highlighted the need for a grand plan and ICAO\'s global air navigation plan reflects this results and we are congratulate ICAO. But I would like to move faster in the direction of a common approach. The US Joint Planning and Development Office is focused on next generation air transport system based on US technology and the Single European Sky ATM Roadmap says, SESAR, is focused on European technology and solutions. And in parallel we have Boeing and AirBus have their own initiative. If we don\'t harmonize the result will be not positive. We must build a future of air navigation where national egos and personal limit and national support to local technology have no place in a global picture. In July a memorandum of understanding was signed by FAA and EUROCONTROL to cooperate. This is a great story and I\'m sure that we\'ll be working in the same \-- they will be working in order to achieve those results. But before concluding just a few comments on security. The way forward is exactly the same as of safety, global standard and harmonization. Security improved tremendously after 2001 but we missed at that time the opportunity to harmonize. The recent agreement on sharing PNR data access between the United States and Europe was an important step in the right direction with the right approach. Similarly, harmonization of rules for hand luggage across Europe is a step in the right direction. But one must certainly question why we cannot agree to a common hand luggage requirement everywhere and why we cannot have a common standard for whole baggage screening so that we can eliminate the need for rescreening at least with a country that had the same kind of attention and equipment. This is a waste of 100 million that could be meaningfully used in other areas, safety for example. As a first step we could have an agreement among countries with similar standards. I realize that the purpose of this conference is safety but let\'s not miss the opportunity to remind our security colleagues of the success of global standards in data driven approach and safety and encourage them to learn from the excellent example that you are setting because safety is a great story to tell. In conclusion, I would like to thank Marion and the FAA for organizing this third International Safety Forum. Marion, with your passion, your commitment, and your great vision, have brought an international approach to the FAA that has made and old and great partner even better. We want to also recognize and support President Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez and Dr. Cherif and ICAO for their great, great efforts. We call them cousins because we work really close to close and I have to compliment and congratulate for how effectively they handled the recent August London crisis. No one entity can delivery success in safety, it must be a team effort. And the team is in this room; industry, airports, air navigation server providers, airlines, manufacturers of aircraft, pilots, governments, ICAO and suppliers. Each of us has a role to play and a responsibility to learn and to share. A common goal must be to achieve and implement a harmonized set of global standards that will make the safest form of transport even safer. Thank you very much for your attention. (Applause) MR. STURGELL: I think you can see now why we\'re so pleased to have Giovanni with us today. He\'s certainly somebody who knows how to stir the pot a little bit and that\'s what this forum is all about. So Giovanni, thank you very much and President Kobeh, we are again very pleased that you\'re able to join us here today. Before we take our first break, I just want to remind everybody that 6:00 p.m. tonight on the sunset terrace in the lower level, we will be having a reception featuring American cuisine and we\'re also going to liven it up a little bit with some Blue Grass and Big Band music as well. So please join us for that. I do want to once again thank the Air Transport Association and the International Air Transport Association for being our sponsors this year and I\'d also like to point out from my team, Virginia Krohn, (phonetic) I don\'t see her standing around yet, but Virginia, the Offices of Aviation Safety, Nick\'s group and Joe\'s group at the Office of International Aviation for their assistance in putting this together. And finally, we do have a number of FAA international reps in the room today. If I can quickly ask you folks to stand for us. We have people come in from Brussels, Singapore, London as well as some new folks going out to the field. So the FAA international reps, please stand and everybody, please introduce yourself, get to know your FAA partners internationally. I know we\'re running just a little bit behind, but I do want to give people a break. So how about 10 minutes and we\'ll pick it back up right here at 10:25. Thanks very much. (Whereupon, at 10:15 a.m. a brief recess was taken.)
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# Presentation: 343157 ## Transdisciplinary Research on Energetics and Cancer **Linda Nebeling, PhD, MPH, RD** **Rachel Ballard-Barbash, M.D.** **National Cancer Institute** **National Institutes of Health** **U.S. Department of Health and Human Services** **August 16, 2004** ## Relationship between Diet, Energy Balance, Obesity and Cancer Risk **Relationship between Diet, Energy Balance, Obesity and Cancer Risk**** ** **Physical Activity** **Weight** **Notes:** Physical activity, combined with a balanced diet, has numerous mental and physical health benefits, including the reduction in the risks of premature mortality, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, depression, osteoporosis and cancer. Important health benefits include a reduced risk of colon, breast and endometrial cancer. In addition, physical activity is an important complement to dietary management for the avoidance weight gain and weight maintenance after intentional weight loss. ## Energy Balance, Energetics and Cancer Status of the Evidence **Extensive epidemiologic research on obesity and cancer association and limited but growing evidence on physical activity and cancer** **IARC report -- *****Weight control, physical activity and cancer -- ***_***[http://www.iarc.fr/](http://www.iarc.fr/)***__*** ***_ **Extensive epidemiologic research on diet and cancer, very little examining role of energy balance, energetics**** ** **Clinical metabolic and basic research on underlying mechanisms, most often with changes in one factor at a time** **Limited intervention research on weight control, physical activity on cancer prognosis and quality of life**** ** **No clinical trials on whether weight control or physical activity reduce cancer incidence** ## Obesity and Cancer Incidence **Incidence and Prevalence** **Increased risk:**** ** ** ****Endometrial, Breast (Post-menopause), Colon, Kidney ** ** ****(Renal Cell), Esophagus (Adeno), Thyroid** **Decreased risk: ** ** ****Breast (Pre-menopause), Lung, Head and Neck** **Inadequate evidence to assess: ** ** ****Cervical, Gallbladder, Ovarian, Pancreas, Testis** **No association:**** Prostate Cancer**** ** **2002 IARC report estimated obesity and physical inactivity accounted for ****25 to 30%**** of these cancers:** **Colon, breast (postmenopausal), endometrial, renal cell, and esophagus** **Notes:** The international Agency for Research on Cancer IRAC has estimated that at least 11 to 15 percent of breast and colorectal cancers may be attributable to inadequate physical activity IARC, 2002) Overall, sedentary lifestyles, combined with poor dietary choices, have been lined to 25-30 percent of deaths from Cancer. Lifestyle choices involving physical activity and diet are reversible. Evidence has shown that increasing one’s level of physical activity can reduce the risk of mortality. High levels of physical activity may reduce the risk of colon cancer by as much as 50%. Part of the challenges in the diet and physical activity relationship is the challenges in identifying standard measures of physical activity or dietary assessment. Research by I-Ming Lee at Harvard has suggested that those who maintain high levels of physical activity throughout life appear to have the greatest disease risk reduction (Lee , 1991) Mechanisms explaining the effects of physical activity are still under research, but a possible cause is the reduction in fecal transit time in subjects more physically active, along with a reduction in circulating levels of insulin, a growth factor for colonic epithelial cells. ## Transdisciplinary Conceptual Model - Energy Balance, - Obesity, - Weight, - Energetics - Physiological* - Factors - Behavioral* - Factors - Genetic - Factors - Socio-cultural - Factors - Environmental - Factors - Institutional/ - Policy Factors - Cancer ** **Macro-Level Factors Micro-Level Factors - (Contextual) (Individual) - *Physiological and Behavioral Factors contribute to the additional factors of Personality (e.g., extraversion), Psychological Factors (e.g., stress), and Cognitive Factors (e.g., beliefs) **Notes:** *Physiological and Behavioral Factors contribute to the additional factors of Personality (e.g., extraversion), Psychological Factors (e.g., stress), and Cognitive Factors (e.g., beliefs) Note: The model presented above is not comprehensive, but represents a general conceptual framework illustrating the major factors that may contribute to obesity/weight/energy balance within the context of cancer. The specific physiological mechanisms responsible for the influence of obesity/weight/energy balance on cancer are not delineated in this model. Moreover, the specific physiological, behaviors, psychological, social, environmental, and institutional mechanisms that may influence the development of obesity/weight gain/energy imbalance are not delineated. ## What is “Transdisciplinary?” **Development and application of a shared, integrative conceptual framework based on discipline-specific theories, concepts, and methods** **Instead of working in parallel, investigators collaborate across levels of analysis and intervention to develop a comprehensive understanding of energy balance and cancer** ## Two Major Challenges **Enhancing understanding of the mechanisms underlying the association between energy balance and carcinogenesis across the cancer continuum and the life cycle**** ** **Developing effective approaches with broad population impact at the social-environmental and policy level for the prevention and control of obesity** **Focusing on children and adults during critical periods for excessive weight gain** ## How does a Transdisciplinary Focus Address the Gaps? **Critical mass of investigators** **Transdisciplinary collaboration within and across research centers** **Unique context for training** **Shared resources for greater efficiency** ## Gaps: Mechanisms **Very limited research on the interaction of diet, physical activity and weight and cancer outcomes**** ** **Need to examine genetic/lifestyle interactions** **Genomics and proteomics** **Use of animal models that allow examination of variation in effect over the life course** ## Barriers to Progress **Research is limited on the intersection of diet, weight and physical activity** **Most research is not transdisciplinary**** ** **Need to engage research disciplines not previously playing a large role in biomedical research** **Urban planning, transportation, communications**** ** **Need to bridge multiple disciplines to identify individual and population level solutions to a complex health problem** ## Research at the Social-Environmental and Systems Level **Systems/Policy changes needed to counter the epidemic of obesity, inactivity and poor diet**** ** **Major focus for efforts to prevent obesity, especially among children and young adults and minorities at risk**** ** **Range from policies for schools, worksites, cities to reimbursement for health care interventions** ## Examples of Research Areas **Define the role of specific diet and physical activity regimens on insulin resistance and the glucorticoid axis and interactions with sex steroids on genetic and phenotypic expression of cancer** **Examples of disciplines involved: basic science, genetics, proteomics,epidemiology, endocrinology, clinical interventions, bioinformatics, behavioral sciences, exercise physiology, nutrition** ## Examples of Research Areas **Develop effective population level interventions for the prevention and control of obesity with a focus on children** **Examples of disciplines involved: sociology, transportation, urban planning, public health policy, communication, education, behavioral sciences, economics, landscape architecture** ## Transdisciplinary Research on Energetics and Cancer (TREC) **U54 Mechanism ** **Maximum of $2.5 million per year total costs ($1.5 direct) for each center award (5-7 awards)** **Coordinating Center (U01) of $1 million per year total costs ($.6 direct) for one award** **Maximum of 5 years**
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TRIBAL CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT SYSTEMS WORKGROUP Session III Joint Application Development Final Report October 2005 ![](media/image1.wmf){width="1.775in" height="1.8930555555555555in"} U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Administration for Children and Families Office of Child Support Enforcement Division of State and Tribal Systems This page intentionally left blank. TABLE OF CONTENTS [1. Introduction 1](#introduction) [1.1 Background 1](#background) [1.2 Scope 2](#scope) [1.3 participants 2](#participants) [1.3.1 Tribal Representatives 3](#__RefHeading___Toc118537936) [1.3.2 Federal 3](#federal) [1.3.3 Session II Support Staff 4](#session-ii-support-staff) [1.4 process 4](#process) [2. JAD SESSION summarY 7](#jad-session-summary) [2.1 JAD Session Overview 7](#jad-session-overview) [2.2 Key Issues for JOINT APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT 7](#key-issues-for-joint-application-development) [2.3 meeting #1 8](#meeting-1) [2.4 meeting #2 9](#meeting-2) [2.5 meeting #3 11](#meeting-3) [2.6 meeting #4 12](#meeting-4) [2.7 Concept of Operations 13](#concept-of-operations) [2.7.1 Overview 13](#overview) [2.7.2 Case Initiation 14](#case-initiation) [2.7.3 Locate 14](#locate) [2.7.4 Paternity Establishment 15](#paternity-establishment) [2.7.5 Establishment of Support Orders 15](#establishment-of-support-orders) [2.7.6 Case Management 16](#case-management) [2.7.7 Enforcement 17](#enforcement) [2.7.8 Financial Management 17](#financial-management) [2.7.9 Reports 18](#reports) [2.7.10 Security and Privacy 18](#security-and-privacy) [2.7.11 System Architecture 19](#system-architecture) [2.8 Business Rules and Processes 20](#business-rules-and-processes) [2.8.1 Case Intake Processes 20](#case-intake-processes) [2.8.2 Locate Processes 21](#locate-processes) [2.8.3 Paternity Establishment Processes 21](#paternity-establishment-processes) [2.8.4 Order Establishment Processes 21](#order-establishment-processes) [2.8.5 Case Management Processes 22](#case-management-processes) [2.8.6 Enforcement Processes 23](#enforcement-processes) [2.8.7 Financial Processes 23](#financial-processes) [2.8.8 Security and Administration Processes 24](#security-and-administration-processes) [2.8.9 Data Elements and Data Dictionary 25](#data-elements-and-data-dictionary) [2.9 Next Steps 25](#next-steps) This page intentionally left blank. # Introduction ## Background The Tribal Child Support Enforcement Systems workgroup (hereinafter called the workgroup) met for the first time in August 2002. The workgroup was chartered to recommend guidelines to maximize the benefits of automating Tribal Child Support Enforcement (TCSE) programs while limiting the fiscal impact associated with design, development, and implementation of automated systems. During the first series of four meetings, the workgroup discussed issues with potential impact on the successful implementation of automation in TCSE programs. The primary outcomes of the 2002 Session I meetings included: Identification of the considerations involved in developing automated systems for TCSE programs, including acquiring and managing automated systems and services, and the related Federal funding processes. 1. Identification of high-level TCSE program automation needs, requirements, and constraints. 2. Definitions of the high-level operational capabilities required for TCSE systems. During the second series of four meetings, the workgroup focused on functional requirements for automated TCSE systems and methods for procuring, implementing and operating these systems, in order to optimize tribal and Federal resources. The primary outcomes of the 2004 Session II meetings included: 1. Assessment of functional software requirements for statewide child support enforcement systems as they apply to tribal child support enforcement. 2. Identification of the essential functional software requirements for a basic TCSE system, with additional software functionality determined to be conditional or optional to the operation of a basic TCSE system. 3. Detailed considerations involved in developing automated systems for TCSE programs, including acquiring and managing automated systems and services. 4. Consideration of the Advance Planning Document (APD) process applied to state systems. 5. Identification of high-level TCSE program automation needs, requirements, and constraints. 6. Definition of the high-level operational capabilities required for TCSE systems. The final reports for 2002 and 2004 Sessions are available at: [www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cse/stsys/tab9.htm](http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cse/stsys/tab9.htm) ## Scope This report summarizes the activities and results of the third series of meetings of the TCSE Systems workgroup. In this series of meetings, tribal and Federal team members focused on joint application development (JAD) of the defining hardware, software, and architecture characteristics for a Model Tribal Child Support Enforcement System, hereinafter called the Model TCSES. The 2005 TCSE Systems workgroup met four times: - February 7-10, 2005 in Phoenix, Arizona - April 4-7 in Clearwater, Florida - May 23-26, in Chicago, Illinois and - July 18-21 in New York City, New York. ## participants All JAD sessions were attended by key Federal and tribal workgroup members. Additional Federal representatives were invited to attend specific meetings. A majority of the individual workgroup members have participated in both series of workgroup meetings. Not all tribal representatives attended every meeting, but most participating tribes sent at least one representative to each meeting. Federal participants represented organizational components of the Office of Child Support Enforcement (OCSE), including the Division of State and Tribal Systems (DSTS), the Division of Special Staffs (DOSS), the Division of Policy (DP), and Administration for Children and Families (ACF) regional staff. Tribal participants represented the tribes operating Tribal Child Support Enforcement programs that received Federal financial participation (FFP) under the Interim Final Rule, 45 CFR 310, and one additional tribal organization. The Federal support team was augmented by contract technical assistance support staff from BAE Systems and Maximus, Inc., who provided technical assistance in defining and documenting technical and system requirements. As in the first series of meetings, State Information Technology Consortium (SITC) staff arranged travel and meeting accommodations for participants. ### Tribal Representatives Tribal participants are listed in alphabetical order by tribe: - Tami Lorbecke, Chickasaw Nation - Jacqueline Pische, Forest County Potowatomi Community - Terry Hoyt, Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians - Karen Burke, Lummi Nation - Tina Gouty-Yellow, Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin - Rosemund Hoffman, Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin - Kurt Nelezen, Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin - Pierette Baldwin-Gumbrecht, Navajo Nation - Alex Largie, Navajo Nation - Lawrence Oliver, Navajo Nation - Harold Skow, Navajo Nation - Sandra Starnes, Port Gamble S\'Klallam Tribe - Linda Tresaugue, Puyallup Tribe of Indians - Emma GreyBull, Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate - Winona Warren, Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate - Rhonda Kampeska, Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate - Keith Bowman, Tanana Chiefs Conference ### Federal The following individuals provided a Federal perspective in one or all of the meetings: - Jay Adams, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Karen Anthony, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Joseph Bodmer, HHS/ACF, OCSE - John Cheng, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Sheck Chin, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Levi Fisher, HHS/ACF Region X - James Hicks, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Ron Logan, HHS/ACF OCSE - Joseph Lonergan, HHS/ACF, Division of Mandatory Grants - Angela Richardson, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Mike Rifkin, HHS/ACF, OCSE - Ellamae Williams, HHS/ACF, OCSE ### Session II Support Staff The following individuals provided technical assistance or meeting support during JAD meetings: - Jean Cost, BAE Systems - Sheila Drake, SITC - Ruth Hara, Maximus, Inc. - Tom Mahony, BAE Systems - Chris Meike, Maximus, Inc. ## process As in the prior two series of meetings, tribal participants represented a range of perspectives and experience on automation issues. Some participants represented tribes that use extensive automation in TCSE programs, while others spoke for tribes operating TCSE programs using manual processes. In addition, workgroup members contributed opinions and viewpoints that considered the larger tribal community. At each meeting, workgroup members addressed specific sets of issues. The group then strove for consensus from all tribal representatives on each issue and its associated sub-issues. Although several tribes, or tribal consortia, sent more than one representative, if a vote were necessary to determine a majority view, only one vote per tribe was permitted. Meeting highlights were produced following each JAD meeting to document the proceedings, the points of consensus and the outstanding issues. Meeting highlights were distributed to all workgroup members prior to the next meeting, and reviewed by the meeting attendees. A listserv maintained by OCSE promoted ongoing dialogue among workgroup participants. This page intentionally left blank. # JAD SESSION summarY ## JAD Session Overview The purpose of the JAD sessions and the current focus of the workgroup is to participate with the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement in creating a workable design for a model automated system for Tribal Child Support Enforcement (Model TCSES). The JAD sessions provide a forum for the current grantee tribes and tribal nations to come together to identify the business requirements and needs of their IV-D programs. The identified needs and business requirements will then be incorporated into a general system design, which will form the framework for the design and development of a Model TCSES. After the general system design has been developed and reviewed by the workgroup, the next phase will entail the development of a detailed system design, which will identify specific system requirements for the Model TCSES. When the general (business) design requirements and the system design requirements are complete, the next step will be to develop a prototype Model TCSES. Initially, one tribe's requirements will be used as a test of the concept and the functionality. When the pilot version is successful and working, the Model TCSES will then be given to the nine tribal grantees for more extensive testing. All four JAD sessions followed a single agenda and process, as noted below. Each topic was discussed in detail in one meeting, then reviewed and refined in succeeding meetings until agreement was reached on the process or the product. The JAD session discussions contributed to the ongoing development of: - Concept of operations. - Business rules and processes, including process flow diagrams identifying the data elements and documents associated with each process. - Definition of the data elements, documents and reports for the Model TCSES. Information in these work products will be incorporated into the final general system design for the Model TCSES. ## Key Issues for JOINT APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT Key issues on the workgroup's agenda included progressive discussions of the following: 1. Develop a draft concept of operations for a Model TCSES. 2. Define high level software requirements for Model TCSES. 3. Define the business processes in each key TCSE process area, including case initiation, locate, establishment, case management, enforcement, financial, reporting, security, administration. 4. Achieve group consensus on process flow diagrams, data elements and definitions, required documents and reports related to each key TCSE process area. 5. Define system architecture considerations, including tribal IT considerations, software requirements, hardware requirements, network administration and configuration, estimate preliminary level of effort, Federal Feasibility Study and impact analysis. 6. Market survey of potential resources for tribal systems. 7. Develop sample screen design requirements and develop prototype screens, forms, notices, documents, and reports. The workgroup agreed to conduct an iterative process, discussing, reviewing and refining agreements and work products in successive meeting sessions. The meeting summaries that follow briefly touch on the results of these discussions. Detailed meeting minutes were also distributed to members during the session. ## meeting #1 The workgroup scheduled three and one-half days of effort for JAD session #1. The session began with a review of the progress and accomplishments of the prior workgroups. The workgroup agreed to use the product of the 2004 workgroup, the draft Guide for Tribal Systems, as a reference for high level software requirements. The workgroup referred to the Guide frequently in its efforts to develop a concept of operations and the business processes for a Model TCSES. The workgroup began with an introduction to Joint Application Development and an overview of the requirements development process to familiarize all members with the roles, tools, and techniques for the four JAD sessions. The workgroup agreed to undertake detailed discussions of the key process areas of Tribal Child Support Enforcement, including case initiation, locate, establishment, case management, enforcement, financial, security, and reports. In addition, the workgroup agreed to discuss system administration and system architecture considerations. The workgroup agreed to conduct a two-part examination of each TCSE process area. First, the workgroup would explore and reach consensus on the specific business processes and rules. The Federal support team would capture the agreed-upon business rules and processes as flow charts and process diagrams. Second, the workgroup would address the data elements related to each process, reviewing and reaching consensus on the elements and data definitions. The workgroup began its JAD tasks with an active review and discussion of a concept of operations document drafted by the Federal support team. The draft was based on discussions and findings of the first two workgroups. The JAD workgroup successively refined and modified the concept of operations over the four meetings of the current session. The key agreements and discussion points are outlined in a separate section of this report, without attributing particular points to specific JAD meetings. Following an initial review of the concept of operations, the workgroup began discussing common business rules and processes. Of the nine business process areas, this first JAD session included detailed discussions of the first four target discussion areas (case initiation, locate, establishment, and case management), and an initial discussion of enforcement processes. The workgroup deferred completion of the enforcement process area until the second JAD meeting in Clearwater, Florida. Workgroup members were asked to provide examples of key documents, reports, and forms discussed during the JAD session as input to the efforts of the Federal support team. ## meeting #2 The workgroup opened this four-day JAD session with a second review of the draft concept of operations, modified to include the agreements reached during the first JAD session. The workgroup approved modifications, and discussed additional refinements in the areas of system architecture, scalability, and access. The concept of operations was to be refined further in the third JAD session. As part of the agreed-on iterative process, the workgroup first reviewed the work products of the prior JAD session, including process flow diagrams, and related data elements and data definitions. Process flow diagrams were produced as visual representations of the detailed workflows and key decision points identified in the areas of case initiation, locate, establishment, case management, and initial enforcement processes. Each process flow diagram included the names of documents and forms associated with the process, and in some cases, key forms and reports. Data elements and definitions had been updated for each process area. The workgroup reviewed each flow diagram in detail, discussing and in some cases modifying a process to reach a common understanding and agreement. The workgroup agreed to review the modifications once more at the next JAD session. The workgroup then resumed initial discussions of the business processes and rules, beginning with the remaining enforcement processes. During the remainder of the JAD session, the workgroup completed detailed discussion and initial flowcharting of enforcement, financial, reporting, and security processes. Workgroup discussions included several topics of additional interest to members. Since six of the nine workgroup members currently operate a tribal Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) program, the workgroup explored system capabilities to support IV-A notices, IV-A data, and IV-A/IV-D interfaces. The workgroup also discussed requirements for worklists and alerts to caseworkers, including action alerts, information alerts, and caseworker-generated alerts. The workgroup also discussed requirements for case history notations in some detail, exploring the kinds of data that should be placed into case history automatically by the system, and data that should be entered at will by caseworkers. This discussion included options for viewing or retrieving case history data. The workgroup continued the agenda with a review of the TCSE configuration data document and discussed those items that should be configurable by each tribe as part of setting up and customizing the system for use. The workgroup determined that each tribe should be able to set or select specific data values in the areas of tribal information, CSE contact information, participant information, enforcement, timeframes, job searches, system-generated documents, automatic income withholding, financial, and security. Discussion points included: - The workgroup agreed to defer discussion of court contact information, since some of the workgroup members belong to tribes that have multiple courts, and further discussion is required on how to handle multiple court situations. - The workgroup agreed that job search criteria should be handled as part of case narrative information and not treated as configurable fields on the model system. - After discussing judicial/administrative considerations, workgroup members agreed that that system should include the capability to print a signature block on form letters. The system should contain a default signature file, to be configured by each tribe during system set-up. The workgroup conducted preliminary exchanges with the Federal support team on a range of system characteristics. Discussions served both to inform workgroup members of industry standard terms, vocabulary, and available technology, and to gather input and direction from the workgroup. Topics included system configuration and administration, compatibility issues, program constraints and assumptions, hardware requirements, software requirements, and estimated schedules and resources. The Federal support team outlined the steps ahead on the path to secure funding to develop a Model TCSES. A Feasibility Study and Impact Analysis is necessary, including analysis of alternatives, cost benefit analysis, investigation of information technology resources, and gathering essential data. Information gathered from the workgroup members will serve as key input for the feasibility study. As preparation for the next JAD session, workgroup members were asked to submit representative pages from the top ten or "hottest" reports in use or needed in the TCSE program, and any remaining forms or documents requested during the prior JAD session in Phoenix. Workgroup members were also asked to submit any additional changes needed to the data element definitions discussed earlier in the current JAD session. ## meeting #3 JAD session #3 agenda included three and a half days of effort. The context for the JAD session was set with an overview of the requirements development process and the function it provides in the general design for a Model TCSES. The workgroup members discussed the progress to date and the tasks remaining in the final JAD sessions and as follow-on efforts. The workgroup continued work on agenda items with a third of four scheduled reviews of the draft concept of operations. The workgroup approved modifications in the areas of system architecture, scalability, and access. Workgroup members discussed additional refinements in the areas of billing and administration. The workgroup continued its iterative process in reviewing the work products of the prior JAD session, including process flow diagrams, and related data elements and data definitions. The workgroup reviewed modifications to case initiation, locate, establishment, and case management flow diagrams, documents, reports, and data elements. The workgroup also reviewed the points in each process where decisions needed to be made by caseworkers, system users, or the system itself, and validated the decision options. The workgroup discussed each specific instance that the system should monitor actions or elapsed time, then take an action. Workgroup members reached agreement on the process monitors, or criteria the system should use to monitor the process or trigger an action. The workgroup continued with a first look at the process flow diagrams created in the prior JAD session, in enforcement, financial, reporting, and security processes. The workgroup reviewed each flow diagram in detail, discussing and in some cases modifying a process to reach a common understanding and agreement. The workgroup discussed preliminary results of a market survey conducted by the Federal support team. This effort surveyed the information technology resources available in geographic areas in which the Model TCSES might be used. Part of the system design process, market survey results should help ensure that the system is developed using technology that the tribes can support with local resources and labor at a reasonable cost over time. As preparation for the final JAD session, workgroup members were asked to provide representative pages from the top ten or "hottest" reports that are in use or needed in the TCSE program, forms or documents not already submitted , caseload and cost information, distribution policy and procedures, and to review the list of system alerts. Workgroup members were also asked to review the forms and documents listed in the process flows, in order to identify any that are not really necessary, or any that should be added. ## meeting #4 The workgroup opened the four-day JAD session with a final review of the updated draft concept of operations document, and concurred that the concept of operations document reflects group agreements and understandings to date. The workgroup reviewed the latest updates to process flows, and the lists of documents, notices, and data elements for all processes, including case initiation, locate, establishment, case management, enforcement, financial, reporting, and security. In this final review, the workgroup reached consensus on the structure and content of each process flow before proceeding, including process decision points, and the process monitors to be used by the system. The workgroup ensured that agreement was reached on any additional changes recommended to the Federal support team. The Federal support team produced a large number of documents and reports based on process flow discussions and on documents submitted by workgroup members during the prior three JAD sessions. The workgroup reviewed the sample documents in detail, clarifying their intended use, identifying common points of style and structure, and developing common understandings for the guidance of the ongoing system design process. In regard to system-generated documents, the workgroup weighed whether the system should produce a larger number of specific, easily generated documents, or a few general purpose documents requiring many choices to be made at the time of generation. The workgroup strongly favored easing the impact on the daily use by workers, rather than for ease of maintenance of the forms. Therefore, the workgroup recommended that the system include a larger number of specific documents. For the same reasons, the workgroup also recommended that documents be designed to be generated separately, rather than as multi-part packages. The workgroup discussed and recommended creation of one or more auxiliary datasets for reference by system users, including: - "Agency" data such as addresses of state and Federal agencies. - "Third Party" data on employers, courts, frequently-needed addresses, service of process providers, the list of federally recognized tribes, FIPS codes, addresses for tribal programs, police agencies, and so forth. The workgroup recommended development of the dataset(s) with an initial set of data that could then be maintained by the tribe. The workgroup reviewed the data dictionary, making recommendations on specific elements and definitions, and their usage in TCSE processes. The workgroup discussed and recommended reports that should be developed with the Model TCSES, including specific financial reports and management reports. The workgroup reviewed a number of prototype screens developed by the Federal support team, and discussed how users would complete processes and navigate from one portion of the system to another. The workgroup discussed the need to reconvene for two additional meetings to finalize general design recommendations, and expressed strong support for a continuing role as a steering committee during future phases of system development. ## Concept of Operations ### Overview The Tribal Systems workgroup reviewed a draft concept of operations, describing the "big picture view" of the proposed Model TCSES. The concept of operations provided a high-level look at how system functions support the business processes and procedures of system users. The group discussed and agreed to a general content for the concept of operations. The concept of operations was refined in each succeeding JAD session as input to the larger system design process. Discussion points included: - Goals for the Model TCSES. There was consensus on four goal areas: ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` - Reduce costs, - Be user friendly, - Provide flexibility, and - Increase caseworker efficiency. ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` - Architecture. Open architecture would afford maximum flexibility. - System scalability. Scalability must be considered in balance with the increased costs of support. - Access. Providing internet/remote access to users may not be cost effective for 'version 1' of the system. - Payment processing mechanisms. Members agreed that the Model TCSES should support the collections and disbursement of child support payments. - Reports. Members expressed interest in having the Model TCSES support the production of reports, but not having to actually produce all of the reports automatically. - Interfaces. Members recommended that the Model TCSES support exchanges of files with other automated systems (FPLS, new hire, state systems). - Performance measurements and scalability. Members agreed that the Model TCSES should be modifiable to accommodate rapid growth, but also retain ability to accommodate interface to smaller systems. ### Case Initiation Discussion points on the concept of operations for case initiation included the following: - Agreement on the importance of a capability to identify tribal affiliation. - Referrals include state or tribal TANF, kinship care, Title XIX Medicaid, and foster care. - Locate-only case sources and reasons. - Agreement on the ability to track changes in case types, including IV-D and non-IV-D cases such as kinship care, foster care (state and tribal), TANF (state and tribal), medical only, locate only, and judgment only. - Application processes vary among members. All members have a specific intake process in place. Members discussed and identified similarities in processes and application forms. - Members expressed interest in future capability for the system to handle electronic signatures. - Agreement on preventing creation of duplicate cases. - Agreement on reasons for case closure. ### Locate General discussion by the group disclosed a broad range of locate documents used by tribal IV-D programs, and an equally diverse range of locate sources that members contacted by phone, Fax, or email. However, both the length of time and number of locate attempts varies by tribe and situation. Discussion points on case closure due to failure to locate: - Model TCSES should allow closing cases for failure to locate, but without specific timeframes. - Model TCSES should not automatically close cases for failure to locate. - It would be helpful to have the Model TCSES generate inactivity alerts on cases in the locate process. - The system should document all locate attempts in case history, tracking how often as well as how many attempts have been made. ### Paternity Establishment Members establish paternity through a variety of methods, include voluntary acknowledgement, in tribal court, in district court, through administrative process, by default, by stipulation, and through tribal ceremony for adoptions. Workgroup member policies vary on the handling of paternity challenges, including differences in the length of time allowed to challenge default orders or findings. Workgroup members commonly use genetic blood testing for enrollment purposes as well as for paternity establishment. ### Establishment of Support Orders Tribal child support orders are established through use of tribal court, CFR Court, state court. administrative process, mediators prior to going to court, and agreement orders. All workgroup members use petitions to establish child support orders. Means of serving process include tribal process servers, tribal police, tribal security officers, private process servers, sheriff, voluntary service via sending a letter to the individual, court bailiff, and subpoena or summons. Jurisdictional issues affect how cases are established. Some workgroup members exert jurisdiction over tribal members, no matter where they are in the country, based on enrollment factors. Some workgroup members consider they have concurrent jurisdiction in paternity cases when the child was born off the reservation but to an enrolled tribal member. However, once either the state or tribe begins working the case, the other entity gives up jurisdiction. In other instances, when it is decided that a state has a valid order and the tribe discovers a previous order exists, the invalid order is dismissed. There is need for a means to indicate that processing of a case should be suspended while a determination of jurisdiction is being made. workgroup members discussed options for court workers to access the Model TCSES, including access through system interface with the court system, and limited or read-only access to the child support system. There was consensus that the Model TCSES should support sending a letter to the individual first, prior to personal service, and also support personal service of process. No consensus was reached on the need for special fonts and language when printing an order, i.e., Navajo fonts for names as well as Spanish for the southern tribes bordering Mexico. ### Case Management Workgroup members have different timeframes for case management actions and recommended that the Model TCSES be flexible enough to accommodate these differences. There was consensus on having the Model TCSES move the case to the next functional area automatically. System ticklers or alerts that the workgroup members need include new address information, missed payments, review and adjustment activities related to the 3-year review, case closure actions related to case review, emancipation of the minor child, and anticipated order termination date. Members track activities and actions taken on cases through use of Microsoft Excel spreadsheets, Microsoft Outlook "search" capabilities, index file cards, and service agreements with states to create download files at a cost. Workgroup members all ascribe to Full Faith and Credit standards in processing of foreign cases The workgroup acknowledged an ongoing enforcement issue with orders referred to states for enforcement. States often use enforcement remedies that the workgroup member are not authorized to take. Case closure processes in place include having the case signed off by more than one person or level of authority, and sending two separate letters to the custodial parent (CP) prior to closure. workgroup members do not close a case when the CP goes off TANF until all the arrears have been satisfied. Case closure points of consensus: - The Model TCSES should include some kind of sign-off process by the supervisor before the case is actually closed in the Model TCSES. - The Model TCSES should alert the caseworker 60 days after the first case closure notice is sent. ### Enforcement Workgroup members expressed a need to identify remedial contempt orders and track compliance with job searches and other activities associated with remedial contempt. Remedial contempt process items that might be tracked include whether the non-custodial parent (NCP) takes required action(s), follows the rules for job searches, and applies for tribal general assistance. The workgroup agreed that generating enforcement notices and letters should remain primarily a manual process. However, the group also recommended that whenever a document is generated, the system should have the capability to create a tickler or alert. The Model TCSES should notify the caseworker when a payment has not been received. Enforcement remedies in use include income withholding, federal tax intercept, bank levies, liens, hunting and fishing license suspension, fishing tax, gaming license suspension, passport denial, and per capita intercept. For per capita intercepts, information has to be tracked on the tribe, the frequency of payout, and steps that are necessary to intercept the payment. ### Financial Management Workgroup members use simple interest, and do not charge interest on fees. Desired Model TCSES capabilities in payment processing: - Capability to track, distribute and disburse child support payments. - Capability to print checks. - Ability to support interest calculations. - Capability to make adjustments to the account balances and allow workers to record case notes associated with the adjustments. - Capability to set up multiple "buckets" or debts. Some tribal child support programs accept payments directly from NCPs; others require payments to be accepted through tribal financial systems. In-kind payments are handled differently from one program to another. However, it is generally presumed that the in-kind payments are being made unless the CP says that they aren't. Care has to be taken to ensure that a check is not generated to a CP based on an in-kind payment. A system alert or tickler would allow a caseworker to check and see if the in-kind payment was made. Workgroup members expressed interest in adding electronic funds transfer capabilities to their programs in the future. ### Reports Workgroup members expressed interest in system worklists or ticklers that: - Inform the caseworker of automatic actions taken by the Model TCSES. - Allow the caseworker to delete the alert after viewing it. - Alert the caseworker whenever new locate information is received. - Allow the worker to create alerts or ticklers. - Alert when documents are generated. - Alert for timeframe-related actions (e.g. timeframes associated with documents). General discussions included three kinds of alerts, including action alerts (worker can delete, but if the action isn't taken, the system recreates the alert overnight), information alert (worker can delete the alert and not see it again), and self alert (tickler set by the worker as a future reminder). Workgroup members expressed interest in having the Model TCSES access court calendaring functions ### Security and Privacy Workgroup members discussed security and privacy requirements including. - Assignment of a system administrator to manage system security and access. - Development of worker profiles. As part of system set-up, each tribe must develop worker profiles for system use and access. Each tribal user must be assigned a user ID as a means for the system to record and track actions. - Passwords. Passwords must be required to access the Model TCSES. Workgroup members must determine how often passwords need to be changed. - System access. Workgroup members must determine at what level the Model TCSES may be accessed by auditors, accounting, technical staff. Workgroup members expressed interest in having the Model TCSES maintain audit trails, including: - Automatic tracking of actions related to data designated as a "key element." When someone changes a key element, the Model TCSES could store the identity of the person who logged in and made the change. - Automatic creation of audit trails in the case history. For application security, the data base should reside with the tribe, and tribes should do periodic back-ups in case of natural or malicious damage. Data security and system back-ups. Discussion points included the following: - As part of the system design process, OCSE should consider creating a set of generic back-up procedures to detail how the Model TCSES should be backed up, recovery procedures and how to apply "patches" and updates to the Model TCSES. - Each tribe should have a plan to acquire a replacement server on an immediate basis, or should maintain a back-up server. - Each tribe must also plan for disaster recovery, including whether to provide a hot site or a cold site for system recovery. Workgroup members must determine the need for remote access to the Model TCSES by caseworkers and staff , and by clients or customers. ### System Architecture Workgroup members discussed a variety of demographic data, including number of staff, number of locations, approximate IV-D caseload, level of connectivity, access to tribal finance functions, and electronic interfaces. Desired agency interfaces include tribal enrollment office, tribal court, tribal police, tribal TANF, tribal payroll office, tribal accounting office, and tribal hearing offices. Workgroup members recognized that it is not possible for the Model TCSES to include built-in capability to interface with state systems, because state systems are too varied in nature. However, workgroup members should be able to develop their own interfaces independently through agreements with their state counterparts. Where a tribe elects to work with a state in developing an interface or some type of data exchange, they should ensure the interface includes a means of getting case updates. Tribes should retain backup data for at least three years, but may retain data for longer if required by tribal procedure. If the system is the official record keeper of the financial data, payment histories may need to be retained indefinitely. Once a tribe implements the Model TCSES, OCSE expects the tribe to commit to using the system for a specific period of time in order to make the system development effort cost effective. When the Model TCSES is ready to be implemented, the tribe's current tribal IV-D cases need to be converted to a format usable by the system. After discussion, workgroup members agreed on an approach to data conversion in which the Model TCSES would have the capability to read a standard tribal case record which OCSE would define as part of the development effort. The workgroup agreed that it would be each tribe's responsibility to put their data into the standard record format, which could then be loaded onto the Model TCSES. ## Business Rules and Processes During this portion of each JAD session, the workgroup participated in documenting the process flows and specific business rules related to the CSE functions of intake, locate, paternity, establishment, and enforcement. Each process flow and rules were refined in succeeding JAD sessions as input to the ongoing system design process. Key points of discussion are summarized below. ### Case Intake Processes Workgroup members noted a distinction between capture versus verification of information: information captured during Intake process would need to be verified at a later time, not during Intake. It should be a management issue for each tribe to determine the demographic data that must be entered, beyond the minimum data needed by the system to establish a case. The workgroup discussed common and unique processes for case types of Non-IV-D, IV-D, TANF IV-D, kinship care, foster care, medical support only, foreign only, and arrears only. The workgroup recommended that any change made to case type be recorded in case history. Workgroup members agreed on the mandatory minimum data needed to complete an application for service, including applicant, participant, and dependent data. Workgroup members agreed on the basic processes that the Model TCSES should support for each case type. Recommendations included a case notes capability to capture information to pass along to other staff members, and creation of an employer dataset so that workers would not have to enter the same employer address multiple times. For TANF referrals, workgroup members agreed that the same screens and information should be used as for non-TANF cases, with the addition of TANF case identifiers and Medicaid data. Workgroup members were in agreement that the Model TCSES should look at all the data and assess where the case should go next for further processing. ### Locate Processes Workgroup members were in agreement that locate processes differ from tribe to tribe. In order to identify the processes mutual to the majority of tribes, the workgroup undertook detailed discussions of the types of locate sources used, generation and content of postmaster letters, and the overlap between locate and income withholding activities. The workgroup agreed that the initial system may produce and monitor locate letters, but that other locate efforts would be done manually. ### Paternity Establishment Processes There are significant differences in how tribes process paternity cases. In order to identify the processes mutual to the majority of tribes, the workgroup discussed in detail their current processes for paternity questionnaires and affidavits, service of process, and genetic testing data and processes. To accommodate their key points of difference, workgroup members recommended that the Model TCSES: - provide a means to record actions taken rather than to take actions automatically, and - not enforce a set workflow through the paternity process, but offer a menu of available actions and options. In court documents, the workgroup agreed that the system may consider case number and docket number to be the same. ### Order Establishment Processes The number and type of documents for establishment of a child support order varies by tribe. Workgroup members agreed that when an account is set up in the Model TCSES, the system would require that a second person approve the account, affording a separation of duties. The workgroup agreed that components of a payment may be treated by the system as separate obligations for tracking purposes. Examples include current support, arrears (to agency), custodial arrears, state-ordered arrears, child care, medical support, fees set in judgment as paternity, interest, vital record fees, court costs, genetic testing, publication fees, tribal TANF, and attorney fees. Workgroup members agreed that the system does not need to generate a certification and verification document. If needed, the document would be treated as a standard office form. The workgroup recommended the capability to save orders generated by the system through a mechanism such as Portable Document Format (PDF). Discussion of imaging documents not created on the system was deferred. Guidelines calculation should be completed through use of a stand-alone module, at least for the initial iteration of the system, due to the variability of current guideline calculations. The Model TCSES should include a stand-alone module for guidelines calculations. Workers would perform guideline calculations according to tribal procedure in the stand-alone module, then enter the results into the TCSE system. ### Case Management Processes Workgroup members agreed that case history should track key data such as the change that was made, the change date, and the logged-in user who made the change. Case history should capture data automatically created by the system. Case history should also include case notes entered by workers. In discussing tickler or worker "to do" lists, there was consensus on three types of alerts, including action alerts (system-generated notice to workers or supervisors that action is necessary), information alerts (system-generated notice that action has been taken in or by the system), and worker-generated alerts (worker-generated reminder or note to be displayed on a chosen future date). The workgroup discussed consolidation of cases versus consolidation of orders. Workgroup members concurred with the following general definitions. Consolidation of cases is separate from consolidation of orders. To consolidate a case involves closing one case and adding persons to the other case. Court involvement is not needed to consolidate a case. Consolidation of orders requires court involvement. In discussing review and modification of orders, Workgroup members determined that all perform at least one review every three years, and also provide reviews upon request. However, tribes vary on the specific timeframes for conducting a review, and also vary on what is considered a substantial change. There was no consensus on a common review process, but all agreed that if the person requesting the review does not return requested information within 30 days, the review action may be closed. When an order is modified, workgroup members agreed that the order serves as the notice to both parties. Workgroup members agreed that the first iteration of the system should include a restricted set of criteria for suggesting when case closure might be appropriate. Closing a case should place it in a "turned off" status but not delete it from the system. ### Enforcement Processes Workgroup members recommended that the system include a mechanism to suppress enforcement remedies (and associated documents) that may not be available to tribes in general or to a particular tribe. There was consensus that the system include capability to pursue per capita intercept or to generate documents for per capita intercept. Workgroup members agreed that tribal licenses can be suspended without suspending state licenses and should be handled separately by the system. Members recommended the system include a process for voluntary assignment and associated documents. There was consensus that the system should provide for an order to appear before the elders, similar to a court order to appear, like an order to show cause. There was consensus that the system does not need to generate an order to seize; that action may be taken outside the system or as part of a court order. ### Financial Processes The workgroup discussed specific processes in place to receive, post, and distribute payments including direct payments. Discussion topics included fees, payment types, offset types, payment frequencies, financial notices, financial audit trail, and the timeframes associated with financial processes. The workgroup concurred on the accounting practice of separation of duties in which the worker who creates a particular payment batch must not be the same one to post those particular payments to case accounts. Members had ongoing and detailed discussions of distribution processes, including whether or when the system should place a priority on tribal arrears in the distribution schema. The workgroup agreed on a general distribution hierarchy, placing emphasis on current support first, arrears second, and judgments last. However, the workgroup acknowledged that distribution processes varied between tribes at the detail level, i.e., how money is distributed for foster care or kinship care cases. The workgroup also assessed the complexities presented by distribution of excess payment for arrears, where state arrears exist alone or in addition to tribal arrears. The workgroup identified differences in how child support arrears judgments are handled differently from judgments for other costs or state fees. Workgroup members recommended a system capability for transaction adjustments to adjust the balance where payments have been made directly, allowing the NCP to receive credit but at the same time prevent a check from being created for the CP. The workgroup concurred in recommending that the system allow tribes to change the order of the fees hierarchy for payment. The workgroup also agreed on processes to address seasonal work payments, i.e., the capability to post to futures when there is money left after all distribution is done. After extended discussion of the existing variances in practice on judgments and debt collection, the workgroup agreed that the system processes should not address statutes of limitation on debt. Workgroup members discussed the content and frequency of a variety of financial reports. It was agreed that the system would be structured to support a significant range of financial reports. It was understood, however, that the initial iteration of the system might not include development of all of the reports discussed. Reports (and discussion highlights) included: suspended payments aging report (weekly or on demand), checks returned for non-sufficient funds (weekly), adjustments (daily and on demand within date range), stale dated warrants. state write offs, collections report, distributed collections (by debt type, etc.), undistributed collections (must include reason), disbursement summary, review and adjustment, delinquency (monthly and quarterly), arrears (quarterly), account history, income withholding, in-kind, kinship care (quarterly and on demand), foster care (quarterly and on demand), TANF case report (quarterly and on demand), bank reconciliation, collection receipt (not needed). receipt batch log and payment balance reconciliation (on demand and on line), payments within a deposit. Members recommended that the system support (i.e., provide the data needed for) selected management reports, including the top two sections of the OCSE 34A (quarterly), tribal portions of the SF 269, program income (quarterly and on demand), annual statistical report, tribal affiliation (quarterly and on demand), new hire report (daily, weekly), as well as reports on workload statistics, case aging, case type, case actions, emancipation, cases closed, cases open with no order, paternity, intercept, and order establishment. ### Security and Administration Processes Workgroup members concurred on processes to incorporate several layers of security related to system access, including initial logon and password for access to the TCSE application, with limits set for password changing and access attempts, the creation of user profiles to restrict user view and create/update capabilities throughout the TCSE system., and field-level security for critical data fields. Workgroup members agreed that the period of time in which passwords need to be reset can be determined by the tribe during system configuration. However, lockout after three attempts is not configurable. The workgroup reviewed and discussed the items that should be configurable by each tribe as part of setting up and customizing the system for use. The workgroup developed agreements on the configurable data values for tribal information, CSE contact information, court contact information, participant information on race and clanship, enforcement options and thresholds, timeframes for action, document format and automatic generation options, automatic income withholding, financial functions and interest handling. ### Data Elements and Data Dictionary Throughout the four JAD sessions, workgroup members reviewed each of the data elements utilized in the process flows, discussing and achieving consensus on definitions and usage. Examples include: it was agreed that at this time, the only data elements needed in the system for family violence and for good cause would be "Yes" and "No;" other information should be maintained outside the system in written files. By the end of the four JAD sessions, workgroup members had developed a mutually acceptable list of data elements recommended for inclusion in the initial iteration of the system. ## Next Steps Some discussion items may need additional clarification by workgroup members, either in a future workgroup setting or through ongoing conversations with Federal support staff. These include: - Not printing CP addresses on documents at CP request as a courtesy even if there is not enough evidence for a Family Violence Indicator. - Primary and secondary case status as indicators to the system to push the case to the next worker appropriately. Members agreed on the concept of primary case status (paying or not) but agreed to table discussion of criteria for secondary case status. For example, an unverified address for CP or NCP might not necessarily advance a case to locate functions. - The need for a batch process for per capita intercept. Considerations include the need to produce separate notices for individuals and a consolidated report for the court. The next activities toward the development of a Model TCSES include completion of a Feasibility Study and Impact Analysis by the Federal support team, and developing an approach to secure funding for further phases of system design and development.
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Lecture 6, Janua:ry 25, 195'4 Continuaticn of inheritance behavior of AC, I, Rev&ew of previous talk: b). Backcross tests: AC ac x ac ac L AC ac : 1 ac ac d. AC AC x 8c ac 85 AC ac : 1 no ac. _--- d), The ears produced by Re c sh ldxds ac Re c sh 'E;ix ds ac x C Sh 1%~ Ds, ac (1). The regular pattern of variegation -- majority of kernels. (2). The unusual types of kernels: No c spots or areas Completely colored krnels Tiny specks of c Late Ds breaks in develol-ment Areas only with few c specks Early losses or Ds bre(aks -- Like 1 AC. 2. The effects of dosa of AC: 'Lhe higher the dose, the later in idtime of development +T na breaks occur at Ds, 3. The different fgolates of AC: In two doses: ,;j"-, a). ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~essive spots: late but uniform pattern of breaks at Ds -- in certain cells, late in development. b). Areas, distributed ov::r kernel, in which bre;'ks ot;cur in some cells, often associated with areas trJhere no breaks occur. Remainder of kernel has speckled pattern of Ds breaks 4. %rnels whsrv3 changes occur early to give sectors: Lhe se resemble 0 AC, 1 AC, 2 A c and 3 AC in same kernel. Suggest that somet?ing is hap;>ening to AC during early development that resembles somatic segregation. II. The analysis of the unusual kernels on tne ea.--s produced by Re c sh Xx AC Re c sh lfx AC x CShwxDs,noAc 1. Initial experiment: selected koynels showing no c specks, th:t is, no evidence of presence of AC and 2 kernels tna-L showed very late losses or breaks at Ds. 2. aecause material available was not great, first ex~*:~rimcnt was sc?et`-ing of a trial to determine sor:lething of nature of events. 2(4nlants derived from aberrant kernels: Analysis made of 2 i'rom k<,rnels shozir\g late losses of C, 2$ from kernels ~it'n no c specks, and 3. 14ecessar;!i- to determine if AC present or not, if Ds present in C chr~.mosome and if trcnsmissions of chro;nosomes 9 in next generation w:re normal -- that is -that no altorations had occurred to effect inheritance of chr-moso:?es. 4. The tests: Self pollination of each :-&n-t; Zach plant crossed to c ds/c ds, ac ac \ 'I, .3 &:q Each 13lan.t crossed to d ds / c ds AC AC ?;:;>t 2:. I '..;* L : Each $lant crossed by AC-tester: I Sh wx Ds, no AC. -.:l(.l+ ;\c !' I p:.,y, III. &rnel types on ear from initial tests: 1, The plants showing no AC: i: 1 Self-pollinated ear gave @atio of 3 Colored, non-var. : 1 colorles Crossed by I Sh wx Ds: All kernels colorless in wx class 4. No evidence of Ac. Crossed to c ds / c ds, ac ac Ratio of 1 Colored, non-var : 1 c/c d). Crossed to c ds / c ds, AC Ac: 25 Colored, non-variegated or not obviously variegated 11 9 Colored with arcas of c produced by Ds breaks 1 & colorless ( c/c class) Shows that Ds in C Sh wx chromosome is active in presence of AC. 4. Con&:-sions: (\\ \;q,;,, i" ,i.. :ut> il. b*:. ..:, No Bc is present in these 19,plants. ,I. I*' 2. Plants derived from colored kernels tn:lt gave no evidence of Ds breaks: AC present from tests. The AC constitutions differed among the plants. lLpQaL";c1 4. 9 plants: tests showed that --2 AC factors present. Not linked. (p&q$; i;- .f J;j 5) b)e 2 plants: 1 AC factor present b&in action it resembles two doses of original AC. ( ~,~~X-ki)m&! d. 2 plants: either 1 A@ with double dose action or 2 AC very closely 1inked;er marked change in action of a t&&be AC factorE, __.." -_._- _,i_. -- _- a-.-- . .._... _ _ . .._.__^.._ --'-"- "I -m-a. 4. Crossed to c ds/c ds, ac ac: Gave: (Example) 67 C, non-variegated kernels 266 Colored ke:nels w%th c areas: Two distinct classes of kernels; those with early losses of Ds, thus some large colorelss areas; those with late losses of ti producing kerrls with specks of c. 342 colorless kernels : the c/c class. b). Crossed to plants that TnJere c ds/c ds, AC AC. 25% Colored kernels; not obv@L~Lsly var-Jega-t;ed , cllas: ~8~ir. ';q2 ' i + dd. 6 Colored kernels >W-fully sneckeld with c 70 Colored kernels - 461 colorless kernels ObVioUslg v:!Wriegated for c areas ( the c/c class) 4. Crossed by AC tjgetier stock This was Re C Sh 11x jfs / I Sh wx Ds, ac/ac, Kernel types on resulting ears in the 2 a%acsn wx class N CShwxDs Re c sh Wx ds Re C Sh Wx ds ac X a I Sh wx Ds ac Only the I wx kernels can be considered: $.Zi 4 wx kernels with no bbvious variegation for C areas wx kernels with heavily speckled pattern of C (color) 494 I Wx ( th e c Wx / I wx class; cant test AC in these kernels) Diagram of ap:;elrance of 1 wx kernels: d). If we assumed plants being tested were Ac ac; AC ac, the gametic ratios for AC would be: 1 Acl Ac2 : 1 Ad : 1 Ac2 : 1 no AC or: 1Ac + AC : 2 AC : 3 no AC, Gametic ratio for AC is 3 with AC to 1 with no AC 4. In cross to c ds/ c ds, no AC would expect a ratio of 3 c - c variegated kernels to 1 with no variegation. Observed 266 variegated to 61 non-variegated. Two t:Tes of variegated kernels: 1 with 2 AC and 1 witn 1 AC, Di'ferences should be seen. f). In cro3s to c d.s/ c ds, AC AC plants wc~ld get: From female: c ds c ds AC AC From male: AC constitution: ratio dose 1 C Ds; no AC 2 AC 2 ' ; 1 AC 3 AC 1 I' ; 2 AC 4 AC In alored class would expect 1 with 2 AC : 2 with 3 AC : 1 with 4 AC 1 AcAcAcAc : 2 AC AC AC : 1 AC AC If 4 AC is too- of kernel, high a dose to give Ds breaks early enoug?: in develonment kernels. then this class would be non-variegated. This would give C 3:: wx AC tester stock used as female had an AC that gives almost n-! effect in 3 doses. The sm.e.11 specks of c that might q>pesr difficult to see. 27 Thus, Ac AC Ac cletss could appear non-variegated, The 4 doses and doses of AC would produce kernels that we:;e not obviously v::riegated, LIUS, ratio expected would be: 3 C kernels, 1 that was variegated, showing speckles of c. not obviously variegated : Observed: 256 C, non-variegated : 70 C and 6 odd kernels - c variega?&d and speckled. Appearance of kernels: -- only areas of specks of c: de In cross by I Sh wx DS ac: C Sh wx Ds - c Sh wx b 1 Expect: Observed: The wx class of colorles kernels: I Sh wx Ds Female contribution AC Ac AC AC : 2 AC AC : 1 with no AC 4 AC No obvious var. 2 AC 1-c var. no AC No var. 258 I wx, no certainly var. (some lzad few C s:>ecks 1 218 1 wx clearly var. for C specks If this projected coilstitution S_s correct, then it should be possible to prove it by progeny tests: This was done for 4 of the 6 plants that gave ratios in these i itial tests indicating the presence of 2 AC factors, independently located in chroi?osome coqlement and not linked to factors in short arm of chromosome 9. IV. The progeny tests conducted with plants assummed to be AC ac; AC ac, 1. T'ne Appearance of plants: Table on board, 2, The reason for the white streaks and their freq,uency: 4 . Ds break could occur in either chromosome; If in %? ti Ds chroaos ze, a whi-te streak t~uld appear. If a coincident Ds in both chromoso:nes, be formed. then cells homoz;:gous deficient, for 2/3 of shortlarm w--:ld These do not prodxe tissue that can he seen. be cells with enormous nuclei: hey appear to I This seen in the examination of the glumes of such plants: b). If AC dose is high, then events occur very late. w streaks may not be seen in the green background, If 1 AC present, Ds breaks occur early enoug? to produce a good streak, easri.lg seen. 3. Tests of the plants in columns A and B for AC inheritance. TWO plants selected from both A and B of each culture in Fig. 2 4. &ch plant crossed to a C sh bx wx ds, ac plant: The cross: Female iGal e Column A c sh be ds, ac I Sh Bz Ds AC ac; AC ac C Sh Bz Ds Column B ti il AC ac b), &pected ratio of kernel tmes from crosses of plants In column A: (1)Gametes: 1Ac AC : 2 AC : 1 no AC j# with AC to 1 with no AC Kernels should be in both 1 and C classes: 3 variegated to 1 non-var, (a). The observed ratio of kernel types: Figure 3 ?Y on board. -..a-^*.... " ..&a All ratios as expected exceT3-t for 1 aberrant plant: rJj-L i g plant had new change of AC. It wa3 A?Ac ac. "eason why C Bz variegated kernels fewer than ex2ected: - Can not see variegation in a purely speckleci pattern* iLhe two types of v ariegated kernels: %te losses of Dominant:2Au &rly losses of " .l AC 4. Tests of plants in column 13 for AC inhez>itance, selected from each culture to be tested: The Two ?lnnts ratio for AC - 1 with 1 AC exuected gametic : 1 wit11 no AC. The expected ratio of kernel types: 1 variegated to 1 non-varieg, %e obs erved types of kernels in cross: Figure 4, on board, 5. Conclusions: 1. Summary of procedure 30 far: a). b). f$ ac plants self-pollinated 'ound the expected I. AC AC : 2,Ac ac : 1 ac ac in F 2 4. (Allelic) Gametes of AC AC plants tested for AC. by CTOSS h=tve 1 AC wi. t? ac . '"ajo-ity of kernels had expected pattr,rn produced by AC All s:oul Few une,xpected ty-pes of keinels. no evidence of AC, Among &em, 31 :r?,e xith 23 s-~chlrkernels removed from eD-?.rs, tested for AC, 11 plants: Wo evidence for AC, AC AC plant, AC not in zametc produced by 12 plants: AC present. In 6 of t'nem, constitution wa4 ap9Caz+entljr AC ac; AC ac. Two non-allelic, non-ltnked AC factors from plant that ~~23 AC AC, nlI.elic, All gamete3 shou2.d kve had only 1 kc, 7' - ,' - P>?ogeny from 4 of the 6 plants assumed to h:?ve AC ac; AC L~C tested. These tests confirmed the AC cc; AC ac co sti.tu- tlcn in t';le I& select d cases derived from. C non-v:kr. k-m. 2. The reason that AC not seen in ori$nal non-variegated kernel: The dose of AC too high: 4 AC present in the endospe??m, 3. To see the AC action, must use an AC ac; AC ac plant as a pollen -8rent . Then, kelme3.s hzve eithez.7 AC AC or AC - 2 or 1 dose of AC. 4-. Evidence so fn~ s>otrs that AC can be lost to a gzmte in an AC AC plant (allelic posdticns of AC), Or, an extra AC factor can aFne<?r in axe ipme t c s . 7. The relaticnship bet;*ree-=1 t':e two suspected. Iqzttios mre 11 to 12, 8. Can suspect trammosition of AC from one location to another. i-'remature to conside? tI-iis now, but better to Sve so~?etXng in mind, P3.agro.m of possible origin of Ro AC aild 2 AC. 9. This would fit wltB 03o.:rvatTcns of the sectorial Ir : nels. Ph.&os; L 0 Som.Lic segregations of the AC factor. wc?Qd give these paRems, In many- cases, associated with a break at Ds, V, Tests of the AcAc ac plants: w c Sh wx ils i'.l!.r,.i t Re c sh b?x ds 6 ) ; I' 1. I;c nel ty~cs in crosses go c ds, ac females: "b& r :c 104 C to c variegated: lcte loz:es of C, II Like AC AC type of original 3sB /r 124 c, non-variegated 233 ,colorless (c/c kL::rnels) 2, icernel types in crosses to c ds/c ds. Ackc (allelic) 68 :,Jith no sharp variegation -- small specks oZ' c in sol?le or small 87eas of C to c. 71 wiYn ty:~ical 2 AC dose C to c variegation 146 colorless (c/c) 3. By w I 18h wx Ds / Re C Sh 3x ds, ac ac. The 1 kernels only: 7 'i'j'*' f-/G> 88 I rn,ii'$&: e few specks of C : 8 I wx, hecvily : 111 I Nx I speckled with C All had few wd streaks (Like 2 AC action & original AC) 5. 2 plants crossed to f 7, (> b' 4. females: C sh bz, ds, ac 5.~1 Both C-j&& crossed to 53; f females: C sh bz ds, ac I, non-var. I-Cbz C Bz CBz-Cbz Iynon, I-Cbz CBz CBz-bz var. Plant 1 74 63 40 ?lant 1 97 111 84 6. Conclusions: Altered AC acts like AcAc -- double dose of AC action at a single locus or: Two AC loci presmt, closely linked. VI, Although first er,ileziment showed much, I was not satisfied with the tests in every case, especially the ones that a!:-Jeared to show altered AC action as well as altered numbers. Also, the tests were not large enough for any one -plant; also, the Ac- tester stocks could have been better. '%he-efore, the second experiment conducted, and much EoIae precisely with regard to details, smmary of results of the cotioi-ed experiments, I and II. 42 plants examined from C, non-variegated kernels: 19 - No AC 16 - AC ac; AC ac Two non-lii-ked AC 1 A%c ac; AC ac Two non-licked AC; one rzrith dolJble-dose 6 AZ& ac action. 8 plants from kernels shotiiI:g onl;: a few c specks 4 AC ac; AC ac Twnoc-linked AC P". 1 AcAc ac; AC ac Two non-linked AC; one with double dose acti& 3 A& ac 8 plants-from kernels showing a heavily meckled pattern of c dots. Late losses of G but unifom in pattern, 2 AcAc ac or two closely Ainked AC. In one dose, very irregular patterns; Gametic ratios imegvlar; many altered Fypes of patt&ns of var. Suggests early ~. Ac tz;nsposlticns of AC Cne AC but dosage action increased over thr:t of ori&nal AC but not doubled in action, 1 "AzAc" ac, The AC action altered. Produces early sectorials in one dose. 1 AC ac. One AC, Could not discover any rnodificat4on in action corzp,?-Ld to original AC, __.-- __.___.- -. .- ,, ..-- - .- - -- .- - .---- - _._ ..-. --._.~ -_._ ..__ - ._._ __-.. ;I ---- .-..__..I,-. -... _._-. .- __ -$i$J$~. j __._ _ __. 4- ,`&a, + - I :f , I , ! I ./ I 1 -. I 1 / I I ? / I 2- i c -i n 6 0 a 5 3- Y 0 2. . L 6 b Y 0 . _. 0 113 t- lu- J-n -- `by
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# Presentation: 483605 ## Cutting edge safety systems - The Danish example - **Mads Melbye** **Statens Serum Institut, ** **Copenhagen, Denmark** ## Agenda - Unique opportunities for postlicensure research in Denmark - In 2001, initiative to study postlicensure epidemiology of childhood vaccination - Recent postlicensure studies of effectiveness and safety ## Unique possibilities for **Unique possibilities for** **for epidemiological ** **research in Denmark** ## The Danish registries are unique **The Danish registries are unique** ** ****an investment worth billions of Danish kroner** ** ****Follow the individual from birth to grave** ** ****follow diseases through generations (gene/environment)** ** ****millions of individuals ** ** ****results are robust** **CRS-number** **Birth characteristics** **Diseases** **Prescribed medication** **Vaccinations** **Childcare facilities** **School performance** **Family, place of living** **Education, employment** **Biological specimens** ## Two important recent contributions **Two important recent contributions** ## The new initiative 1 - Financial support to establish sections at Statistics Denmark (socio-economic, demographic) and the National Board of Health (diseases, health care parameters) that only facilitate registry research - Low costs for data - Cut delivery time to below 2 months - On-line assess to Statistics Denmark from research milieu - Data linkages made available to other researchers for free (internet) ## New initiative 2 - Stored biological specimens defined as a registry – means rules for registry research aply (”persondataloven”) - Opt out register - Biological specimens involved – aplication to scientific ethics committee - Unless important to the individual’s health – informed consent not always requested. ## Initiative to study postlicensure epidemiology of childhood vaccination in 2001 ## Childhood Vaccination in Denmark **Danish childhood vaccination program** - **Voluntary** ** ****Free of charge to the vaccinees** ** ****Statens Serum Institut mandated by law to supply the vaccines to the childhood program – all children vaccines from same manufacturer ** **Vaccines today** - **DTaP-IPV / Hib, 3,5, and 12 m** ** ****MMR, 15 m, and 12 yr** ** ****DTaP-IPV booster, 5 yr** **Major changes in 1990s** - **Introduction of Hib, 1993** ** ****Whole cell P -> Acell. P, 1997** ** ****OPV -> IPV, 2003 ** ## Childhood vaccination database - Family doctor - Bill with details - National Health Insurance, - National Board of Health - Payment to MD - All registrations - + - Information from - other registries - National - Vaccination Register - 1990-2007 - (the only in the world) - Type, dose, date, crs-number ## Exposure **CRS-Number** **Childhood** **Vaccination** **Database** **Hospital** **Discharge** **Registry** **Psychiatric** **Registry** **Birth** **Registry** **CPR Registry – ** **Demography** ** ****Statistics** ** ****Denmark –** ** ****Socio-economic** **Exposure** **Outcome** **Potential confounders** **School** **performance** ## Epidemiological Study Designs ** ****Randomized Clinical Trial** ** ****Cohort study - individual-level** ** ****(Self-controlled case-series method)** ** ****Case-control ** ** ** **Cohort study - population-level** ** ****Ecological designs ** ** ****Other case-series methods ** **No evidence with respect** **to causality** **Weak evidence with ** **respect to causality** **Evidence with respect to** **causality** **Notes:** Differentgial misclassification ,- spurious associations, non-differential misclassification –mask associations ## Short examples of postlicensure studies **Effectiveness** **Herd immunity** **Booster strategy considerations** **Safety** ## Cohort Design and Methodology **Cohort Design and Methodology** - N = 500,000 - 1,000,000 children | | Cases | Person-years at risk | | --- | --- | --- | | Unvaccinated | | | | Vac | | | | 1.dose | | | | 2.dose | 1 | 31⁄2 | | 3.dose | | | ** ****Poisson regression** | | Rate ratio | 95% CI | | --- | --- | --- | | Unvaccinated | 1 | Referent | | Vac | | | | 1.dose | | | | 2.dose | | | | 3.dose | | | - OR DEATH, - EMIGRATION, - END OF - FOLLOW-UP, - WHICHEVER - FIRST ## Impact of Hib vaccination - PRP-T Vaccine introduced May 1993 - 542,100 children followed from birth or 1 January, 2001, whichever occurred last - 2,664,040 person-years of follow-up - Meningitis (Hib, other) from National Hospital Discharge Registry - 141 Hib meningitis cases (94 before, 47 after vaccination introduced) - Risk/confounding factors: BW, gestational age, - birth complications, birth order, season, gender ## Hib Vaccine Effectiveness | | # cases | Person years | Vaccine effectiveness against Hib meningitis (95% CI) | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Hib vaccination | | | | | one dose | 2 | 499,296 | 97.7 (90.8-99.5) | | two doses | 2 | 549,149 | 98.9 (95.7-99.7) | | three doses | 1 | 770,250 | 99.3 (94.9-99.9) | ## Relative risk of Hib meningitis in unvaccinated children after introduction of Hib vaccination ## Impact of pre-school booster vaccination on pertissus in 0-1 year-old children - Cohort of all children born in Denmark, 1977-2001 - Place of residence to identify household members and their vaccination history - Rate ratios of pertussis hospitalisations according to number, age, and vac status of household mmbers - Estimated the preventable proportion of hospitalisations among 0-1 year-old-children according to age at booster (4-6 years), booster uptake, and efficacy of the booster against transmission ## RR for pertussis hospitalisation in children born 1990-2001 | | Rate Ratio | 95% CI | | --- | --- | --- | | Living without other children | 1 | | | Living with one other child fully vaccinated (age) | | | | 0-1 year | 0.94 | 0.53-1.69 | | 2 years | 1.57 | 1.16-2.14 | | 3 years | 2.13 | 1.60-2.83 | | 4 years | 2.02 | 1.38-2.94 | | 5 years | 2.84 | 1.79-4.51 | | 6-8 years | 2.99 | 1.81-4.92 | | 9-11 years | 1.45 | 0.20-10.39 | ## RR for pertussis hospitalisation before 2 years of age and living with one other child **Booster vaccination** - Preventable proportion - of hospitalisations: - 7%-33% - Most realistic scenario: - 18% ## MMR and Autism **MMR and Autism** - Wakefield and others: ”MMR increases risk of autism” - Cohort of all Danish children born between 1991-98 - N = 537,303, 2.1 mill. Person-years of follow-up - 738 cases of Autistic Spectrum Disorders (316 w/autism) _**Autistic Disorder**_, - MMR +/- - RR: **0.92 (**0.68 – 1.24) _**Other Spectrum Disorders**_, - MMR +/- - RR: **0.83** (0.65 – 1.07) - No association between: age at time of vaccination, - time since vaccination, date at vaccination, - and autism or other spectrum disorders ## Childhood Vaccination and Non-targeted Infections **Childhood Vaccination and Non-targeted Infections** - To many antigens overwhelms the immunesystem - Vaccination increases risk of non-targeted inf. - N = 805,206, 2,9 mill person-years of follow-up - 84,317 cases of infectious disease hospitalizations - - **No increased risk of non-targeted infections after vaccination** ## Diarrhea **Diarrhea ** - Adjusted for age, calendar period and other vaccinations **Vaccination** - Yes / No - Trend (within) ## Flue vaccine - New regulative: Flue vaccinations electronically recorded to enable effectiveness and safety sudies ## Acknowledgement - Anders Hviid - Jan Wohlfart - Michael Stellfeld - Kreesten Madsen - Mogens Vestergaard ## Some references Contact: [email protected] **Association between thimerosal-containing vaccine and autism**. - JAMA 2003;290:1763-6. **Childhood vaccination and type 1 diabetes**. - N Engl J Med 2004;350:1398-404. **Childhood vaccination and nontargeted infectious disease hospitalization**. JAMA 2005;294:699-705. **A population-based study of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination and autism**. N Engl J Med 2002;347:1477-82. **MMR vaccination and febrile seizures: evaluation of susceptible subgroups and long-term prognosis**. JAMA 2004;292:351-7. **Postlicensure epidemiology of childhood vaccination: the ** **Danish experience**. Expert Rev Vaccines 2006 October;5(5):641-9. **Some references****Contact: [email protected]** ## Cohort of 101,000 pregnant women and offsprings **Science, 11 juli 2003** - Ongoing follow-up - of children at - age 7 years ## Rate ratio for pertussis hospitalisation in children born 1977-2001 | | Rate Ratio | 95% CI | | --- | --- | --- | | Not living with other children | 1 | | | Living with one other child | 2.37 | 2.12-2.65 | | Living with two other children | 3.89 | 3.41-4.43 | | Living with three other children | 4.21 | 3.47-5.10 | | Living with four other children | 4.52 | 3.24-6.29 | | Living with five+ other children | 5.98 | 4.14-8.64 | ## Thimerosal and Autism - Thimerosal, a vaccine preservative, contains mercury. - Mercury is neurotoxic. - 1990s, US: More and more TCVs. - TCVs increases risk of Autism. - N = 470,000 - 1,227 cases of Autistic Spectrum Disorders _**Autistic Disorder**_, - TCV +/- - RR: **0.85 (**0.60 – 1.20) _**Other Spectrum Disorders**_, - TCV +/- - RR: **1.12 (**0.88 – 1.43) ## MMR and Febrile Seizures **MMR and Febrile Seizures** - Fever occurs in 7% of MMR vaccinated children - ”MMR increases risk of Febrile Seizures” - N = 540,000 - 17,986 cases of Febrile Seizures _**2 weeks following MMR**_ - RR: **2.75 (**2.55 – 2.97) _**Susceptible subgroups**_ - None identified. _**Risk of reccurence**_ - MMR +/- - RR: **1.19 (**1.01-1.10) _**FS and Epilepsy**_ - MMR +/- - RR: **0.70 (**0.33-1.50) ## Childhood Vaccination and Type 1 Diabetes **Childhood Vaccination and Type 1 Diabetes** - Temporal associations - Infections, immuno-modulation. - Vaccination increases risk of Type 1 Diabetes - N = 740,000 - 681 cases of Type 1 Diabetes - - **No increased risk of T1D** **- No clustering of T1D in periods following vaccination.** **- No increased risk of T1D among children with at least one T1D sibling**
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# JigsawDownload # See <http://atterer.net/jigdo/> for details about jigdo [Jigdo] Version=1.2 Generator=jigdo-file/0.7.3 [Image] Filename=Fedora-9-i386-disc4.iso Template=http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/9/Fedora/i386/jigdo/Fedora-9-i386-disc4.template Template-MD5Sum=YddM2wGw4hiuwgFgvL_phg [Servers] Base-i386=http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/9/Fedora/i386/os/ [Mirrorlists] Base-i386=http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?path=pub/fedora/linux/releases/9/Fedora/i386/os/ [Parts] 12zwGMiZ0foIyKCyZhCsLA=Base-i386:GPL HscHQMMiyMJTfRnJkeHJiA=Base-i386:Packages/GConf2-devel-2.22.0-1.fc9.i386.rpm P1UxqJ-Nng6CyWu30dgwkg=Base-i386:Packages/GeoIP-1.4.4-2.fc9.i386.rpm t7yz9OO9cF8aGgB_XLKS3g=Base-i386:Packages/VLGothic-fonts-proportional-20071215-2.fc9.noarch.rpm 2smIt7zdshltejUIjyG6dQ=Base-i386:Packages/ant-1.7.0-1jpp.4.fc9.i386.rpm 0VyuinEeSSJWvKnIr1T_iA=Base-i386:Packages/ant-antlr-1.7.0-1jpp.4.fc9.i386.rpm 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log-files
814617
<!-- Title: Day shift. Fri Jan 10, 2003 --> <!-- SciCo: C. Blocker, B. Foster --> <!-- DAQAce: B. Stelzer, D. Clark --> <!-- MonAce: L. Cerrito, T. Nelson --> <!-- CO: Valentin Necula --> <!-- OpManager: Eric James --> <!-- Notes: --> <pre>Still stacking. Anticipate shot around 11am-noon.</pre> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 08:28:01 2003 --> This happened in the owl shift... <p> 1) CLSMAIN appeared red in ProcMon, and we tried to restarted. But, actually there was not any problem in CSL (comunitation problem in ProcMon?). We stopped and started CSL, but run was in progress. So, finally evb was stuck, and it was needed to stop the run (just shop setup) and clean up evb. <p> 2) b0dap58 was frozen, and we needed to reboot it. We already restarted ProcMon and TevMon processes <!-- Author: Guillelmo/Lin --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 08:31:59 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156431">156431</A> TERMINATE: End run - switch to cosmics <!-- Author: Bernd --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 08:39:17 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156433">156433</A> Activated at 2003.01.10 08:38:15 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 08:39:17 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156433">156433</A> ACTIVATE: Cosmic run to examine DAQ system <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:09:46 2003 --> TOF alarm in iFix while TOF OFF, it turned red for 30 sec., and then back OK, I could not see anything wrong with it <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 13;15;06 comment by...Lucio --> then it goes yellow every now and then, but again I can't see the reason. TOF is OFF <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:12:01 2003 --> <pre>We get several erros in the error logger about CSL "receiving a bad event" (every 2-8min) - All CSL processes in ProcMon are green though. 41'32" b0dau32.fnal.gov:csl_mon_send:8:41:32 AM->CSL received a "BAD EVENT" in partition 0.[MLW]</pre> <!-- Author: Bernd :: (run <a href='/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156433' target=_top>156433</a>) --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:38:18 2003 --> <pre>OK, here are the formal Terms of Offer for my attempt to bribe the MCR shift crew to deliver luminosity while I am CDF SiCo: (this is a renewal of my previous offer Nov 30 2002, which came very very close to working...) 1) Each member of the MCR shift crew (up to maximum of 6) gets twenty ($20) U.S. Dollars apiece for breaking the record for single-shift delivered luminosity on a shift where I am CDF SiCo (currently DAY Jan 10-18). Note this offer does not depend on how much of the data CDF actually records. 2) If the single-shift record is associated with a record instantaneous luminosity on a shot put in by the previous MCR shift, then that shift crew qualifies as well. But the previous shift crew only qualifies if the shot stays in long enough to generate a record integrated luminosity on MY shift. Got it? 3) The offer is renewable up to maximum of (3) times during this period, providing that subsequent records represent an improvement of at least 2.5% over the previous record. (this part of the offer is kind of irrelevant this week since we are heading into shutdown. Looks like the last, best chance is a really good shot early tomorrow AM.) 4) Only CDF luminosity is considered in this bribe. For example, optimizing the luminosity lifetime by reworking the Helix to bring the beams out of collision at D0 would be a perfectly acceptable means of qualifying for this Award. I believe that the current single-shift delivered luminosity is still 712 nb-1, set 20 Oct. 2002 Owl shift. Breaking this record will require approximately L > 32E30 at 8AM and keeping the store in all shift.</pre> <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:47:59 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156433">156433</A> Terminated at 2003.01.10 09:46:55 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:49:17 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156433">156433</A> TERMINATE: end Cosmic run for CCAL Laser calibration. <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 09:52:02 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156438">156438</A> TERMINATE: Silicon global Cold-start to pick up hardware DB changes to e483. <!-- Author: nielsenj --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 10:26:11 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156442">156442</A> Activated at 2003.01.10 10:25:13 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 10:26:11 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156442">156442</A> ACTIVATE: Cosmic run again <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 10:26:41 2003 --> I made some changes in the <a href=http://www-cdfonline.fnal.gov/internal/usr/spezziga/elog.html>luminosity calculator script</a> (under "Luminosity summary"), trying to fix the problem which appeared <a href= '/cgi/elog/elog.pl?nb=2002&action=view&page=1079&frame=2&anchor=16:24:19'>a couple of weeks ago</a>, when ACNET was providing bad values to the database. It is not easy to reproduce the problem to debug it now that ACNET is working, so I am not sure 100% that it will react properly next time. <!-- Author: Mario Spezziga --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 10:29:36 2003 --> We are investigating the change in AVDD current on SB4W1L4. (This cell is RED/ORANGE/whatever in IMON.) <!-- Author: Jason Nielsen --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 10;30;04 comment by...Jason --> RED/ORANGE/PINK/MAGENTA <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 10:45:09 2003 --> MCR still plans to shoot at 120mA -- currently at 112mA and 5~6mA/hr. This would mean shot setup around noon & so shot might go in 1-2PM. <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 11:00:30 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156442">156442</A> Terminated at 2003.01.10 10:59:10 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 11:11:15 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156442">156442</A> TERMINATE: End run - Nikolai will be back to continue his laser runs <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 11:51:21 2003 --> <pre>During Nikolai's Laser run, we got a Done timeout error - We issued a manual HRR, but Run Control got stuck in Recover state - Problem seems related to EVB/Trigger supervisor - Paged EVB experts</pre> <!-- Author: Bernd/David/Tim --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 11:56:17 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156443">156443</A> TERMINATE: Abort run - RC got stuck doing HRR <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 12:10:26 2003 --> <pre>Trying to partition the same configuration doesn't work. EVB/L3 doesn't pass partition. Expert instructed us to reboot b0tsi00 and cleanup EVB. In the meanwhile he is coming in.</pre> <!-- Author: Bernd/David/Tim --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 12;21;01 comment by...Bernd --> <pre>Here is the error from the elog: 44'21" 1 crate/s: b0htdc00(153), busy.[RXPT] (MLE) b0tsi02:Messenger:11:44:19 AM-&gt;BUSY timeout (MLE) b0dap59.fnal.gov:AWT-EventQueue-0:11:44:19 AM-&gt;Busy Timeout: HADRON_TIMING_00 (MLE) b0tsi02:Messenger:11:44:23 AM-&gt;BUSY timeout (MLE) b0tsi02:Messenger:11:44:28 AM-&gt;BUSY timeout (MLE) b0tsi02:Messenger:11:44:32 AM-&gt;BUSY timeout</pre> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 12:19:00 2003 --> <pre>We tried a new Central Laser run, but after a Busy timeout from trigger supervisor 2. b0tsi02:Messenger:12:14:00 PM-&gt;BUSY timeout After a manual HRR Run Control got stuck again</pre> <!-- Author: Bernd/Nikolai/David/Tim --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 12:26:23 2003 --> <pre>MCR now estimates shot setup starting 1PM ==&gt; collisions 2:30~3:00. Stack is at 123mA.</pre> <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 12:48:40 2003 --> <pre>MCR called, their estimate for shot setup is now 1:30.</pre> <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:13:15 2003 --> I got a pop-up window in iFix, complaining that the alarm queue 'SUMMARY LIST' has overflowed, and at least one alarm may have been lost! . Since I don't understand what this means, I emailed [email protected] <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 17;23;56 comment by...Andy H. --> Don't worry, that happens from time to time and it isn't serious (even though it looks like it is). <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:20:10 2003 --> <pre>Level3 was paged because EVB would not partition The problem was in Scanner Manager crate b0eb10 that had a suspended process tsmDisp. That one got suspended because a little ago EVB was used in 2 partition mode and the second user on partition 2 closed Run Control while being in Idle State Clean up of the EVB did not help because on the partition transition after EVB clean up b0eb10 would get the same confusing message from RTserver So , what i had to do was: restart RTserver , switch to partition 0 and clean up EVB Now things seem to be working </pre> <!-- Author: Arkadiy --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:39:55 2003 --> MCR calls with 5-minute warning on shot setup. <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:46:26 2003 --> shot setup underway. <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:50:30 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156448">156448</A> Activated at 2003.01.10 13:49:44 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 13:51:59 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156448">156448</A> ACTIVATE: running cosmic to ex. daq, removed clc00 and clc01 (used by other partition) <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 14:22:37 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156448">156448</A> Terminated at 2003.01.10 14:21:44 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 14:22:37 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156448">156448</A> TERMINATE: End the run to switch to shot-setup <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 14:32:10 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156449">156449</A> ACTIVATE: AAA_Shotsetup with current PHYSICS_1_04[3,224,354] table <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 14:49:12 2003 --> Smells like final protons. <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:01:31 2003 --> Checked Roman Pot trigger signals with scope by triggering on fake B0 signal, we found that one of 3 RP bits was not delivered properly to the PreFRED. Replaced the trigger panel with the spare, and then everything looked fine. <!-- Author: M. Mulhearn, M. Gallinaro, K. Terashi --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:02:13 2003 --> <TABLE bgcolor=#cdc9a5> <TR><TH>Date</th><th>Time</th><th>BLM</th><th colspan=2>Dose</th></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>14:57:47</td><td>W Inner BLM</td><td>0.70</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>14:57:47</td><td>W Outer BLM</td><td>0.23</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>14:57:47</td><td>E Inner BLM</td><td>1.47</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>14:57:47</td><td>E Outer BLM</td><td>2.00</td><td>RADS</td></tr> </TABLE> <strong>Integrated dosage</strong> <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 15;05;29 comment by...Lucio --> protons load <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:04:47 2003 --> Proton Load ~8400. Injecting Final Pbars. <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:24:13 2003 --> <pre>3:20:39 PM-&gt; Level 2 Decision Timeout HRR recovered OK Error message in Alpha minicom: Error: Startload is still low. ModDone bits 0x400effff for event 14204 TIMEOUT: Mod done not set for slot 19 (0x0006ffff, cnt 1) Error: Startload is still low. ModDone bits 0x4006ffff for event 14560 TIMEOUT: Mod done not set for slot 19 (0x0006ffff, cnt 2) Error: Startload is still low. ModDone bits 0x400effff for event 50852 TIMEOUT: Mod done not set for slot 19 (0x0006ffff, cnt 3) Unknown saw 3 sequential errors at Jan 10 15:21:15 2003 FaultManager: Fatal error, sending L2 timeout (L2A 10436) </pre> <!-- Author: Bernd/David/Tim :: (run <a href='/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156449' target=_top>156449</a>) --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:36:52 2003 --> <TABLE bgcolor=#cdc9a5> <TR><TH>Date</th><th>Time</th><th>BLM</th><th colspan=2>Dose</th></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>15:34:27</td><td>W Inner BLM</td><td>0.83</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>15:34:27</td><td>W Outer BLM</td><td>0.23</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>15:34:27</td><td>E Inner BLM</td><td>1.74</td><td>RADS</td></tr> <tr><td>2003.01.10</td><td>15:34:27</td><td>E Outer BLM</td><td>2.28</td><td>RADS</td></tr> </TABLE> <strong>Integrated dosage</strong> <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Comment: Fri Jan 10 15;37;13 comment by...Lucio --> after pbars load <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:37:46 2003 --> Ramping Pbars=800E9 Prot=6800 <!-- Author: bill foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:39:31 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156449">156449</A> TERMINATE: End shot setup. <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:44:26 2003 --> scraping... <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:44:47 2003 --> <pre>Partition AAA_Current with PHYSICS_1_04[3,224,354]</pre> <!-- Author: Bernd/David --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:54:37 2003 --> <pre>scraping complete Lum=27.65</pre> <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:55:48 2003 --> <TABLE BORDER=2 CELLSPACING=1 CELLPADDING=1 BGCOLOR=WHITE> <TR BGCOLOR=YELLOW><TH>Run Number</TH> <TH>Data Type</TH> <TH>Physics Table</TH> <TH>Begin Time</TH> <TH>End Time</TH> <TH>Live Time</TH> <TH>L1 Accepts</TH> <TH>L2 Accepts</TH> <TH>L3 Accepts</TH> <TH>Live Lumi, nb-1</TH> <TH>GR</TH> <TH>SC</TH> <TH>RC</TH></TR> <TR><TD>Totals</TD> <TD> </TD> <TD> </TD> <TD> </TD> <TD>15:55:01</TD> <TD ALIGN=CENTER>::</TD> <TD ALIGN=RIGHT></TD> <TD ALIGN=RIGHT></TD> <TD ALIGN=RIGHT></TD> <TD ALIGN=RIGHT></TD> <TD> </TD> <TD> </TD> <TD> </TD></TR> </TABLE> <!-- Author: End of Shift Report --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 15:59:09 2003 --> All HV are ON and ready to go, except Silicon, waiting for TeVMon <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 16:00:18 2003 --> <font color=red>Shift Summary: </font><pre>Store 1107 went in uneventfully 5 mins before end of shift. Initial Lum 27.65.</pre> <br><b>End of Shift Numbers</b> <table><tr><td width=60% align=left> <b>CDF Run II <p></b> <pre> Runs 156431-156449 Delivered Luminosity 6.5 Acquired Luminosity 0 Efficiency 0 </td></tr></table></pre> <!-- Author: Bill Foster --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 16:00:47 2003 --> TeVMon green, turning silicon ON <!-- Author: Lucio --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 16:07:19 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156452">156452</A> Activated at 2003.01.10 16:06:35 <!-- Author: RunControl --> <!-- Date: Fri Jan 10 16:07:48 2003 --> Run <A HREF="/java/cdfdb/servlet/RunSummary?RUN_NUMBER=156452">156452</A> ACTIVATE: Starting PHYSICS run <!-- Author: Alberto -->
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# Presentation: 245379 ## Status **Status** - M. Della Negra - LHC Symposium - FNAL, 1 May 2003 **Civil Engineering and Magnet** **Updates on sub-detectors status** **Initial Detector and Early Physics** ## The CMS Detector **MUON BARREL** **CALORIMETERS** ** ** **ECAL** - Scintillating - PbWO4 crystals - Cathode Strip Chambers ( ) **CSC** - Resistive Plate Chambers ( ) **RPC** - Drift Tube - Chambers ( ) ** ****DT** - Resistive Plate - Chambers ( ) **RPC** ** ** **IRON YOKE** **TRACKER** **MUON** **ENDCAPS** **HCAL** - Plastic scintillator/brass - sandwich ## Experimental Caverns **Experiment: UXC55 ready July 04** **Service : **USC55 ready Jan 04 ## Services on the Magnet Yoke - Waiting for the cavern to be ready, CMS (compact design!) can be fully assembled and tested in the large surface hall SX5. - Wheels and disks of the Yoke can be instrumented with Muon detectors in SX5. - Metallic structures for racks are ready. Piping work for gas and cooling has started on the yoke. ## Transfer CMS Underground mid-05 - Transfer YB0 (2000t) - Transfer YE2 (800t each) - Rent 2000t Gantry for ~ 4 months - The design of CMS has been made modular to allow the transfer of big commissioned pieces underground. After the Magnet test on the surface mid-05 , CMS can be transferred in the cavern in about 4 months. ## 4 Tesla Coil Design: 4 Layer Winding - Magnetic length 12.5 m - Free bore diameter 6 m - Central magnetic induction 4 T - Nominal current 20 kA - Stored energy 2.7 GJ - Magnetic Radial Pressure 64 Atmospheres! **4 Tesla Coil Design: 4 Layer Winding** ## Status of Conductor - All 21 superconducting cables have been produced (November 2002) - All 21 inserts have been - produced (January 2003) - 17 (out of 21) Electron Beam (EB) welded conductors have been produced so far. - “insert” **Status of Conductor** **We need 21 lengths (2.65 km each) of reinforced conductor.** **4 lengths/coil_module x 5 coil_modules + 1 spare = 21 lengths** - 4 lengths left to be - reinforced. Finish by - June 03. **EB welding** ## Coil Winding (Ansaldo, Genova) - Coil is made of 5 coil modules: CB-2, CB-1, CB0, CB+1, CB+2 - CB-2 completed, CB-1 ready for winding, last coil (CB+2) at CERN beg 04. - 4 mo delay in mandrel production (critical path), aim to recover 2 mo **Winding last layer of CB-2 ** **Magnet test on the surface ends mid-05 ** - (2 mo delay wrt V33 planning, use master contingency in underground phase) **Mandrel Production Critical ** **CB-1** **CB0** ## Test Coil Swiveling - The 5 coil modules will be stacked vertically on a Swiveling Platform. The coil will then be inserted horizontally ## Inner Tracker **5.4 m** **Outer**** Barrel –TOB-** **Inner Barrel –TIB-** **End cap –TEC-** **Pixel** - 2,4 m **Inner Disks –TID-** **210 m****2**** of silicon sensors** **6,136 Thin detectors (1 sensor)** **9,096 Thick detectors (2 sensors)** **9,648,128 electronics channels** **Notes:** Changes Start of module production shows a delay of ~ 5 months w.r.t. v33. Plans and milestones for 2003 Ramp-up mass-production of modules. Recover some of the delays incurred so far by exploiting high throughput of automated assembly gantries. Submit 0.25 m version of pixel ROC chip. Concerns Logistics of module production. ## Module Production: Components ** ** **Automated module assembly** **15,000 modules** **25,000,000 Bonds** **Schedule**: module production shows 5-6 month delay w.r.t. v33. Aim to recover as much of the delay as possible using over-capacity. If no further delays occur, 5 mo delay could be covered by 3 month tracker float + 2 months of master contingency. **Sensors**: Production batches received from Hamamatsu (excellent quality) and ST (improvement needed) - Problems solved: packaging of ASICs, bondability of pitch adaptors. **Hybrids**: latest batch good, 4700 ordered, awaiting bulk order (delivery in Oct 03) **Notes:** The LHCC were pleased to see that production and delivery of both Hamamatsu and ST sensors with acceptable quality may soon be possible. This follows the excellent yield from Hamamatsu which is now standard, and the progress in establishing adequate QA/QC to ensure similar quality from ST. We agree that there is every likelihood that by summer 03 it will be possible to assess if the production rate of 1000 sensors per month is achieved. Progress on ASICS, pitch adapters, CF frames, and kapton insulators is clear, and there is every reason to be optimistic and to believe that acceptable delivery of these components with acceptable quality will soon be a matter of course. We noted that the problems with kapton-ceramic bonding on the hybrids had not been understood. Nevertheless a new delivery did not exhibit the same symptom, and therefore production of the remaining 80 for the first batch had now been authorised. ## Tracker Module Production **v33** ## System Tests **TOB** **TEC** **TIB** **Clean signals observed** **in tests of all 3 subsystems** ## Pixel Detector - Module 00: DMILL chips with dummy sensor - Works well at 40 MHz - Successful operation of 2x8 chips - 100 - 150 - Increase number transistors per - pixel from 127 (old DMILL ROC) to 251 (new DSM ROC) - Translation of ROC chip into 0.25 m CMOS - Submission end April 03 - Superior performance ## ECAL **Notes:** Changes Redesign of the mechanical structure of ES Plans and milestones for 2003 Improve the cutting process for large crystal boules Place order for endcap crystals Choose the final electronics chain Test of several hundred channels with final electronics by October 2003 Concerns Cutting process for large crystal boules Electronics Chain: schedule is aggressive Assurance of funding – critical to place order for endcap crystals in 2003 ## Crystals and Photodetectors - 85k out of 130k APDs delivered - 4100 production VPTs delivered - 16k barrel crystals (out of 62k ) delivered. - Growth of large ingots is now very successful and reproducible - Technical problems for cutting large ingots. Reduced delivery in 3 quarters - Must order endcap crystals by end-03 - 85mm - 4 crystals from 1 boule ## Crystal Delivery **Crystals Delivered (cumulative)** **Today** **Critical Path** **Delivery assuming quarters with reduced rate (Q1,Q2- 2003)** **Quarters** - 3000 in Q1-03 - 3000 in Q2-03 - 5100 in Q3-03 - 6600 in Q4-03 ## Supermodule Assembly **V33: Finish 12 bare supermodules by end-03** **SM0** **SM1** **SM1** ## ECAL Electronics **In 2002 two major concerns: ** - 1) Very Front End (VFE) analogue electronics: FPPA too noisy - 2) Cost overrun: hope for cheap digital links (one per crystal) never materialised **Decision:** - 1) Organise full review of FPPA design with outside experts and resubmit. Develop back up solution in 0.25 m (DSM). - 2)Alter electronics architecture: generate L1 trigger primitive (25 xtals) on-detector rather than off-detector- reduce links and off detector electronics by factor ~ 10. - One new radhard 0.25m chip to be developed: FENIX (trigger sums, digital pipeline). Build on experience with APV. - 3) Use tracker technology for Optical links and Control system - 4) Reorganise ECAL electronics team ## Very Front End (VFE) Electronics **VFE Card** **FPPAs** **ADI ADCs** **MGPA** **ADC** - Alternative: New 0.25m (DSM) ASICS, preamplifier (MPGA) & ADC submitted Feb 03, expect packaged chips in May. - DSM front-end expected to be substantially cheaper, consume less power and have slightly better performance ** ****DECISION in mid-2003 after comparative tests of alternative systems** ** **Prototype of VFE cards ready to test both versions - New version of FPPA received Dec 02. Faults corrected but noise 30% higher than spec, yield 35% (instead of 50%). Very Front End analogue electronics still a concern. **ADC and MGPA DSM Chips** ## Status of Fenix and FE Board **FENIX** : New chip for trigger sums and digital pipeline. - FENIX Asic Submitted Feb 03. - Packaged chips back in May 03 **New FE Board:** (compatible for both FENIX and FPGA) ready for Tests **FE Board** ## ECAL Planning **Goal: Apr 07 - ECAL comple****te and commissioned** - System test of both solutions mid-2003, followed by decision. - ESR in Sep 03. - EB electronics mounted in 2004/2005 – calibrate at least 9 SMs in 2004 - EE and SE mounted in 2006/2007, calibrate 1 Dee in 2006 **Electronics Schedule** **ESR Sep 03** **EB+ EB- EE- EE+** ## Hadronic Calorimeter: HCAL - Had Barrel: HB - Had Endcaps: HE - Had Forward: HF - HB - HE - HF ## HCAL : HB and HE **Back-flange** **18 Brackets** **3 Layers of absorber** **HE-1 re-installed on YE-1 in Jan/Feb 2003. ** **Only 3mm droop.** **Mount HE+1 by end of 2003, ** **HB complete, ** **install onboard electronics by Q2-04** ## HCAL: HF Fibre Insertion - If present rate maintained fibre insertion will be finished in November 2003 - (instead of April 04) **scheduled** **produced** ## Drift Tubes in Barrel ## Muons: DT Production - By end-Mar: 67/250 chambers made (46 at CERN) - All 3 sites (Aachen, Ciemat, Legnaro) assembling chambers at necessary rate - Torino: start assembly in autumn 03. - Finish outfitting of chambers in ISR. Delays in minicrates production  initial DT+RPC installation without minicrates starting in autumn 03. **Notes:** Finish outfitting of chambers in ISR Delays in minicrates – initial installation w/o mc starting in auumn 03. ## Installation of first MB1 chamber - 4 tech. + supervisor , half a day/ch **Installation of first MB1 chamber ** ## Cathode Strip Chambers in Endcaps ## Muons: CSC Assembly **Dubna ME1/1** **50 out of 72 assembled ** **45 US_CSCs at CERN** **US: production of 148 chambers finished. ** ## Muons: Chambers at CERN **CSC Test ** **stands** **DT Test ** **stand** **Alignment ** **Bench** ## Installing CSCs - The support posts have been installed on YE+2, ready for CSCs to be mounted as soon as gas distribution pipes have been laid down. * * - Start installation in Jun 03 ## Muons: RPCs **Endcap: ** **Funding shortfall forces staging** - Install an initial working system **(oiled RPCs)** comprising RE1,2,3 ( < 1.6). - -buy only components for this reduced system where practicable.-balance the books. **Barrel**** **: - 650 gaps completed, chamber manufacture proceeding well at Bari & GT. 20 RB ch. at CERN-ISR **Operational RPCs** ## CMS Data Acquisition **CMS Data Acquisition** **DAQ TDR submitted end-02** **Modular design of Event Builder**** ** **8 x (12.5 kHz DAQ units)** **The single-farm design, that provides maximum flexibility in the physics selection, works.** ## Initial Low Luminosity Detector **LHC start up scenario?** - First Beam in April 2007. Beam commissioning for 4 mo. - Goal: attain > 5.1032@25ns bunch spacing. - Shutdown 2-3 months? - Physics Run starts mid-07: Run until 5-10 fb-1 @ 1-2 1033 **Initial CMS detector: Complete CMS (as described in TDRs) except:** - 1. ME4 staged - 2. 3rd forward pixel disks missing - 3. Start with 50% DAQ (limit L1 rate at 50kHz instead of 100 kHz) - 4. Reduced End-Cap RPC system: RE1,2,3 (|| < 1.6). **Staging scenario consistent with Financial Plan approved by RRB** - The Financial Plan is based on **50 MCHF of additional funds** promised by Funding Agencies on top of their global MoU commitment of 450 MCHF. **The cost of the initial CMS detector is ~ 500 MCHF** ## Physics at Startup - 3 months (80 fills) - @ L0=1033 cm-2s-1 - 10fb-1 per expt. - 115 GeV **Example SM Higgs Discovery Reach (5********): ATLAS +CMS** **ATLAS +CMS** - At L0=1033 cm-2s-1 - 1 month ~ 0.7 fb-1 - At L0= 3.1033 cm-2s-1 - 1 month ~ 2 fb-1 - Assumptions: 14hr run - and 10hr to refill - i.e. 1 fill/day - tL ~ 20 hr, Efficiency of 2/3 ## Physics **Squarks and Gluino mass reach** **SUSY will be found quickly !** ## Conclusions **2003 is a critical year for CMS** **Magnet:** Coil: proceeding well but on critical path: estimate delay can be reduced to ~2 months. Can compensate the delay using master contingency **Tracker **: Tight schedule, delayed start requires full exploitation of production capacity to recover. Aim to keep any net delay within the shadow of coil delay. **ECAL **: Tight schedule. Revised electronics still on track for ESR in Sep03. Assuming anticipated rate of crystal delivery, schedule to have complete ECAL installed in April 07 is realistic **HCAL, Endcap Muons **: construction on schedule. **Barrel Muons**: Delays should be recovered by Apr-04. **To watch** - Tracker: Ramping up of of Si modules assembly - ECAL: Crystals production, Electronics, Endcap crystals order - Muons: Minicrates for DTs, Installation of DTs and RPCs **v33 CMS Schedule**: Foresees CMS closed ready for 1’st beam in April 07.** ** **A low luminosity detector can be ready for physics in 2007. Exciting physics is likely to start ‘tumbling out’ soon after startup.**
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Before shutdown. 1) Prepare cover or door for M100. Possibly install before shutdown. Should be installed before decommissioning. [Russ?] 2) Do a test run of installing all infrastructure on test racks in DAB3, including pipes, hoses, valves, fans, plenums, etc. Check out RMIs, smoke detectors, etc. Then bundle/box all components for each and every MCH1 rack. [Victor Martinez] 3) Validate/update all mechanical drawings. Verify the vertical positions of all MCH1 infrastructure. Where do we place the L1Cal readout crate? 4) Prepare TAB/GAB crate and strain relief system so that the crate and all cables can be moved as one unit from the sidewalk to MCH1. 5) Obtain/purchase spare ADF crate for use on the sidewalk. 6) Make note of any LVDS cables which may have been damaged during the installation on the sidewalk. We may try to remove these cables after they are disconnected at the sidewalk, but before they are reconnected in MCH1. 7) Do some tests with the Run IIb version of the Calorimeter preamp pulser, so we know this tool works, the documentation is validated and the system is reliable. 8) Have an updated list of any "broken" trigger towers (and why), so we do not waste time on those channels during installation and commissioning. After Calorimeter noise studies, and before decommissioning. 1) Disconnect/turn off/close valves for all power and water to M102-113 for safety reasons. Water valves are at the bottom of the rear of the racks. 2) Rework VESDA, so M100, M101, M122-124 can be powered up independently of the L1Cal racks (M102-113). [Dan Edmunds] 3) Put up sign, and control access to MCH1 throughout the decommissioning and installation. We have to determine if there is a clear path for the DAQ Shifters to do their safety checklist during the shutdown. 4) Make sure there are matching labels to doors and rack frames for M103-112. Remove doors, place any hardware (hinges, screws, bolts) in bags and tape bag to specific doors. Store doors elsewhere (DAB3, pit?) as they are not needed until the end of the shutdown. 5) Locate ECL cable which carries L1Cal signals to the TFW. Dan Edmunds is primary for this job. The cable will be disconnected, and carefully threaded out of M104(?), over cross aisle cable tray to M124(?), and stored for safety. It will be reused (GAB->TFW) after everything else has been installed. 6) Remove all twist-and-flat ribbon cables in M103-112, front, back and on top in cable tray. The preferred method is to snip the ribbon cables at the top of the front and back of the racks. Next, disconnect the connector ends from the electronics, front and back. Finally, pull out all the excess cable from the cable tray on top. All the twist-and-flat ribbon cable goes to scrap. We will need a bring a 'laundry cart' or some similar container to the control room outside the MCH1 door in order to dump the possibly hundreds of pounds of scrap cable. Designate a place to move the cart after it is filled. 7) Disconnect blue/grey signal cables. Do no more than four cables at a time (a row to a single electronics board). Apply new labels (already printed, in cabinet on sidewalk). Do not waste time removing old label, and apply new label so it does not obscure old label. New labels are only applied to the MCH end. It may be necessary to remove cable ties in order to find a straight unused part of the signal cable near the connector end so the label is visible and readable. 8) There are a total of 128 blue/grey cables in each MCH rack. After the new labels are applied, the cables need to be stored in the vertical grey cable guides. This step may also require removing additional cable ties. Use caution, and minimize handling. The old ties will need to be removed eventually in order to dress the cables for the final routing to the patch panels. Do we need some wrap or cover for the connectors? 9) All remaining cables should be scrap. However, we may want to doublecheck with Dan Edmunds at this stage before proceeding with the systematic removal of all other cables and components. 10) Strip racks M103-112 to their frames. We need another portable container in which to dump the scrap electronics boards, and another container for the old power supplies. Who will do this work? Can people work from the front and back of the rack removing different components, or from adjacent racks? 11) Replace water services. New pipes, valves, heat exchangers, etc. 12) Install smoke detectors, rack monitors, RMIs, associated cables. 13) Install AC distribution boxes. Need some restraining mechanism so the power cables are not pulled or pushed accidentally. 14) Checkout water, power and safety services. 15) Install shelves, plenums, blowers and patch panels. 16) Power off all crates on the sidewalk. Make sure all cables to be used in MCH1 are labelled before disconnecting them from any components. 16) Disconnect all signal and power cables to ADF crates on the sidewalk. All four fully populated (ADF cards in front, ATCs in back) ADF crates can be relocated from the sidewalk to M104, M106, M109 and M111. 17) Install the strain relief systems at the rear of the ADF crates. There are two roll bars on each side and about four inches above the ADF backplane for the pleated foil cables. In addition, another roll bar is needed another 4-6 inches higher up and to the side of the ADF crate closest to the TAB/GAB location for the LVDS cables. 18) Disconnect all cables to the Communications crate on sidewalk. Relocate Communications crate to M108. 19) Disconnect the GAB->TFW daughtercard and associated cables from the TAB/GAB crate backplane. Remove the L1CalTrk patch panel and cables from the sidewalk rack. Disconnect all cables along the front of the TAB/GAB crate (orange optical cables, white TFW/SCL cables, etc.). 20) Carefully thread the four bundles or trunks of LVDS cables through the open panel above the TAB/GAB crate. There are 240 cables in total, each with about 4.5 meters from the lock position of the strain relief system to the connector end (for the ADF). The four trunks of cables can be coiled up and gently placed inside a box or similar container. The weight of the cables needs to be supported so as not to drag on the TAB/GAB crate. 21) Remove the TAB/GAB crate from the sidewalk rack, and place it on a cart. The crate and cable combination moves uniformly to the steps leaving the sidewalk area, carried up the steps to another cart, and then rolled down to corridor to the MCH1 door. The crate is then carried by two people standing on both sides of the crate, with two people trailing along with the cable bundles. The center aisle is too narrow to permit a pair of people to rotate into position, so the crate needs to be carried down the aisle, with the rear facing south, so the TAB/GAB crate can slide into position along shelves into M107. 22) The four trunks of LVDS cables need to be threaded back to the rear of M107, and then routed to one of the four racks in which an ADF crate resides. The slack cable can be carefully stored on shelves in any of the racks which contain only patch panels. Reconnect the LVDS cables to the ATCs. 23) Route and connect the 160 pleated foil cables from the patch panel cards to the ATCs. The slack for the pleated foil cables can rest on the shelves behind each patch panel. Do not apply the strain relief latch on the patch panels yet. The pleated foil cables and BLS trigger cables share the same strain relief system, and it would be too time consuming to undo and redo one to two days later. 24) Set-up the test-wave generator for use in the MCH1. Turn on power to the ADF crates, and check out the pleated foil cables, patch panel cards, ATCs and ADFs. Have spares if any component fails the test. Turn off power after testing is completed. 25) Route, connect and redress the BLS trigger cables. For a given rack, 64 cables are in the left cable guide and 64 cables are in the right cable guide. There is plenty of open space in the shelves behind each patch panel to allow any slack BLS trigger cable to flow. 26) Use the Calorimeter pulser to check out BLS trigger cables with a scope and the monitor connectors on the front of each patch panel. We need a specially prepared cable and/or adaptor (and a spare?). To run the Calorimeter preamp pulser, the DAQ and Calorimeter readout is needed (trigger, preamp & BLS & pulser power, etc.). We may want to check out the first rack before doing the rest to determine if our handling of the cables has been too rough. 27) Reconnectorize cables that do not check out ok on the scope.
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(i) Vegetable seeds. The term "vegetable seeds" means the seeds of the following kinds that are or may be grown in gardens or on truck farms and are or may be generally known and sold under the name of vegetable seeds: Artichoke -- Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. cardunculus Asparagus -- Asparagus officinalis Baker Asparagusbean or yard-long bean -- Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. subsp. sesquipedalis (L.) Verdc. Bean, garden -- Phaseolus vulgaris L. Bean, lima -- Phaseolus lunatus L. Bean, runner or scarlet runner -- Phaseolus coccineus L. Beet -- Beta vulgaris L. subsp. vulgaris Broadbean -- Vicia faba L. Broccoli -- Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis L. Brussels sprouts -- Brassica oleracea L. var. gemmifera DC. Burdock, great -- Arctium lappa L. Cabbage -- Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata L. Cabbage, Chinese -- Brassica rapa L. subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Hanelt Cabbage, tronchuda -- Brassica oleracea L. var. costata DC. Cantaloupe -- (see Melon) Cardoon -- Cynara cardunculus L. subsp. cardunculus Carrot -- Daucus carota L. subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Arcang. Cauliflower -- Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis L. Celeriac -- Apium graveolens L. var. rapaceum (Mill.) Gaud. Celery -- Apium graveolens L. var. dulce (Mill.) Pers. Chard, Swiss -- Beta vulgaris L. subsp. cicla (L.) Koch Chicory -- Cichorium intybus L. Chives -- Allium schoenoprasum L. Citron -- Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. and Nakai var. citroides (Bailey) Mansf. Collards -- Brassica oleracea L. var. acephala DC. Corn, sweet -- Zea mays L. Cornsalad -- Valerianella locusta (L.) Laterrade Cowpea -- Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. subsp. unguiculata Cress, garden -- Lepidium sativum L. Cress, upland -- Barbarea verna (Mill.) Asch. Cress, water -- Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum (L.) Hayek Cucumber -- Cucumis sativus L. Dandelion -- Taraxacum officinale Wigg. Dill -- Anethum graveolens L. Eggplant -- Solanum melongena L. Endive -- Cichorium endivia L. Favabean (see Broadbean) Gherkin, West India -- Cucumis anguria L. Kale -- Brassica oleracea L. var. acephala DC. Kale, Chinese -- Brassica oleracea L. var. alboglabra (Bailey) Musil Kale, Siberian -- Brassica napus L. var. pabularia (DC.) Reichb. Kohlrabi -- Brassica oleracea L. var. gongylodes L. Leek -- Allium porrum L. Lettuce -- Lactuca sativa L. Melon -- Cucumis melo L. Muskmelon -- (see Melon). Mustard, India -- Brassica juncea (L.) Czernj. and Coss. Mustard, spinach -- Brassica perviridis (Bailey) Bailey Okra -- Abelmoschus esculentus (L.) Moench Onion -- Allium cepa L. Onion, Welsh -- Allium fistulosum L. Pak-choi -- Brassica rapa L. subsp. chinensis (L.) Hanelt Parsley -- Petroselinum crispum (Mill.) A.W. Hill Parsnip -- Pastinaca sativa L. Pea -- Pisum sativum L. Pepper -- Capsicum spp. Pe-tsai -- (see Chinese cabbage). Pumpkin -- Cucurbita pepo L., C. moschata (Duchesne) Poiret, and C. maxima Duchesne Radish -- Raphanus sativus L. Rhubarb -- Rheum rhabarbarum L. Rutabaga -- Brassica napus L. var. napobrassica (L.) Reichb. Sage -- Salvia officinalis L. Salsify -- Tragopogon porrifolius L. Savory, summer -- Satureja hortensis L. Sorrel -- Rumex acetosa L. Southernpea -- (see Cowpea) Soybean -- Glycine max (L.) Merr. Spinach -- Spinacia oleracea L. Spinach, New Zealand -- Tetragonia tetragonioides (Pall.) Ktze. Squash -- Cucurbita pepo L., C. moschata (Duchesne) Poiret, and C. maxima Duchesne Tomato -- Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. Tomato, husk -- Physalis pubescens L. Turnip -- Brassica rapa L. subsp. rapa Watermelon -- Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. and Nakai var. lanatus
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table with row headers in column A and column headers in rows 3 through 5 (leading dots indicate sub parts),,,,,,,, "Table 2: Cumulative Estimates of Population Change for Counties of Kentucky and County Rankings: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2005",,,,,,,, .Geographic Area,Population estimates,,"Change, 2000 to 2005",,State ranking of counties,,, ,,,,,Population estimates,,"Change, 2000 to 2005", ,"July 1, 2005","April 1, 2000 estimates base",Number,Percent,"July 1, 2005","April 1, 2000 estimates base",Number,Percent Kentucky,"4,173,405","4,042,285","131,120",3.2,(X),(X),(X),(X) .Adair County,"17,573","17,244",329,1.9,62,63,66,66 .Allen County,"18,706","17,800",906,5.1,59,60,30,29 .Anderson County,"20,394","19,111","1,283",6.7,54,56,26,19 .Ballard County,"8,277","8,286",-9,-0.1,107,105,90,90 .Barren County,"40,073","38,033","2,040",5.4,24,23,20,25 .Bath County,"11,626","11,085",541,4.9,94,95,54,31 .Bell County,"29,665","30,060",-395,-1.3,36,36,110,105 .Boone County,"106,272","85,992","20,280",23.6,4,8,1,2 .Bourbon County,"19,833","19,360",473,2.4,56,55,57,58 .Boyd County,"49,594","49,752",-158,-0.3,17,16,102,94 .Boyle County,"28,363","27,697",666,2.4,39,38,46,60 .Bracken County,"8,670","8,279",391,4.7,105,106,62,33 .Breathitt County,"15,957","16,100",-143,-0.9,72,69,101,102 .Breckinridge County,"19,293","18,648",645,3.5,57,57,47,43 .Bullitt County,"68,474","61,236","7,238",11.8,11,13,3,7 .Butler County,"13,414","13,010",404,3.1,86,86,61,49 .Caldwell County,"12,973","13,060",-87,-0.7,88,85,97,99 .Calloway County,"35,122","34,177",945,2.8,30,28,29,56 .Campbell County,"87,251","88,616","-1,365",-1.5,8,7,117,107 .Carlisle County,"5,329","5,351",-22,-0.4,117,117,92,95 .Carroll County,"10,454","10,155",299,2.9,98,98,68,52 .Carter County,"27,306","26,889",417,1.6,40,39,60,71 .Casey County,"16,290","15,447",843,5.5,70,72,33,24 .Christian County,"70,145","72,309","-2,164",-3.0,10,9,120,114 .Clark County,"34,887","33,144","1,743",5.3,31,31,23,27 .Clay County,"24,146","24,556",-410,-1.7,48,43,113,109 .Clinton County,"9,559","9,634",-75,-0.8,102,102,96,100 .Crittenden County,"8,984","9,384",-400,-4.3,104,103,111,118 .Cumberland County,"7,147","7,147",-,0.0,112,112,89,89 .Daviess County,"93,060","91,545","1,515",1.7,7,6,25,68 .Edmonson County,"12,030","11,644",386,3.3,90,93,63,47 .Elliott County,"6,902","6,748",154,2.3,115,115,77,62 .Estill County,"15,089","15,307",-218,-1.4,77,73,105,106 .Fayette County,"268,080","260,512","7,568",2.9,2,2,2,53 .Fleming County,"14,610","13,792",818,5.9,78,80,38,22 .Floyd County,"42,218","42,441",-223,-0.5,22,21,107,98 .Franklin County,"48,207","47,687",520,1.1,18,17,55,73 .Fulton County,"7,217","7,752",-535,-6.9,111,111,114,120 .Gallatin County,"8,134","7,870",264,3.4,109,110,71,45 .Garrard County,"16,579","14,792","1,787",12.1,69,75,21,6 .Grant County,"24,610","22,384","2,226",9.9,44,51,16,10 .Graves County,"37,625","37,028",597,1.6,28,25,49,69 .Grayson County,"25,189","24,053","1,136",4.7,42,44,27,32 .Green County,"11,588","11,518",70,0.6,95,94,84,82 .Greenup County,"37,184","36,891",293,0.8,29,26,69,80 .Hancock County,"8,613","8,392",221,2.6,106,104,73,57 .Hardin County,"96,947","94,170","2,777",2.9,6,4,15,51 .Harlan County,"31,614","33,202","-1,588",-4.8,33,30,118,119 .Harrison County,"18,527","17,983",544,3.0,60,59,53,50 .Hart County,"18,319","17,449",870,5.0,61,62,32,30 .Henderson County,"45,573","44,829",744,1.7,20,20,42,67 .Henry County,"15,903","15,060",843,5.6,73,74,33,23 .Hickman County,"5,075","5,262",-187,-3.6,118,118,103,117 .Hopkins County,"46,705","46,519",186,0.4,19,19,75,85 .Jackson County,"13,618","13,495",123,0.9,84,81,82,76 .Jefferson County,"699,827","693,604","6,223",0.9,1,1,8,77 .Jessamine County,"43,463","39,041","4,422",11.3,21,22,10,8 .Johnson County,"24,001","23,445",556,2.4,49,45,52,61 .Kenton County,"153,665","151,463","2,202",1.5,3,3,17,72 .Knott County,"17,561","17,649",-88,-0.5,63,61,98,97 .Knox County,"32,069","31,795",274,0.9,32,34,70,79 .Larue County,"13,699","13,373",326,2.4,82,82,67,59 .Laurel County,"56,338","52,715","3,623",6.9,15,15,12,18 .Lawrence County,"16,166","15,569",597,3.8,71,71,49,39 .Lee County,"7,709","7,916",-207,-2.6,110,109,104,111 .Leslie County,"11,994","12,401",-407,-3.3,91,89,112,115 .Letcher County,"24,434","25,277",-843,-3.3,45,42,116,116 .Lewis County,"13,872","14,092",-220,-1.6,81,78,106,108 .Lincoln County,"25,122","23,361","1,761",7.5,43,46,22,16 .Livingston County,"9,760","9,804",-44,-0.4,101,101,94,96 .Logan County,"27,169","26,573",596,2.2,41,40,51,63 .Lyon County,"8,160","8,080",80,1.0,108,108,83,75 .McCracken County,"64,698","65,514",-816,-1.2,13,12,115,104 .McCreary County,"17,233","17,080",153,0.9,64,64,78,78 .McLean County,"9,926","9,938",-12,-0.1,100,100,91,91 .Madison County,"77,749","70,872","6,877",9.7,9,10,5,11 .Magoffin County,"13,472","13,332",140,1.1,85,83,79,74 .Marion County,"18,939","18,212",727,4.0,58,58,44,37 .Marshall County,"30,967","30,125",842,2.8,35,35,35,54 .Martin County,"12,215","12,578",-363,-2.9,89,88,109,113 .Mason County,"17,140","16,800",340,2.0,65,65,65,65 .Meade County,"28,447","26,349","2,098",8.0,38,41,19,13 .Menifee County,"6,809","6,556",253,3.9,116,116,72,38 .Mercer County,"21,610","20,817",793,3.8,53,53,39,40 .Metcalfe County,"10,197","10,037",160,1.6,99,99,76,70 .Monroe County,"11,660","11,756",-96,-0.8,93,92,99,101 .Montgomery County,"24,256","22,554","1,702",7.5,46,50,24,15 .Morgan County,"14,334","13,948",386,2.8,79,79,63,55 .Muhlenberg County,"31,548","31,840",-292,-0.9,34,33,108,103 .Nelson County,"41,088","37,477","3,611",9.6,23,24,13,12 .Nicholas County,"7,027","6,813",214,3.1,114,114,74,48 .Ohio County,"23,676","22,916",760,3.3,51,49,40,46 .Oldham County,"53,533","46,618","6,915",14.8,16,18,4,4 .Owen County,"11,374","10,547",827,7.8,97,97,36,14 .Owsley County,"4,746","4,858",-112,-2.3,119,119,100,110 .Pendleton County,"15,125","14,390",735,5.1,76,76,43,28 .Perry County,"29,452","29,422",30,0.1,37,37,86,87 .Pike County,"66,922","68,736","-1,814",-2.6,12,11,119,112 .Powell County,"13,687","13,237",450,3.4,83,84,58,44 .Pulaski County,"59,200","56,217","2,983",5.3,14,14,14,26 .Robertson County,"2,279","2,266",13,0.6,120,120,87,84 .Rockcastle County,"16,712","16,582",130,0.8,68,66,81,81 .Rowan County,"22,226","22,094",132,0.6,52,52,80,83 .Russell County,"17,020","16,315",705,4.3,67,68,45,36 .Scott County,"39,380","33,061","6,319",19.1,25,32,7,3 .Shelby County,"38,205","33,337","4,868",14.6,26,29,9,5 .Simpson County,"17,021","16,405",616,3.8,66,67,48,41 .Spencer County,"15,651","11,766","3,885",33.0,74,91,11,1 .Taylor County,"23,754","22,927",827,3.6,50,48,36,42 .Todd County,"11,944","11,970",-26,-0.2,92,90,93,92 .Trigg County,"13,349","12,597",752,6.0,87,87,41,21 .Trimble County,"9,023","8,125",898,11.1,103,107,31,9 .Union County,"15,592","15,637",-45,-0.3,75,70,95,93 .Warren County,"98,960","92,522","6,438",7.0,5,5,6,17 .Washington County,"11,399","10,916",483,4.4,96,96,56,35 .Wayne County,"20,352","19,923",429,2.2,55,54,59,64 .Webster County,"14,161","14,120",41,0.3,80,77,85,86 .Whitley County,"38,029","35,865","2,164",6.0,27,27,18,20 .Wolfe County,"7,070","7,065",5,0.1,113,113,88,88 .Woodford County,"24,246","23,208","1,038",4.5,47,47,28,34 "Note: The April 1, 2000 Population Estimates base reflects changes to the Census 2000 population from the Count Question Resolution program and geographic program revisions. Dash (-) represents zero or rounds to zero. (X) Not applicable",,,,,,,, Suggested Citation:,,,,,,,, "Table 2: Cumulative Estimates of Population Change for Counties of Kentucky and County Rankings: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2005 (CO-EST2005-02-21)",,,,,,,, "Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau",,,,,,,, "Release Date: March 16, 2006",,,,,,,,
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CASSETTE BOOKS 1996 National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped Washington, D.C. 1996 Young Adults Contents Nonfiction Fiction Nonfiction American Dragons: Twenty-five Asian American Voices RC 39409 edited by Laurence Yep read by Gordon Gould 2 cassettes An anthology of twenty-five stories, poems, and essays by Asian Americans that enlighten, probe, and examine the experiences and emotions of young people with roots in Japan, China, India, Korea, and Southeast Asia. Selections are set in the past, present, and future, and most raise questions about identity and about preserving or rejecting the values of ancestors. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. Ask Me if I Care: Voices from an American High School RC 40603 by Nancy J. Rubin read by Catherine Byers 3 cassettes For eighteen years, Nancy Rubin has been teaching a nine-week crash course to help high school students deal with problems in such areas as sexuality, substance abuse, family relationships, stress, and prejudice. To inform other teens and their parents, Rubin discusses these issues here and presents entries from the journals she has her students keep. Strong language and some descriptions of sex. For high school and older readers. 1994. The Black Press and the Struggle for Civil Rights RC 40195 by Carl Senna read by Ralph Lowenstein 1 cassette The role of African American newspapers in the fight for equality. Senna traces the influence of the black press from the birth of _Freedom's Journal_ in 1827 through the antislavery movement before the Civil War and the struggle to end segregation, highlighting the importance of leaders like Frederick Douglass and Ida B. Wells in bringing blacks into the media mainstream. For high school and older readers. 1993. The Breakup of the Soviet Union: Opposing Viewpoints RC 40166 edited by William Barbour and Carol Wekesser read by Peter Johnson 2 cassettes In this volume of the Opposing Viewpoints series, political observers and leaders debate issues related to the collapse of the Soviet Union. They discuss the effect of the breakup on the rest of the world, the response of the United States, and the ethnic conflicts and struggling economies of the republics. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. Cleopatra RC 39806 by Don Nardo read by Mary Kane 1 cassette Cleopatra VII, queen of Egypt from 51 to 30 B.C., became a legend in her own time. Her intimate relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, two of the most powerful men of the day, make her controversial. Noting that she was called greedy, dishonest, immoral, and a poor ruler by some and resourceful and an able ruler by others, the author attempts to separate fact from fiction in this biography. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition RC 40424 by Anne Frank read by Suzanne Toren 2 cassettes This notebook kept by a German-born Jewish girl includes material that was omitted from the first edition in 1947. Begun on her thirteenth birthday, the diary is a personal, sometimes humorous, account of years spent with her family in a Dutch attic hiding from the Nazis. After Anne heard a radio appeal about the importance of such papers, she expanded the scope of her entries. For high school and older readers. 1995. Do or Die RC 40107 by Leon Bing read by Madelyn Buzzard 2 cassettes Account of gang life among the Crips and the Bloods in South Central Los Angeles. Bing visited gang neighborhoods, a juvenile detention camp, and Soledad Prison to get beyond the stereotypes by interviewing gang members and recording their stories in their own words. Violence and strong language. For high school and older readers. 1991. Looking for Your Name: A Collection of Contemporary Poems RC 40715 selected by Paul B. Janeczko read by Jim Zeiger 1 cassette Anthology of poems by contemporary writers. Focusing on conflict in a range of situations, the poems are designed to evoke strong emotions. The opening poem recalls a first-grader's eagerness in raising his hand to be called on for the answer. Other poems deal with such topics as suicide, AIDS, nuclear accidents, and the swift passage of life. Some strong language. For high school and older readers. 1993. Lost in Yonkers RC 41415 by Neil Simon read by Ken Kliban 1 cassette Play set in New York, 1942. After their mother's death, Arty and Jay are visiting their stern grandmother. When their father finishes a private talk with his mother, the boys are shocked to learn he wants them to stay there while he takes a traveling job. Grandmother agrees with the boys that it would be a very bad idea. But childlike Aunt Bella surprises everyone by insisting they remain. For high school and older readers. Pulitzer Prize. 1991. Madonna RC 40785 by Nicole Claro read by Suzanne Toren 1 cassette Madonna and her five siblings grew up in an Italian American suburb of Pittsburgh. She dropped out of college to move to New York, hoping to make it as a dancer. Instead she became a pop singer, eventually achieving a record fifteen consecutive top-five singles. Her daring work has broken social and sexual taboos. Madonna's short marriage to Sean Penn and her movie career are also discussed. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. Mark Twain: The Man and His Adventures RC 41051 by Richard B. Lyttle read by Christopher Hurt 1 cassette Portrait of a man often cited as the quintessential American author. Lyttle traces the life of Samuel Langhorne Clemens, also known as Mark Twain, from his premature birth in a frontier village in Missouri through his career as a popular writer and a famous speaker. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. Sickle Cell Anemia RC 41141 by George Beshore read by Bill Wallace 1 cassette Sickle-cell anemia is an inherited disease in which the red blood cells change from round to sickle-shaped. This condition can cause painful symptoms and may be fatal if not treated. The history, nature, symptoms, and treatment of the disease are discussed, as is research for a cure. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. Sorrow's Kitchen: The Life and Folklore of Zora Neale Hurston RC 41455 by Mary E. Lyons read by Melissa Maxwell 1 cassette Lyons inserts samples of Hurston's fiction, autobiography, and folklore collected in Florida, Louisiana, and the West Indies into this account of the African American anthropologist and Harlem Renaissance writer of stories, plays, essays, and articles. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1990. Stardust otel: Poems RC 39469 by Paul B. Janeczko read by David Palmer 1 cassette Leary, who describes his parents as "flower children, Woodstock lovers," is nearly fifteen. These thirty poems tell of his life, his friends, and the residents of the Stardust otel (the H fell off when he was born and has never been replaced) owned by his parents. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. Teen Prostitution RC 39625 by Joan J. Johnson read by Maggie Welch 1 cassette Analysis of a social problem that the author feels is often overlooked. Johnson examines why kids leave home, how they are recruited for prostitution, and why it is so difficult to escape the lifestyle. She discredits certain stereotypes, including that of the "black pimp," and describes the power of sexual fantasy--which can obscure the risk of AIDS. She also offers possible solutions to the problems. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1992. Voices from the Future: Our Children Tell Us about Violence in America RC 40131 by Children's Express read by Ray Foushee 2 cassettes Children's Express, a news service reported and edited by teenagers, interviewed young people around the country about violence. In their own words, more than forty teenagers describe the impact of violence on their lives, some as criminals, others as victims. They talk about drugs, guns, abuse in the home, and life on the streets. Violence and strong language. For high school and older readers. 1993. The Way of the Earth: Native America and the Environment RC 40635 by John Bierhorst read by Bill Wallace 2 cassettes Scholarly investigation of Native American approaches to safeguarding the environment, which combine beliefs and instinctive customs with a conscious effort. Analytical chapters focus on the unifying themes found in the myths of various tribes. Interspersed are the texts of proverbs and parables illustrating these principles. For high school and older readers. 1994. What If the Moon Didn't Exist? Voyages to Earths That Might Have Been RC 39898 by Neil F. Comins read by Ed Blake 2 cassettes An astronomy professor illustrates the fragility of Earth's habitat by discussing what Earth would be like if it had been formed under different cosmic circumstances or if it were to experience extreme planetary changes. For example, what would Earth be like without an ozone layer, or if it had no moon, or were tilted at a different angle on its axis? For senior high and older readers. 1993. Fiction Al Capsella Takes a Vacation RC 40648 by J. Clarke read by Gary Telles 1 cassette Sequel to _Al Capsella and the Watchdogs (RC 37551)_. Sixteen-year-old Al and his friend Lou don't want to take the usual holiday vacation with their families. Instead, they decide to go alone to Scutchthorpe, a town highly recommended by a friend. Arriving by bus, the boys are horrified to find themselves in the country, far from the promised beaches and party life. How will they ever live this down? For junior and senior high readers. 1992. Among the Volcanoes RC 40369 by Omar S. Castaeda read by Ilona Dulaski 1 cassette Isabel Pacay, the eldest daughter of a Mayan family in Guatemala, has a dream--to stay in school and become a teacher. While many of her friends are married with families, she feels too young to marry. When her mother becomes ill, Isabel's dreams are shattered as she quits school to care for her. The _sanjorin_ has been unable to cure Mrs. Pacay, but her family fears consulting an American medical student. For junior and senior high readers. 1991. Brother to Shadows RC 41082 by Andre Norton read by Vanessa Maroney 3 cassettes Cast out from the Shadow Brotherhood to which he has dedicated his life, young Jofre wanders Asborgan alone until he meets Zurzal, a reptilian off-worlder on a quest for powerful knowledge. Jofre decides to seek his fortune as Zurzal's bodyguard and soon finds his job difficult because many in the galaxy want to acquire Zurzal's secrets for their own evil purposes. For high school and older readers. 1993. Captain Hawaii RC 40472 by Anthony Dana Arkin read by John Polk 2 cassettes Captain Dan's Zodiac Pirate Tours sound exciting to Arron, who is a nature lover. Unlike his parents, he didn't come to Hawaii just to sit by the pool. And he is pleased that Kate, the captain's daughter, is pretty too. But then events erupt when a rival tour company tries to put Captain Dan out of business, involving Kate and Arron in the process. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. Child of an Ancient City RC 40466 by Tad Williams and Nina Kiriki Hoffman read by James DeLotel 1 cassette During a banquet, Masrur al-Adan is encouraged to tell a story. Since his old friend Ibn Fahad is there, he tells of a trip they took many years earlier. A caravan of treasures they were escorting was attacked, and they were forced to return home. On the way, they were attacked again, this time by the vampyr. Masrur tells how they escaped death through all-night storytelling. For junior and senior high readers. 1992. Cold Sassy Tree RC 39112 by Olive Ann Burns read by Dennis Bateman 3 cassettes (Reissue) Just three weeks after Granny's death, Will Tweedy's Grandpa marries the pretty, thirtyish town milliner, Miss Love Simpson. It's 1906 and the town of Cold Sassy, Georgia, is shocked. Fourteen-year-old Will takes it all in--his Grandpa's rejuvenation and Cold Sassy's reaction--while he experiences some major life changes of his own. For high school and older readers. 1984. A Cup of Christmas Tea RC 40835 by Tom Hegg read by Terence Aselford 1 cassette Shortly before Christmas a young man receives a letter from a great-aunt asking that he stop in for a cup of Christmas tea. Although he doesn't want to replace his childhood memories of her with what she might be like now, he reluctantly accepts. For senior high and older readers. 1982. Dinosaur Fantastic RC 40540 by Mike Resnick and Martin H. Greenberg read by John Stratton 2 cassettes Twenty-five original short stories relating to dinosaurs. Pat Cadigan's "Dino Trend" describes the Age of the Nanosecond where people dress as dinosaurs and go to dino clubs. In "Wise One's Tale" by Josepha Sherman, Wise One, a Winged Hunter, explains how his people got their wings. In "Betrayal" by Susan Casper, a man ultimately betrays a mosasaur who once befriended him. For high school and older readers. 1993. Double Date RC 41050 by R.L. Stine read by Michael Pinney 1 cassette Bobby Newkirk might be good-looking and an excellent guitarist, but he is also extremely conceited. He has dated all of the cheerleaders and now has plans to date both of the Wade twins, who are new in town. Bree is quiet and shy while Samantha is bold and sexy, so it should be easy to tell them apart. But Bobby soon begins to wonder just who is who. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. Dreamers and Desperadoes: Contemporary Short Fiction of the American West RC 40192 edited by Craig Lesley and Katheryn Stavrakis read by Christopher Hurt 4 cassettes Short stories featuring working people in the West. "Winter of '19" tells how two sheep ranchers save their flock during a blizzard. "Do You Hear Your Mother Talking?" tells of a millworker and a lumberjack's romance. And "Sleepwalkers" tells of a hotel maid's adjustment to the guests' schedules. Strong language. For high school and older readers. 1993. Dreams Underfoot: The Newford Collection RC 40507 by Charles de Lint read by Mary Woods 3 cassettes Collection of nineteen interrelated short stories set in the imaginary city of Newford. Populating these urban myths are recurring characters who encounter monsters, goblins, ghosts, wizards, conjure men, and Bigfoot in city streets, music clubs, and restaurants. Some strong language. For high school and older readers. 1993. Fast Talk on a Slow Track RC 40486 by Rita Williams-Garcia read by Barry Bernson 1 cassette Denzel Watson is headed for Princeton, and he expects to do just fine. After all, he was valedictorian of his senior class, and he never had to study very much. But he has had to spend six weeks of the summer attending the Princeton Experience program for minorities, and now Denzel wonders if he is cut out for college. However, his job for the remainder of the summer will help him see life from a new perspective. For junior and senior high readers. 1991. Godspeed RC 39724 by Charles Sheffield read by David Palmer 2 cassettes Godspeed Drive starships have not landed at the planet Erin of Maveen's Forty Worlds for many years. Thus Erin has become isolated. But when spaceman Paddy Enderton visits Molly Hara and gives her young son, Jay, science trinkets never seen before, Jay finds himself searching space for a Godspeed Drive ship. On the way, he must contend with artificial intelligence and mutiny. For high school and older readers. 1993. Hexwood RC 41065 by Diana Wynne Jones read by Graeme Malcolm 2 cassettes A young boy wanders into Banners Wood near London and suddenly finds himself in another world with a robot and a dragon. Ann, who lives close to Banners Wood and Hexwood Farm, watches people go into a barn never to return. And in another galaxy, a controller gets a message about the old computer in the archival library at Hexwood Farm. Soon the lives of all these characters will merge. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1993. High Steel RC 40489 by Jack C. Haldeman and Jack Dann read by James DeLotel 2 cassettes Native American John Stranger is conscripted by the Trans-United Space Engineering Corporation to help build an industrial complex in orbit above Earth. But even in this high-tech environment, John retains his tribal spirituality and exhibits special powers of mind that may be the key to Earth's freedom from the megacorporations. Strong language and descriptions of sex. For senior high and older readers. 1993. The Italian Garden RC 40157 by Judith Lennox read by Barbara Caruso 4 cassettes In early sixteenth-century Italy, Joanna Zulian is abandoned by her father and goes to live with her artist uncle. Uncle Taddeo makes use of Joanna's talents as a painter but gives her no credit for her work. Pursued by several suitors and barred from an art career because of her sex, Joanna finds an acceptable way to use her talents: she creates a garden depicting four kinds of love she has known. For high school and older readers. 1993. The Jaguar Princess RC 40480 by Clare Bell read by Bruce Huntey 3 cassettes Stolen from her people as a child, Mixcatl ends up in Tenochtitlan at the center of the Aztec empire. She works as a slave in a school for priests, but when her talent for glyph-writing emerges, she is made an apprentice scribe. A descendant of the Children of the Jaguar, Mixcatl discovers other unusual powers that will tie her destiny to powerful men who wish to transform the Aztec civilization. For high school and older readers. 1993. Just for Kicks RC 40754 by Paul Baczewski read by Gregory Gorton 1 cassette Brandon Lewis, narrator of this satire on sports, is manager of a high school football team on which one brother is the star quarterback, another is an offensive lineman, and a sister is the punter and field-goal kicker. The coach is an unpredictable fanatic who can be brutal. But Brandon decides to call a few plays of his own, putting his neck on the line and gambling with the state championship. For high school and older readers. 1990. Keeping Christina RC 39896 by Sue Ellen Bridgers read by Nona Pipes 1 cassette Annie and Jill have been best friends forever, so when Annie befriends new student Christina, Jill is not happy. Christina begins spending time with Annie's family after play rehearsals while she waits for her ride home. After Annie has run-ins with both her boyfriend and Jill, she spends even more time with Christina. But things her new friend says and does begin to bother Annie. Was Jill right about her? For junior and senior high and older readers. 1993. Love Is the Crooked Thing RC 39066 by Barbara Wersba read by Barbara Rappaport 1 cassette In the sequel to _Fat (RC 28806)_, Rita Formica, seventeen, is searching for her eccentric lover, Arnold Bromberg, thirty-three, who has gone to Europe. He sends her romantic postcards with no return address. Rita determines, against her family's wishes, to find Arnold and bring him back to Sag Harbor. To finance her plan, she turns to writing pot-boiler, romantic novels. Descriptions of sex and some strong language. For high school and older readers. 1987. Miriam's Well RC 40564 by Lois Ruby read by John Polk 2 cassettes Miriam Pelham's religious beliefs do not allow her to wear makeup or jewelry or to allow medical intervention during illnesses. Adam Bergen, a Jewish classmate, is not keen on religion. When their English teacher assigns them to work together on a poetry assignment and Miriam has a fainting spell in class that lands her in the hospital, both Adam and Miriam begin to question their beliefs. For high school and older readers. 1993. On Fortune's Wheel RC 39439 by Cynthia Voigt read by David Palmer 2 cassettes Two generations after _Jackaroo (RC 23883)_, another innkeeper's daughter, Birle, fourteen, tries to stop a boat thief, but becomes his passenger instead as he flees downriver. The thief, however, is Lord Orien, the next ruler of the Kingdom, leaving because he doubts his leadership abilities. Marooned on an island and rescued by slavers, Orien is sold to a cruel master while Birle becomes the assistant to a philosopher. For junior and senior high readers. 1990. People of the Wolf: The First North Americans, Volume 1 RC 41113 by W. Michael Gear and Kathleen O'Neal Gear read by Jim Zeiger 3 cassettes The authors, archaeologists, look at North America through the eyes of a people who forged a path from the old world into the new. This account begins as the Ice Age ends and the People are led into new and plentiful hunting grounds by the Wolf Dreamer. Prequel to _People of the Fire (RC 41114)_. Violence, some strong language, and some descriptions of sex. For high school and older readers. 1990. Red Sky at Morning RC 37376 by Richard Bradford read by Larry Shapiro 2 cassettes (Reissue) A boy of seventeen accompanies his mother to their summer home in New Mexico while his father is serving in World War II. He describes their life in the remote mountain village and the comic escapades that occur. Through it all runs the strain of holding the family together. For high school and older readers. 1968. Risky Assignment: Live! from Brentwood High, Book 1 RC 40727 by Judy Baer read by Erik Sandvold 1 cassette Darby Ellison dreams of becoming a news reporter, so she is thrilled to join a high school program producing stories about other teens and teen issues and airing them on TV. Darby's group focuses on a teenaged emergency medical technician, and Darby gets to know the team members, especially Jake Saunders. For high school and older readers. 1994. Saying Goodbye RC 40654 by Marie G. Lee read by Laura Giannarelli 1 cassette In this sequel to _Finding My Voice (RC 37265)_, Ellen Sung is a freshman at Harvard. She learns to balance her desire to excel in her premed studies with her interest in writing, but racism creates a harder challenge. Will she betray her African American roommate by opposing an anti-Korean rap star? Some strong language. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1994. Shadowmaker RC 41280 by Joan Lowery Nixon read by Cecelia Riddett 1 cassette Katie Gillian and her mom, Eve, an investigative reporter, have moved to the small town of Kluney, Texas, so Eve can write a novel and escape the trouble they have had since Eve wrote a series of articles about toxic waste dumps. But trouble seems to follow Katie and her mom. They discover there is a toxic waste dump in Kluney, and two murders take place. Is there a connection? For junior and senior high readers. 1994. A Sudden Silence RC 38908 by Eve Bunting read by Phil Regensdorf 1 cassette Jesse searches for the hit-and-run driver who killed his brother Bry. Jesse thinks that if he finds the driver, his own feelings of guilt will be eased. For Bry, who was deaf, could not hear the screeching brakes or Jesse's shouts of warning before he leaped to safety. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1988. That Year of Our War RC 39268 by Gloria Goldreich read by Mikel Lambert 3 cassettes Following her mother's death from leukemia on D-Day, Sharon Grossberg lives with relatives while her doctor father serves overseas. She feels guilty enjoying summer with her young, wealthy aunt and uncle and her new friends in Woodstock. And each piece of news from the battlefields brings a mixture of sadness and guilty relief when her father is not among those killed. Some descriptions of sex. For high school and older readers. 1994. The Tiger Orchard RC 40377 by Joyce Sweeney read by John Polk 2 cassettes Zack Lloyd is an outstanding senior. But when he begins having nightmares and seems to be losing all the confidence he used to have in himself, Zack starts seeing a therapist. Counseling sessions help Zack uncover long-suppressed memories of his father, who he learns is still alive. A new girlfriend and a trip to find his father help Zack put his life into perspective. Some strong language. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. Torn Away RC 39756 by James Heneghan read by John Lescault 1 cassette Thirteen-year-old Declan is a wild Irish boy seeking revenge for family deaths. Declan's terrorist activities have persuaded the British authorities that the place for him is in Canada with an uncle who is offering him a fresh start. Declan slips out of the handcuffs that restrain him on the flight out of Belfast. He continues to resist, determined as he is to find a way back, until he learns the truth. For junior and senior high readers. 1994. The Weekend Was _Murder_! RC 39695 by Joan Lowery Nixon read by Madelyn Buzzard 1 cassette In the sequel to _The Dark and Deadly Pool (RC 29619)_, young Mary Elizabeth and her coworkers at Ridley Hotel are asked to act out small parts in a murder mystery weekend. The "murder scene" is to be in a suite that many of the hotel workers consider haunted. When Mary Elizabeth discovers an actual corpse in the room, a real murder investigation becomes tangled in the make-believe one. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1992. Whatever Happened to Janie? RC 38978 by Caroline B. Cooney read by June Carter 1 cassette In this sequel to _The Face on the Milk Carton (RC 36957)_, Janie Johnson (ne Jennie Spring)--an illegally adopted child who learns of the existence of her natural parents twelve years after her kidnapping--has contacted her real mother and father, who reclaim her. Janie reluctantly agrees to leave her beloved adoptive parents to live with her birth family, but her struggle to adjust is upsetting to both families. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. Windleaf RC 41148 by Josepha Sherman read by Erik Sandvold 1 cassette Eighteen-year-old Count Thierry rescues a mysterious young woman named Glinfinial from the ancient forests that surround his estate. They fall in love and want to get married, but Glinfinial's father turns out to be the powerful Faerie Lord Tiernathal, who prohibits the marriage and spirits his daughter back into the forest. To win Glinfinial, Thierry must undertake a dangerous quest against powerful magic. For high school and older readers. 1993. The Wings of a Falcon RC 40468 by Cynthia Voigt read by David Palmer 3 cassettes A nameless boy and his loyal friend Griff endure a harsh captivity on the Damall's island, but the boy takes strength in believing he has a great destiny. He names himself Oriel and escapes with Griff. They work for a saltmaker for three years and then are captured by barbarian invaders. Escaping once more, they pursue Oriel's destiny. Sequel to _On Fortune's Wheel (RC 39439)_. Some violence. For junior and senior high readers. 1993. Wishing Season RC 40094 by Esther M. Friesner read by Jack Fox 1 cassette Khalid, one of the smartest genies in his class, receives an early chance to earn a lamp of his own. His first master is a scraggly black cat whose requests are simple: "Food. Clean fur. Loving home." But Khalid soon discovers a cat doesn't qualify as a master, and he returns to offer three wishes to the cat's new owner, Haroun. Trouble arises when impatient Khalid forgets to inform Haroun of the limit on wishes. For high school and older readers. 1993. Wolf by the Ears RC 39516 by Ann Rinaldi read by Gail Nelson 2 cassettes Young Harriet Hemings, a slave at Monticello, has a chance for freedom, but she's afraid to leave the plantation she grew up on. Though her mother, Sally Hemings, is pushing her, Harriet cannot bear to think of leaving her family and friends. Then there's Master Thomas Jefferson, Harriet's gentle benefactor, who some believe may be her father. For junior and senior high and older readers. 1991.
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Identification_Information: Citation: Citation_Information: Originator: Labay, Keith A. Originator: Wilson, Frederic H. Originator: Bleick, Heather Originator: Shew, Nora B. Publication_Date: 2008 Title: Digital data for the geology of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska Edition: ver 1.0 Geospatial_Data_Presentation_Form: digital data Series_Information: Series_Name: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report Issue_Identification: OFR 2008-XXXX Online_Linkage: http//pubs.usgs.gov/of/2008/XXXX Larger_Work_Citation: Citation_Information: Originator: Till, Alison B. Originator: Dumoulin, Julie, A. Originator: Harris, Anita G. Originator: Moore, Thomas E. Originator: Bleick, Heather Originator: Siwiec, Benjamin Publication_Date: 2008 Title: Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data Geospatial_Data_Presentation_Form: map Series_Information: Series_Name: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map Issue_Identification: SIM-XXXX Description: Abstract: The southern Brooks Range spans northern Alaska from west to east. It has tree- and shrub-covered lowlands and tundra-covered and rocky uplands. Much of the area has ridgelines reaching about 4000 feet, but the central part of the map area has ridgelines exceeding 6000 feet and peaks above 7000 feet. The geology includes the Brooks Range orogen, a contractional mountain belt with a foreland basin on its north side. This map has been compiled from published maps and papers, and unpublished mapping by the authors. This data set is a portion of a statewide geology database, which is being compiled by the U.S. Geological Survey's National Surveys and Analysis (NSA) project, whose goal is to compile geologic, geochemical, geophysical, and other data. Purpose: This data set represents part of a systematic effort to release geologic map data for the United States in a uniform manner. Geologic data in this series has been compiled from a wide variety of sources, published and unpublished, ranging from state and regional geologic maps to large-scale field mapping. Time_Period_of_Content: Time_Period_Information: Single_Date/Time: Calendar_Date: 2008 Currentness_Reference: publication date Status: Progress: Complete Maintenance_and_Update_Frequency: As needed Spatial_Domain: Bounding_Coordinates: West_Bounding_Coordinate: -162.0 East_Bounding_Coordinate: -146.0 North_Bounding_Coordinate: 68.0 South_Bounding_Coordinate: 66.75 Keywords: Theme: Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: None Theme_Keyword: geology Theme_Keyword: bedrock Theme_Keyword: orogen Theme_Keyword: schist belt Theme_Keyword: metamorphic Place: Place_Keyword_Thesaurus: Geographic names information system (GNIS) Place_Keyword: Alaska Place_Keyword: Brooks Range Place_Keyword: Baird Mountains Place_Keyword: Ambler River Place_Keyword: Survey Pass Place_Keyword: Wiseman Place_Keyword: Chandalar Place_Keyword: Christian Place_Keyword: Selawik Place_Keyword: Shungnak Place_Keyword: Bettles Place_Keyword: Beaver Access_Constraints: None Use_Constraints: None. Acknowledgment of the U.S. Geological Survey would be appreciated in products derived from these data. Point_of_Contact: Contact_Information: Contact_Organization_Primary: Contact_Organization: U.S. Geological Survey Contact_Person: Alison B. Till Contact_Position: Geologist Contact_Address: Address_Type: mailing and physical address Address: 4200 University Drive City: Anchorage State_or_Province: Alaska Postal_Code: 99508 Country: U.S.A. Contact_Voice_Telephone: 907-786-7444 Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: [email protected] Browse_Graphic: Browse_Graphic_File_Name: XXX Browse_Graphic_File_Description: XXX Browse_Graphic_File_Type: XXX Data_Set_Credit: This data set was prepared by Keith Labay (USGS), Nora Shew (USGS), David Pray (contractor), Nathan Pannkuk (contractor), Lana Cohen (contractor), Jeanie Yarnell (contractor) Native_Data_Set_Environment: Data set was created using ESRI ARC/Info version 7.2.1 on a Unix platform. Data_Quality_Information: Attribute_Accuracy: Attribute_Accuracy_Report: There were many types of source materials, of varying scale, used to compile this data set. Sources include previously published maps and unpublished mapping. The dates of the mapping range from the present to 1950's. Vector features were digitized on a large digitizing tablet or on screen from a scanned image. Vector and polygon attributes were assigned based on the original source. the digital data has been checked, and the geologic map has been technically reviewed and edited. Logical_Consistency_Report: Each geology coverage is a network coverage containing attributed arcs and polyons. Each polygon has a coded attribute designating the mapped geologic unit. Faults, stratigraphic contacts, and other linear features are represented as arcs. When a fault is also a stratigraphic contact, only a single arc is present. Dangling arcs may be present (faults, dike, etc.) Completeness_Report: The complete data set consists of 11 geology GIS converages. There is also an associated relational database of geologic units. Each coverage has the full or partial extent of a 1:250,000 scale quadrangle. A graphic representation of the database (map) and a report including complete geologic unit descriptions is provided in .pdf format. Positional_Accuracy: Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy: Horizontal_Positional_Accuracy_Report: This data is presented for use at a nominal scale of 1:500,000. Lineage: Process_Step: Process_Description: Line work for the geology compilation was hand digitized from material of various media and scale. The arcs and polygons were attributed. The spatial databases are provided in UTM projection and geographic coordinates. The native ARC/Info coverages have been exported to an interchange file format, and also converted to shape files. Please note that shape files do not preserve arc directions, which help determine fault movement. Process_Date: 2007 Process_Contact: Contact_Information: Contact_Organization_Primary: Contact_Organization: U.S. Geological Survey Contact_Person: Frederic H. Wilson Contact_Position: Geologist Contact_Address: Address_Type: mailing and physical Address: 4200 University Drive City: Anchorage State_or_Province: Alaska Postal_Code: 99508-4667 Country: U.S.A. Contact_Voice_Telephone: 907-786-7448 Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: [email protected] Spatial_Data_Organization_Information: Direct_Spatial_Reference_Method: Vector Spatial_Reference_Information: Horizontal_Coordinate_System_Definition: Planar: Grid_Coordinate_System: Grid_Coordinate_System_Name: Universal Transverse Mercator Universal_Transverse_Mercator: UTM_Zone_Number: 4 Transverse_Mercator: Scale_Factor_at_Central_Meridian: 0.9995 Longitude_of_Central_Meridian: -159.0 Latitude_of_Projection_Origin: 0.0 False_Easting: 500000 False_Northing: 0 Planar_Coordinate_Information: Planar_Coordinate_Encoding_Method: coordinate pair Coordinate_Representation: Abscissa_Resolution: 0.000256 Ordinate_Resolution: 0.000256 Planar_Distance_Units: meters Planar: Grid_Coordinate_System: Grid_Coordinate_System_Name: Universal Transverse Mercator Universal_Transverse_Mercator: UTM_Zone_Number: 5 Transverse_Mercator: Scale_Factor_at_Central_Meridian: 0.9995 Longitude_of_Central_Meridian: -153.0 Latitude_of_Projection_Origin: 0.0 False_Easting: 500000 False_Northing: 0 Planar_Coordinate_Information: Planar_Coordinate_Encoding_Method: coordinate pair Coordinate_Representation: Abscissa_Resolution: 0.000256 Ordinate_Resolution: 0.000256 Planar_Distance_Units: meters Planar: Grid_Coordinate_System: Grid_Coordinate_System_Name: Universal Transverse Mercator Universal_Transverse_Mercator: UTM_Zone_Number: 6 Transverse_Mercator: Scale_Factor_at_Central_Meridian: 0.9995 Longitude_of_Central_Meridian: -147.0 Latitude_of_Projection_Origin: 0.0 False_Easting: 500000 False_Northing: 0 Planar_Coordinate_Information: Planar_Coordinate_Encoding_Method: coordinate pair Coordinate_Representation: Abscissa_Resolution: 0.000256 Ordinate_Resolution: 0.000256 Planar_Distance_Units: meters Entity_and_Attribute_Information: Detailed_Description: Entity_Type: Entity_Type_Label: polygons Entity_Type_Definition: Characteristics of the polygon features in the geology coverages are coded in the polygon attribute table. The table <cov>.pat includes the following items: CLASS, QCLASS, LITH2, SOURCE, NSACLASS, NSAMOD, LABEL, MIN_AGE, and MAX_AGE. Item LITH2 is used to generate the southern Brooks range map of Till and others, in press. NSACLASS is used for creating the generalized geologic map of Alaska. Items CLASS and SOURCE together identify the original mapping of the geologic unit. Entity_Type_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute: Attribute_Label: LITH2 Attribute_Definition: LITH2 is a positive integer value (4 5 B) item in the polygon attribute table. Values range discontinuously from 0 to 52090. LITH2 is a numeric code for the geologic unit (LABEL), as shown on the southern Brooks range map by Till and others, in press. LITH2 to LABEL is a one-to-one relationship. NOTE: Because of the limitations of common GIS fonts, the letters "C", "Mz", "Pz", "Tr", and "Z" are substituted for the standard symbols for "Cambrian", "Mesozoic", "Paleozoic", "Triassic", and "Proterozoic". Attribute_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute_Domain_Values: Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 100 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Qs - Surficial sedimentary deposits, undivided (Quaternary) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 102 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: water Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2180 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Kvg - Volcanic lithic sandstone and mudstone (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5145 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: KJm - Melange (Cretaceous to Jurassic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52000 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dsq - Quartz-mica schist (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52001 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52002 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZb - Metasedimentary rocks of Bluecloud Mountain (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dg - Granitic orthogneiss (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Da - Ambler sequence (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52006 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzsg - Mafic schist (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52007 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzpg - Phyllite and graywacke (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52008 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZm - Metamorphic rocks (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52009 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JDab - Mafic metavolcanic and metaintrusive rocks, metachert, metalimestone, and amphibolite of the Angayucham terrane (Early Jurassic to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52011 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Zg - Granitic orthogneiss (Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52012 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZem - Metamorphic rocks of the Ernie Lake area (Paleozoic to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52013 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Zam - Metamorphic rocks of Mt. Angayukaqsraq (Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52015 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: OZc - Older carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform (Middle Ordovician to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52016 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DOc - Younger carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform (Middle Devonian to Ordovician) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52017 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52018 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dhf - Hunt Fork Shale (Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52019 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dl - Metalimestone (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52021 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZqs - Quartz-rich metasedimentary rocks (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52022 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Khs - Hammond River shear zone (Cretaceous?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52023 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzm - Marble (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52026 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: TrCs - Sedimentary rocks (Triassic to Carboniferous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52027 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ml - Carbonate rocks (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52028 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDk - Kanayut Conglomerate (Lower Mississippian? and Upper Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52030 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzp - Phyllite (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52032 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzj - Metasedimentary rocks of Jesse Mountain (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52034 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZbs - Biotite schist (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52035 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZsr - Ruby schist (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52036 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Km - Migmatite (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52037 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Kg - Granitic rocks (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52038 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ks - Conglomerate, sandstone, and shale (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52039 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: QTb - Basalt (Quaternary? or Tertiary?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52041 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist; metachert and conglomerate subunit (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52042 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ozc - Older carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform; restricted to Ordovian strata only (Middle Ordovician to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52043 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks; volcanic-rock bearing (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52044 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dhf - Hunt Fork Shale (Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52045 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZgn - Schist and paragneiss (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52046 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZcm - Metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks, undivided (Paleozoic and Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52047 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZm - Mafic schist (Paleozoic? to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52048 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsm - Schist and marble, undivided (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52049 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Spl - Black phyllite and metalimestone (Silurian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52052 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks; iron-rich and calcareous components (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52053 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzw - Metasedimentary rocks (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52055 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzw - Metasedimentary rocks; northern belt (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52056 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dn - Noatak Sandstone (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52057 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: SCvs - Volcanic and sedimentary rocks (Silurian to Cambrian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52061 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mkl - Kayak Shale of Endicott Group and Lisburne Group (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52062 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mu - Metasedimentary rocks, undivided (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52063 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist; abundant albite porphyroblasts (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52065 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzbq - Black quartzite (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52066 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzb - Black phyllite and siliceous phyllite (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52067 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZg - Granitic rocks (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52068 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Zam - Metamorphic rocks of Mt. Angayukaqsraq (Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52069 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DOb - Baird Group (Devonian to Ordovician) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52070 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDer - Eli River sequence (Mississippian and Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52071 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mcp - Carbonaceous chert and siliceous phyllite (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52073 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MzPzs - Serpentintite (Mesozoic? to Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52074 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDe - Endicott Group, undivided (Mississippian and Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52075 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JDk - Rocks of the Kivivik Creek sequence (Jurassic to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52076 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MzDm - Igneous and sedimentary rocks of the Maiyumerak Mountains (Mesozoic? to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52077 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mc - Quartz-rich conglomerate (Mississippian?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52081 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dps - Lithic sandstone and shale (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52083 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dps - Lithic sandstone and shale; schistose (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52084 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DSc - Carbonate rocks of Cosmos Hills (Devonian and Silurian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52085 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzbs - Black metasedimentary rocks (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52086 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzpc - Carbonate rocks of phyllite belt (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52087 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzsm - Marble of the Schist belt (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52088 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mkkl - Kekiktuk Conglomerate(?), Kayak Shale of Endicott Group, and Lisburne Group (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52089 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDk - Kanayut Conglomerate; area not differentiated from Noatak Sandstone (Lower Mississippian? and Upper Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 52090 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JCs - Sedimentary rocks (Jurassic to Carboniferous) Attribute: Attribute_Label: NSACLASS Attribute_Definition: NSACLASS is a positive integer value (4 5 B) item in the polygon attribute table. Values range discontinuously from 100 to 9325. NSACLASS is a numeric code for the geologic unit for the statewide database. This data set represents a generalized map, thus it is possible that a geologic unit consists of multiple NSACLASS values. Each NSACLASS matches to a geologic unit label in LABEL and has minimum (MIN_AGE) and maximum (MAX_AGE) range, given in million of years (my). Supplemental attribute tables included with this data set contain additional descriptive information of each geologic unit. A user may use items SOURCE and CLASS to retrieve information about the original units from which these generalized units were formed. NOTE: Because of the limitations of common GIS fonts, the letters "C", "Mz", "Pz", "Tr", and "Z" are substituted for the standard symbols for "Cambrian", "Mesozoic", "Paleozoic","Triassic", and "Proterozoic". Attribute_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute_Domain_Values: Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 100 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Qs - Surficial sedimentary deposits, undivided (Quaternary); QCLASS = 1000 Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 102 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: water; QCLASS = 102 Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 350 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: QTb - Basalt (Quaternary? or Tertiary?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 1990 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ks - Conglomerate, sandstone, and shale (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2030 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ks - Conglomerate, sandstone, and shale (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2180 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Kvg - Volcanic lithic sandstone and mudstone (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2492 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Kg - Granitic rocks (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2610 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Km - Migmatite (Cretaceous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 2650 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Khs - Hammond River shear zone (Cretaceous?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 3498 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MzPzs - Serpentinite (Mesozoic? to Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 4951 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MzDm - Igneous and sedimentary rocks of the Maiyumerak Mountains (Mesozoic? to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5001 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JDk - Rocks of the Kivivik Creek sequence (Jurassic to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JCs - Sedimentary rocks (Jurassic to Carboniferous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: TrCs - Sedimentary rocks (Triassic to Carboniferous) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5133 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JDab - Mafic metavolcanic and metaintrusive rocks, metachert, metalimestone, and amphibolite of the Angayucham terrane (Early Jurassic to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5140 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: JDab - Mafic metavolcanic and metaintrusive rocks, metachert, metalimestone, and amphibolite of the Angayucham terrane (Early Jurassic to Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5145 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: KJm - Melange (Cretaceous to Jurassic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5525 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DSc - Carbonate rocks of Cosmos Hills (Devonian and Silurian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5560 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzp - Phyllite (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5565 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzpg - Phyllite and graywacke (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 5570 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzpc - Carbonate rocks of phyllite belt (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6200 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mcp - Carbonaceous chert and siliceous phyllite (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6300 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDe - Endicott Group, undivided (Mississippian and Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6305 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mkkl - Kekiktuk Conglomerate(?), Kayak Shale of Endicott Group, and Lisburne Group (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6320 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Ml - Carbonate rocks (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6328 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mkl - Kayak Shale of Endicott Group and Lisburne Group (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6331 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzbs - Black metasedimentary rocks (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6360 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mc - Quartz-rich conglomerate (Mississippian?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6365 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Mu - Metasedimentary rocks, undivided (Mississippian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6686 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Spl - Black phyllite and metalimestone (Silurian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6720 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: SCvs - Volcanic and sedimentary rocks (Silurian to Cambrian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6850 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzj - Metasedimentary rocks of Jesse Mountain (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6900 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dn - Noatak Sandstone (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6914 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDk - Kanayut Conglomerate (Lower Mississippian? and Upper Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6915 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDk - Kanayut Conglomerate (Lower Mississippian? and Upper Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6925 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dhf - Hunt Fork Shale (Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6927 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6951 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dl - Metalimestone (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6972 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6973 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dmu - Metasedimentary and lesser metaigneous rocks (Middle and Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6980 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DOc - Younger carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform (Middle Devonian to Ordovician) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6982 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: MDer - Eli River sequence (Mississippian and Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 6983 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzm - Marble (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7000 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzsg - Mafic schist (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7200 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dps - Lithic sandstone and shale (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7215 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzsm - Marble of the Schist belt (Paleozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7225 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dhf - Hunt Fork Shale (Late Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7235 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Pzb - Black phyllite and siliceous phyllite (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7250 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dg - Granitic orthogneiss (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7260 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Da - Ambler sequence (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7360 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsm - Schist and marble, undivided (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7361 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZgn - Schist and paragneiss (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7740 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: OZc - Older carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform (Middle Ordovician to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 7741 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: OZc - Older carbonate rocks of the Nanielik antiform (Middle Ordovician to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8601 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZbs - Biotite schist (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8602 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Dsq - Quartz-mica schist (Devonian) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8603 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZqs - Quartz-rich metasedimentary rocks (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8604 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZb - Metasedimentary rocks of Bluecloud Mountain (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8605 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8607 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8608 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZsc - Calcareous schist (Devonian to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8611 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZem - Metamorphic rocks of the Ernie Lake area (Paleozoic to Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8655 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZcm - Metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks, undivided (Paleozoic and Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8661 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZm - Mafic schist (Paleozoic? to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 8852 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: DZm - Metamorphic rocks (Devonian to Proterozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 9045 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZg - Phyllite and graywacke (Paleozoic?) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 9060 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Zg - Granitic orthogneiss (Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 9300 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Zam - Metamorphic rocks of Mt. Angayukaqsraq (Proterozoic) Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: 9325 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: PzZsr - Ruby schist (Paleozoic to Proterozoic?) Attribute: Attribute_Label: NSAMOD Attribute_Definition: NSAMOD is a character (8 10 C) item in the polygon attribute table. It contains modifiers of the geologic unit. Attribute_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute_Domain_Values: Unrepresentable_Domain: HFS - contact metamorphism, hornfels Attribute: Attribute_Label: SOURCE Attribute_Definition: SOURCE is a character (6 8 C) item found in both the arc and polygon attribute tables. The values are abbreviated codes representing the original source reference for the polygon or arc feature. The format for SOURCE is XX###, wher XX is a two letter code for the 1:250,000 scale quadrangle and ### is a three digit number (with leading zeros). All source codes with '001' are unspecified sources for water and ice features, often paper topographic maps, and DRG or DLG files. Attribute_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute_Domain_Values: Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: AR003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., Wilson, F.H., Labay, K.A., and Shew, Nora, in prep., Reconnaissance geologic map and digital data for the Yukon-Koyukuk basin, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Series Map SIM-2909, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: AR004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till. A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BM004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BT002 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., and Miller, T.P., 1973, Bedrock geologic map of Bettles and southern part of Wiseman quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-492, scale 1:250,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BT003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., Wilson, F.H., Labay, K.A., and Shew, Nora, in prep., Reconnaissance geologic map and digital data for the Yukon-Koyukuk basin, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Series Map SIM-2909, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BT005 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BV004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Wilson/Hults edits 8/22/2007 Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: BV006 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: CH004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: CS002 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Brosge, W.P., and Reiser, H.N., 2000, Geology of the Christian quadrangle, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 00-192, scale 1:250,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: CS003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Phillips, J.D., Stanley, R.G., and Crews, Jesse, in prep., Generalized bedrock geologic map, Yukon flats region, east-central Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, pamphlet, 1 plate, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: CS004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: HU002 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., and Miller, T.P., 1966, Regional geologic map of the Hughes quadrangle, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Series Map I-459, scale 1:250,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: HU003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., Wilson, F.H., Labay, K.A., and Shew, Nora, in prep., Reconnaissance geologic map and digital data for the Yukon-Koyukuk basin, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Series Map SIM-2909, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: HU004 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: SE003 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Karl, S.M., Dumoulin, J.A., Ellersieck, Inyo, Harris, A.G., and Schmidt, J.M., 1989, Preliminary geologic map of the Baird Mountains and part of the Selawik quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 89-551, 65p., 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: SE005 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.G., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: SH002 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Patton, W.W., Jr., Miller, T.P., and Tailleur, I.L., 1968, Regional geologic map of the Shungnak and southern part of the Ambler River quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Map I-554, scale 1:250,000. 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Enumerated_Domain: Enumerated_Domain_Value: WI007 Enumerated_Domain_Value_Definition: Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Harris, A.G., Moore, T.E., Bleick, Heather, and Siwiec, Benjamin, in press, Bedrock geologic map of the southern Brooks Range, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map SIM-XXXX, scale 1:500,000. Detailed_Description: Entity_Type: Entity_Type_Label: arcs Entity_Type_Definition: Characteristics of the arc features in the geology coverages are coded in the arc attribute table. Table <cov>.aat includes the following items: ARC-CODE, ARC-PARA1, and SOURCE. For explanation of SOURCE, see attribute definitions for polygons. Entity_Type_Definition_Source: this data set Attribute: Attribute_Label: ARC-CODE Attribute_Definition: ARC-CODE is a positive integer value (3 3 I) item in the arc attribute table. Values range discontinuously from 1 to 99. Values match one-for-one with geologic features, such as stratigraphic boundary, fault, etc. Some ARC-CODE features have additional modifiers in item ARC-PARA1. 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Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, expressed or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, product, or process disclosed in this report, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference therein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. Although all data and software published on this web-site have been used by the USGS, no warranty expressed or implied, is made by the USGS as to the accuracy of the data and related materials and (or) the functioning of the software. The act of distribution shall not constitute any such warranty, and no responsibility is assumed by the USGS in the use of this data, software, or related materials. Standard_Order_Process: Digital_Form: Digital_Transfer_Information: Format_Name: ARCE File_Decompression_Technique: zip files Digital_Transfer_Option: Online_Option: Computer_Contact_Information: Network_Address: Network_Resource_Name: http://pubs/usgs.gov/of/2008/XXXX Fees: There is no cost for the download of these digital files Metadata_Reference_Information: Metadata_Date: 20080303 Metadata_Contact: Contact_Information: Contact_Organization_Primary: Contact_Organization: U.S. Geological Survey Contact_Person: Nora B. Shew Contact_Address: Address_Type: mailing and physical address Address: 4200 University Drive City: Anchorage State_or_Province: AK Postal_Code: 99508 Country: USA Contact_Voice_Telephone: 907-786-7445 Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: [email protected] Metadata_Standard_Name: FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata Metadata_Standard_Version: FGDC-STD-001-1998
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154541
1992 CENSUS OF AGRICULTURE HIGHLIGHTS OF AGRICULTURE: 1992 AND 1987 ATCHISON COUNTY, KANSAS Item ALL FARMS 1992 1987 Farms .........................number.. 686 694 Land in farms ..................acres.. 245 099 233 619 Average size of farm .......acres.. 357 337 Value of land and buildings@1: Average per farm .........dollars.. 221 375 176 069 Average per acre .........dollars.. 611 564 Estimated market value of all machinery and equipment@1 Average per farm .........dollars.. 46 730 38 521 Farms by size: 1 to 9 acres ........................ 48 48 10 to 49 acres ...................... 70 78 50 to 179 acres ..................... 220 222 180 to 499 acres .................... 207 200 500 to 999 acres .................... 86 104 1,000 acres or more ................. 55 42 Total cropland .................farms.. 610 630 acres.. 184 520 178 038 Harvested cropland ...........farms.. 583 589 acres.. 142 880 122 717 Irrigated land .................farms.. 7 11 acres.. (D) 478 Market value of agricultural products sold................$1,000.. 35 742 26 262 Average per farm .........dollars.. 52 102 37 842 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops............$1,000.. 19 677 14 121 Livestock, poultry, and their products....................$1,000.. 16 065 12 142 Farms by value of sales: Less than $2,500 .................... 63 77 $2,500 to $4,999 .................... 63 78 $5,000 to $9,999 .................... 105 108 $10,000 to $24,999 .................. 144 158 $25,000 to $49,999 .................. 104 113 $50,000 to $99,999 .................. 102 95 $100,000 or more .................... 105 65 Total farm production expenses.$1,000.. 25 761 21 043 Average per farm .........dollars.. 37 498 30 365 Net cash return from agricultural sales for the farm unit.......farms.. 687 693 $1,000.. 9 709 4 776 Average per farm..........dollars.. 14 133 6 892 Operators by principal occupation: Farming ............................. 411 426 Other ............................... 275 268 Operators by days worked off farm: Any ................................. 347 333 200 days or more ................... 250 230 Livestock and poultry: Cattle and calves inventory...farms.. 452 456 number.. 32 969 29 344 Beef cows ..................farms.. 384 368 number.. 12 897 10 970 Milk cows ..................farms.. 34 49 number.. 1 362 1 332 Cattle and calves sold .......farms.. 447 463 number.. 18 611 15 993 Hogs and pigs inventory ......farms.. 136 134 number.. 26 576 17 675 Hogs and pigs sold ...........farms.. 144 144 number.. 42 135 28 541 Sheep and lambs inventory ....farms.. 9 14 number.. 1 143 1 718 Chickens 3 months old or older inventory.............farms.. 20 38 number.. (D) (D) Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold...............farms.. 0 2 number.. 0 (D) Selected crops harvested: Corn for grain or seed .......farms.. 280 285 acres.. 28 876 22 627 bushels.. 3 257 592 1 910 556 Corn for sil or green chop....farms.. 41 33 acres.. 1 257 918 tons, green.. 17 339 12 621 Sorghum for grain or seed.....farms.. 294 381 acres.. 27 184 32 153 bushels.. 2 407 599 2 555 518 Wheat for grain ..............farms.. 274 133 acres.. 16 323 5 160 bushels.. 579 532 137 915 Oats for grain................farms.. 89 107 acres.. 1 765 2 589 bushels.. 81 217 127 246 Soybeans for beans ...........farms.. 410 435 acres.. 47 967 43 701 bushels.. 1 720 302 1 474 034 Hay-alf, other, wild, silage..farms.. 444 395 acres.. 23 228 19 182 tons, dry.. 47 336 36 644 @1Data are based on a sample of farms. Legend: - Represents zero (D) Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual farms (X) Not applicable (Z) Less than half the unit shown (NA) Not available Source: 1992 Census of Agriculture, Volume 1 Geographic Area Series, "Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 1992." This electronic series presents summary statistics for each county and state together with comparable data from the 1987 census. The items included are the same for all states and counties, except selected crops harvested, which vary by state. Data for 1992 and 1987 are directly comparable for acreage and inventories. Dollar values have not been adjusted for changes in price levels. You can obtain the Volume 1 Geographic Area Series from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. If you have any questions concerning the data in this report or need additional information or order forms for agriculture publications, please call Agriculture Division, Bureau of the Census, at 1-800-523-3215. .
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+--------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | > **\"Richard Hornung\" | | | > \<Richa | | | [email protected]\>** | | | > | | | > 02/11/2008 10:00 AM | | +--------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ > To > > [email protected], Jee-Young Kim/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA > > cc > > Karen Martin/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA, Deirdre Murphy/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA, > Zachary Pekar/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA, Mary Ross/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA, David > Svendsgaard/RTP/USEPA/US@EPA > > Subject > > Re: Request for additional information on Lanphear et al. (2005) ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Young > > I am including the statistics that you requested for concurrent blood > Pb. They are as follows: > > [N mean 5% 50% 95%]{.underline} > > \<7.5 103 3.24 1.30 3.00 6.00 > > \>=7.5 1230 12.92 3.50 10.05 34.00 > > \<10 244 4.30 1.40 4.15 8.00 > > \>=10 1089 13.93 4.30 11.03 35.40 > > Let me know if this satisfies your needs. > > Rick > > Professor of Environmental Health > > Director, Biostatistics & Data Management Core > > Div. of Gen. & Community Pediatrics > > CCHMC > > 3333 Burnet Ave > > Mail Location 7035 > > Cincinnati OH 45229-3039 > > 513-636-1948 > > Fax: 513-636-4402 > > \>\>\> \<[email protected]\> 2/7/2008 4:49:49 PM \>\>\> > > Dear Drs. Dietrich and Hornung, > > As a follow-up to my conversation with Dr. Dietrich, here is the > e-mail > > specifying the additional information we would like to request from > > Lanphear et al. (2005). The paper states that the concurrent median > > blood lead concentration for the study population was 9.7 ug/dL > > (5th-95th: 2.5-33.2). Would you please provide us with the concurrent > > median (5th-95th percentile range) blood lead concentrations for the > > subsets \<10 ug/dL and \<7.5 ug/dL as well? > > As you are aware, the Pb NAAQS review is on a very tight court-ordered > > deadline. We would greatly appreciate your prompt response. > > Many thanks, > > Young > > Jee Young Kim, Sc.D. > > U.S. Environmental Protection Agency > > National Center for Environmental Assessment > > Telephone: 919-541-4157 > > E-mail: [email protected]
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DISSENTING STATEMENT OF **COMMISSIONER HAROLD FURCHTGOTT-ROTH** *Re: NOS Communications, Inc. and Affinity Network, Inc. Apparent Liability for Forfeiture*, Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, File No. EB-00-TC-005, NAL/Acct. No. 200132170011. The Commission has taken this action under section 201(b) of the Communications Act without ever conducting a rulemaking to establish the contours of that provision's applicability to common carrier advertising. Moreover, as I have explained before, section 201(b) does not empower the Commission to regulate common carrier advertising. This enforcement action is therefore illegal, and I urge the affected parties to seek judicial review of this decision. **Background.** Although section 201(b) has been on the books for upwards of sixty-five years, the Commission first applied this provision to common carrier advertising in 1998. In a notice of apparent liability issued against a long-distance carrier that had slammed customers, the Commission concluded -- without citing a single precedent -- that a company's representations regarding its product also constituted "unjust and unreasonable practices" under section 201(b). *See* *Business Discount Plan, Inc.,* Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, 14 FCC Rcd 340 \[¶ 29\] (1998). The Commission decided that the company "knowingly misrepresented both its identity as a reseller and the nature of its service offering in an effort to \[intentionally\] mislead small business customers, who relied, to their detriment, on BDP's misrepresentations of these material facts." *Id.* \[¶ 34\].[^1] Beyond reciting the facts of that case, the Commission did not explain what it meant by the terms "knowing misrepresentation," "detrimental reliance," or "material facts." The Commission followed up its action in *Business Discount Plan* with a policy statement entitled "Joint FCC/FTC Policy Statement for the Advertising of Dial-Around and Other Long-Distance Services to Consumers," 15 FCC Rcd 8654 (Mar. 1, 2000) (hereinafter "Policy Statement"). There, the Commission acted though it had for years regulated common carrier advertising practices under section 201(b), when in fact it had only ever explicitly addressed that issue in the *Business Discount Plan* dockets.[^2] *See* *id.* \[¶ 4\]. Borrowing from the FTC's truth-in-advertising rules, the Policy Statement explained if an advertisement makes an "implied or express objective claim" that "conveys a material representation to reasonable consumers," the advertisor must make sure the representation is true and be able to substantiate it. *Id.* \[¶ 11\]. Advertisements that might be "misleading in the absence of qualifying or limiting information" must contain "any necessary disclosures," which must be "clear and conspicuous." *Id.* \[¶ 12\]. The Commission went on to set out what amounts to a detailed set of rules interpreting this standard and provided examples of advertisements that would be deceptive. Compliance with all of these requirements is mandatory: (1) "\[A\]dvertisers should exercise the greatest care in ensuring the accuracy of their claims related to price, including the clear and conspicuous disclosure of information such as minimum per-call charges, monthly fees, fees for additional minutes beyond the initial calling period, and other information that significantly affects the total charge of a particular call or calling plan or service," *id*. \[¶ 13\]; (2) "\[A\]ny significant conditions or limitations on the availability of the advertised rates should also be clearly and conspicuously disclosed," *id.* \[¶ 14\]; (3) "\[T\]he advertiser should clearly and conspicuously disclose whether the advertised service includes in-state calls, and the fact that such calls are charged at a higher rate if such is the case," *id.* \[¶ 15\]; (4) "Advertisers should . . . exercise care to adequately explain phrases such as 'basic rates' in their ads. . . . \[W\]hen making claims using such terms as 'basic rates' or 'regular rates,' advertisers should be mindful that those terms will be evaluated from the point of view of the reasonable consumer, and may be deceptive," *id.* \[¶ 16\]; (5) "By representing a competitor's rates, an advertiser is making an implied claim that these rates are reasonably current. As in the case of any other objective claim, the advertiser must have a reasonable basis for this representation," *id.* \[¶ 17\]; (6) "The fact that information about significant limitations or restrictions on advertised prices may be available by calling a toll-free number or a clicking on a Web site is generally insufficient to cure an otherwise decptive price claim in advertising," *id.* \[¶ 18\]; (7) "To ensure that disclosures are effective, advertisers should use clear and unambiguous language, avoid small type, place any qualifying information close to the claim being qualified, and avoid making inconsistent statements or using distracting elements that could undercut or contradict the disclosure," *id.* \[¶ 20\]; (8) "Disclosures that are large in size, are emphasized through a sharply contrasting color, and, in the case of television advertisements, remain visible and/or audible for a sufficiently long duration are likely to be more effective than those lacking such prominence," *id.* \[¶ 28\]; (9) "\[T\]he proximity and placement of disclosures are important factors in determining whether they are clear and conspicuous. . . The placement of qualifying information away from the triggering representation . . . reduces the effectiveness of the disclosure. Furthermore, when significant qualifying information about the cost of a long-distance plan or service is necessary to prevent the ad from misleading consumers, the user of an asterisk will generally be considered insufficient to draw a consumer's attention to a disclosure placed elsewhere in an ad," *id.* \[¶30\]; (10) "Even if a disclosure is large in size and long in duration, other elements of an advertisement may distract consumers so that they may fail to notice the disclosure. . . . Advertisers should take care not to undercut the effectiveness of disclosures by placing them in competition with other arresting elements of the ad," *id.* \[¶ 31\]; and (11) "\[C\]onsiderations specific to television ads include volume, cadence, and placement of any audio disclosures. Disclosures generally are more effective when they are made in the same mode (visual or oral) in which the claim necessitating the disclosure is presented," *id.* \[¶32\]. Today, the Commission applies section 201(b) for the second time to a common carrier's advertising practices. In contrast to the facts in *Business Discount Plan*, however, there are no allegations of slamming in this case. Rather, the Commission bases its finding *solely* on its conclusion that the common carriers here used rate calculations that were "complicated and confusing," *see* Notice of Apparent Liability ¶ 7, and that disclosures the carriers made regarding their promotional rates were inadequate, *id.* ¶ 13. Based on these determinations, the Commission concludes that each company is apparently liable for \$500,000. ***The Commission's advertising rules have not been promulgated in accordance with the APA.*** Even assuming that common carrier advertising were an appropriate concern of the Commission, the agency's rules regarding this issue have not been promulgated in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act. The Commission came up with a brand-new rule in a 1998 enforcement case, greatly expanded on that rule in a so-called "policy statement," and now appears prepared to apply this expanded set of standards against common carriers generally. Affected parties have never had an opportunity to weigh in on the matter. I explain below why the APA does not permit the Commission to apply section 201(b) to common carrier advertising without first conducting a rulemaking. **1.** As an initial matter, it was inappropriate for the Commission to apply section 201(b) to common carrier advertising for the first time in an adjudication, as it did in *Business Discount Plan*. The APA distinguishes between "rules" and "orders." A "rule" is "an agency statement of general or particular applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret, or prescribe law or policy or describing the organization, procedure, or practice requirements of an agency." 5 U.S.C. § 551(4). Rulemaking is the "agency process for formulating, amending, or repealing a rule," *id*. at §551(5), and the APA requires agencies to give public notice of a proposed rulemaking and give interested parties an opportunity to submit comments on the proposal, *id.* at § 553(b). An "order," by contrast, is the "whole or part of a final disposition . . . of an agency in a matter other than rulemaking," and it is formulated through "adjudication." *Id.* at § 551(6), (7). Notice and comment are not required. *Id*. at § 554. (Also exempt from the APA's notice and comment requirements are "interpretive rules" and "general statements of policy." *Id.* at § 553(d)(2).) The distinction between rulemaking and adjudication is fundamental: "\[T\]he entire Act is based upon a dichotomy between rule making and adjudication. . . . Rule making is agency action which regulates the future conduct of either groups of persons or a single person; it is essentially legislative in nature, not only because it operates in the future but also because it primarily concerned with policy considerations. . . . Conversely, adjudication is concerned with the determination of past and present rights and liabilities." Attorney General's Manual on the Administrative Procedure Act 13-13 (1947). Section 201(b) imposes on common carriers the immensely broad requirement that their "charges, practices, classifications, and regulations" be "just and reasonable." 47 U.S.C. § 201(b). But the provision, by its plain language, does *not* authorize the Commission to define the scope of a common carrier's section 201(b) obligations through ad hoc adjudicatory proceedings. Rather, it directs the Commission to "prescribe such *rules and regulations* as may be necessary in the public interest to carry out the provisions of this Act." *Id.* (emphasis added). In other words, to support an action against a carrier based on an expanded or new understanding of section 201(b), the plain language of the statute requires the Commission first to promulgate a *rule*, which can be adopted only after public notice and comment. *See* *American Mining Congress v. Mine Safety & Health Administration*, 995 F.2d 1106, 1109 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (noting that the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 "forbids nothing except acts or omissions to be spelled out by the Commission in 'rules or regulations,'" and that "clearly some agency creation of a duty is a necessary predicate to any enforcement against an \[mine\] operator \[under 30 U.S.C. § 813(h)\] for failure to keep records"). Even if the Commission were not precluded by section 201(b)'s plain language from adopting new interpretations of the provision in an adjudication, policy reasons required it to define the contours of a common carrier's section 201(b) advertising obligations in a rulemaking. As the Supreme Court, the federal appeals courts, and this agency itself have recognized, adjudication is most appropriate when an agency seeks incrementally to develop the law, rather than fundamentally change it. For that reason, the Supreme Court has held that "rulemaking is generally a better, fairer, and more effective method" of announcing a new rule than ad hoc adjudication. *See* *Community Television of Southern California v.* Gottfried, 459 U.S. 498, 511 (1983); *see also Shell Offshore Inc. v. Babbitt*, 238 F.3d 622, 627-28 (5^th^ Cir. 2001); *Pfaff v. Department of Housing & Urban Development*, 88 F.3d 739, 748 (9^th^ Cir. 1996) ("The disadvantage to adjudicative procedures is the lack of notice they provide to those subject to the agency's authority. While some measure of retroactivity is inherent in any case-by-case development of the law, and is not inequitable per se, this problem grows more acute the further the new rule deviates from the one before it. Adjudication is best suited to incremental developments to the law, rather than great leaps forward."); *Curry v. Block*, 738 F.2d 1556, 1563 (11^th^ Cir. 1984); *First Bancorporation v. Board of Governors*, 728 F2d 434, 438 (10^th^ Cir. 1984); *National Small Shipment Traffic Conf. v. I.C.C.*, 725 F.2d 1442, 1447- 48 (D.C. Cir. 1984) ("Trial-like procedures are particularly appropriate for retrospective determination of specific facts . . . \[while\] \[n\]otice-and-comment procedures . . . are especially suited to determining legislative facts and policy of general, prospective applicability."). Even where an agency has discretion to announce a new rule in an adjudication, there are limits to this discretion. "Such a situation may present itself where the new standard, adopted by adjudication, departs radically from the agency's previous interpretation of the law, where the public has relied substantially and in good faith on the previous interpretation, *where fines or damages are involved, and where the new standard is very broad and general in scope and prospective in application*." *See* *Pfaff*, 88 F.3d at 748 (citing *NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co.*, 416 U.S. at 267, 295 (1974)) (emphasis added). The Commission itself has recognized that "issues of general applicability are more suited to rulemaking than to adjudication," and numerous occasions it has refused to develop broad new rules in an adjudicatory context. *See* *Application of Alton Rainbow Corp. and Cox Radio*, Memorandum Opinion & Order, 1999 WL 566130 \[18\] (1999) ("It is generally inappropriate to address this argument in a restricted adjudicatory proceeding, "where third parties, including those with substantial stakes in the outcome, have had no opportunity to participate, and in which we, as a result, have not had the benefit of a full and well-counseled record."); *Application of Great Empire Broadcasting, Inc. and Journal Broadcast Corp.*, Memorandum Opinion and Order, 14 FCC Rcd 11145 \[¶ 8\] (1999) (same); *Rulemaking to Amend Parts 1, 2, 21, and 25 Of the Commission's Rules to Redesignate the 27.5-29.5 Ghz Frequency Band, to Reallocate the 29.5-30.0 Ghz Frequency Band, to Establish Rules and Policies for Local Multipoint Distribution Service and for Fixed Satellite Services*, Second Report and Order, Order on Reconsideration, and Fifth Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 12 FCC Rcd 12545 \[¶¶ 388-90\] (1997); *Stockholders of Renaissance Communications Corp. and Tribune Co.*, Memorandum Opinion & Order, 12 FCC Rcd. 11866, 11887-88 \[¶ 50\] (1997); *Formulation of Policies And Rules Relating to Broadcast Renewal Applicants, Competing Applicants, and Other Participants to the Comparative Renewal Process and to the Prevention of Abuses of the Renewal Process*, Second Further Notice of Inquiry and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 3 FCC Rcd 5179 (1988) ("\[I\]t is generally the view that such decisions are better left to the rulemaking process where all interested parties can participate. 'Rulemaking,' as the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals have recognized, 'is generally a better, fairer, and more effective method of implementing a new industrywide policy than is the uneven application of conditions in isolated renewal proceedings.'"); *Nextel Communications Inc.*, Order, 14 FCC Rcd 11678 \[¶ 31\] (WTB 1999) (declining to proceed through adjudication because to do so would be to establish spectrum policies of general applicability). In light of these principles, what the Commission did in *Business Discount Plan* was illegitimate. In an enforcement action against a single carrier, it set forth a broad new understanding of section 201(b), generally applicable on a going-forward basis to *all* common carrier advertising. But section 201(b)'s plain language required it to conduct a rulemaking before it imposed this new obligation on a carrier. And even assuming the agency had some discretion to apply a new interpretation of section 201(b) in an enforcement action, that discretion is not unbounded. Where fines and damages are involved, and the new standard is a broad from an agency's previous regulatory position, as was the case in *Business Discount Plan*, courts have held that adjudication is not a proper vehicle for announcing new law. **2.** Not only was the Commission wrong in adopting a new rule regarding common carrier advertising in *Business Discount Plan*, it compounded the problem by expanding on that rule in what it labeled a "policy statement." The agency's detailed description of the kinds of advertising practices that will violate section 201(b) is not a policy statement at all, but rather amounts to a set of substantive new rules, which are subject to the APA's notice and comment requirements. Its attempt to enforce these rules here is therefore improper. The APA exempts "policy statements" and "interpretive rules" from the statute's notice and comment requirements, 5 U.S.C. § 553 (b)(A), while all other rules -- which the courts have often called "substantive" or "legislative" rules -- are subject to these provisions. A quick review of these statutory distinctions is helpful. Although the precise difference between policy statements and interpretive rules is the subject of some dispute, *see* *Appalachian Power Co. v. Environmental Protection Agency*, 208 F.3d 1015, 1021 n.13 (D.C. Cir. 2000), courts have observed that a policy statement "does not seek to impose or elaborate or interpret a legal norm," but rather "represents an agency position with respect to how it will treat -- typically enforce -- the *governing* legal norm." *Syncor International Corp. v. Shalala*, 127 F.3d 90, 94 (1997) (emphasis added). "By issuing a policy statement, an agency simply lets the public know its current enforcement or adjudicatory approach. . . . Policy statements are binding on neither the public, nor the agency." *Id*. (citations omitted); *see also* *United States Telephone Ass'n v. FCC*, 28 F.3d 1232, 1234 (D.C. Cir. 1994) ("\[T\]he paradigm of a policy statement \[is\] an indication of an agency's current position on a particular regulatory issue."). An interpretive rule, on the other hand, "typically reflects an agency's construction of a statute that has been entrusted to the agency to administer." *Id.* "The legal norm is one that Congress has devised; the agency does not purport to modify that norm, in other words, to engage in lawmaking. . . . Instead, it is construing the product of congressional lawmaking 'based on specific statutory provisions.'" *Id.* For these reasons, "'\[t\]he distinction between an interpretative and substantive rule . . . likely turns on how tightly the agency's interpretation is drawn linguistically from the actual language of the statute.'" *Id.* (citing *Paralyzed Veterans of American v. D.C. Arena L.P.*, 117 F.3d 579, 588 (D.C. Cir. 1997). Substantive rules, in contrast to both interpretive rules and policy statements, *modify* or *add* to a legal norm, based on the agency's *own authority*. *Id.* at 95. "That authority flows from a congressional delegation to promulgate substantive rules, to engage in supplementary lawmaking." *Id.* Because the agency is engaged in lawmaking, the APA requires it to comply with notice and comment. *Id.* In determining whether an agency's exercise of regulatory authority qualifies as a substantive rule, courts begin with an examination of the applicable statute. Where the authorizing statute is "very general, using terms like 'equitable' or 'fair,' and the 'interpretation' really provides all the guidance, then the latter will more likely be a substantive regulation, because then the agency's rule gives content to the legal norm in question." *Id.* at 94 n.6 (citing *Paralyzed Veterans*, 117 F.3d at 588). As the Seventh Circuit has explained: > When Congress authorizes an agency to create standards, it is > delegating legislative authority, rather than itself setting forth a > standard which the agency might then particularize through > interpretation. Put differently, *when a statute does not impose a > duty on the persons subject to it but instead authorizes (or requires > -- it makes no difference) an agency to impose a duty, the formulation > of that duty becomes a legislative task entrusted to the agency*. > Provided that a rule promulgated pursuant to such a delegation is > intended to bind, and not merely to be a tentative statement of the > agency's view, which would make it just a policy statement, and not a > rule at all, the rule would be the clearest possible example of a > legislative rule, as to which the notice and comment procedure . . . > is mandatory. *Hoctor v. United States Dep't of Agriculture*, 82 F.3d 165, 169-70 (7^th^ Cir. 1996) (emphasis added). Also important to the determination whether an agency publication amounts a substantive rule is whether it prescribes mandatory requirements. *See Syncor*, 127 F.3d at 95 (holding that an agency's decision is substantive if it uses language that is "consistent only with the invocation of its general rulemaking authority to extend its regulatory reach."). In *Syncor*, for example, the court concluded that a "notice" issued by the Food and Drug Administration announcing that a certain category of radioactive drugs should comply with various statutory requirements was substantive. Although the agency described this notice as a "policy statement" and as "guidance," the court ruled that the agency's statement that it had "concluded" that these drugs "should be regulated" amounted to fundamentally new regulation, which must be informed by notice and comment rulemaking. *Id.*; *see also Appalachian Power Co.*, 208 F.3d at 1023 ("\[T\]he entire Guidance, from beginning to end, reads like a ukase. It commands, it requires, it orders, it dictates. Throughout the guidance, EPA has given the States their 'marching orders' and EPA expects the States to fall into line . . .."); *Sweet v. Sheahan*, 235 F.3d 80, (2d Cir. 2000) ("Legislative \[*i.e.*, substantive\] rules can impose obligations on members of the public distinct from, and in addition to, those imposed by statute."); *United States v. Picciotto*, 875 F.2d 345, 348 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (holding that rules that "impose obligations" are substantive, whereas rules that "merely restate existing duties" are interpretive). Applying these principles here, it is clear that the advertising guidelines set out in the Commission's so-called policy statement are substantive rules. First, section 201(b) is a classic example of a congressional delegation to an agency of lawmaking authority. The provision requires only that a carrier's "charges, practices, classifications, and regulations" be "just and reasonable," leaving it to the agency to supply content to these enormously broad terms. Despite what the Commission might say, it is certainly not obvious from the text of the statute that a carrier's "practices" necessarily include advertising. Indeed, the word "practices," standing alone, is so broad that it could include virtually any corporate practice. Nor does the statute, on its face, tell us what "just" or "reasonable" mean. In its "policy statement," the Commission gave new meaning to these terms, and in doing so, acted in its lawmaking capacity. The agency informed carriers that their advertising practices would not meet the "just and reasonable" standard unless they ensured the accuracy of their price-related claims, including information regarding minimum per-call charges, monthly fees, fees for additional minutes beyond the initial calling period, geographic restrictions on rates, and comparative price claims. Policy Statement ¶ 12-15. The Commission also concluded that section 201(b)'s "just and reasonable" standard required advertisers "clearly and conspicuously" to disclose "qualifying information," and it explained in detail the form such disclosures should take. *See id.* ¶ 20-32. These are plainly new requirements. Even assuming that *Business Discount Plan* legitimately announced a new rule (which it did not), that case dealt only with a carrier's misrepresentations in the slamming context. The carrier there told customers that it was a consolidated billing service and misled them into changing their long-distance carrier. The most one may make of that case is that section 201(b) applies to a carrier's illegal slamming conduct, precluding a carrier from misrepresenting to customers the type of service the carrier offers and from fraudulently inducing them to change their long-distance carrier. *Business Discount Plan* said nothing about the accuracy of price-related advertising or the need for "clear and conspicuous" disclosures, or any of the other issues the Commission addressed in its policy statement. A second sign that the Commission's "policy statement" is actually a set of substantive rules is the mandatory nature of these new requirements. Section B, for example, is entitled "Material Information that *Should* Be Disclosed in Advertisements for Long-Distance Calling Services." Each paragraph in Section B states that carriers "should" disclose specific pieces of pricing information, and carriers are informed that they "should" also ensure that these disclosures are "clear and conspicuous." In short, the Commission's so-called policy statement is a substantive rule in masquerade. The agency created a new regime governing common carrier advertising, with legal consequences for common carriers. It went far beyond whatever rule it created in *Business Discount Plan*. The statement simply does not qualify as a mere interpretation of an existing rule or a statement of policy regarding the enforcement of governing law. It is a substantive change in the law. As such, it should have been promulgated in compliance with the APA's notice and comment rulemaking procedures. It was not, and this enforcement action is therefore illegal. # The Commission Lacks Jurisdiction to Regulate Common Carrier Advertising Under Section 201(b). As I have written before, I do not believe Congress intended to delegate to the Commission the authority to regulate common carrier advertising. See, e.g., Commission on the Verge of a Jurisdictional Breakdown: The FCC and Its Quest to Regulate Advertising, 8 CommLaw Conspectus 219 (2000); Dissenting Statement, Joint FCC/FTC Policy Statement for the Advertising of Dial-Around and Other Long Distance Services to Consumers, 15 FCC Rcd 8654 (2000). By specifically giving the Federal Trade Commission authority to regulate pay-per-call service advertising in the 1992 Telephone Disclosure and Dispute Resolution Act, Congress indicated that it did not think this Commission possessed general jurisdiction to regulate common carrier advertising. In the preemption context, moreover, the federal courts have indicated that the Communications Act does not impose a duty on common carriers regarding advertising. For these reasons, it is my view that the Commission lacks jurisdiction to regulate advertising. # # \* \* \* \* Although it apparently thinks otherwise, this agency does not have unlimited authority to enforce against parties any standard of conduct it might think is appropriate. If the Commission wishes to regulate common carrier advertising under section 201(b), it must put its proposed position out for comment and be prepared to justify whatever rule it fashions to the public and to the courts. It has not done this here, and this enforcement action is therefore unlawful. I dissent from this decision. [^1]: The Commission issued an order of forfeiture in the matter last July, 15 FCC Rcd 14,461 (2000), and denied a petition for reconsideration in December, 2000 WL 1785129 (Dec. 7, 2000). [^2]: The Commission cited *AT&T Card Issuer Identification Cards.*, Letter, 7 FCC Rcd. 7529 (1992), as standing for the proposition that it had previously "found unfair and deceptive marketing practices by common carriers constitute unjust and unreasonable practices under section 201(b)." But that case did not squarely raise the section 201(b) issue. It concerned statements that AT&T had made in literature sent to card holders, telling them that "government requirements" required the company to issue new cards and asking them to destroy their old cards. The Commission staff determined that the language might lead customers to destroy cards issued by companies affiliated with AT&T, and it sent a letter of admonishment to AT&T. But it never actually addressed the section 201(b) question, and the Commission's suggestion that the case supports its regulation of common carrier advertising under section 201(b) is disingenuous.
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**UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY** **WASHINGTON, DC 20460** OFFICE OF PREVENTION, PESTICIDES, AND TOXIC SUBSTANCES ![](media/image1.png) September 11, 2008 MEMORANDUM > Subject: Environmental Fate and Transport Assessment of Creosote for > the Reregistration Eligibility Decision (RED) Process. > > From: A. Najm Shamim, PhD, Chemist > > Regulatory Management Branch II > > Antimicrobials Division (7510P) > > To: Jackie McFarlane, CRM for Creosote RED > > Regulatory Management Branch I > > Antimicrobials Division (7510P) > > And > > Timothy McMahon, PhD, Senior Toxicologist > > and Risk Assessor for Creosote RED > > Risk Assessment and Science Support Branch > > Antimicrobials Division (7510P) > > Thru: Mark Hartman, Chief > > Regulatory Management Branch II > > Antimicrobials Division (7510P) DP Barcode : D246550 **CREOSOTE - ENVIRONMENTAL FATE AND TRANSPORT RISK ASSESSMENT** **I. Executive Summary:** Creosote is an oil-based wood preservative which is primarily used for preserving wood used in railroad ties and utility poles. Coal tar creosote or the P1/P13 and P2 fractions of coal tar creosote are obtained from the carbonization of bituminous coal and are mixtures of organic molecules (about 200-250 identifiable substances) consisting of simple polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), multi-aromatic fused rings, cyclic nitrogen-containing heteronuclear compounds, and phenolic substances. It is estimated that about 85 percent of the creosote mixture consists of PAHs and the remainder consists of cyclic heteronuclear nitrogen and oxygen containing molecules. Since the PAHs constitute the majority of the percent mass of the P1/P13 and P2 fractions of creosote, they weigh heavily in the environmental fate assessment. Therefore, the Agency has carried out an open literature search for environmental fate and transport studies on the creosote mixture and has decided to make the assessment based on the PAH constituents only. Coal tar creosote has been used as a wood preservative pesticide for over 125 years. According to the American Wood Preservers' Association (AWPA,1997) statistics, an estimated 728 million cubic feet of wood was treated with preservatives, and creosote and its mixtures represent 13.3 percent of the treatments. Nearly 100 percent of railroad crossties, switch ties and bridge timbers are pressure-treated with creosote and 14.6 percent of utility poles are treated with creosote (Webb, N.D.). Process wastewater, dumpsite leachate, storage tank leaks, and spills are the major creosote sources to the environment (Merril and Wade, 1985). In addition, leachates from pressure treated wood can migrate out into soils, and water. The environmental fate and transport of creosote as addressed here focuses primarily on the likely exposure of PAHs into three environmental compartments: 1) leaching of creosote mixture into surface and ground waters from the railroad ties and utility poles; 2) migration into soil/sediments from the railroad ties and utility poles, and 3) bioaccumulation into the aqueous and benthic organisms. The major uses of creosote since 1988 have been railroad ties, crossbars, decks on marinas and utility poles. Polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) constitute the highest percent (85%) of coal tar creosote while the phenolic substances are about 10 percent, and N-- and S- containing substances represent the remainder of the mixture. Most of the PAHs are non-volatile, therefore; creosote normally does not contaminate the air. The major route of exposure from creosote is through water and soil, and from these environmental compartments into the aquatic and benthic organisms (bioaccumulation). ***Abiotic Degradation*** The PAHs are fused aromatic polycyclic rings which have no hydrolyzable hydrogens and the solubility of these compounds are very low in water. Environmentally, hydrolysis does not appear to be an important pathway for dissipation of the composite mixture of PAHs in water; however, some molecules like benzo\[k\]fluoranthene and benz\[a\]pyrene could persist in water. Very few studies are reported in the open literature on field volatilities for PAHs present in creosote. Gevao et al. (1998) showed that acenaphthene, fluorene, phenanthrene, anthracene, and fluoranthene volatilized at a faster rate at 30°C than at 4°C. The study also showed that 85 percent of these components remained in the wood after seven weeks. The rate of volatilization was slow for acenaphthene (half-life, one year) and fluoranthene (half-life, one year). In most cases, the initial rates of dissipation are caused by partitioning between the wood and air and biodegradation in the presence of microbial populations. Therefore, exposure to air does not appear to be an important factor in fate assessment for most PAHs. Photooxidation is a common phenomenon, and therefore an important degradation pathway for the creosote PAHs. The photolytic half-lives of the PAHs in aqueous medium are dependent on the season, geographical location, surface water measurements, and complexities of the parent molecules (two fused rings vs. five fused rings). In most cases, half-lives under the conditions mentioned do not appear very long. Because of this, and the fact that most of the PAHs are not readily soluble (except for a few low molecular weight ones), the PAHs may not be a problem in surface and groundwater runoffs. However, it should be noted that the photooxidized products of PAHs are stable; therefore, may persist in air/water and soils and become an environmental concern as these photooxidized products are also bioaccumulative. ***Mobility*** Once introduced to an aquatic environment, creosote components are subjected to several fractionation processes. Many PAHs adsorb to sediments and may persist for long periods of time. Creosote contaminated sediments usually contain relatively higher levels of hydrophobic PAHs than whole creosote (Bieri et al., 1986). Eventually, sediment adsorbed PAHs may dissolve or become re-suspended in the water by tides, storms, bioturbation, shipping, or dredging. As a result, local biota may be exposed to low level PAHs over the long term (Fowler et al., 1993). Therefore, the adsorption/desorption processes in water involved with creosote-derived PAHs are a significant consideration in fate assessments of creosote contamination. Additionally, colloidal matter present in a cresote-contaminated environment has been found to affect the desorption rates of specific PAHs. One study found that PAHs partitioned to course (of sizes \>100 nm) colloid fractions and were linearly correlated with the PAH octanol-water partition coefficient, indicating the partitioning was hydrophobic (Villholth, 1999). The PAHs from creosote-treated utility poles and/or railway ties tend to leach out initially in the first seven days and remain in the sediment surrounding the poles or railroad ties not migrating far from the wood. Most of the PAHs, however, tend to stay inside the wood (\~85%). One study showed that background levels for PAHs leached from wood were attained within three months and may have been due to photolysis or biodegradation of the PAHs. A detailed study of 200 U.S. estuaries showed that PAHs that leached from the treated wood of decks and bulkheads, 175 had muddy sediments. Higher amounts of PAHs leached into such soil types. No systematic work has been carried out on all the PAHs and the representative soil types to show which one would have a higher tendency of retention for the PAHs. Migration studies of PAHs into groundwater have shown that migration of some of the PAHs does take place. Vertical or lateral migration of the PAHs from the utility poles indicated that at ground level the migration was not significant beyond 150 meters from the site of contamination (base of utility poles). The vertical or downward migration of the PAHs was even more limited and the existence of the PAHs were not found below a 12 meter depth. ***Biodegradation*** Most of the PAHs have a tendency to biodegrade under aerobic conditions. It has been reported that over eighty percent of biodegradation occurs in the first month after the wood preservative application, with the exception of benz\[a\]pyrene and benzo\[k\]fluoranthene, which have shown resistance to biodegradation. A number of aerobic soil metabolism studies on PAHs conducted at various contaminated sites as well as in simulated microcosms reported that low molecular weight PAHs generally metabolized in aerobic conditions and the greater the oxic environment, the higher the biodegradation level. Aerobic degradation of PAHs associated with soil and groundwater often leads to a rapid depletion of dissolved oxygen which eventually decreases the redox potential. This decrease in the redox potential can result in favorable environments for denitrifying, sulfate-reducing, or methanogenic microbes. Therefore, anaerobic transformations may be a significant factor in oxygen-depleted habitats (Karthikeyan and Bhandari, 2001). Under these conditions, anoxic or anaerobic degradation stimulated by denitrifying or sulfate-reducing bacteria can become an important pathway for the cleanup of contaminated sites. ***Bioaccumulation in Fish*** The major components of the PAHs in creosote have shown the ability to form neutral to oxidized transformation products under aerobic soil/aquatic conditions. For example, fluorene forms hydroxy fluorene and acenaphthene converts into diacetic acid acenaphthene. These oxidized species are stable and bioaccumulative. Numerous studies have shown that photooxidized transformation products of these PAHs are bioaccumulative and result in adverse effects on the aqueous biota as well as on the organisms in the soils and benthic sediments. In aquatic habitats, fish, shellfish, and crustaceans readily bioaccumulate PAHs from the environment and store these at high levels in the tissues. Seven PAHs: naphthalene, anthracene, phenanthrene, pyrene, 9-methyl anthracene, benz\[a\]anthracene and perylene were shown to bioaccumulate in *Daphnia pulex*. PAHs like naphthalene, biphenyl/acenaphthylene, fluorene, phenanthrene/anthracene/chrysene, and benzopyrene were found to bioaccumulate in clams (*Rangia cuneate)*. The most dramatic increases were in cases such as benz\[a\]anthracene/chrysene which reported a bioaccumulation of 41 ppb (week zero) and increased to 190 ppb (week 4). Similarly, benzopyrene bioaccumulated from 8 ppb (week zero) to 600 ppb (week 4). Depuration was within two weeks. This study was conducted after the creosote spill into the Bayou Bonfuca at the American Creosote Works Plant Site at Slidell, Louisiana. A study on benthic invertebrates showed a bioaccumulation concentration ranging from 0.10 to 11.00 ppm. A bioconcentration study on zebra mussels in the Great Lakes found that pre-spawning species (high lipid) bioaccumulated benzo\[a\] pyrene at a faster rate than the post- spawning (low lipid) species. Bioaccumulation data on marine mammals are not readily available, and only one study on whales and seals has been reported. That study indicated a bioaccumulation of 0.10 and 1.21 ppm in the muscles of these mammals, respectively. Some of the PAHs, particularly those that have a high molecular mass (higher number of the fused aromatic rings) have a higher tendency to adsorb to soil organic carbon. Such adsorption coefficients (K~OC~) have been reported in literature. Some PAHs with a high K~oc~ can bind strongly with the organic carbon of the soils/sediments and may not be bioavailable to the aquatic organisms. However, if the octanol/ water coefficients (K~ow~) is high, and if the PAHs are desorbed from the soils/sediments to which they are bound, some of these PAHs can become bioaccumulative to the benthic organisms. It has been suggested that based on theoretical calculations and modeling, the half-lives of the PAHs obtained from coal tar creosote can be estimated in air, water, soils and sediments. From these calculations and modeling, one can arbitrarily divide the PAHs into 3 distinct groups: PAHs with two fused rings, PAHs with three fused rings and PAHs that have 4 to 5 fused rings. The half-lives in the environmental compartments (air, water, and soils) for PAHs are as follows: the half-lives of two fused rings PAHs \< three fused rings \< 4/5 fused rings. The K~ow~ values lie between 3 and 4 for PAHs with two fused rings, between 4 and 5 for PAHs with 3 fused rings, and at 6 or above for the third group of the PAHs. In general, the half-lives in air and water environmental compartments are much lower than in soils/sediments because the soil adsorption coefficients are higher. The longer the half-life, the greater the persistence of the PAHs in soils. Some of the 4/5 fused ring PAHs are more persistent in soils and sediments and since their K~ow~ values are higher, they can bioaccumulate but some of them adsorb onto soils and they may not be bioavailable for benthic organisms. The third group of PAHs show a higher degree of bioaccumulation, persistence in soils and water, resistance to biodegradation and photooxidation. Additionally the components of these group have less of a tendency to leach from the wood structure and have high sorption constants to soils. On the other hand, these higher members of the PAHs (4/5 fused ring compounds) are not readily soluble in water and their percent on a mass basis in the creosote mixture is very low compared to the first group (2 fused rings) of the PAHs, and may not be available for biomagnification and migration into surface and ground waters. A recent two year mesocosm study (K. Brooks, 2004) of leaching and migration of PAHs from creosote-treated railway ties into ballast, wetland sediments, ground water, storm water and soil showed that ballast and sediment core samples found the presence of PAHs at an initial level of 1.207 µg/g at 0 cm to 0.482 µg/g at 60 cm depth. One out 16 storm water sample, collected after 18 months, showed the presence of two PAHs: benzo(a) anthracene (0.00019 mg/L) and phenanthrene (0.00066 mg/L) **[B. APPENDIX OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL FATE AND TRANSPSORT ASSESSMENT For CREOSOTE]{.underline}** **A. Chemical Profile** > [Common Name(s):]{.underline} Creosote, Creosote Oil, Dead Oil, Brick > Oil, Coal Tar Oil, Creosote P1, Heavy Oil, Liquid Pitch Oil, Wash Oil, > Creosotum, Cresylic Creosote, Naphthalene Oil, Tar Oil, AWPA #1, and > Preserv-o-sote > > [Chemical Name:]{.underline} Coal Tar Creosote [Trade Name:]{.underline} Sakresote 100 [Formulations:]{.underline} Distillate mixture obtained from bituminous coal; oil-based [Physical/Chemical Properties:]{.underline} > Molecular formula: It is a multi-component mixture. Not applicable > > Molecular weight: It is a multi-component mixture. Not applicable > > Physical State: Translucent brown to black; yellowish to dark > green-brown; oily liquid > > Melting Point: Not available > > Boiling Point: 194-400°C. Not possible to define a boiling point of a > multi-component mixture > > Viscosity: 14.60 mm/s (P1/P13); 15.5 mm/s (P2) > > Vapor Pressure: 11.1 mm Hg at 24.4°C (P1/P13); 8.6 mm Hg at 24.4 to > 24.5°C (P2) Dissociation Constant: 3.247 (pKa, P1/P13); 3.311 (pKa, P2) > Solubility: (Water) 313 µg/mL (P1/P13); 306 µg/mL (P2); temperature > not specified > > Henry's Law Constant: Not available. Not possible to determine for a > multi-component mixture Octanol/Water Partition Coefficient (log K~ow~): 1.0 Studies have not been submitted to the Agency and specific guideline requirements have not been fulfilled for creosote. Therefore, the Agency has carried out an open literature search for environmental fate studies on creosote mixtures and has decided to make the assessment based on the PAH constituents only. The literature search on environmental fate studies provided data on the volatility, photolysis in water, aerobic/anaerobic metabolism, leaching and adsorption/desorption, bioaccumulation in aquatic and benthic organisms, and migration from poles into soils. The following are summaries of studies obtained from the literature search. **II a.** **Volatility** **Lindhardt, B. and T.H. Christensen, 1996** A laboratory volatilization study was conducted on the non-steady-state fluxes of aromatic hydrocarbons from coal tar contaminated soil. The contaminated soil samples, obtained from Holte, Denmark, were placed below a 5 cm deep layer of uncontaminated soil and monitored for 53 days. The contaminated soil contained 50 to 840 µg/cm^3^ of 11 selected aromatic hydrocarbons. In analyses where the microbial activity was inhibited, the fluxes stabilized on a semi-steady state level for monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, naphthalene and 1-methylnaphthalene after 10 to 20 days. Acenaphthene and fluorene fluxes were measurable only in experiments using a soil cover with a low organic content. When the soil cover was adapted to degrade naphthalene, the fluxes of naphthalene and 1-methylnaphthalene were approaching the detection limit at 5 to 8 days. **Gevao, B. and K.C. Jones, 1998** A volatilization study for five PAHs (acenaphthene, fluorene, phenanthrene, anthracene and fluoranthene) from treated (painted) wood was conducted in the United Kingdom. This laboratory study was performed using glass chambers equipped with an air inlet/outlet in 4°C and 30°C environments. Wood samples painted with 110 grams of creosote were placed in the glass chambers and the air traps were changed at each sampling interval. Samples were stored for 2 to 4 weeks at -17°C prior to extraction. The rate of desorption was analyzed using first order kinetics for all five PAHs and was found to be higher at 30^o^ C than at 4^o^C. The mean PAH values ranged from 2.57 ± 1.52 mg/m^2^ treated wood/day and 29.5 ± 6.1 mg/m^2^ treated wood/day at 4°C and 30°C, respectively. From the desorption rates, the half-life at 4^o^C ranged from 0.70 year to 31 years for fluoranthene and acenaphthene, respectively. When the temperature was raised to 30°C, the half-life ranged from 0.3 year to 1 year for fluroanthene and acenaphthene, respectively. Following a long-term study at 4°C, it was observed that the volatilization rate was constant for about seven weeks after which it was estimated that \>85 percent of the PAHs remained in the wood. The authors noted that initial desorption rates were caused by partitioning between the wood and air, and by the rates of compound diffusion from the interstices of the wood. **II b. Aqueous Photolysis** **Kirso, U., 1991** A photolysis study in natural sunlight in aqueous (\~5 x 10^-8^ M) PAH, aza-PAH and benzene media was performed with selected PAHs. Table 1 summarizes the photooxidation half-lives of these commercially available highly pure PAHs. The study also collected data on photolysis by natural sunlight of benzo\[a\]pyrene under open-sea conditions at northern and southern latitudes. In this European study, first-order photooxidation rates were measured and first-order rate constants were found. The Agency has calculated the half-lives using the first-order rate constants from this study. PAH appear to photolyse through oxidation processes. The results of the calculations are presented in Table 1. **Table 1. Photochemical Oxidation and Half Lives of Selected PAHs** ----------------------------------------------------------------------- **Compound** **Half-life in **Half-life in Benzene Water (minutes)** (minutes)** ---------------------------- ------------------- ---------------------- Fluorene 119.97 2.05 Anthracene 8.06 \* Phenanthrene 64.95 107.05 Triphenylene 93.93 136.80 Pyrene 19.99 97.47 Chrysene 25.88 100.54 Benz\[a\]anthracene 20.92 41.72 Benz\[b\]anthracene 3.56 0.68 Dibenz\[a,c\]anthracene 25.57 55.06 Dibenz\[a,h\]anthracene 22.94 55.06 Dibenz\[a,j\]anthracene 16.58 41.04 Dibenzo\[a\]pyrene 15.5 34.20 Dibenzo\[e\]pyrene 22.94 117.99 Perylene 374.94 51.98 Coronene 312.01 63.95 Benzo\[k\]fluoranthene 110.98 171.00 Benzo\[b\]fluoranthene 312.01 190.15 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Notes: 1. Not all the PAHs used in the study are present in the P1/P13 > and P2 fractions of the creosote. > > 2\. PAHs with high molar masses have longer photooxidation half-lives > than smaller PAHs with small molar masses. 3\. \* = Could not be determined under the experimental conditions. **Table 2.** **Rate Constants and Half-lives of Photooxidation of Benzo\[a\]pyrene by Sunlight in Sea Water** +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | **Region** | **Water | **Initial | **Rate | ** | | | T | Conce | C | Half-life** | | | emperature** | ntration** | onstant** | | | | | | | ** | | | **(^o^C)** | **(10^-8^ | **(k x | (minutes)** | | | | M)** | 10^-4^) | | | | | | 1/s** | | +===============+==============+============+===========+=============+ | Bering Sea | 14 | 1.47 | 1.69 | 68.3 | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Bering Sea | 16 | 4.20 | 1.60 | 72.2 | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Tropical | 26 | 6.59 | 2.84 | 40.6 | | Pacific | | | | | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Tropical | 27 | 2.06 | 1.60 | 72.2 | | Pacific | | | | | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Lagune | 27 | 1.90 | 2.99 | 38.61 | | Caroline | | | | | | Atoll | | | | | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Lagune | 27 | 0.70 | 4.20 | 27.50 | | Caroline | | | | | | Atoll | | | | | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ | Baltic Sea | 6 | 15.6 | 0.70 | 146.2 | +---------------+--------------+------------+-----------+-------------+ Notes: 1. 'K' is a first-order rate constant. > 2\. The Rate constants of photooxidation of benzo\[a\]pyrene (and half > lives) are higher in tropical longitudes than in northern and > temperate climatical zones. Experimental and calculated data on the photolysis of most of the PAHs present in the P1/P13 and P2 fractions of creosote can be found in the international scientific literature. These data are summarized in the Table 3 below. **Table 3. Photolysis of Selected PAHs Found in P1/P13 and P2 Fractions of Coal Tar Creosote** +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | **Compound** | **Description** | **Half lives** | +==============+============================+==========================+ | Naphthalene | Direct sunlight, 40°N, | 71 Hours (Harris, 1982) | | | midday, midsummer | | | | (calculated) | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Distilled water at 25 ^o^ | 25 Hours (Fukuda, 1988) | | | C | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Quinoline | Sunlight at 40°N, aqueous | 3851 Hours, summer | | | hydrolysis, pH 6.9 | | | | | 535 Hours, winter (Mill | | | | et al., 1981) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | 1-Methyl | Summer sunlight in surface | 180 Days (Miller, 1985) | | naphthalene | water | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | 2-Methyl | Summer sunlight in surface | 410 Days (Mill et al., | | naphthalene | water | 1981) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Distilled water | 16.4 Hours (Fukuda, | | | | 1988) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Acenaphthene | Determined by rotary | 2.0 Hours (Behymer & | | | photoreactor technique on | Hites, 1985) | | | different atmospheric | | | | particulate substrates: | 2.2 Hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 44 Hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Distilled water(irradiated | 3 Hours (Fukuda, 1988) | | | light at wavelength 290 | | | | nm) | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Fluorene | Determined by rotary | 110 Hours (Behymer & | | | photoreactor technique on | Hites, 1985) | | | different atmospheric | | | | particulate substrates: | 62 Hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 37 Hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Anthracene | Midsummer sunlight: | 173.2 hours (Southworth, | | | | 1977) | | | \-- deep, slow, somewhat | | | | turbid water | 693 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- deep, slow and muddy | 38.5 hours (Ibid.) | | | water | | | | | 8.1 hours (Ibid.) | | | \-- deep, slow and clear | | | | water | 2.91 hours | | | | | | | \-- Shallow, fast and | | | | clear water | | | | | | | | \-- shallow, very fast and | | | | clear water | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | At 35° on latitude | 1.6 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- summer | 4.8 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- winter | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | At 35° N, winter | 4.62 hours (Callahan, | | | | 1979) | | | \-- in water | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Different atmospheric | 2.9 hours (Beymer & | | | particulate substrate: | Hites,1985) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 0.50 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | 48 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | 1.0 hour (Fukuda, 1988) | | | | | | | \-- distilled water | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Carbazole | 40°N , midday, sunlight in | 6.0 hours (Smith, 1978) | | | late Jan. and river | | | | (calc.) | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | In eutrophic pond and | 15.0 hours (Ibid.) | | | eutrophic lake | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | In oligotrophic lake | 3.0 hours (Ibid.) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Aqueous medium | 1.0 hours (Ibid.) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Fluoranthene | Atmospheric/aqueous | 21 hours (Howard, 1991) | | | photolysis, based on the | | | | measured sunlight | 160 days (Mabey, 1982) | | | photolysis rate constant | | | | in water | | | | | | | | \-- summer sunlight, | | | | surface water | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Different atmospheric | 74 hours (Behymer & | | | particulate substrates: | Hites, 1985) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 23 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | 44 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Chrysene | Different atmospheric | 100 hours (Behymer & | | | particulate substrates: | Hites, 1985) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 78 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | 38 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Ac | Different atmospheric | 0.7 hours (Behymer & | | enaphthylene | particulate substrates: | Hites, 1985) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 2.2 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | 44 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | Benz\[a | Aquatic | 10-50 hours (Callahan, | | \]anthracene | | 1979) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Stream | 20 hours (Smith, 1978) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Eutrophic pond or lake | 50 hours (Ibid.) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Oligotrophic lake | 10 hours (Ibid.) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Aquatics | 0.58 hours (EPA Report | | | | 600/7-78-074) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Early March | 0.2 days (Zepp, 1980) | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | \-- 1% acetonitrile in | 5 hours | | | filter-sterilized natural | | | | water at 313 nm wave | | | | length | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ | | Different atmospheric | 4.0 hours (Behymer & | | | particulate substrates: | Hites) | | | | | | | \-- silica gel | 2.0 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- alumina | 38 hours (Ibid.) | | | | | | | \-- fly ash | | +--------------+----------------------------+--------------------------+ **IIc. Aerobic/anaerobic Metabolism** **Mueller, J.G. et al., 1993** This laboratory study was designed to evaluate the ability of a sequential inoculation process using selected microorganisms to enhance the bioremediation technologies for the treatment of groundwater contaminated with creosote and PCP. The contaminated groundwater was obtained from a monitoring well at the American Creosote Works site in Pensacola, Florida. Both 1.2 L (bench scale) and 454 L (pilot scale) bioreactors were utilized for the analysis. The bench scale study showed that after 32 days of continuous-flow operation, the majority of the monitored creosote components were degraded. Overall, for groups 1, 2, and 3 PAHs, the biodegradation values were determined to be 98.0, 96.2, and 89.4 percent, respectively. The amount of group 2 and 3 PAHs found in the bioreactor residues were 3.5 and 9.2 percent, respectively. In the pilot scale study, the system was effective in treating the contaminated water in a two-step process. Since the pattern of degradation favored the low molecular weight components, an additional inoculum of microorganisms selected for their ability to degrade this components were added. As a result, \>98 percent of all the monitored creosote components were removed. A mass balance distribution analysis showed that of the various routes of removal (adsorption, volatilization, and biodegradation), biodegradation was the primary mechanism for the removal of the creosote components. **National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1988** The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) conducted a detailed study on the analysis of PCBs, PAHs, and 12 trace metals present in surface water sediments of 200 estuaries. One hundred seventy-five estuaries were contaminated with PAHs. These estuaries have muddy rather than sandy sediments with the exception of two estuaries in Long Island, where the sediments were predominantly sandy. The results of the study indicated that PAH contamination was higher in the muddy sediment. **Bouwer, E.J., W. Zhang, L.P. Wilson, and N.D. Durant, 1996** A four-week aerobic study was conducted on the sediment and groundwater of an abandoned manufactured gas plant (MGP) site which was contaminated with creosote PAHs . The experiment was conducted to assess the ability of the bacteria in sediment to mineralize ^14^C-labeled benzene, naphthalene, and phenanthrene under simulated field conditions. The results of this study showed that the bacteria present in the aquifer sediments were able to degrade low molecular weight PAHs. The study also determined that the higher the concentration of oxygen, the greater the biodegradation of these molecules. Mineralization for anthracene and phenanthrene ranged from 4 to 23 percent, ranged from 4 to 42 percent for benzene, and from 8 and 55 percent for naphthalene. **Chapman, P.J., M. Shelton, M. Grifoll, and S. Selifonov, 1995** In this study, bacterial cultures were obtained from washing creosote-contaminated soils at lumber treatment facilities. These cultures were to be utilized as an enrichment for biodegradation studies. Purified PAHs were used as the sole carbon sources (0.1%) and were inoculated with the bacterial cultures. Increases in turbidity and color changes were monitored to determine growth and biological activity, respectively. Low molecular weight PAHs were easily degraded by the bacterial enrichments. Approximately 72 percent of the measured PAH were degraded, which accounted for 52.5 percent of the weight of the initial PAHs. These aerobic degradation processes of creosote PAHs have shown that biodegradation in the presence of certain bacteria is accompanied with the formation of neutral and acidic oxidized products. **Schocken, M.J. and D.T. Gibson, 1984** The metabolism of acenaphthene and acenaphthylene by two strains of bacteria was examined in this study. *Biejerinckia species* and a mutant strain *Biejerinckia species* B8/36 bacteria were found to oxidize the two PAHs. The study was carried out with large-scale incubations at 30°C. Acenaphthene oxidized into 1-acenaphthenone, 1,2-acenaphthenediol, acenapthenequinone and 1-acenaphthenol; acenaphthylene oxidized into acenapthenequinone. The results indicated that even though these PAHs were both oxidized to acenapthenequinone, the pathways to form this product are quite different. **Godsy, E.M., D.F. Goerlitz, and D. Grbic-Galic, 1992** (Anaerobic Study) The US Geological Survey selected an abandoned wood preserving site once used for creosote and pentachlorphenol pressure treatments to analyze and identify the contaminants in groundwater from plant waste. This waste had been discharged into the unlined surface impoundments that were in direct hydraulic contact with groundwater. The groundwater was determined to be anaerobic and showed the presence of methane and hydrogen sulfide (indicating the presence of methanogenic and sulfuryl microbes). To conduct the study, holes were bored to a depth of 6.1 meters at various sites on a downward slope from the contamination source ponds. Table 4 lists the concentrations of PAHs at the various sites. The results indicated that lateral migration of most of the PAHs became undetectable 150 meters from the source of contamination. However, the study authors did not indicate the age of the wood and how long the preserving plant had been abandoned before testing began. **Table 4. Amounts of PAHs in the Water Samples From 6.1 Meter Wells^a^** +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | **Compound^b^** | **Site | * | * | * | * | * | | | 1^c^** | *Site | *Site | *Site | *Site | *Site | | | | 3** | 39** | 40** | 4** | 37** | | | **(unc | | | | | | | | ontam.)** | * | **(53 | **(99 | * | * | | | | *(6.0 | m)** | m)** | *(122 | *(150 | | | | m)** | | | m)** | m)** | +=================+===========+=======+=======+=======+=======+=======+ | Indene | ND | 1.25 | 0.24 | ND | ND | ND | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Naphthalene | ND | 9.38 | 3.39 | 2.89 | 0.93 | 1.54 | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | 1-Me | ND | 0.41 | 0.32 | 0.25 | 0.06 | 0.11 | | thylnaphthalene | | | | | | | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | 2-Me | ND | 0.99 | 0.32 | 0.54 | 0.10 | 0.10 | | thylnaphthalene | | | | | | | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Acenaphthene | ND | 0.52 | 0.29 | 0.33 | 0.05 | ND | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Indole | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Quinoline | ND | 11.2 | 0.01 | ND | ND | ND | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Benzothiophene | ND | 0.83 | 0.31 | 0.22 | 0.16 | 0.16 | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ | Dibenzofuran | ND | 0.30 | 0.04 | 0.16 | ND | ND | +-----------------+-----------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+ ND = Not detected a - Water samples collected from wells on these sites. b - Analyzed and quantified through GC/MS methods. c - Uncontaminated site **Goerlitz, D.F. et al., 1985** A similar study was conducted by the US Geological Survey at the same wood preserving plant that was used in the study of Godsy et al. (1992). Results showed that on Site 3 at a 30-meter well, naphthalene (15.60 ppm) was detected 6 meters from the source of contamination and the level of naphthalene progressively decreased with an increase in well depth. At 24 meters, only 0.60 ppm of naphthalene was detected. PAHs were not detected at a depth greater than 12 meters. **Genther, B.R., et al., 1997** A year long study on anaerobic soil biodegradation was conducted at the American Creosote Works Superfund site located in Pensacola, Florida using soil samples collected from the creek bed sediment. Samples were collected at a depth of 5 to 8 cm and 12 meters, which was below the main discharge pond. These soil samples were selected because they represented bacterial populations exposed to minimum and maximum concentrations of the PAHs *in situ*. The PAHs used were from an artificial mixture simulating the PAH components of creosote. Various batches of the artificial mixture were made and consisted of the following components: naphthalene (36 mg), 1-methylnaphthalene (10.8 mg), 2-methylnaphthalene (10.8 mg), 2,6-dimethylnaphthalene (10.8 mg), biphenyl (5.4 mg), acenaphthene (5.4 mg), fluorene (10.8 mg), phenanthrene (18.0 mg), anthracene (18.0 mg), 2-methylanthracene (9.0 mg), anthraquinone (3.6 mg), fluoranthene (9.0 mg), pyrene (3.6 mg), chrysene (3.6 mg), 2,3-benzo\[b\]fluorene (3.6 mg), and benzo\[a\]pyrene (3.6 mg). Various batches of this artificial PAH mixture were inoculated with the contaminated soil samples under methanogenic, sulfidogenic, and nitrate-reducing conditions. The majority of the PAHs did not degrade in the soil samples collected from the creek bed (5-8 cm depth). Loss of some bicyclic and tricyclics were observed; however, 4- and 5-membered PAHs did not degrade under methanogenic, sulfidogenic, or nitrate-reducing conditions. By 16 weeks, under methanogenic conditions, the maximum loss of naphthalene was 47 percent (similar to naphthalene loss under an abiotic control (40 percent)). Among the tricyclics, anthraquionone was the only substance where any loss under methanogenic conditions was reported. Anthraquinone loss reached 48 percent and about 65 percent by weeks 28 and 52, respectively. Two other tricyclics, anthracene and acenaphthene, degraded 22 percent under the same conditions. Under nitrate-reducing conditions, only degradation for 2-methylanthracene was observed and the concentration of this chemical was below the detection limit between weeks 8 to 28. Under sulfidogenic conditions, only anthraquinone degraded 22 percent by week 8. Under these conditions, no other PAHs showed any biodegradation up to week 52. For the 12-meter soil samples, no appreciable biodegradation processes were observed for most of the PAHs under all three anaerobic conditions. **III Miscilinous Studies** Anaerobic soil metabolism studies for individual PAHs have been conducted over a period of time using the three anaerobic conditions. For nitrate reducing conditions, the studies conducted were Bouwer and McCarty, 1983; Al-Bashir, et al., 1990; Ehrlich et al., 1982a; Flyvberg et al. 1993; Hambrick et al., 1980; Kuhn et al., 1988; and Mihelcic and Luthy, 1988a, 1988b. The study was conducted for sulfidogenic conditions by Flyvjberg et al., 1993. The studies for methanogenic conditions include Ehrlich et al. 1982a; and Godsy et al., 1992. Other *in situ* studies for biodegradation of PAHs at creosote contaminated sites are: Ehrlich et al. 1982a, 1982b; Godsy et al. 1992; Goerlitz et al., 1985; and Mattraw and Frank, 1986. **Bauer, J.E. and D.G. Capone, 1985** Microorganisms present in the intertidal sediments were investigated for the degradation of anthracene and naphthalene. No mineralization was observed under anaerobic conditions. However, mineralization did show dependence on the amounts of the polyaromatics present, oxygen level, and pre-exposure time. Maximum mineralization of these two PAHs occurred after one or two weeks of pre-exposure. A similar study conducted by the same authors (in 1988) showed that the pre-exposure of anthracene and naphthalene under aerobic conditions (marine sediments collected from 0 to 1 cm depth) to benzene and other PAHs accelerated their mineralization. **Mueller, J.G. et al., 1991** Groundwater samples collected from a depth of 7 meters from the American Creosote Works superfund site in Pensacola, Florida were examined for biodegradation (aerobic aquatic metabolism) of PAHs from coal-tar creosote. Creosote-contaminated soil from the site was collected and used to prepare the microbial inoculum. Groundwater samples and the microbial inoculum were incubated for 14 days at 30°C. The groundwater samples contained the PAHs present in coal-tar derived creosote and in the phenolic components (which constituted 5% of the creosote sample). In addition, PCP was also present. Table 5 summarizes the results of the 14-day incubation experiment. The analysis showed that bicyclic PAHs and phenolics are metabolized readily by the microorganisms in the aquatic soil while the PAHs with a higher number of fused rings biodegrade more slowly. By Day 8 most of the biodegradation was complete. A few nitrogenous heterocyclics like quinoline, isoquinoline, and acridine readily metabolized while quinaldine, carbazole, and pentachlorphenol showed resistance to the metabolic process under the conditions of the experiment. **Table 5. Aquatic Soil Metabolism (Biodegradation) Results for Creosote/PCP Contaminants In Groundwater Samples From Pensacola, Florida Superfund Site** +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | **Compound** | **C | | | | | | | | | onc | | | | | | | | | ent | | | | | | | | | rat | | | | | | | | | ion | | | | | | | | | ( | | | | | | | | | µg/ | | | | | | | | | mL) | | | | | | | | | Af | | | | | | | | | ter | | | | | | | | | Inc | | | | | | | | | uba | | | | | | | | | tio | | | | | | | | | n** | | | | | | | +=========================+=====+====+=====+=====+=====+=====+=======+ | | **I | * | **3 | **5 | **8 | * | **St | | | nit | *1 | Day | Day | Day | *14 | erile | | | ial | D | s** | s** | s** | Day | Cont | | | C | ay | | | | s** | rol** | | | onc | ** | | | | | | | | .** | | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Naphthalene | 2 | 17 | 0.1 | U | 0.1 | U | 25.6 | | | 8.7 | .2 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2-Methylnaphthalene | 4.7 | 3 | U | U | 0.1 | U | 4.5 | | | | .0 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 1-Methylnaphthalene | 9.5 | 5 | 2.1 | 1.5 | U | U | 8.2 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Biphenyl | 3.0 | 1 | 1.2 | U | U | U | 2.6 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,6-Dimethylnaphthalene | 2.4 | 1 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.0 | 0.3 | 2.1 | | | | .4 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,3-Dimethylnaphthalene | 1.3 | 0 | 0.5 | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.2 | 1.0 | | | | .8 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Acenaphthalene | 0.6 | 0 | 0.4 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 0.2 | 0.4 | | | | .3 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Acenaphthene | 1 | 9 | 8.3 | 9.6 | 9.7 | 1.8 | 11.9 | | | 3.6 | .0 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Fluorene | 1 | 7 | 8.0 | 5.2 | 1.8 | 0.1 | 9.9 | | | 1.6 | .8 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Phenanthrene | 3 | 23 | 2 | 1 | 0.3 | U | 27.7 | | | 2.8 | .5 | 3.1 | 5.4 | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Anthracene | 4.7 | 3 | 3.0 | 2.7 | 2.2 | 0.5 | 3.9 | | | | .2 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2-Methylanthracene | 5.2 | 3 | 3.7 | 4.0 | 4.2 | 1.5 | 4.4 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Anthraquinone | 3.3 | 2 | 1.9 | U | U | U | 2.9 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Fluoranthene | 1 | 11 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 7.6 | 14.4 | | | 6.2 | .5 | 1.5 | 3.3 | 3.5 | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Pyrene | 1 | 7 | 7.3 | 8.2 | 8.3 | 4.7 | 9.8 | | | 0.4 | .8 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Benzo\[b\]fluorene | 2.5 | 1 | 1.7 | 1.8 | 2.0 | 1.2 | 2.0 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Chrysene | 2.7 | 1 | 1.8 | 2.0 | 2.1 | 1.2 | 2.4 | | | | .8 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Benzo\[a\]pyrene | 2.1 | 0 | U | U | U | 0.9 | 2.0 | | | | .5 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Benz\[a\]anthracene | 2.9 | 2 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.2 | 1.3 | 2.7 | | | | .0 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Benzo\[b\]f | 2.9 | 2 | 2.0 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 1.7 | 2.8 | | luoranthene/benzo\[k\]- | | .8 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Fluoranthene | | | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | In | 1.9 | 1 | 1.4 | 1.4 | 1.2 | 0.9 | 1.8 | | deno\[1,2,3-c,d\]pyrene | | .3 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,6-Xylenol | 1.1 | 0 | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.1 | U | 0.8 | | | | .6 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | o-Cresol | 4.2 | 2 | 0.3 | 0.2 | 0.2 | U | 4.9 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,5-Xylenol | 0.1 | U | U | U | U | U | 0.1 | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,4-Xylenol | 0.2 | U | U | U | U | U | 0.2 | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | p-Cresol | 2.0 | 0 | U | U | U | U | 2.3 | | | | .1 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | m-Cresol | 2.5 | 1 | U | U | U | U | 2.3 | | | | .9 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2,3-Xylenol | 0.2 | 0 | U | U | U | U | 0.1 | | | | .1 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 3,5-Xylenol | 1.3 | 0 | 0.2 | 0.1 | U | U | 1.1 | | | | .5 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 3,4-Xyleno | 0.4 | 0 | 0.1 | 0.1 | U | U | 0.3 | | l/2,3,5-trimethylphenol | | .1 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | PCP | 0.1 | 0 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | | | | .3 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 2-Picoline | 0.3 | 0 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.1 | U | U | | | | .2 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | 3-Picoline/4-picoline | U | U | U | U | U | U | U | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Lutidine | 0.9 | 0 | 0.6 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.6 | 0.8 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Thianaphthene | 2 | 12 | 2.6 | 1.2 | 0.5 | 0.3 | 23.4 | | | 0.3 | .5 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Quinoline | 4.3 | 1 | 0.5 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 0.2 | 3.6 | | | | .7 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Isoquinoline | 1.5 | 0 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.1 | U | 1.4 | | | | .9 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Quinaldine | 3.4 | 3 | 2.8 | 2.4 | 0.6 | 0.3 | 4.9 | | | | .2 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Lepidine | 0.7 | 0 | 0.4 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.2 | 0.7 | | | | .6 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Dibenzofuran | 5.5 | 5 | 5.8 | 3.4 | 1.0 | 0.7 | 6.1 | | | | .9 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Dibenzothiophene | 3.8 | 2 | 3.1 | 2.0 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 3.1 | | | | .8 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Acridine | 2 | 18 | 1 | 1.9 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 26.2 | | | 2.5 | .2 | 4.1 | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ | Carbazole | 2.9 | 2 | 1.2 | 0.9 | 0.8 | 1.0 | 3.0 | | | | .1 | | | | | | +-------------------------+-----+----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-------+ Note: Reported data are averages of duplicate samples. U - Below the detection limit. **Hurst, C.J. et al., 1996** An aerobic and anaerobic soil metabolism study was conducted at the Champion International superfund site in Libby, Montana. The contaminated soil samples were spiked with for analysis. Biodegradation for ^14^C-pyrene and seventeen PAHs (including pyrene) was followed by 0 percent, 2 percent, and 21 percent oxygen as soil gas. The PAHs chosen for the study were: naphthalene, acenaphthylene, acenaphthene, fluorene, anthracene, phenanthrene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benzo\[a\]anthracene, chrysene, benzo\[b\]fluoranthene, benzo\[k\]fluoranthene, benzo\[a\] pyrene, dibenzo\[a,h\] anthracene, benzo\[g,h,i\]perylene, and indeno(1,2,3-cd). After 70 days, 45 to 55 percent of the ^14^C-pyrene was mineralized in 2 percent and 21 percent oxygen. At 0 percent oxygen, no statistically significant mineralization was observed. For eight of the non-radiolabeled PAHs, biodegradation in an oxygen atmosphere ranged from 6.2 percent (naphthalene) to 57 percent (pyrene). The remaining PAHs were below the limit of detection. **IV Leaching and Adsorption/Desorption** **Villholth, K.G., 1999** The objective of this study was to determine the amount of colloids in the groundwater of two creosote-contaminated aquifers in Denmark and to determine the *in situ* distribution of the PAHs between the dissolved and colloidal phases in the water. The colloids identified at the sites were clay minerals, iron-oxides, iron-sulfides, and quartz particles containing significant amounts of organic carbon. The results of a two-step fractionation procedure, showed that the PAHs partitioned to the course (\>100 nm) colloid fraction (log K~oc~) and was linearly correlated with the PAH octanol-water partition coefficient (log K~ow~), indicating the partitioning was hydrophobic. This suggested a potential for colloid-facilitated transport of PAHs. The lack of PAH partitioning to colloids \<100 nm, indicates a weaker binding to the smaller, more hydrophilic colloids in the groundwater. **Rutherford, P.M., et al., 1997** This study was designed to determine if a 10-week slurry phase bioremediation treatment altered the desorptive properties of two-creosote-contaminated soils. Soil samples were collected from an inactive wood preserving facility in Edmonton, Alberta (EDM site) and Prince Albert, Saskatchewan (PAA site). For bioremediation, soil samples were combined with aqueous nutrient media under aerobic conditions in a bioreactor. Desorption of ^14^C-naphthalene from the contaminated soils was measured before and after bioremediation in a sequential batch experiment. The contributions of the contaminant organic phase and the soil organic matter to desorption were determined by experiments on soils with and without nonaqueous phase liquid contaminants. Results showed that total extractable organics were 43 to 31 percent lower in the bioremediated soils for both sites. This reduction in total organic carbon content lowered the sorption capacity of the soils. The desorptive partition coefficient (K~d~) for the nonbioremediated EDM soil was significantly (p = 0.022) greater than the nonbioremediated PAA soil. However, after bioremediation, no significant difference was found between the two soils (p = 0.11). Although the K~d~ decreased due to bioremediation, the carbon-based partition coefficients on the nonaqueous phase liquid did not change significantly once the changes in the overall composition of the soil had been accounted for. **Priddle, M.W. and K.T.B. MacQuarrie, 1994** A laboratory study was conducted to evaluate the dissolution of industrial creosote in water using a generator column to determine the impacts on groundwater quality and the kinetics of the dissolution process. The laboratory results were also compared to an equilibrium model and a quasi-kinetic model. For the laboratory study, the generator column was packed with a 10 percent creosote effluent obtained from Carbochem Inc. (Hamilton, Ontario, Canada). The study focused on 10 specific PAHs including naphthalene, phenanthrene and benzo\[a\]pyrene. A mass-transfer rate test was conducted to evaluate the rate the creosote components reached equilibrium concentrations. Additionally, two long-term dissolution tests were conducted by passing water through the column for a designated period of time. The mean contact time in the column was 0.56 and 1.02 hours during the two testing periods. The results of the mass transfer test indicated that the creosote components reached equilibrium with the aqueous phase in about 60 hours. The two long-term tests found that the concentrations of the targeted PAHs detected in the effluent all decreased steadily throughout the monitoring period. The initial concentrations of the components were approximately 40 percent of the calculated effective solubilities. The higher molecular weight compounds were not detected which was expected due to the low effective solubilities (\<0.002 mg/L^-1^). Overall, the ratios of these concentrations were in proportion to their effective solubilities which were calculated using Raoult's law and the creosote composition data. **Padma, T.V. et al., 1999** A study was conducted to monitor the effects that various processes (tides, storms, bioturbation, shipping, and dredging) may have in the dissolution and resuspension of sediment-associated PAHs. These environmental processes were mimicked by creating a water-soluble fraction from the creosote-contaminated sediment and artificial estuarine water. Creosote-contaminated sediment samples were collected near Atlantic Wood Industries on the Southern Branch of the Elizabeth River in Virginia. The results showed that the creosote-contaminated sediment source contained more intermediate weight (three aromatic rings) and high molecular weight (more than three aromatic rings) PAHs, in contrast to the water-soluble fraction, which contained high levels of low molecular weight (less than three aromatic rings) and heterocyclic compounds. These differences were the result of fractionation and degradation of creosote in the water soluble fraction. **EPRI, 1992** EPA's toxicity characteristic (TC) rule declares three phenolic isomers (o-, m-, and p-cresol) are highly toxic, and therefore, regulated substances. The Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) used the TCLP technique, a leaching method (EPRI, 1992), to determine the concentrations of the three phenolic isomers that leached from treated wood poles and crossarms when nearing disposal. The EPA regulation requires that the leachates should not contain \>200 mg/L; otherwise, the treated wood is classified as hazardous and can not be disposed of as solid waste into landfills. Fifty four samples from seventeen poles and six crossarms, (ages 7 to 53 years) were chosen from the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Midwest, North Central and Western regions of the United States. Southern Pine, Douglas Fir, Western Red Cedar, and Cedar woods were chosen for the study. Total cresol concentration (all three isomers) present in the leachates ranged from below the detection limit (0.01 mg/mL) to 14.95 mg/mL, and the mean concentration was 1.63 mg/mL. This was below the Agency's toxic characteristic regulatory level of 200 mg/mL. **Gile, J.D. et al., 1982** Seven blocks of Ponderosa pine blocks (3.3 x 2.6 x14 cm) pressure-treated with radiolabeled phenanthrene, acenaphthene, and bis(tri-n-butyl oxide) were tested in a terrestrial microcosm chamber (TMC-II). This microcosm contained Williamette Valley topsoil, ryegrass, invertebrates, and a gravid gray-tailed vole. The impregnation mixture contained dieldrin as a reference compound. The study was conducted for 2.5 months at which time it was found that 95 percent of the pesticides remained in the wood and most of the materials that leached remained in the upper soil layer immediately surrounding the pine blocks. In the plants of the microcosm, 0.7 ppm of dieldrin was detected while phenanthrene was detected at a 8.8 ppm. Bioaccumulation in the invertebrates was variable and the concentration of phenanthrene in the vole body was 7.2 ppm, while acenaphthene was detected at 37.0 ppm. **Wendt, P.H., 1996** In a six-week two-phase field study, private, residential docks located on ten tidal creeks at South Carolina's Charleston Harbor Estuary treated recently with CCA, but originally treated with creosote were studied. Samples were collected from sediments and oysters (*Crassostrea virginica*) \<1 meter, and \>10 meters from the docks. Reference samples were also collected. Mean concentrations of the 12 PAHs monitored from the sediment were 978.3 µg/kg (dry wt.), 690.0 µg/kg (dry wt.), and 1183.8 µg/kg (dry wt.) for the \<1 m, \>10 m, and the reference samples, respectively. Mean PAH concentrations from the oysters were 3547.3 µg/kg (dry wt.), 2057.6 µg/kg (dry wt.), and 2173.1 µg/kg (dry wt.) for the \<1 m, \>10 m, and reference samples, respectively. The study author reported that these concentrations were generally within the range of values found at nearby marinas. Most concentrations of PAHs in whole sediments were generally below Long et al.'s (1995) "ER-L" (Effects Range-Low) levels, suggesting that these values reported were insufficient to cause any adverse biological/toxic effects. **Bestari K.T. Jim et al., 1998a** In a field study, the fate of creosote components in aqueous medium, sediment, and adsorption processes (using PVC strips) were studied using fourteen microcosms (12,000 L volume) filled with sediment consisting of 53 percent sand/gravel, 25 percent silt, and 22 percent clay. The microcosms were treated with liquid creosote in concentrations ranging from 0.06 ppm to 109 ppm. The concentrations for 15 PAHs (recognized by the Agency as the priority pollutants) showed a rapid decline in the water. Two days after the application, total PAHs measured in the water were 7.3 μg/L (0.06 ppm application) and 5,803.2 μg/L (109 ppm application). By Day 84, total PAHs remaining in the water were 0.80 μg/L and 13.9 μg/L from the 0.06 ppm and 109 ppm applications, respectively. In sediments, total PAHs ranged from 0.91 μg/g to 63.9 μg/g at Day 28, then declining thereafter. A similar trend of declining concentrations was shown by the PAHs on the PVC strips. A mass balance calculation reported a loss of 88.3 percent of PAHs from the microcosms after one month. Based on the total PAH concentrations, the half-life of most PAHs in water was reported to be approximately one week. **Bestari, K.T. Jim et al., 1998b** Marine-grade Douglas fir pilings (15 to 20 cm diameter and 1.2 m length) were pressure-treated with creosote using the same concentrations (0.06 ppm to 109 ppm) as in Bestari K.T. Jim et al. (1998a) in a similar simulated microcosm. This microcosm contained sediment, rooted and floating macrophytes, and fish and invertebrate communities which consisted of phytoplankton, zooplankton, and benthos. The total organic content was 5.1 percent in water that had been circulated in the microcosm through a holding tank for four weeks to maximize the chemical and biological compositions. The pressure-treated pilings were suspended vertically in each microcosm in such a way that they were just above the water surface and not touching the sediment. The experiment was conducted for one year beginning in 1994. Water samples were collected prior to the creosote treatment (Day 1), Day 2, and Day 5 after the treatment, then weekly up to four weeks and biweekly thereafter for twelve weeks. Quantitative analyses were performed on these solutions. The analysis showed that the concentration of PAHs increased rapidly through Day 7 after the treatment (7.3 μg/L to 97.2 μg/L) and then declined to concentrations close to the background (0.80 to 6.7 μg/L) by the end of the study (Day 84). Total PAHs from the leachates did bind to the PVC liner, concentrations on Day 31 ranged from 0.3 to 2.4 μg/cm^2^, and ranged from 0.2 to 2.2 μg/cm^2^ 58 days after the treatment. The rate of loss of creosote from the pilings was 50 μg/cm^2^/day. The study suggested that the rapid loss of creosote was primarily due to degradation processes like photolysis and microbial decomposition, and partial adsorption to PVC liners. The PAHs identified in this and previous experiments were: naphthalene, acenaphthene, fluorene, phenanthrene, anthracene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benz\[a\]anthracene, chrysene, benzo\[b\]pyrene, benzo\[k\]fluoranthene, benzo\[a\]pyrene, benzo\[ghi\]perylene, indeno\[1,2,3-cd\]pyrene and dibenz\[a,h\]anthracene. These are fifteen of the sixteen PAHs that EPA has recognized as EPA Priority Pollutants. **Wan, M.T., 1994** In this study, runoff water from pressure-treated utility and telephone wood poles was collected from fourteen utility and six railway ditches. The utility and telephone poles were initially pressure-treated with pentachlorophenol and later *in situ* treated with a mixture of creosote and chlorophenols. The treatment was typically at the base up to 0.5 m above and below soil level, and these applications were either used as wrappings or painted with a creosote/chlorophenol mixture. The runoff water was analyzed for the presence of 15 PAHs. These right of way (ROW) ditches which were sampled flow into salmon streams in the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island of British Columbia, Canada. Ditches of parklands, farmlands, and railway ROWs were also sampled to establish background and reference PAH concentrations. PAHs were not detected in the parkland ditches; however, they were found in farmlands and in utility and railway ROW ditches. The data from this study showed that the maximum concentrations of the PAHs are in the wood and the PAHs that leach out of the wood were mostly present around the base of the poles. Tables 6 through 8 summarize the presence/absence of the PAHs in various environmental compartments. **Table 6. PAHs in Treated Wood** +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | **Compound** | **Poles** | **Railway Ties | | | | (mg/kg)** | | | **(mg/kg)** | | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Acenaphthene | 3,566 | 1,238 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Acenaphthylene | 244 | 77 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Anthracene | 17,686 | 5,100 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Benz\[a\]anthracene | 1,938 | 465 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Benz\[b+k\]fluoranthene | 811 | 254 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Benz\[a\]pyrene | 1,116 | 461 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Benz\[ghi\]perylene | 69 | 37 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Chrysene | 1,093 | 383 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Dibenz\[a,h\]anthracene | 7 | 16 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Fluoranthene | 7,832 | 1,880 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Fluorene | 5,313 | 1,141 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Indeno\[1,2,3-cd\]pyrene | 36 | 40 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Naphthalene | 1,514 | 342 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Phenanthrene | 15,378 | 3,173 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Pyrene | 5,289 | 1,487 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Total PAHs | 61,182 | 16,094 | +---------------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+ > Note: These PAHs were extracted from a sample of wood chips/scraps > which were collected and made into a composite mixture of 25 poles or > 25 railway ties. **Table 7. PAHs in Ditch Water of Parklands, Farmlands and Railway Rights-of-Way in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia** -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- **Compound** **Parkland **Farm **Railway **Railway Ditches Ditches Ditches Ditches (w/o (μg/L)** (μg/L)** (w/poles, poles, μg/L)** μg/L)** -------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------ Acenaphthene ND 1.04 206 0.57 Acenaphthylene ND 1.72 5.5 1 Anthracene ND 0.16 81 01.3 Benz\[a\]anthracene ND 0.10 195 0.12 Benz\[b+k\]fluoranth-ene ND 0.19 144 0.19 Bnez\[a\]pyrene ND 0.10 43 0.10 Benz\[g,h,i\]perylene ND 0.19 12.2 0.14 Chrysene ND 0.10 228 0.17 Dibenz\[a,h\]anthrace-ne ND 0.26 4.1 0.10 Fluoranthene ND 0.30 2035 0.26 Fluorene ND 0.30 116 0.22 Indeno\[1,2,3-cd\]pyrene ND 0.16 17.6 0.15 Naphthalene ND 0.35 8.5 0.19 Phenanthrene ND 0.40 1027 0.44 Pyrene ND 0.19 1233 0.19 Total PAHs ND 5.56 5,356.3 3.97 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Note: In all cases the number of sample sites was never more than two. ND = Not detected. **Table 8. PAH Concentrations in Utility ROW Sediments in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia** +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | **Compound** | **C | | | | | | oncent | | | | | | ration | | | | | | (µ | | | | | | g/L)** | | | | +===================+========+============+=============+============+ | | **Base | **Ditches | **Ditches | **Ditches | | | of | 4 m** | Adjacent to | 4 m | | | Pole** | | Pole | Downstream | | | | **Upstream | (0.1-0.3 | of Pole** | | | | of Pole** | m)** | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Acenaphthene | 221 | 0.11 | 1.03 | ND | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Acenaphthylene | 36 | ND | 1.37 | ND | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Anthracene | 706 | 0.16 | 2.12 | 0.09 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Be | 93 | 0.05 | 0.46 | 0.25 | | nz\[a\]anthracene | | | | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Benz\[b+k\] | 71 | ND | 0.65 | 0.73 | | fluoranthene | | | | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Benz\[a\]pyrene | 67 | 0.11 | 0.41 | 0.64 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Benz | 73 | ND | 0.43 | 0.20 | | \[g,h,i\]perylene | | | | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Chrysene | 92 | 0.11 | 0.41 | 0.17 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Dibenz | 91 | ND | 0.20 | 0.27 | | \[a,h\]anthracene | | | | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Fluoranthene | 211 | 0.19 | 1.24 | 0.24 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Fluorene | 469 | 0.10 | 1.58 | ND | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Indeno\ | 75 | 0.25 | 0.71 | 0.34 | | [1,2,3-cd\]pyrene | | | | | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Naphthalene | 34 | 0.12 | 0.08 | ND | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Phenanthrene | 666 | 0.07 | 3.29 | 0.12 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Pyrene | 171 | 0.06 | 1 | 0.22 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ | Total PAHs | 3076 | 1.33 | 15 | 3.27 | +-------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------+ Note: Sampling size varied from 5 to a maximum of 8 samples. ND = Not detected **Middaugh, D.P. et al., 1991** An Agency sponsored study was conducted on the leaching of creosote components from an abandoned American Creosote Works Site, a freshwater stream that flows into the Florida Pensacola Bay. This site also utilized pentachlorophenol (PCP) and chromated copper arsenate (CCA). Adjacent to the site, a well was dug to a depth of 21 meters and the ground water was analyzed. The PAH concentrations in groundwater were reported as follows: phenanthrene (32.8 mg/kg), naphthalene (28.8mg/kg), fluoranthene (16.1 mg/kg), acenaphthene (13.6 mg/kg), fluorene(11.6 mg/kg), pyrene (10.4 mg/kg), 1-methyl naphthalene(9.5 mg/kg), and 2-methylanthracene (5.2 mg/kg). The concentrations of other PAHs detected were either less than 5 percent of the ones noted above or were very low. **V Bioaccumulation** **Stegman and Teal, 1973 and Varsani, et al., 1978** Studies on bioaccumulation showed that in an aquatic habitat, organisms such as fish, shellfish, and crustaceans readily accumulate PAHs from the environment and store them at a high level in their tissues. **Southworth, G.R., etal., 1978** A study was designed to investigate the bioaccumulation of seven selected PAHs in *Daphnia pulex*. The PAHs selected were: naphthalene, anthracene, phenanthrene, pyrene, 9-methylanthracene, benz\[a\]anthracene, and perylene. Bioaccumulation corresponded to the octanol/water partition coefficients (K~OW~). The benz\[a\]anthracene bioaccumulation factor was 10,000 fold higher and about 100 fold higher for naphthalene. A bioaccumulation study on clams (*Rangia cuneate*) was also conducted after a creosote spill into Bayou Bonfuca at the American Creosote Works Plant site at Slidell, Louisiana. Results showed that the levels of PAHs increased gradually for two weeks and increased dramatically by week four at the monitoring station closest to the spill site. The PAH results are shown in Table 9. Another station (control station) in the same study showed evidence of depuration after two weeks and equilibration after four weeks. The concentration of PAHs in water was very low at the site close to the spill (13 ppb in two weeks and 26 ppb after four weeks). Among the PAHs, benzopyrenes were detected at a very high level of 600 ppb at the station closest to the spill site. Other studies (Politzer, 1985; Neff, 1976) also showed that depuration of PAHs in bivalves vary from a couple of weeks to a few months. These studies support the possibility of bioavailability of PAHs and contamination of the food chain. **Table 9. Amounts of PAHs Detected in Clams at the Closest Station to the Spill Site** +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | **PAH Component** | **Week 0 - | **Week | **Week 4** | | | Pre-exposure | 2** | | | | (ppb)** | | **(ppb)** | | | | **(ppb)** | | +======================+=====================+===========+============+ | Naphthalene | 43 | 60 | 120 | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Bi | 17 | 13 | 42 | | phenyl/Acenapthylene | | | | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Fluorene | 7 | 5 | 11 | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Phenanthrene/ | 34 | 10 | 28 | | Anthracene | | | | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Fluoranthene/Pyrene | 120 | 88 | 130 | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Benz\[a\ | 41 | 81 | 190 | | ]anthracene/Chrysene | | | | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ | Benzopyrenes | 87 | 132 | 600 | +----------------------+---------------------+-----------+------------+ **Spacie, A., et al., 1983** Bluegill sunfish were used to investigate the uptake (bioaccumulation), biotransformation, and depuration rates of anthracene and benzo\[a\]pyrene. The uptake half-life for anthracene was 0.019 hours and did not appear to be affected by the exposure concentration and humics. The uptake half-life of benzo\[a\]pyrene was also similar, but was affected by the presence of humics. Biotransformation for anthracene was determined to be 0.22 nmol/hr while for benzo\[a\]pyrene varied from 0.044 nmol/hr to 0.088 nmol/hr, between 1 and 2 hours of exposure. The depuration half-life for anthracene was 17 hours and 67 hours for benzo\[a\]pyrene. Due to the biotransformation, the bioconcentrations for both anthracene and benzo\[a\]pyrene were lower than predicted from the K~ow~. **Tay, K.L., et al., 1992** A detailed bioassessment study was conducted in Canada on the Halifax Harbor Sediment. Bioaccumulation of PAHs and other organic and inorganic contaminants were investigated on the bivalve mollusk (*Macoma balthica*). The exposure of the species to the contaminated sediment was 30 days. The study authors suggested that the duration of 30 days may have been too short for uptake of the PAHs into the *Macoma* system. Organic content in the Tuft's Cove sediment was high and that may have prevented the bioaccumulation process. Table 10 summarizes the results. **Table 10. Bioaccumulation of PAHs in *Macoma balthica*** +--------------------------------------+-------------------------------+ | **Station** | **PAHs in Tissues** | | | | | | **(mg/kg wet wt.)** | +======================================+===============================+ | Walton (Control sediment) | 0.11 | +--------------------------------------+-------------------------------+ | Drakes Gut 1 (Reference sediment) | 0.13 | +--------------------------------------+-------------------------------+ | Tuft's Cove (Contaminated sediment) | ND | +--------------------------------------+-------------------------------+ | Original tissues (not exposed to | 0.01 | | test sediment) | | +--------------------------------------+-------------------------------+ **J.F. Elder and P. Dresler, 1988** A study on bioaccumulation was conducted on mollusk species at the Pensacola Bay, 500 m from the creosote wood-preserving facility in Pensacola, Florida. Only four PAH compounds (phenanthrene, fluoranthene, pyrene, and naphthalene) were found in the mollusk species studied. Depuration rates were not reported. The same study also estimated the PAH presence in water and the surface layer of estuarine sediments. The study, conducted on seven sites, found that the sediments of the drainage streams were heavily contaminated with PAHs. The analysis of sediments at the sites showed very little contamination with PAHs except at one site (Site 4). This site was closest to the wood-preserving facility. The same study also reported that the bioaccumulation of fluoranthene, pyrene and phenanthrene in both species of mollusks was ten times higher at the test site than at the control site. Table 11 summarizes the results. Most of the PAHs were insoluble in water and the solubilities were inversely related to the molecular weights of the polyaromatics. Bioaccumulation of a pesticide depended on many external factors such as resistance to biodegradation, chemical degradation, photolysis, tendency for migration, and bioavailability. The data on bioaccumulation of PAHs are not extensive; however, a few generalities emerged from the existing data. First, molecules with lower molar masses had a tendency to bioaccumulate more than high molar mass substances. Second, bioaccumulation was also dependent on the concentrations of a substance. For example, between naphthalene (two fused-ring compound) and phenanthrene (three fused-ring compound), it is the later which was found to bioaccumulate more than naphthalene because in the original mixture of PAHs, phenanthrene was 20 percent of the mixture while naphthalene was 3 percent. **Table 11. Concentrations of PAHs in the Sediment and Discharge Stream at Pensacola Bay** +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | **PAH** | **Stream | **Stream | **Pensacola | **Pensacola | | | Site 3 | Site 2 | Bay** | Bay/ Other | | | (g/kg)** | (g/kg)** | | Sites | | | | | **Site 4 | (g/kg)** | | | | | (g/kg)** | | +==============+=============+=============+=============+=============+ | Naphthalene | 300 | 200 | ND | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Phenanthrene | ND | 12000 | ND | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Fluoranthene | 62000 | 17000 | 190 | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Pyrene | 32000 | 11000 | 160 | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Ben | 15000 | 5000 | 75 | ND | | zoanthracene | | | | | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Chrysene | 10000 | 7000 | 100 | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Acenaphthene | 19000 | 5000 | ND | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Fluorene | 32000 | 3000 | ND | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | Anthracene | 140000 | 3000 | ND | ND | +--------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ ND - Not detected. The limit of detection was 40 g/kg. **Bruner, K.A. et al., 1994** To measure PAH bioconcentration factors, a study was conducted on pre-spawning (high lipid) and post-spawning (low lipid) mussel populations of zebra mussel in the Great Lakes. Pre-spawning mussels had greater bioconcentration factors and a faster rate of accumulation for benzo\[a\]pyrene than post-spawning mussels. Lipid content, however, did not influence bioconcentration factors or the rates of accumulation. Rates of depuration were not influenced by either factor (high or low lipid contents). **Hellou, J.G., et al., 1990** A study was conducted on the bioaccumulation of PAHs in marine mammals. Four species of seals and six species of whales from the waters around Newfoundland and Labrador were utilized as test subjects. Accumulated values, when expressed in terms of chrysene-equivalents were 0.10 to 1.21 ppm in the muscles of these mammals on a dry weight basis. **Howard, P.H. et al., 1991** It was suggested, based on theoretical calculations and modeling, that the half-lives of the PAHs can be estimated in air, water, soil and sediments. This data are presented in Table 12. From the table, one can arbitrarily divide the PAHs into three groups: PAHs with two aromatic fused rings, with three aromatic fused rings, and 4-5 aromatic fused rings. The study authors came to the following conclusions: 1) The half-lives of the PAHs in these environmental compartments increased as the complexity of the molecules increased. Generally, half-lives of 2 aromatic fused rings \< 3 aromatic fused rings \< 4/5 aromatic fused rings; 2) K~ow~ values also show a similar trend: three sets of K~ow~s were observed. The K~ow~ values ranged from 3 to 4, from 4 to 5, and 6 and above. As noted for the half-lives, the Log K~ow~ increased as the complexity of the molecule increased; 3) In general, the half-lives in air and water environmental compartments were lower than in soils/sediments, since the adsorption constant in these two compartments were larger than in air and water media. Those molecules with a longer half-life also exhibited persistence in that environmental compartment. PAHs were more persistence in soils/sediments than in other environmental compartments; and 4) The 4/5 aromatic-fused ring molecules were persistent and because they also had high K~ow~s, they were also bioaccumulative in the organisms present in the soil/sediments. **Table 12. Estimated/Modeled PAH Half-lives in Air, Water, Soil and Sediment** <table> <colgroup> <col style="width: 23%" /> <col style="width: 7%" /> <col style="width: 7%" /> <col style="width: 9%" /> <col style="width: 8%" /> <col style="width: 7%" /> <col style="width: 8%" /> <col style="width: 12%" /> <col style="width: 7%" /> <col style="width: 6%" /> </colgroup> <thead> <tr class="header"> <th><strong>Compound</strong></th> <th><p><strong>Air/</strong></p> <p><strong>Class</strong></p></th> <th><strong>Half- live</strong></th> <th><strong>Water/Class</strong></th> <th><strong>Half-life</strong></th> <th><strong>Soil/Class</strong></th> <th><strong>Half-life</strong></th> <th><strong>Sediment/Class</strong></th> <th><strong>Half-life</strong></th> <th><strong>K<sub>ow</sub></strong></th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr class="odd"> <td>Indan</td> <td>2</td> <td>1 day</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>3.33</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Naphthalene</td> <td>2</td> <td>1 day</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>3.37</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>1-methyl naphthalene</td> <td>2</td> <td>1 day</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>3.87</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Acenaphthalene</td> <td>3</td> <td>2 days</td> <td>5</td> <td>3 wks.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>3.92</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Fluorene</td> <td>3</td> <td>2 days</td> <td>5</td> <td>3 wks.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>4.12</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Phenathrene</td> <td>3</td> <td>2 days</td> <td>5</td> <td>3 wks.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>4.57</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Anthracene</td> <td>3</td> <td>2 days</td> <td>5</td> <td>3 wks.</td> <td>7</td> <td>8 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>4.54</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Pyrene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>5.18</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Fluoranthene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>5.22</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Chrysene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>1.65</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Benz[a]anthracene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>5.91</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Benzo[k]flouranthene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>6.00</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td>Benzo[a]pyrene</td> <td>4</td> <td>1 wk.</td> <td>6</td> <td>2 mos.</td> <td>8</td> <td>2 yrs.</td> <td>9</td> <td>~ 6 yrs.</td> <td>6.04</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> **VI Migration of PAHs From Poles to Soils** **Mississippi State University, 1981** Fifty-six soil samples were collected radially around fourteen creosote-treated poles and analyzed for migration of creosote components into the surrounding soils. The concentrations of naphthalene, 2-methylnaphthalene, 1-methylnapthalene, and biphenyl varied from 25 to 50 ηg/g. Acenaphthylene, acenaphthene, dibenzofuran, fluorene, phenanthrene, and anthracene were present at lower concentrations than in the original mixture of creosote. The author suggested that vaporization, water solubility, and biological degradation might be contributing factors for reduction in the concentrations of these polycyclic components of creosote. Fluoranthene, pyrene, carbazole, 1,2-benzanthracene, and chrysene were persistent in the soil around the poles and the concentration of all the components decreased as the distance from the poles increased. **McGroddy, S.E. and J.W. Farrington, no date available** In a study on sediment porewater partitioning of PAHs in Boston Harbor, it was shown that the PAH concentrations measured in sediments and porewaters from three cores were notably lower than the amounts of the PAHs predicted by two- and three-phase equilibrium partitioning models. The study author suggested lower amounts might have been available for partitioning in sediment porewaters. **K. Brooks' Study, 2004 :** **"Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Migration From Creosote-Treated Railway Ties into Ballast and Adjacent Wetlands.** \*A simulated mesocosm on a wetland was created in Will County, Illinois. \*Newly Treated, untreated and weathered-treated railroad ties were placed in this simulated wetland. \*The study was conducted for two years. \*Samples were analyzed from **[ballast]{.underline} ( surface on which ties are placed), [wetland sediments, groundwater, stormwater, and soil cores.]{.underline}** \*The detection and analysis of the PAHs was done: by examining direct contamination from surface stormwater, PAHs infiltration into shallow ground water, and lateral distance from the railroad ties (adjacent wetland soils). \*PAHs were detected up to 60 cm vertically down into the ballast. \*Mesocosm soil type was: Romeo Silty clay loam. \*Baseline PAH concentrations were determined using EPA's Method 8310. The samples were extracted by Soxhlet extraction method. \*p-Terphenyl was used as a surrogate for PAH determinations. \*Baseline PAH levels in the surface soils on this simulated wetland was measured at 0.00 to 0.17 µg/g. \* Retentions for new railway ties varied from 28 to 57.28 kg/m^3^ and for the old railway ties it varied from 39.36 to 55.52 kg/m^3^ Each number represents an average of 12 borings. \*13 stormwater samples which included newly treated, untreated and weathered ties were analyzed using EPA's Method 2003a( GC/MS technique). \*229 samples collected form the surface soils of the wetland at a distance of 0, 0.25, 0.50 and 0.75 meters were collected and analyzed using EPA's Method 2003b(HPLC technique) \*174 samples of ballast (rock) from around (east/west) the railway ties at the distance of 5, 20 and 30 cm were collected and analyzed using modified EPA method 8310 (HPLC technique). \* 36 core samples of ballast rock and 11 sediments) collected at a distance 10 cm form each other (up to 60 cm) were collected and analyzed using EPA's method 8310. \*LOD of the analytical methods used was set between 0.20 to 0.100 µg/g. \* First sample analysis was done 10 days after the construction of the simulated wetland. Thereafter the sample analysis and data collections were done at 3, 6, 9, 12 , 15 and 18 months. \*The measured concentrations of PAHs form new, weathered generally declined progressively from 5 cm to 30 cm distances for all samples taken after 10 days, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and 18 months. \* Similarly, core samples at 10-cm depth increment up to 60 cm down, showed that the concentration decreased from 1.207 µg/g at 0 cm to 0.482 µg/g at 60 cm depth. \* From stormwater samples collected after 18 months, two PAHs were detected from newly treated railway ties; Benzo(a)anthracene (0.00019 mg/L) and phenanthrene (0.00066 mg/L). This was observed in only one out of 16 samples that were collected. \*Fluoranthene, phenanthrene and pyrene were detected from weathered railway ties. \*Because in this particular simulated site the ballast did not have organic carbon and therefore the likelihood of microbes in such an environment were not likely to survive,. no biodegradation study was conducted. **[Conclusions:]{.underline}** This is a well designed study conducted for about two years. Sample size is also large. However, this mesocosm could not yield a biodegradation of PAH data. It should be noted that this study is not a real life wetland and no rails run on these railroad ties. Thus we do not know how the concentration of PAH leaching out, and migration would be impacted . We can ask for a mesocosm study. **LITERATURE REFERENCES** Al-Bashir, B. et al. 1990. Appl. Microbiol. Biotech. 34:414-419. Bauer, J.E. et al. 1985. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 81-90. Bauer, J.E. et al. 1988. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 1649-1655. Behymer, T.D. and R.A. Hites. 1985. Environ. Sci. Technol. 19(10):1004-1006. Bestari, K.T. Jim et al. 1998a. Distribution and composition of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons within experimental microcosms treated with liquid creosote. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 17(12):2359-2368. Bestari, K.T. Jim et al. 1998b. Distribution and composition of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons within experimental microcosms treated with creosote-impregnated douglas fir pilings. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 17(12):2369-2377. Bieri, R.H. et al. 1986. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in surface sediments from the Elizabeth River subestuary. Int. J. Environ. Anal. Chem. 26:97-113. . Bouwer, E.J. and P.L. McCarty. 1983. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 45:1295-1299. Bouwer, E.J. et al. 1996. Annals of New York Academy of Sciences. pp. 103-115. Brooks, K., 2004:PAH Migration From Creosote-Treated Railway Ties into Ballast and Adjacent Wetland, A Study conducted in will County, Illinois Bruner, K.A. et al. 1994. J. Great Lakes Research. 20:725-734. Callahan, M.A. et al. 1979. Water Related Environmental Fate of 129 Priority Pollutants, EPA-440-4-79-029a,b. Chapman, P.J. et al. 1995. Fossil Fuel Biodegradation: Laboratory Studies. Environ. Health Perspec. 103, Supplemental 5:80-83. Elder, J.F. and P. Dresler. 1988. Accumulation and bioconcentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in a nearshore estuarine environment near a Pensacola (Florida) creosote contamination site. Environmental Pollution. 49:117-132. Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). 1992. Document EPRI TR-01000870. Ehrlich, G.G. et al. 1982. Groundwater. 20(4):703-710. Flyvberg, J.E. et al. 1993. J. Contamin. Hydrology. 12:133-150. Fowler, M.G. et al. 1993. Preliminary results from a field experiment investigating the fate of some creosote components in a natural aquifer. Org. Geochem. 22:641-649. Fukuda, K. et al. 1988. Chemosphere. 17(4):651-659. Gevao, B. and K.C. Jones. 1998. Kinetics and potential significance of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon desorption from creosote-treated wood. Environ. Sci. Tech. 32:640-646. Gile, J.D. et al. 1982. J. Agric. Food Chem. 30:295-301. Godsy, E.M. et al. 1992. Ground Water. 30(2):232-242. Goerlitz, D.F. et al. 1985. Environ. Sci. Tech. 19(10):955-961. Grbic-Galic, D. et al. 1991. Anaerobic degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons and aerobic degradation of trichloroethylene by subsurface microorganisms. In: Organic Substances and Sediments in Water, R.A. Baker, Ed., Lewis Publishers, Michigan:239-266. Harris, J.C. 1982. Handbook of Chemical Property Estimation Methods. W.J. Lyman, W.F. Reehl, D.H. Rosenblatt, Eds. McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York: Chapters 7-8. Hellou, J.G. et al. 1990. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in muscle tissue of marine mammals from the Norhtwest Atlantic. Marine Pollution Bulletin. 21(10):469-473. Howard, P.H., R.S. Boethling, W.F. Jarvis, W.M. Meylan, E.M. Michalenco, Eds. 1991. Handbook of Environmental Degradation Rates, Lewis Publishers, Inc. Chelsea, Michigan, USA. Hurst, C.J. et al. 1996. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon biodegradation as a function of oxygen tension in contaminated soil. J. Haz. Materials. 51:193-208. Karthikeyan, R. and A. Bhandari. 2001. Anaerobic biotransformation of aromatic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in soil microcosms: a review. Journal of Hazardous Substance Research. 3:3-19. Kirso, U. et al. 1991. Photochemical oxidation of PAH and heteroaromatic analogues in different model conditions. Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Symposium on Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons. Kuhn, E.P. et al. 1988. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 54:490:496. Lindhardt, B. and T.H. Christensen. 1996. Volatilisation of aromatic hydrocarbons from soil: part II, fluxes from coal tar contaminated soils residing below the soil surface. Water Air Soil Pollution. 92:375-389. Long, E.R. et al. 1995. Incidence of adverse biological effects within ranges of chemical concentrations in marine and estuarine sediments. Environ. Management. 19:81-97. Mabey, W. et al. 1982. Aquatic Fate Process for Organic Priority Pollutants. EPA Report No. 440/4-81-14. Mattraw, H.C. and B.J. Frank. 1986. Movement and fate of creosote waste in ground water, Pensacola, Florida; U.S. Geological Survey toxic waste \-- ground-water contamination program. U.S. Geological Survey Water Supply Paper No.: 2285. McGroddy, S.E. and J.W. Farrington. Sediment porewater partitioning of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in three cores from Boston Harbor, Massachusetts. Environ. Sci. Technol. 29(6):1542-1550. Merril, E.G. and T.L. Wade. 1985. Carbonized coal products as a source of aromatic hydrocarbons to sediments from a highly industrialized estuary. Environ. Sci. Technol. 19:597-603. Middaugh, D.P. et al. 1991. Archives of Environ. Contamin. pp. 244-254. Mihelcic, J.R. et al. 1988. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 54:1182-1187. Mill, T. et al. 1981. Chemosphere. 10:1283-1293. Miller, M.M. et al. 1985. Environ. Sci. Technol. 19:522-529. Mississippi State University. 1981. Cooperative Agreement Number 12-156. Mueller, J.G. et al. 1991. Biodegradation of creosote in contaminated groundwater: chemical and biological assessment. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 57(5):1277-1285. Mueller, J.G. et al. 1993. Strategy using bioreactors and specially selected microorganisms for bioremediation of groundwater contaminated with creosote and pentachlorophenol. Environ. Sci. Technol. 27(4):691-698. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 1988. A Selected Summary of Data of Chemical Contaminants in Sediments Collected During 1984-1987, NTIS. Neff, J.M. et al. 1976. Marine Biology. Volume 38:279-289. Padma, T.V. et al. 1999. Toxicity of creosote water-soluble fractions generated from contaminated sediments t the bay mysid. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety. 42:171-176. Politzer, I.R. et al. 1985. Impact on Human Health of Petroleum in the Marine Environment, American Petroleum Institute (API), Washington, DC. Priddle, M.W. and K.T.B. MacQuarrie. 1994. Dissolution of creosote in groundwater: an experimental and modeling investigation. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology. 15:27-56. Rutherford, P.M., M.R. Gray, and M.J. Dudas. 1997. Desorption of \[^14^C\]naphthalene from bioremediated soils contaminated with creosote compounds. 31:2515-2519. Sharak Genther, B.R. et al. 1977. Arch. Environ. Contamin. Toxicol. 32:99-105. Shocken, M.J. et al. 1984. Bacterial oxidation of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons acenaphthene and acenaphthylene. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 48(1):10-16. Smith, J.H. et al. 1978. Environmental Pathways of Selected Chemicals in Fresh Water Systems: Part II. Laboratory Studies: 304. EPA-600/7-78-074, USEPA, Athens, Georgia. Southworth, R.G. 1977. Aquatic Toxicology, ASTM ATP 667. L.L. Marking, R.A. Kimerle, Eds., American Society for Testing and Materials: 359-380, Philadelphia. Southworth, G.R., J.J. Beauchamp, and P.K. Schmieder, 1978. Water Research. 12:973-977. Spacie, A. et al. 1983. Uptake, depuration, and biotransformation of anthracene and benzo\[a\]pyrene in bluegill sunfish. Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety. 7:330-341. Stegman, J.J. and J.M. Teal. 1973. Marine Biology. 22:37-44. Tay K.L. et al. 1992. Sediment bioassessment in Halifax Harbour. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 11:1567-1581. Verasani, U. et al. 1978. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 44:277-289. Villholth, K.G. 1999. Colloid characterization and colloidal phase partitioning of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in two creosote-contaminated aquifers in Denmark. Environ. Sci. Technol. 33:691-699. Wan, M.T. 1994. Utility right-of-way contaminants: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. J. Environ. Quality. 23:1297-1304. Webb, D.A. No date available. Creosote, its use as a wood preservative in the railroad transportation industry with environmental considerations. American Wood Preserver's Association. Wendt, P.H. et al. 1996. Wood preservatives leachates from docks in an estuarine environment. Arch. Environ. Contamin. Toxicol. 31:24-37. Zepp, R.G. et al. 1980. Assessing the photochemistry of organic pollutants in aquatic environments. In, Dynamics, Exposure and Hazard Assessment of Toxic Chemicals. R. Haque, Ed. Ann Arbor Sci. Publ. Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan: 69-110.
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30 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR ALASKA. Mr. Wickeesham. No; I never have. He did not desire it. That is why this committee has a greater duty than usual to perform. The President of the United States has been misled in this matter by people who have secured his attention and who do not, for some reason known to them, want the people to have control in that country. The situation is a pretty serious one, and deserves your most earnest consideration for those reasons. Mr. Young. Absolutely so. I think the responsibility is a great one. Mr. Wickeksham. In September, 1909, the President was in Seat-. tie, Wash. When I learned he was going there I procured a tele- fram, to be signed by all the newspapers in Alaska except two, and y the heads of the commercial bodies, and the mayors of the incorporated towns, and that telegram was sent to him on the 29th day of September, 1909, and read as follows: Fairbanks, Alaska, September 29, 1909. William H. Taft, President of the United States, Seattle, Wash.: A united press and people of Alaska, in aid of constructive legislation for the creation of a government by the people in this Territory, and in aid of the development of its natural resources, respectfully request you to recommend in your next message to Congress, and give your support to, the creation of an elective Alaskan legislature in substantial conformity with Delegate Wicker-sham's bill, introduced at the recent special session of Congress: Mayors. E. Valentine, mayor, Juneau. W. B. Watts, mayor, Nome. T. Tonseth, mayor, Chena. L. Archibald, mayor, Valdez. C. Ott, mayor, Eagle. H. Ashley, mayor, Skagway. Jos. H. Smith, mayor, Fairbanks. E. O. Smith, president, Sitka Chamber of Commerce. F. G. Hale, president, Seward Chamber of Commerce. Newspapers. Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Fairbanks Daily Times. Daily Nome Gold Digger, Nome. Daily Nome Nugget, Nome. Skagway Alaskan, Skagway. Daily Miner, Ketchikan. Daily Alaskan Dispatch, Juneau. Pioneer Press, Haines. Seward Gateway, Seward. Hot Springs Echo, Hot Springs. Tanana Leader, Fort Gibbon. Valdez Prospector, Valdez. Cordova North Star, Cordova. Tanana Miner, Chena. Daily Tanana Tribune, Fairbanks. Douglas Island News, Douglas. That telegram is signed by all the- newspapers in Alaska except two. Mr. Connell. May I ask why the two did not sign that? Mr. Wickersham. It was not signed by those two because their owners did not wish the people to have legislative power there. The Cordova Alaskan is published at Cordova. It is owned and controlled and its bills are paid by the direct representatives of the Alaska Syndicate; its editor would not sign because the big syndicate was opposed to the bill. Mr. Young. What is the business of that syndicate? Mr. Wickersham. Its business is securing and monopolizing the resources of Alaska. Mr. Houston. If you will take the time right now to tell the interests that that Alaska Syndicate owns, and the different corporations that it controls, or in which it has a controlling interest, it would be very instructive to the committee.
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HOISTING AND RIGGING **1.0 Objective** The objective of this surveillance is to examine hoisting and rigging operations to ensure that safe equipment and work practices are being used. The surveillance includes verification that hoisting and rigging work is performed in accordance with DOE requirements and best practices. **2.0 References** 2.1 DOE O 440.1A, Worker Protection Management For Doe Federal And Contractor Employees 2.2 DOE-RL-92-36, Hanford Site Hoisting and Rigging Manual **NOTE** **The DOE Hoisting and Rigging Manual should be used as the primary reference for this surveillance.** 1 **3.0 Requirements Implemented** This surveillance is conducted to implement the RL Functions, Responsibilities, and Authorities Manual (FRAM) item No. 2504. **4.0 Surveillance Activities** During this surveillance, the Facility Representative (FR) may evaluate one or more aspects of a facility\'s hoisting and rigging program. The surveillance may involve field observations of a lift, field review of equipment, a program evaluation, or a review of hoisting and rigging records. Choose one or more of the sections identified below to evaluate, as appropriate. After each question, the Hoisting and Rigging manual reference is included in brackets. Prior to initiating a surveillance, it is highly recommended that the FR review the complete sections of DOE-RL-92-36, \"Hanford Site Hoisting and Rigging Manual,\" to obtain additional information and review all detailed requirements imposed on the activity or program. This manual can be found at <http://www.hanford.gov/docs/rl9236/rl9236tc.htm>. **Surveillance Guideline** **HOISTING AND RIGGING** Surveillance No.: Facility: Date Completed: **HANFORD SITE HOISTING AND RIGGING MANUAL SECTIONS** **Section 2, Responsibilities** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Is the crane\'s rated capacity marked on each side of the crane? \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Is a supervisor or manager responsible for H&R operations at this facility? \[ 2.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Is a supervisor or manager assigned responsibility for inspection, maintenance, and repair of H&R equipment and components? \[2.2.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Do responsible inspectors, maintenance, and test personnel have access to adequate information? Such information would include: operating instructions; maintenance and repair information (instructions); manufacturer\'s recommendations concerning lubrication; wiring diagrams. \[2.2.2.c\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Is a Person-In-Charge (PIC) assigned for each critical lift? \[2.2.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Is a designated leader appointed to all H&R activities, including critical and non-critical ordinary lifts, that require more than one person? \[2.2.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Does a responsible safety organization monitor your H&R operations to ensure that they are performed safely? \[2.3.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Do all personnel involved in a hoisting and rigging activity have a clear understanding of their duties and responsibilities? \[2.2.3 through 2.2.6\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Other **Section 3, Critical Lifts** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Do critical lift procedures contain adequate and appropriate information? \[3.4.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Are critical lift procedures (and any revision) reviewed and approved by the author, responsible manager, PIC, and the Safety Organization? \[3.4.2/3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are pre-lift meeting(s) held to review procedures and resolve questions before making critical lifts? \[3.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are pre-lift meetings documented? \[3.6(2)\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Is appropriate critical lift documentation maintained for one year following the lift? \[3.6\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Other **Section 4, Personnel Qualifications And Training Requirements** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Does the contractor have a documented training and qualification program for hoisting and rigging activities? \[4.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Does the qualification program include 1) classroom or computer based training, 2) written tests, 3) On-the-job training (OJT), and 4) On-the-job evaluations (OJE). \[4.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are personnel requalified on a frequency of 36 months or less? \[4.3.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Do written, oral, and performance tests have established pass/fail criteria? \[4.6\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are qualified personnel issued qualification cards with the appropriate information? \[4.7.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Other. **Section 5, Hooks** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Are new and repaired hooks inspected to ensure compliance with applicable provisions of ASME B30.10, Hooks. \[5.4.1.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Does the operator or other designated person visually inspect the hook daily, before use? \[5.4.1.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are hooks periodically inspected by a qualified inspector on the proper frequency (depending on service classification)? Are documented records available to verify periodic hook inspections? \[5.4.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Do hook inspections look at 1) distortion, 2) wear, 3) cracks, nicks, or gouges, 4) latch engagement, and 5) hook attachment? \[5.4.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are hooks with excessive wear or deformation removed from service? \[5.4.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Do existing crane/hoist hooks rated greater or equal to 10 tons and assigned to heavy or severe service receive an NDT by a qualified inspector at the following intervals: a\. Heavy service \--annually b\. Severe service\--semi-annually (every 6 months) **Note:** Hooks in normal service do not routinely require NDT. \[5.5.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Other. +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | **Hook Service Classifications** | | | | **service, normal**\--service that involves operating at less than | | 85% of rated load except for isolated instances | | | | **service, heavy\--**service that involves operating at 85% to 100% | | of rated load as a regular specified procedure | | | | **service, severe**\--heavy service coupled with abnormal operating | | conditions | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ **Section 6, Forklift Trucks** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Does management classify and post hazardous locations before a forklift truck is assigned to work in the area? \[6.2.1.a\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Does management ensure forklift operators are properly trained and qualified? \[6.2.1.d\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Has management designated an area for battery charging of electric forklifts? \[6.2.1.e\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are personnel assigned and trained to change out LP-gas containers for LP-gas powered forklifts? \[6.2.1.f\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. For forklift trucks assigned to this facility, are frequent inspection (pre-use) inspection instructions readily available to the operator? \[6.2.2.2.b\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Are forklift truck operators at this facility familiar with and do they accomplish frequent (pre-use) inspections? \[6.2.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Examine forklift trucks at this facility to determine if the manufacturer\'s plates, tags, labels, and decals are in legible condition. \[6.2.2.d and 6.3.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Do forklift attachments (excluding fork extensions) have nameplates attached with the appropriate information? \[6.3.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Are front-end attachments used with any forklift truck(s) at this facility? If so, is the truck(s) marked to identify the attachment(s), the approximate weight of the truck and attachment combination, and the capacity of the truck with the attachment(s)? \[6.4.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 10. Is prior written approval obtained from the manufacturer prior to making modifications or additions that affect forklift capacity or safe operation? Are capacity operation and maintenance instruction plates, tags, or decals changed accordingly? \[6.4.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 11. Do management and forklift operators understand what \"free rigging\" is? Do they understand the process that is required to utilize \"free rigging\"? \[6.4.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 12. Do forklift operators understand the basis for forklift capacity and the need to \"de-rate\" a forklift for large or unusually configured loads? \[6.12.c and d\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 13. Other **Section 7, Shop Cranes** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Are operating instructions readily available for shop cranes? \[7.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Does each shop crane have the rated capacity for each specified boom and leg position marked in a prominent location? \[7.5.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Is the manufacturer\'s warning statement affixed to the shop crane? \[7.5.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Is maintenance performed for each shop crane in accordance with the manufacturer\'s instructions? \[7.7\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Other **Section 8, Wire Rope** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Identify cranes or hoists at this facility that use rotation-resistant wire rope. Are special installation, inspection, and maintenance procedures readily available for rotation-resistant wire rope? \[8.2.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Confirm that independent wire rope core (IWRC) is used on all mobile cranes and any other hoist or crane that could operate at temperatures in excess of 180F. \[8.2.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Review wire rope inspection procedures used at the facility. Do the procedures provide clear instructions/acceptance criteria that are in accordance with DOE-RL-92-36? \[8.3 and 8.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are inspection records available for wire ropes on H&R equipment at this facility? \[8.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. If wire rope is stored at this facility, is it adequately protected? \[8.5.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Other. **Section 9, Slings** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Are alloy steel chain slings properly labeled? \[9.2.2.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Does the chain sling inspection program at this facility meet the requirements of DOE-RL-92-36? \[9.2.2.6\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are periodic inspections on alloy steel chain slings documented? \[9.2.2.6.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Have wire rope slings at this facility been proof tested? \[9.2.3.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are wire rope slings labeled with a tag or other identification method that provides: manufacturer\'s name, rated load, load test date, periodic inspection due date? \[9.2.3.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Is there evidence that personnel who use wire rope slings understand and practice frequent (pre-use) inspection? \[9.2.3.8.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Review the periodic inspection program employed at this facility for wire rope slings. Is it in accordance with DOE-RL-92-36? \[9.2.3.8.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Are wire rope slings immediately removed from service if inspections identify adverse conditions? \[9.2.3.8.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Determine by field inspection if synthetic web slings are labeled to state the following: a\. Manufacturer\'s name or trademark b\. Manufacturer\'s code or stock number c\. Rated loads for the types of hitches used d\. Type of synthetic web material e\. An additional tag, sticker, or other identifier to indicate when the next periodic inspection is required. f\. Synthetic web slings used for critical lifts shall have a tag or other identifier to indicate that a proof test has been performed. \[9.2.5.1.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 10. Is there evidence that a \"before use\" inspection is done on synthetic web slings at this facility? \[9.2.5.6.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 11. Is there evidence of an acceptable periodic inspection program for synthetic web slings at this facility? (The periodic inspection shall be made at least annually and shall be documented.) \[9.2.5.6.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 12. Other **Section 10, Rigging Hardware** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Do shackles and pins have appropriate manufacturing markings? \[10.2.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Are shackles and rings properly inspected before each use? \[10.2.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are shackles used for critical-lift service proof load tested to two times the safe working load? \[10.2.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are turnbuckles used for critical-lift service initially proof tested at two times the rated capacity? Do tested turnbuckles have a tag or other marking to indicate that proof testing has been done? \[10.5.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Other. **Section 11, Below-The-Hook Lifting Devices** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Inspect below-the-hook lifting devices to determine if they are properly tagged/marked. 11.4 \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Are modifications to below-the-hook lifting devices properly analyzed and documented? \[11.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Is there an established program, including records, for periodic inspection of below-the-hook lifting devices? \[11.7.3 and 11.7.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Have below-the-hook lifting devices at this facility been subjected to a rated load test? Is documentation available to verify rated load tests? \[11.9.1.4 and/or 11.9.1.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are maintenance history files maintained for below-the-hook lifting devices? \[11.10\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Other. **Section 12, Hoists, Jib Cranes, And Monorail Systems** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Is the operation of hoists, jib cranes, and monorail systems at this facility limited to qualified personnel? \[12.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Are hoists provided with the proper identification markings ? \[12.8.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are hoists provided with the proper identification warning labels, if equivalent training has not been conveyed to and understood by the users? \[12.8.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are hand signals used for controlling hoists at this facility? If so, are hand signal charts posted conspicuously at the job site(s)? \[12.8.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. The absence of a hook throat latch is not indiscriminately allowed. Review operating conditions for any hoist hooks at this facility which operate without a throat latch. Should throat latches be installed? \[12.8.9\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. For pendant controls: a\. Are the pushbutton stations supported so that the electrical conductors are protected from strain? b\. Do pushbuttons spring return to the off position when pressure is released by the operator? c\. To the extent possible, is each control clearly marked to indicate the direction of resultant motion? \[12.10.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Are electrical supplies for permanently installed hoists and monorail systems shall be controlled by a lockable switch or circuit breaker located on a fixed structure, accessible from the floor. \[12.10.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Is there evidence of a Frequent/Periodic Inspection Program for hoists at this facility? \[12.12 and Tables 12-1, 12-2, 12-3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Are there hoists, jib cranes, or monorail systems at this facility that are considered standby equipment (idle for 1 month or more)? If so, are they inspected (equal to Frequent Inspection) before being placed in service? Does equipment used for standby service receive a Periodic Inspection and operational test no less than annually. \[12.12.6\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 10. For hoists, jib cranes and monorail systems at this facility, is there a Preventive Maintenance program? Is this program based on the manufacturer\'s, or a qualified person\'s, recommendations? \[12.16.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 11. Are load tests conducted in accordance with written step-by-step procedures? \[12.17.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 12. Other **Section 13, Overhead And Gantry Cranes** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Is the operation of overhead and gantry cranes at this facility limited to properly qualified personnel? \[13.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Has the facility established an OJE program to verify the qualifications of all personnel (including outside organizations) that are allowed to use a facility crane? \[13.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Inspect marking of overhead and gantry cranes at this facility: a\. Is the rated load of the crane marked on each side of the crane? b\. If the crane has more than one hoisting unit, does each hoist have its rated load marked on it or its load block? c\. Load blocks should be painted to contrast with the bridge and trolley to facilitate quick visual identification. Do blocks at this facility follow this recommendation? d\. Are marking on the bridge, trolley, and load block legible from the ground floor? \[13.7.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are hand signals used for overhead or gantry cranes at this facility? If so, are hand signal charts posted conspicuously at the job site(s)? \[13.7.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Is a means of egress from cab-operated cranes provided to permit departure under emergency conditions? \[13.7.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. For cab-operated cranes at this facility, is there a 10BC portable fire extinguisher, minimum, installed in the cab and maintained in a serviceable condition? \[13.7.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Inspect pendant control stations on overhead and gantry cranes. a\. Are the pushbutton stations supported so that the electrical conductors are protected from strain? b. To the extent possible, is each control clearly marked to indicate the direction of resultant motion? c\. Do push buttons spring-return to the \"off\" position when pressure is released by the operator? d\. Where possible, are crane controls marked to indicate the direction of resultant motion? \[13.7.11.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Are appropriate pre-use and daily inspections performed? \[13.9.1.2.1 and 13.9.1.2.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Are periodic inspections properly documented? \[13.9.1.4.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 10. Are Periodic Inspection procedures available for each overhead and gantry crane at this facility? \[13.9.1.4.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 11. For overhead and gantry cranes at this facility is there a Preventive Maintenance program based on the manufacturer\'s recommendations or developed by a responsible maintenance organization? \[13.9.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 12. Are new, reinstalled, altered, repaired, or modified cranes load-tested prior to initial use, as determined by a qualified person. \[13.9.3.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 13. Other **Section 14, Mobile Cranes** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Is a system of flagging, barricades, or other safeguards used to isolate pinch point hazards relative to operating mobile cranes? \[14.4.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Is a portable fire extinguisher in serviceable condition, with a minimum extinguisher rating of 10 BC, installed in the cab or at the machinery housing on each mobile crane? \[14.4.9\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Is a durable, legible rating chart(s) from the manufacturer provided in the cab of each mobile crane? (The crane\'s serial number should be printed or stamped on the chart by the manufacturer or designee.) \[14.5.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Is an operating manual for each mobile crane readily available to the operator at all times? \[14.5.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Does each crane have a boom-angle indicator? Does each telescoping boom crane have a boom-length indicator? \[14.6.5.2 and 14.6.5.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Are booms, boom sections, and jibs clearly identified as to the crane(s) they are assigned? \[14.6.5.5\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Are telescopic boom cranes, lattice boom cranes, or cranes used to lift suspended personnel platforms provided with appropriate anti-two-block devices or two-block warning features? \[14.6.6.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 8. Do your mobile cranes have a means provided for the operator to visually determine the levelness of the crane? \[14.6.6.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 9. Are durable signs installed on all mobile cranes, at the operator\'s station, and on the outside of the crane warning that electrocution or serious bodily injury may occur unless adequate clearance is maintained between the crane, or the load line, and energized power lines? \[14.6.6.5.a\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 10. Are hand signal charts conspicuously posted at the job site (posting outside the crane cab meets this requirement)? \[14.6.6.5.b/c\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 11. Is the frequent inspection procedure for each mobile crane available to the operator? Does each frequent inspection procedure, or an attachment thereto, state how deficiencies found during frequent inspection shall be reported? \[14.7.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 12. Are critical items such as brakes, crane hooks, ropes, hydraulic and pneumatic cylinders, and hydraulic and pneumatic relief pressure valves, inspected and documented monthly? \[14.7.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 13. Are operator aids including Anti-Two-Block, Two-Block Warning, and Two-Block Damage Prevention Systems checked and inspected as follows: a\. Before daily operation, by the operator or other designated person, to ensure that the system is functional in accordance with the system manufacturer\'s written instructions? (This check is not required to be documented.) b\. Inspected and tested by a qualified person every 12 months, or more frequently, if specified by the manufacturer? This inspection and testing shall be documented. \[14.7.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 14. Are records of periodic inspections available? \[14.7.5 to 14.7.9\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 15. For each mobile crane, is there a preventive maintenance program based on the crane manufacturer\'s recommendations? Are dated PM records available for each crane? \[14.8.1.a\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 16. Other. **Section 15.0, Personnel Lifting** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. Are personnel suspended from cranes in a personnel platform? Is the crane being used for other purposes while handling personnel? \[15.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. Is personnel lifting performed under the direction of a Personnel Lift Supervisor? \[15.4.b\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Are trial lifts performed each shift before hoisting personnel? \[15.4.g\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Are personnel in the lift platform wearing appropriate fall protection equipment? \[15.4.o\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are wind and weather restrictions for personnel lifts identified? \[15.4.x\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Other. **Section 18.0, Hoisting And Rigging In Hostile Environments** [Yes]{.underline} [No]{.underline} [N/A]{.underline} \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 1. In order to document alternative compliance methods and procedures in hostile environments, are Hostile Environment Plans established where normal usage criteria can not reasonably be met? \[18.2.1\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 2. If Hostile Environment Plans are used at this facility, are the plans approved by responsible management and an overview organization (such as Safety or Quality Assurance)? \[18.3.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 3. Do Hostile Environment Plans contain the appropriate information? \[18.3.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 4. Does equipment that requires a Hostile Environment Plan properly posted? \[18.4\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 5. Are polyester (rope or webbing) slings prohibited from use in radiation areas? \[18.5.2\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 6. Are nylon (rope or webbing) slings prohibited from use in radiation areas? If necessary to use a nylon sling in a radiation area, is the responsible manager ensuring the radiation exposure does not exceed 100,000 rad during the life of the sling? \[18.5.3\] \_\_\_ \_\_\_ \_\_\_ 7. Other. OTHER: NOTES/COMMENTS: PERSONNEL CONTACTED: FINDINGS: Finding No.: Description: OBSERVATIONS: Observation No.: Description: FOLLOW-UP ITEMS: CONTRACTOR MANAGEMENT DEBRIEFED AND RESULTS: Signature: \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ Date: \_\_\_\_\_/\_\_\_\_\_/\_\_\_\_\_ Facility Representative
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279336
# Presentation: 279336 ## Beyond the Gate But Still Behind the Fence: Addictive Thinking Styles of Ex-Offenders - Jonathan M. Hartiens, Ph.D. - Michael D. McCarty, Ph.D. - Center for Addiction Treatment - VAMC Martinsburg WV ## How We Got Here - Center For Addiction (CAT-5) is a VA residential drug and alcohol program; has been working with formerly incarcerated veterans (IV) for 15 years - Noticed clinical difference between regular substance abuse patients and veterans who had been incarcerated - Began prison group six years ago to learn what these differences were related to; patients taught us how they looked at the world - Applied for and received a three year grant (2005) to study and develop programming to help formerly incarcerated veterans transition into the community. - Identifying clinical tools and methods that are replicable and useable in other settings ## Objectives - Discuss how addiction is a pervasive and often overlooked problem among the incarcerated - Discuss how recidivism is related to addictive thinking patterns that are often overlooked. - Define “Prison Mindset” and how it activates addictive thinking during community re-entry. ## Objectives (cont’d) - Describe how addictive thinking in ex-offenders, once activated, tends to be expressed in three areas of daily living – work, money, and relationships. - Examine how addictive behaviors that are a progression towards recidivism and relapse are often misinterpreted as healthy behaviors. ## Pervasiveness of Substance Abuse Among The Incarcerated - Substance Abuse is the most common occurring psychiatric disorder among the incarcerated population. It occurs at a much higher rate than the general population1. - 75% of inmates reported substance abuse problems on self report measures2. - When given a structured diagnostic interview, 95% of inmates met criteria for a Substance Use Disorder3. ## Offender Characteristics (Cont’d) - Of those incarcerated, 64%4 to 70%5 were acutely intoxicated with one or more substances or withdrawing from them _*at time of arrest*_. - Of first time offenders, 41% had a history of regular drug use. This percentage increased to 81% for those with 5 or more convictions6. ## What do these statistics mean? - Substance Abuse is a _*significant *_ problem among the incarcerated and tends to be minimized. - In a majority of cases, Substance Abuse precedes or accompanies criminal behavior. - The more often a person is incarcerated, the more likely substance abuse is part of his/her lifestyle. - The fact that recidivism and substance abuse are so interconnected suggests a common underlying mechanism exists that activates both problems- a “Prison Mindset.” ## Prison Mindset: Defining Features - Living in prison conditions a mindset in which: - Routines are structured by someone else. - Choices are made by others. Offenders lose the ability to make decisions. - Basic needs are met without any effort. - Have to constantly prove and protect oneself. - Respect and safety is generated by inflicting fear in others. - Appearance of weakness or fear invites aggression from others. - The goal is simple – SURVIVAL! ## How Prison Mindset Impacts The Reentry Process - Person needs structure, cannot provide it for self - Making choices are terrifying and overwhelming - Difficult to ask for help, to do so is a sign of weakness - Does not know how to meet basic needs - Compulsion to prove oneself - Uses fear and intimidation to solve problems ## How Prison Mindset Activates Addictive Thinking: Survival and Work - Thoughts - I’ve got to have a job that pays me the most money. - I’ve got to make up for lost time. - I need to prove myself. - I can’t be bored on the job. - Behaviors - Take whatever job is available regardless of its impact on recovery. - Work excessive hours. - Complicate simple instructions; don’t ask for help; do other people’s work. - Work in a way that mimics their drug of choice. ## How the Prison Mindset Activates Addictive Thinking: Survival and Money - Thoughts: - The more money I make, the better my chances at surviving. - Its my money to *spend how I want *now that I’m not drinking or using. - Behaviors: - Turn down jobs that are “beneath” them. Work overtime, second jobs, or do under-the-table work. - Binge spending, giving $ to someone else, gambling - finding ways to get rid of it. ## How the Prison Mindset Activates Addictive Thinking: Survival and Money - Thoughts: - I need money to be somebody. - I need money to give to my partner or children. - Behaviors: - Flash cash, Showboating - Give away savings, rent or grocery money to children or spouse. ## How the Prison Mindset Activates Addictive Thinking: Survival and Relationships - Thoughts: - I can’t make it on my own. I need someone to take care of me. - I need to be needed. - Behaviors: - Moves in with a partner who already has a house and structured lifestyle. - Selects a needy caretaking partner who enables addictive behavior. ## Prison Mindset: Defining Features - Conditioned from living in prison and based on: - Routines are structured by someone else. - Choices are made by the partner. Ex-offenders lack the ability to make decisions in the relationship. - Basic needs are met without any effort. - Have to constantly prove oneself in the relationship. - Respect and safety is generated by inflicting fear in the relationship. - Hears feedback as an attack which triggers aggression towards the partner. - The goal is simple – SURVIVAL! ## Roundtable Exercise - Identify someone as a reporter/scribe - With your peers at your table, identify: - What are the common barriers (attitudes, feelings, behaviors) you have to help your clients deal with when they are in job search? - What job retention barriers do you have to often address with your clients to help them stay employed? - What are the reasons your clients give as to why they quit or lost their job? (can’t use substance use). - What do you think are the _*real reasons*_ your clients quit or lose their jobs? (can’t use substance use - Count the number of people at your table that ask about money and relationships as a routine part of your case management? ## Suggestions for Further Thought - The Prison Mindset doesn’t leave when the offender leaves prison - it just changes locations. - The Prison Mindset activates addictive thinking and behaviors in ex-offenders. - Addictive behaviors are intricately related to recidivism. - Recidivism is reduced when one addresses the prison mindset and the addictive behaviors which become activated in work, money, and relationship settings. - Recidivism would be better understood as a process, not an event. Each ex-offender has a specific and unique pattern that follows a predictable course of events prior to ending in re-arrest. By collecting information on one’s addictive behaviors, case managers could identify various patterns of recidivism and tailor specific interventions to address them. ## References - 1 Timmerman, I.G. & Emmelkamp, P.M. (2001). The prevalence and comorbidity of axis I and II pathology in a group of forensic patients. *International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 45 (2)*, 198-213. - 2 Ibid - 3 Kouri, E.M., Pope Jr., G.H., Powell, K.F., Oliva, P.S., & Campbell, C. (1997). Drug use and history of criminal behavior among 133 incarcerated men. *American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 23 (3)*, 413-419 - 4 Ibid - 5 National Institute of Justice. (1989). *NJR Reports*, *215*, Washington DC. - 6 National Institute on Addiction and Substance Abuse, (1998). *Behind Bars: Substance Abuse and America’s Prison Population*. New York: Columbia.
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Released: November 1, 2001 **request FOR Further Comment on selected issues regarding the authorization of satellite digital audio radio service** **terrestrial repeater Networks** IB Docket No. 95-91 RM No. 8610 DA No. 01-2570 Report No. SPB-176 In March 1997, the Commission adopted service rules for satellite digital audio radio service (SDARS) authorizations in the 2320-2345 MHz frequency band.[^1] The Commission noted that some SDARS applicants intended to implement, as necessary, repeaters or "gap fillers" in urban canyons and other areas where it may be difficult to receive DARS signals transmitted by a satellite. At that time, however, there was no information in the record on the specific operations of the SDARS repeaters and several issues concerning the licensing and regulation of the repeaters were unresolved. To resolve these issues, the Commission issued a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Further Notice) seeking comment on the proposed use of SDARS repeaters in conjunction with SDARS systems.[^2] The Commission proposed to license SDARS repeaters on a blanket basis, that is, multiple repeaters under a single authorization, provided there were no unresolved international coordination, antenna clearance, or environmental impact issues. The Commission also tentatively concluded that it would prohibit the use of SDARS repeaters to transmit locally originated programming. In October 1997, the Commission authorized two licensees, Sirius Satellite Radio and XM Radio, to launch and operate satellites to provide SDARS.[^3] Both entities have launched all of their authorized satellites. Recognizing that a repeater network is essential to achieving nationwide service and that the rulemaking to establish operating parameters for repeaters has not been concluded, the International Bureau granted special temporary authority (STA) on September 17, 2001, for each SDARS licensee to operate its repeater network, subject to various conditions.[^4] The STAs permit the licensees to operate SDARS repeaters, for 180 days or until final rules are adopted, on a nationwide, commercial basis, with an Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP) at or below 2 kW (Low Power Repeaters) and with an EIRP above 2 kW (High Power Repeaters), as specified in the STA request.[^5] Since the Further Notice, the Commission has received detailed technical information on the SDARS repeaters and significant comment from the Wireless Communications Service (WCS), Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS), Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS) licensees and the SDARS licensees on terrestrial repeater licensing.[^6] **[PROPOSALS]{.underline}** By this Public Notice, we seek to augment the record on the specific proposals described below for the resolution of issues identified in the record that have not yet been directly addressed by commenters. Specifically, we seek comment on an approach that defines a compensation methodology for SDARS licensees to pay for the components necessary for WCS licensees to eliminate the effects of blanketing interference to their receivers.[^7] This approach is based on features of existing and proposed WCS and SDARS systems as well as on comments received from all licensees. We seek comment on this approach and on any variation or alternatives that commenters have proposed in this proceeding.[^8] We also include for comment various alternatives for a long-term solution to the potential blanketing interference between SDARS and WCS licensees with stations close to high power repeaters. In addition, we seek comment on provisions that would address the effect of SDARS operations on MDS and ITFS licensees. Based on this approach and the comments received to this Public Notice, specific rules will be developed for adoption in the Commission's rules. Commenters should support their views with concrete analysis and documentation. **I. Repeater Requirements** We seek comment on the sufficiency of an approach that would require SDARS repeaters to meet the following: A. [Definitions.]{.underline} > 1\. Low Power Repeaters (LPRs) are limited to an EIRP less than or > equal to 2 kW. > > 2\. High Power Repeaters (HPRs) are limited to an EIRP greater than 2 > kW and less than or equal to 40 kW. B. [Authorized transmissions*.*]{.underline} SDARS repeaters shall be used only to transmit the complete programming, and only that programming that is also transmitted by an authorized DARS satellite and in such a way that the satellite signal and the terrestrial repeater signal are received nearly simultaneously by SDARS subscriber receivers. C. [Eligibility and frequencies.]{.underline} Authorization to operate SDARS repeaters is granted only to licensees of SDARS systems with operational space stations. An SDARS licensee shall locate repeater frequency assignments in the center of its exclusively licensed frequency band, with the edge of the repeater band being no less than four megahertz from the edge of the SDARS spectrum at 2320 MHz and 2345 MHz. D. [Emission limits.]{.underline} > 1\. SDARS repeater out-of-band emission levels shall comply with > 47 C.F.R. § 25.202(f) within the 2320-2332.5 MHz and 2332.5‑2345 MHz > frequency bands. > > 2\. Below 2320 MHz and above 2345 MHz, the power of any SDARS repeater > emission shall be attenuated below the peak equivalent isotropically > radiated power (P~eirp~) within the assigned frequency band(s) of > operation between 2320 MHz and 2345 MHz, measured in watts, by a > factor not less than 75 + 10log (P~eirp~) dB, where P~eirp~ is > measured in watts. > > 3\. Compliance with the above provision is based on the use of > measurement instrumentation employing a resolution bandwidth of 1 MHz > or more, but at least one percent of the emission bandwidth of the > fundamental emission of the transmitter, provided the measured energy > is integrated over a 1 MHz bandwidth. **II. Prior Approval** We also seek comment on SDARS licensees obtaining prior Commission approval to operate: (1) any SDARS repeater that exceeds the power levels and/or proximity restrictions specified in existing international agreements with Canada and Mexico covering the use of SDARS frequency bands, except that Commission approval shall not be required for SDARS repeaters already coordinated successfully with Canada or Mexico; (2) any SDARS repeater that fails to comply with the requirements of 47 CFR § 17.4 of the Commission's rules; (3) any SDARS repeater that will have significant environmental effects, as defined by 47 CFR § 1.1301 through 1.1319 of the Commission's rules. We seek comment on the feasibility of this requirement. **III. Low Power Repeater (LPR) Operations** A. [LPR Operation.]{.underline} We seek comment on permitting an SDARS licensee to operate an unlimited number of LPRs without prior coordination as of the effective date of the Commission Order adopting final rules governing SDARS repeaters and where prior approval is not required. B. [Notification of LPRs to WCS, MDS/ITFS licensees.]{.underline} We seek comment on imposing a notification requirement on SDARS licensees to provide notice to any WCS, MDS, or ITFS licensee that may be operating in the vicinity of an LPR brought into operation after the final SDARS rules are effective. At least 30 days prior to commencing operations from any new LPR transmitting station, or with increased power from any existing LPR up to 2 kW EIRP, the SDARS licensee shall notify all WCS, and MDS/ITFS licensees in or through whose licensed service area they intend to operate, and provide the technical parameters of the SDARS terrestrial repeater transmission facility. C. [LPR interference to MDS/ITFS receivers.]{.underline} To provide parity with the requirements imposed on WCS licensees to remedy blanketing interference caused to MDS/ITFS receivers,[^9] as proposed by several commenters in this proceeding, we seek comment on requiring SDARS licensees to remedy any blanketing interference caused to MDS/ITFS receivers from LPRs. We also seek comment on requiring the SDARS licensees to bear the full financial obligation to remedy interference from their repeaters to MDS/ITFS block downconverters if all of the following conditions are met: \(1\) The complaint is received by the SDARS licensee prior to February 20, 2002; \(2\) The MDS/ITFS downconverter was installed prior to August 20, 1998; \(3\) The SDARS terrestrial repeater station transmits at 50W or more peak EIRP; and > \(4\) The MDS/ITFS downconverter is located within a SDARS terrestrial > repeater's free space power flux density contour of -34 dBW/m^2^. We also seek comment on the following concepts: that if the SDARS licensee cannot otherwise eliminate any interference that its repeater causes to MDS/ITFS reception, then that SDARS licensee must cease operations from the offending LPR facility. In addition, if SDARS licensees collocate their repeater antennas on the same tower, they shall assume shared responsibility for remedying interference complaints within the area determined by the -34 dBW/m^2^ power flux density contour, unless the offending station can be readily determined and then that station operator shall assume full financial responsibility. Also, if the complainant is also entitled to compensation from one or more licensees in the Wireless Communications Service pursuant to 47 CFR § 27.58, we seek comment on whether the cost should be shared equally among all WCS and SDARS licensees that cause such interference. **IV. High Power Repeater (HPR) Operations** We seek comment on the following compensation methodology that will apply to SDARS licensees operating HPRs. This concept establishes a safe harbor in which SDARS licensees would not be required to coordinate with or compensate WCS licensees to resolve blanketing interference that may be caused to WCS receiving stations from SDARS repeaters. It also establishes "zones" outside of this safe harbor in which WCS licensees would be entitled to compensation to resolve interference from HPR operations. The methodology includes a schedule for providing compensation. We seek comment on this proposal and its implementation as well as any variations of this concept as set forth below.Specifically, we solicit comment on whether or not compensation should be provided for consumer premises equipment (CPE) and on whether or not there should be a limit of the SDARS licensees' financial liability. A. [Permitted HPR Operations**.**]{.underline} We seek comment on whether SDARS licensees should be permitted to operate HPRs at locations with technical parameters as limited by the Commission in the XM and Sirius STA Orders[^10] for 18 months after the effective date of the final rules and whether, within 15 days from the release date of these rules, the SDARS licensees should be required to file with the Commission technical information on HPRs that have been moved to an alternate location, reduced in power, or no longer in operation as a result of interference concerns with WCS, MDS or ITFS facilities prior to the release date of the final SDARS repeater rules. B. [Safe Harbor.]{.underline} We seek comment on whether SDARS licensees should have any obligation to coordinate with WCS stations, including WCS customer premises equipment, located within the power level contour that would be generated by a 2 kW EIRP LPR, and using free space loss and the specified receive system threshold characteristics of the affected WCS licensee, as follows: ------------ ------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ----------- Maximum LPR LPR EIRP Maximum EIRP (kW) (dBm) Safe Harbor Distance from LPR to edge of contour (miles) -25 dBm -35 dBm -45 dBm -58 dBm contour contour contour contour 2 63 0.16 0.50 1.56 6.97 ------------ ------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ----------- Free space path loss is defined as: Loss~dB~ = 32.5 + 20log(distance in km) + 20log(frequency in MHz) C. [Liability Zone.]{.underline} We seek comment on whether SDARS licensees should be required to coordinate in good faith with WCS licensees with respect to WCS stations located outside of the Safe Harbor but located within the Liability Zone defined by the power level contour generated by the actual HPR EIRP, and using free space loss and the specified receive system threshold characteristics of the "affected" WCS licensee (i.e. the affected licensee is that licensee with one or more stations inside the Liability Zone). At any stage in the 18-month period following the effective date of the SDARS repeater rules, an SDARS licensee may elect to reduce its HPR power level to any level that would reduce its Liability Zone. The edge of the Liability Zone shall not extend beyond the distances from the HPR according to the following: ------------ ------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ----------- HPR EIRP HPR EIRP Maximum (kW) (dBm) Liability Zone Distance from HPR to edge of contour (miles) -25 dBm -35 dBm -45 dBm -58 dBm contour contour contour contour 40 76 0.70 2.20 6.97 31.13 ------------ ------------- ----------- ---------- ----------- ----------- Free space path loss is defined as: Loss~dB~ = 32.5 + 20log(distance in km) + 20log(frequency in MHz) These tables are intended to provide generic rules that take into account the fact that the technical parameters of WCS systems may vary. The Safe Harbor and Liability Zone sizes depend upon the overload threshold of the affected WCS receiver. The tables provide the range of sensitivities of the WCS receivers to be deployed as stated in the record. For example, if the WCS licensee deploys receivers that overload at --25dBm, the first table indicates that the Safe Harbor maximum radius distance will be 0.16 miles. If the SDARS repeater operates at 40 kW with an omni-directional antenna, the second table indicates that the Liability Zone will have a maximum radius of 0.70 miles. If the SDARS licensee uses a 10 kW repeater, the Liability Zone radius would be calculated using the free space path loss formula to be 0.35 miles. D. [Blanketing interference to WCS stations.]{.underline} We seek comment on whether a WCS station located within the Liability Zone is considered to potentially receive blanketing interference from the notified HPR(s) and the affected WCS licensee is entitled to compensation according to the Compensation Schedule below. Under this approach, SDARS and WCS licensees would be expected to coordinate in good faith to avoid interference problems and to allow the greatest operational flexibility in each other\'s operations. To remedy actual blanketing interference to WCS stations already in operation or planned for operation in the 18-month period, either by compensation or power reductions, the licensees must, in as expeditious a manner as possible, exchange information about WCS station deployment (e.g., the number of base stations planned to be in operation in the 18 months following the effective date of the SDARS rules; the station locations within the Liability Zone in order of anticipated deployment, if known; the technical characteristics of those stations; and the estimated reasonable cost to resolve interference to the WCS stations receiving blanketing interference from the specified HPR(s)). E. [Compensation Schedule.]{.underline} If an SDARS licensee is notified by an affected WCS licensee that it is receiving blanketing interference within the Liability Zone that prevents the provision of commercial service, the SDARS licensee shall immediately pay the reasonable costs of eliminating or mitigating such interference. This is similar to what the Commission has required of WCS licensees to do for MDS/ITFS licensees and of new FM broadcast licensees to do for complainants.[^11] The SDARS licensee shall compensate the WCS licensee for the cost of the components to protect its station receivers from blanketing interference caused by the HPRs (e.g. filters for base stations or RF Automatic Gain Control for CPE). The following schedule sets forth the timeframes during which WCS licensees' interference complaints shall be remedied and the prorated financial liability of SDARS licensees following the effective date of the rules governing SDARS repeaters: 0 to 6 months -- SDARS licensee pays 100% of components for base stations; 6 to 12 months -- SDARS licensee pays 50% of components for base stations; 12 to 18 months -- SDARS licensee pays 25% of components for base stations; after 18 months -- SDARS licensee has no financial liability. Under this approach, for 18 months after the final rules are effective, the SDARS HPR operations would be limited to the locations and parameters identified in the STA requests. That is, the population of HPRs would be frozen. After the 18 month period, any new HPR would have to be coordinated with affected WCS operations or would be limited in maximum power, as described below in section V., B. There would also be an obligation on SDARS licensees to abide by the final rules to ensure future protection to WCS licensees. We also seek comment on the appropriateness of including the cost of resolving interference to WCS CPE in the Compensation Schedule. We seek comment on the time within which SDARS licensees must mitigate interference to WCS CPE and whether or not we should require SDARS licensees to pay any compensation or provide compensation for up to 18 months for WCS CPE. We seek further comment on whether the SDARS licensees should be required to provide filters for WCS base stations or to pay all the costs associated with eliminating the interference for both base stations and CPE, including labor, as well as on any other aspects of possible interference mitigation. Moreover, we seek comment on whether the SDARS licensee's monetary liability to WCS licensees should be limited to a particular amount. If so, what is that amount and the rationale for it? We also generally seek comment on whether the resolution of interference should be left to the SDARS and WCS licensees. F. [Blanketing interference to MDS/ITFS receivers.]{.underline} Similar to the approach for SDARS licensees to remedy blanketing interference caused to MDS/ITFS receivers from LPRs until February 20, 2002 in Section III. C., we seek comment on applying this approach with regard to HPRs. Specifically, we seek comment on whether SDARS licensees should bear the full financial obligation to remedy interference to MDS/ITFS block downconverters if all of the following conditions are met: \(1\) The complaint is received by the SDARS licensee prior to February 20, 2002; \(2\) The MDS/ITFS downconverter was installed prior to August 20, 1998; and > \(3\) The MDS/ITFS downconverter is located within a SDARS HPR > station's free space power flux density contour of -34 dBW/m^2^. We seek comment on requiring that if the SDARS licensee cannot otherwise eliminate interference caused to MDS/ITFS block downconverters, the SDARS licensee must reduce its power or cease operations from the offending SDARS HPR station. If SDARS licensees collocate their antennas on the same tower, they shall assume shared responsibility for remedying interference complaints within the area determined by the -34 dBW/m^2^ power flux density contour, unless an offending station can be readily determined in which case the offending SDARS should be required to assume full financial responsibility. If the MDS/ITFS complainant is also entitled to compensation from one or more licensees in the Wireless Communications Service pursuant to section 27.58 of this part, the cost shall be shared equally among all WCS and SDARS licensees with stations causing such interference. **V. Operation of HPRs after the compensation schedule to WCS/MDS/ITFS licensees no longer applies** In addition to a methodology to limit interference and establish compensation to WCS and MDS/ITFS licensees, we seek comment on how to facilitate the future deployment of HPRs. We seek comment on whether to establish a power cap and a notification process for HPRs. We also request comment on a possible requirement that operator-to-operator agreements among SDARS and WCS/MDS/ITFS licensees be established before an SDARS licensee would be permitted to commence further HPR operations or other similar alternatives. Specifically, we seek comment on the following: A. [MDS/ITFS Receivers.]{.underline} We seek comment on imposing a requirement on SDARS licensees to provide notice to any MDS/ITFS licensee that may be operating in the vicinity of an HPR station: at least 90 days prior to commencing operations from any new HPR, the SDARS licensee shall notify all MDS/ITFS licensees, in or through whose licensed service area an SDARS licensee intends to operate, of the technical parameters of the SDARS terrestrial repeater transmission facility. B. [WCS Stations.]{.underline} We seek comment on how to regulate HPRs after the 18-month compensation period described above has expired. One alternative would be to place a power cap on HPRs and establish a notification process for them similar to that proposed for MDS/ITFS receivers. Under this approach, all existing HPRs would be grandfathered and the power cap would apply to new repeaters after expiration of the compensation schedule in the approach described above. Prior to commencing operation from any new HPR, the SDARS licensee would be required to provide a 90-day notice to WCS licensees. We specifically seek comment on what an appropriate power cap should be in the range of 2 kW to 40 kW. For example, is a 9 kW EIRP level (39.5 dBW, which is midway between the 2 kW (33 dBW) and 40 kW (46 dBW) powers established in the record as acceptable to WCS/MDS/ITFS licensees and desired by SDARS licensees, respectively) appropriate to apply to future HPRs? Would this power cap distribute equally among WCS and SDARS licensees the responsibility to manage their operations in the presence of each other's service and provide for the ability of all services to deploy expeditiously? If applied to existing repeaters, what transition period would be necessary or appropriate? Another alternative would be to permit HPR operations at power levels up to 40 kW EIRP only after prior agreement among SDARS and affected WCS licensees has been reached. In this case, each SDARS licensee would be required to exchange information with affected WCS licensees about its repeater deployment and technical parameters. The SDARS licensee would be required also to take all practical steps to locate additional HPRs in areas that will mitigate the potential for blanketing interference to WCS operations. Prior to commencing operation of an additional HPR, the SDARS licensee would be required to certify to the Commission that it has completed coordination of the HPR with all affected WCS licensees. We seek comment on these options and any other alternatives for the deployment of HPRs after the 18-month period has expired. **VI. Radio Frequency (RF) Safety** In February 1997, the Commission adopted rules for Wireless Communications Services.[^12] In that Report and Order, the Commission modified Section 1.1307(b) of its rules to require applicants proposing to operate fixed terrestrial stations in the 2305-2320 MHz and 2345-2360 MHz frequency bands to perform routine environmental evaluations if their station's EIRP exceeds 1640 Watts.[^13] We now seek comment on modifying this Section of the Commission's rules to accommodate SDARS repeaters governed by Part 25, which will operate in the 2320-2345 MHz frequency bands. The proposal is based on suggestions offered by the DARS and WCS licensees. The WCS licensees propose to require routine environmental evaluation for SDARS repeaters operating above 1640 Watt EIRP level, the same requirement for terrestrial stations in the WCS bands (2305-2320 MHz and 2345-2360 MHz). SDARS licensees propose to increase the level to 2000 Watts EIRP presumably because that power level reflects the technical distinctions between SDARS repeaters and WCS stations throughout the other proposals set forth in this Public Notice. We seek comment on the following proposed modification to Table 1 in Section 1.1307 particularly from the standpoint of RF safety to the public. We specifically propose that actions that may have a significant environmental effect, for which Environmental Assessments (EAs) must be prepared for: Table 1: Transmitters, Facilities, and Operations Subject to Routine Environmental Evaluation ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- Service (title 47 CFR rule part) Evaluation required if ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- \*\*\*\*\* +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | Satellite Communications (part | *Satellite DARS Terrestrial | | 25) | Repeaters*: \>2000 W EIRP | | | | | | All others included. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ **Procedural Matters:** Pursuant to Sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, 47 C.F.R. §§ 1.415 and 1.419, interested parties may file supplemental comments limited to the issues raised in this Public Notice no later than **21** days after this Public Notice appears in the Federal Register and supplemental reply comments no later than **28** days after this Public Notice appears in the Federal Register. Because the DARS repeaters STAs expire on March 18, 2002 or on the implementation of permanent rules for repeater operations, whichever occurs first, we must adhere to the schedule set forth in this Public Notice and do not contemplate granting extensions of time. Comments should reference IB Docket No. 95-91 and should include the DA number on the front of this Public Notice. Comments may be filed using the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).[^14] Comments filed through the ECFS can be sent as an electronic file via the Internet to <http://www.fcc.gov/e-file/ecfs.html>. In completing the transmittal screen, parties responding should include their full name, mailing address, and the applicable docket number, IB Docket No. 95-91. Parties filing comments on paper must file an original and four copies of each filing. All filings must be sent to the Commission's Secretary, Magalie Roman Salas, Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, 445 12^th^ Street, SW, Room TW-A325, Washington, D.C. 20554. An additional copy of all pleadings should also be sent to Rockie Patterson, International Bureau, FCC Room 6-B524, 445 12^th^ Street, SW, Washington, D.C. 20554. One copy of all comments should also be sent to the Commission's copy contractor, Qualex International, 445 12^th^ Street, SW, Room CY-B402, Washington, D.C. 20554. Copies of all filings are available for public inspection and copying during regular business hours at the FCC's Reference Information Center, 445 12^th^ Street, SW, telephone 202-857-3800; facsimile 202-857-3805. For *ex parte* purposes, this proceeding continues to be a "permit-but-disclose" proceeding, in accordance with Section 1.1200(a) of the Commission's rules, and is subject to the requirements set forth in Section 1.1206(b) of the Commission's rules. The Commission's Consumer Information Bureau Reference Information Center shall send a copy of this Notice, Including the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration. For further information, please contact Rockie Patterson, Satellite Engineering Branch at 202-418-1183. Action by the Chief, International Bureau, November 1, 2001. **Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis** 1\. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),[^15] the Bureau has prepared this Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the possible significant economic impact on small entities by the policies and rules proposed in the International Bureau's Public Notice Requesting Further Comment on Selected Issues Regarding the Authorization of Satellite Digital Audio Radio Service Terrestrial Repeater Networks (Notice). Written public comments are requested on this IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the deadline for comments on the Notice provided above on pages 8-9. The Bureau will send a copy of the Notice, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.[^16] In addition, the Notice and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the Federal Register. 2\. **Need for and Objections of the Proposed Rules.** This Notice seeks comments on specific proposals to resolve issues regarding the proposed use of satellite digital audio radio service (SDARS) terrestrial repeaters in conjunction with SDARS systems. The Bureau intends to evaluate whether the proposed rules will facilitate the efficient implementation of SDARS while seeking to limit or mitigate interference to terrestrial operators. The proposals define a compensation methodology for SDARS licensees to pay for the components necessary for WCS licensees to eliminate the effects of blanketing interference to WCS receivers. It also seeks comment on provisions that would resolve potential interference to MDS and ITFS licensees. 3\. **Legal Basis.** This Notice is adopted pursuant to Sections 1, 4(i), 4(j), 303(c), 303(f), and 303(g) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. § 151(i), 154(i), 154(j), 303(c), 303(f) and 303(g). 4\. **Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which the Proposed Rules Will Apply.** The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted.[^17] The RFA defines the term "small entity" as having the same meaning as the terms "small business," "small organization," or "small concern" under Section 3 of the Small Business Act.[^18] A small business concern is one which: (1) is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.[^19] A small organization is generally "any not-for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field."[^20] Nationwide, as of 1992, there were approximately 275,801 small organizations.[^21] "Small governmental jurisdiction"[^22] generally means "governments of cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special districts, with a population of less than 50,000.[^23] As of 1992, there were approximately 85,006 governmental entities in the United States.[^24] This number includes 38,978 counties, cities, and towns; of these 37,566, or 96%, have populations of fewer than 50,000.[^25] The Census Bureau estimates that this ratio is approximately accurate for all governmental entities. Thus, of the 85,006 governmental entities, we estimate that 81,600 (96%) are small entities. 5\. *SDARS.* The Commission has not developed a definition of small entities applicable to geostationary or non-geostationary orbit broadcast satellite operators. Therefore, the applicable definition of small entity is the definition under Small Business Administration (SBA) rules applicable to the Communications Services, Not Elsewhere classified. This definition provides that a small entity is one with \$11.0 million or less in annual receipts.[^26] There are only two SDARS providers authorized to provide service in the DARS spectrum band, XM Radio, Inc. and Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc. While neither has implemented nationwide service, both entities have financing of over \$100 million. In addition, the DARS licensees have significant partnership interests with large corporations: General Motors in XM Radio, Inc. and DiamlerChrysler in Sirius Satellite Radio. Because of the above and the high implementation and operating costs for SDARS systems, we do not believe either DARS licensee qualifies as a small entity. *Wireless Communications Services* (*WCS*). This service can be used for fixed, mobile, radiolocation and digital audio broadcasting satellite uses. The Commission defined \"small business\" for the wireless communications services (WCS) auction as an entity with average gross revenues of \$40 million for each of the three preceding years, and a \"very small business\" as an entity with average gross revenues of \$15 million for each of the three preceding years. The SBA has approved these definitions.[^27] The FCC auctioned geographic area licenses in the WCS service. In the auction, there were seven winning bidders that qualified as very small business entities, and one that qualified as a small business entity. We conclude that the number of geographic area WCS licensees affected includes these eight entities. *Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS)*. The Commission refined the definition of "small entity" for the auction of MDS as an entity that together with its affiliates has average gross annual revenues that are not more than \$40 million for the preceding three calendar years.[^28] This definition of a small entity is described in the Commission's Report and Order concerning MDS auctions, and has been approved by the SBA.[^29] The Commission completed its MDS auction in March 1996 for authorizations in 493 basic trading areas (BTA's). Of 67 winning bidders, 61 qualified as small entities. Five bidders indicated that they were minority owned and four winners indicated that they were women owned businesses. MDS is an especially competitive service, with approximately 1,573 previously authorized and proposed MDS facilities. Information available to us indicates that no MDS facility generates revenue in excess of \$11 million annually. We tentatively conclude that for purposes of IRFA, there are 1,634 small MDS providers as defined by the SBA and the Commission's auction rules. *Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS).* There are presently 2,032 ITFS licensees. All but one hundred of these licenses are held by educational institutions. Educational institutions are included in the definition of a small business. We do not, however, collect annual revenue data for ITFS licensees and are not able to ascertain how many of the 100 non-educational licensees would be categorized as small under the SBA definition. Thus, we tentatively conclude that at least 1,932 ITFS licensees are small businesses. 6\. **Description of Projected Reporting, Record keeping and Other Compliance Requirements.** Under the proposals licensees, such as WCS, MDS and ITFS, potentially affected by the operation of SDARS repeaters will have to undertake a minimal engineering analysis to determine whether it has operations within the liability zone or the safe harbor as defined in the Notice. This analysis can be completed using the technical information provided by the DARS licensees and basic commercially available software. Thus, there may be minimal costs to these licensees associated with conducting the engineering study. As noted below, resolution of any actual interference would be at the expense of the DARS licensee provided the WCS, MDS or ITFS licensees are in the established vicinities and file timely complaints as set forth in the Notice. 7\. Compliance requirements for the DARS licensees, if it is determined that there is actual interference, include contacting the affected licensee and remedying the interference. The remedy may involve weighing options such as reducing the repeater's power or compensating the affected licensees by providing equipment and labor to alter the affected licensee's receivers. Costs to the DARS licensees may relate to engineering studies, cost analyses and expenses in equipment and labor. These costs may be determined on a case-by-case basis. 8\. **Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities and Significant Alternatives Considered**. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant alternatives that it has considered in reaching its proposed approach, which may include the following four alternatives (among others): (1) the establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the resources available to small entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance or reporting requirements under the rule for small entities; (3) use of performance, rather than design standards; and (4) and exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part there of, for small entities.[^30] 9\. The proposed rule represents an alternative to extremes presented by the licensees involved in this proceeding and spreads the economic impact and business decisions to resolve interference among the licensees. Our proposed alternatives are based on the actual performance of equipment deployed and would benefit small entities affected by interference from the SDARS use of their terrestrial repeaters by providing assurances that interference to their operations will be resolved by the DARS licensees within the parameters set forth in the Notice. In addition, we have sought comment on whether the proposed compensation schedule and associated time frames are sufficient, and especially seek comment from small entities, given that they may be some of the potentially affected licensees.[^31] 10\. **Federal Rules that duplicate, Overlap or Conflict with the Commission's Proposals.** None. [^1]: Establishment of Rules and Policies for the Digital Audio Radio Satellite Service in the 2310-2360 MHz Frequency Band, *Report and Order, Memorandum Opinion and Order and Further Notice of Proposed* *Rulemaking*, 12 FCC Rcd 5745 (1997). [^2]: *Id*. at 5810. [^3]: *See* American Mobile Radio Corp., *Order and Authorization*, 13 FCC Rcd 8829 (1997). (American Mobile Radio Corp. is now known as XM Radio Inc.); and Satellite CD Radio, Inc., *Order and* *Authorization*, 13 FCC Rcd 7971 (1997). (Satellite CD Radio is now known as Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc.) *See also* Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc., for Minor Modification of License to Construct, Launch and Operate a Non-geostationary Satellite Audio Radio Service System, *Order and Authorization*, 16 FCC Rcd 5419 (Int'l Bur. 2001). [^4]: *See* XM Radio, Inc., Application for Special Temporary Authority to Operate Satellite Digital Audio Radio Service Complimentary Terrestrial Repeaters, *Order and Authorization*, DA 01-2172 (rel. September 17, 2001) and Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc., Application for Special Temporary Authority to Operate Satellite Digital Audio Radio Service Complementary Terrestrial Repeaters, *Order and Authorization*, DA 01-2171 (rel. September 17, 2001). [^5]: *Id.* at para. 17. [^6]: *Ex Parte* Communications have been filed by: Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc., XM Radio Inc., Aerospace & Flight Test Radio Coordinating Council; AT&T Wireless Services, Inc., Alabama Broadcasters Association, BeamReach Networks, Inc., BellSouth Corporation and BellSouth Wireless Cable, Cellular Phone Taskforce, Consumer Electronics Manufacturers Association, Entercom Communications Corp., General Motors Corp., MCI WorldCom, Inc., WorldCom, Inc., and WorldCom Broadband Solutions, Inc., Metricom, Inc., Mt. Wilson Broadcasters, Inc., National Association of Broadcasters, Navini Networks, Inc., Radio Operators Caucus, Spike Broadband Systems, Inc., Susquehanna Radio Corp., Verizon Wireless and Wireless Communications Association International, Inc. We have considered aspects of these filings in formulating our proposals set forth in this Public Notice. [^7]: *See* 47 CFR § 27.58. The rules require WCS licensees to resolve interference to MDS/ITFS licensees at no cost to the licensee experiencing interference. S*e*e also 47 CFR § 73.318. The rules require new FM broadcast stations to resolve interference within their blanketing contour at no cost to the complainant for one year after commencing operations. [^8]: *See Supra* n. 6. [^9]: *See* 47 CFR § 27.58. [^10]: XM STA *Order Supra* n. 4 at para. 17, Sirius STA *Order* *Supra* n. 4 at para. 17. [^11]: See CFR 47 § 27.58, § 73.318. [^12]: Report and Order, Amendment to the Commission's Rules to Establish Part 27, the Wireless Communications Service ("WCS"), February 19, 1997. [^13]: *See* 47 CFR § 1.1307(b), Table 1, Transmitters, Facilities, and Operations Subject to Routine Environmental Evaluation. [^14]: *See* Electronic Filing of Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings, 63 Fed. Reg. 24121 (1998). [^15]: *See* 5 U.S.C. § 603. [^16]: *Id.* at § 603(a). [^17]: *Id*. at § 604(b)(3). [^18]: *Id*. at § 601(3). [^19]: *Id*. at § 632. [^20]: 5 U.S.C. § 601(4). [^21]: 1992 Economic Census, U.S. Bureau of the Census, Table 6 (special tabulation of data under contract to the Office of Advocacy of the U.S. Small Business Administration). [^22]: 47 C.F.R. § 1.1162. [^23]: 5 U.S.C. § 601(5). [^24]: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, "1992 Census of Governments." [^25]: *Id.* [^26]: 13 C.F.R. § 121.201, NAICS Code 4899. [^27]: *See* Letter from A. Alvarez, Administrator, SBA to Amy Zoslov, Chief, Auctions and Industry Analysis Division, FCC (December 2, 1998). [^28]: 47 C.F.R. § 21.961(b)(1). [^29]: Amendment of Parts 21 and 74 of the Commission's Rules with Regard to Filing Procedures in the Multipoint Distribution Service and in the Instructional Television Fixed Service and Implementation of Section 309(j) of the Communications Act -- Competitive Bidding, MM Docket No. 94-31 and PP Docket No. 93-253, *Report and Order*, 10 FCC Rcd 9589 (1995). [^30]: 5 U.S.C. § 603(c). [^31]: *See* Sections III B & C; IV E & F*, supra.*
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**Minerals Management Service** **Interim Policy Document** **Effective Date:** September 11, 2007 **IPD No. 07- 08** **Program:** Offshore Minerals Management **Title:** OMM Information Technology Acquisition Approval Authority **Originating Office:** Information Technology Division, Offshore Minerals Management 1. **Purpose**. This Interim Policy Document (IPD) outlines the authority and approval process for Offshore Minerals Management (OMM) Information Technology (IT) acquisitions. 2. **Scope.** This IPD applies to all OMM acquisitions related to computer hardware, software, and services, including acquisitions that have an IT component (e.g., environmental studies with a database component). Note: supplies used in conjunction with computer hardware (e.g., diskettes, magnetic tapes and storage media, printer toner cartridges, compact discs, desktop accessories) are not considered IT and do not require IT approval. 3. **Objective.** To ensure the procurement of IT resources follows a structured acquisition process, selected IT solutions fit within the established OMM IT architecture, and all acquisitions comply with federal regulations. 4. **Authority.** A. The Clinger-Cohen Act B. Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) C. OMB Circular A-130 D. Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) E. OMB Circular A-11 F. Departmental Manual 376, Chapter 4, Automated Data Processing, IT Investment G. Minerals Management Service Manual Handbook, Administrative Delegations of Authority 218.1-H ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` 5. **Definitions**. A. Information Technology (IT) is defined as any equipment, or interconnected system(s) or subsystem(s) of equipment, used in the automatic acquisition, storage, manipulation, management, movement, control, display, switching, interchange, transmission, or reception of data or information by the agency. The term \"information technology\": \(1\) Includes computers, ancillary equipment, software, firmware and similar procedures, services (including support services), and related resources. \(2\) Does not include: a. Any equipment acquired by a contractor incidental to a contract. b. Any equipment that contains imbedded information technology used as an integral part of the product, but the principal function of which is not defined as "Information Technology". For example, HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) equipment such as thermostats, temperature control devices and, uninterruptible power supplies. c. Supplies used in conjunction with computer hardware such as: diskettes, magnetic tapes and storage media, printer ink/toner cartridges, compact discs, digital video disks, desktop accessories, anti-glare screens, etc. B. "Purchasing threshold" is the micro-purchase value for acquisitions as defined by the FAR 2.101 and, for IT, is limited to the threshold established by the MMS Chief Information Officer (CIO). ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` 6. **Policy.** It is the policy of the OMM program that: A. The OMM IT acquisition process is managed by the Information Technology Division (ITD), Office of Information Policy and Communications (OIPC). Contact information for individuals with responsibilities related to the management of this process is available on the MMS Pipeline at http://pipeline.mms.gov/pages/organ/omm/omm_itd_opc\_\_PPPSBranch.asp B. All OMM IT acquisitions, regardless of funding source, cost level, or acquisition method, be in compliance with: 1. Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR). 2. Departmental, MMS and OMM Capital Planning and Investment Control (CPIC) processes. 3. Departmental and MMS standards for IT architecture. C. All acquisitions funded by the Information Management Program (IMP) account require the certification and signature approval of the OMM IMP Budget Manager. D. All desktop, laptop, server-class computers, and enterprise software acquisitions use the Department of the Interior (DOI) Consolidated IT Blanket Purchase Agreement (BPA), and must be implemented by the designated OMM Acquisition Manager. A decision guide for selecting hardware is available at http://www.doi.gov/ocio/erm/guidelines.pdf E. Requests for products not available from the DOI BPA require a waiver containing a detailed technical justification and signature approval from the MMS Chief Information Officer (CIO), Chief, Information Management Division (IMD), and the Chief, Information Technology Division (ITD). F. Copies of all final approved IT acquisitions, regardless of funding source or cost level, will be forwarded to the OMM CPIC Manager and the OMM IT Asset Manager. G. Splitting an acquisition to achieve two or more purchases under the purchasing threshold is prohibited. H. Delegated approval authority is governed by a zero tolerance abuse policy. If abused, delegated approval authority will be rescinded. 7. **Responsibilities**. A. OMM requesting offices are responsible for: 1. Identifying a Technical Point of Contact. 2. Developing the justification, requirements and, if necessary, statement of work, for IT acquisitions. B. The Technical Point of Contact is responsible for assisting the requesting office in the development of technical requirements, the evaluation of proposals and the resolution of technical issues related to the acquisition. C. The Chief, ITD, has approval authority for all IT acquisitions exceeding the purchasing threshold, regardless of funding source, and hereby delegates IT approval authority as follows: 1. Local IT managers are delegated IT approval authority for IT acquisitions up to the purchasing threshold and are responsible for: a. Reviewing all acquisitions, regardless of cost level, for completeness of documentation, compliance with local standards and consistency with the OMM architecture. Questions regarding standards should be referred to the OMM Enterprise Architect for clarification. b. Ensuring budget certification has been obtained from the proper authority. c. Forwarding acquisitions exceeding the local IT Managers purchasing threshold to the OMM Enterprise Architect for review. 2. The OMM Enterprise Architect, is responsible for reviewing all IT acquisition requests exceeding the purchasing threshold and is responsible for: a. Ensuring required documentation is complete and sufficient to render an opinion on whether the acquisition is consistent with the technical architecture. b. Evaluating requests for compliance with technical standards, requirements, mission needs and strategic goals. c. Returning requests that do not comply or require additional information to the requestor with instructions on needed changes. d. Forwarding approved requests funded by the IMP to the OMM IMP Budget Manager. Non-IMP requisitions will be forwarded to the OMM Acquisition Manager for processing. 3. The OMM IMP Budget Manager is responsible for: a. Certifying IMP funding availability. b. Assigning IMP account numbers. c. Forwarding the requisition to the OMM Acquisition Manager. 4. The OMM Acquisition Manager will oversee the acquisition process for all OMM IT procurement requests exceeding the purchasing threshold and is responsible for: a. Coordinating requests with appropriate offices within, and external to, OMM. ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` a. Developing requisition forms. b. Assigning requisition numbers. c. Forwarding all requests which exceed the purchasing threshold to the Chief, ITD and, as appropriate, to Deputy Chief Information Officer for evaluation, approval and further processing. d. Coordinating with the Chief, Procurement Operations Branch, Procurement Division, or their delegated Contracting Officer. e. Recording and tracking all IT acquisition requests. f. Submitting copies of all completed acquisitions to the OMM IMP Budget Manager and OMM IT Asset Manager. 8. **Expiration.** This IPD will remain in effect until incorporated into the MMS Manual, canceled, or superseded with another IPD. > Associate Director for > > Offshore Minerals Management
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# Presentation: 689223 ## Federal Workers’ Compensation Agency Medical Exams and Related Employment Issues **6****th**** Annual Federal Workers’ ** **Compensation Conference** **Washington, DC** **David L. Hull****, ****MBA** **Program Manager** **Federal Workers' Compensation Program ** **U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs** ## Agency Medical Exams **Agency Medical Exams are most useful in acquiring objective medical information, upon which an employing agency may base informed employment decisions involving medical conditions, based upon objective medical evidence.**** ** **An Agency Medical Exam is an employing agency’s **_**qualified**_** right to determine an employee’s physical ability to perform the essential functions of their job.** ## Agency Medical Exams (Continued) **Oftentimes, medical information provided by an employee, does not provide sufficient detail with which the employer might construct light duty offers, alternate duty assignments, or modifications to existing positions, that would meet the employee’s physical limitations.** ## OPM may establish or approve medical standards for a government-wide occupation. 5 CFR 339.202 Standards must be established by written directive Standards must be directly related to the requirements of the job **Standards must be established by written directive** **Standards must be directly related to the requirements of the job** **Medical Standards** ## Physical Requirements **Agencies**** are authorized to establish physical requirements for individual positions without OPM approval when such requirements are essential for successful job performance.**** ****5 CFR 339.203*** * ## Physical Requirements (continued) **Physical requirements ****[established by Agencies]**** must be clearly supported by the actual duties of the position and documented in the position description.** ## Legal Authority To Order Agency Medical Exams **Agency Medical Exams must be offered, or ordered, in writing, usually by the Employing Agency’s Appointing Authority (commonly the Chief of Human Resources). Such examinations are governed by ****5 CFR Part 339****.** ## Legal Authority (Continued) **Employing agencies may require an employee who has applied for, or is receiving, benefits, as a result of an on-the-job injury, to undergo a medical examination that may affect placement decisions.**** ****5 CFR 339.301 (c)** ## Examination Procedures **The Agency must inform the employee in writing of the reason for the exam and consequences of failure to cooperate.**** ****5 CFR 339.303**** ****(a)**** ** **The Agency designates the physician, but must offer the employee the opportunity to submit medical documentation from their own physician.**** 5 CFR 339.303**** ****(b)** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **Agency must review and consider all medical documentation submitted by employee’s physician. [Notice must give the physician’s name, location, date and time of examination in order to be enforceable.] ****5 CFR 339.303 (b)**** ** **Agency must pay for exam, ordered or offered.**** ****5 CFR 339.304** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **General Medical Exam ****must**** precede Psychiatric Exam.**** ********* ** ** ****5 CFR 339.301 (e)** **Agency must report to OWCP the failure of an employee to report for an ordered examination.**** ****5 CFR 339.305 (c)** *** Except in cases of claims for work-related emotional disorders** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **The Agency must forward all reports and medical documentation, resulting from exams relating to on-the-job injury claims, to the Office of Workers Compensation Programs. The Agency must also report the failure of any workers’ compensation claimant to report for a properly ordered examination.**** **** **** ****5 CFR 339.305 (c)** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **Agency Medical Examinations are not sufficient, in and of themselves, to cause OWCP to render decisions on the level of medical impairment of a workers’ compensation claimant. OWCP must, however, consider any other medical reports in the file.**** ****20 CFR 10.502** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **Agency Medical Examinations may provide conflicting medical evidence, if it exists, that would enable OWCP to order a second opinion medical examination.**** ****20 CFR 10.321 (a)** ## Examination Procedures (continued) **An employee who refuses to submit to or obstructs an examination ordered by OWCP, may have their entitlement to compensation suspended for the duration of the obstruction. Such obstruction also includes an employee’s representative.**** ****20 CFR 10.323** ## IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS **A person who claims benefits has the burden of establishing the essential elements of his claim, including the fact that he sustained an injury while in the performance of duty, and that he had disability as a result. As part of this burden the employee must present **_***rationalized medical opinion evidence, based on a complete factual and medical background***_**, showing a causal relationship between the injury and the disability.**** *****Daniel R. Hickman, *****34 ECAB 1220***** *****(1983)** ## IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS (continued) **The fact that a disabling condition exists does not establish a right to compensation benefits, nor does it raise an inference of causal relationship between such condition and an employment injury.**** *****Dolph G. Stuart*****, 13 ECAB 480 (1969)** ## IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS (continued) **The employee's belief that the condition was caused by or aggravated by employment conditions is insufficient to establish causal relationship.**** *****Alberta S. Williamson*****, 47 ECAB 569 (1996)** ## IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS (continued) **Where a person has a pre-existing condition which is not disabling, but which becomes disabling because of aggravation causally related to the employment, then regardless of the degree of such aggravation, the resulting disability is compensable. If the medical evidence reveals that an employment factor contributes **_***in any way***_*** *****to the employee's condition, the condition is considered to be employment related.**** *****Arnold Gustafson*****, 41 ECAB 131 (1989)** ## LIMITED/ALTERNATE DUTY (for work-related injuries) **Physical restrictions must be provided by attending physician ****(use Form OWCP 5 or CA-17)** **To be effective, Agencies **_**MUST**_** provide limited duty, if medically feasible** **An employee **_**MUST**_** accept any light duty, offered by the Agency, that meets the attending physician’s statement of physical limitations or the employee may loose eligibility for compensation benefits.** ## Reasonable Accommodation (for non work-related injuries) **To be useful, physical restrictions **_**MUST**_** be provided obtained based upon objective medical evidence** **The employing Agency **_**MUST**_** identify and document ‘essential functions’ of the position in question** **The employing Agency **_**MUST**_** comply with EEOC regulations ****[29 CFR 1614.203]**** with regard to reasonable accommodation**** ****5 CFR 339.103** ## Medical Report Requirements (for work-related conditions) ** ****In all cases, a medical report from the attending physician should include:** ** ****(a) Dates of examination and treatment;** ** ****(b) History given by the employee;** ** ****(c) Physical findings;** ** ****(d) Results of diagnostic tests;** ** ****(e) Diagnosis;** ** ****(f) Course of treatment;** ## Medical Report Requirements (Continued) **(g) A description of any other conditions found but not due to the claimed injury;** **(h) The treatment given or recommended for the claimed injury;** ***(i) The physician's opinion, with medical reasons, as to causal relationship between the diagnosed condition(s) and the factors or conditions of the employment;*** ## Medical Report Requirements (Continued) **(j) The extent of disability affecting the employee's ability to work due to the injury;** **(k) The prognosis for recovery; and** **(l) All other material findings.** ** ****20 CFR 10.330** ## EEO DECISIONS **“****A claimant may not use the EEO process to launch a collateral attack on the workers compensation process.”**** ** ** ****Story v USPS, EEOC 05960314 (10/18/96) ** **“****The Commission has recognized that an agency has the right to represent its position and interest in the OWCP Forum, and will not review decisions, which would require it to judge the merits of a workers compensation claim.”**** ****Hogan EEOC 05940407**** ** ## EEOC DECISIONS **The Commission stated: “...it is well established that an Agency has an obligation to controvert an employee’s workers compensation claim where there is a dispute as to the employee’s entitlement.”**** ** ** ****Andel v. USPS EEOC 01975337** ## OTHER CONSIDERATIONS **Kevin Clark ** **v. ** **USPS**** ** **[Merit Systems Protection Board]** **[NY-0752-95-0155-I-1]** **Example of consequences of failing to follow regulations pertaining to ** **Reasonable Accommodation issues.** ## MEDICAL EVIDENCE **Objective medical evidence is **_**REQUIRED**_** to make an informed employment decision (which includes separation from employment)** **If an employing agency does not have suitable medical facilities or access to appropriate medical specialists, Agency Medical Exams may be contracted with appropriate private sector companies, who specialize in providing such examinations.** ## SAMPLE LETTER 1 **This letter may be used in accordance with ****5 CFR 339.302**** to offer an employee an Agency Medical Exam for **_**non-work-related**_** reasons. Because this issue deals with the appointment qualifications of a Federal employee, this letter should be issued by the Appointing Authority (normally the Personnel Officer) in order to ensure all employment related issues are addressed.** ## SAMPLE LETTER 2 **This letter may be used to request medical information when an employee has filed a claim for workers compensation and there is some question about the medical evidence that affects placement decisions. ****5 CFR 339.301(c)** **Resulting medical evidence must then be forwarded to OWCP. ****5 CFR 339.305 (c)** ## SAMPLE LETTER 3 **This letter provides notification to an employee that they must provide acceptable medical documentation for non-work-related medical conditions. This letter also gives the employee proper notice of the type of information needed and potential consequences for failure to provide it.**** **** **** ****5 CFR 339.303 (a)****It is used in accordance with ****5 CFR 339.302**** when an employee requests any benefit or special treatment , to include reasonable accommodation, due to a **_**non-work related**_** medical condition.**** ** ## SAMPLE LETTER 4 **This letter provides notification to an employee that they are ordered to undergo an Agency Medical Exam. This letter also gives the employee proper notice of the medical examination and potential consequences for failure to follow instructions.**** **** **** ****5 CFR 339.301 (c)** **It is used in accordance with ****5 CFR 339.301 (c) **** when an employee has filed for or is receiving benefits under FECA for a **_**work related**_** medical condition.**** ** ## Contact Information **David L. Hull, ****MBA** **Program Manager** **Federal Workers' Compensation Program ** **U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs** **Mailing Address:** **1540 Spring Valley Drive** **Huntington, West Virginia 24704** **Phone: (304) 429-6755 x 2334 ** **Fax: (304) 429-0265** **E-mail: [email protected]**
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-------------------------------------------------------------------- USE OF NOAA ESRL DATA These data are made freely available to the public and the scientific community in the belief that their wide dissemination will lead to greater understanding and new scientific insights. The availability of these data does not constitute publication of the data. NOAA relies on the ethics and integrity of the user to assure that ESRL receives fair credit for their work. If the data are obtained for potential use in a publication or presentation, ESRL should be informed at the outset of the nature of this work. If the ESRL data are essential to the work, or if an important result or conclusion depends on the ESRL data, co-authorship may be appropriate. This should be discussed at an early stage in the work. Manuscripts using the ESRL data should be sent to ESRL for review before they are submitted for publication so we can insure that the quality and limitations of the data are accurately represented. Contact: Tom Conway (303 497 6681; [email protected]) File Creation: Thu Jul 24 15:04:07 2008 RECIPROCITY Use of these data implies an agreement to reciprocate. Laboratories making similar measurements agree to make their own data available to the general public and to the scientific community in an equally complete and easily accessible form. Modelers are encouraged to make available to the community, upon request, their own tools used in the interpretation of the ESRL data, namely well documented model code, transport fields, and additional information necessary for other scientists to repeat the work and to run modified versions. 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S1 1997 07 28 16 12 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86558 NMB 1997 04 18 12 08 4320-91 P co2 359.980 ... S1 1997 07 28 16 14 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86559 NMB 1997 05 05 11 00 1131-91 P co2 361.690 ... S1 1997 07 28 17 53 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86560 NMB 1997 05 05 11 00 1132-91 P co2 361.630 ... S1 1997 07 28 17 54 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86561 NMB 1997 05 26 15 12 1473-91 P co2 361.120 ... S1 1997 07 28 18 00 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86562 NMB 1997 05 26 15 12 1474-91 P co2 361.170 ... S1 1997 07 28 18 01 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86563 NMB 1997 06 02 11 00 1133-91 P co2 361.930 ... S1 1997 07 28 16 34 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86564 NMB 1997 06 09 16 15 1797-91 P co2 361.670 ... S1 1997 07 28 15 38 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86565 NMB 1997 06 09 16 15 1798-91 P co2 361.610 ... S1 1997 07 28 15 39 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86566 NMB 1997 06 16 12 40 4313-91 P co2 362.860 ... S1 1997 07 28 17 49 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86567 NMB 1997 06 16 12 40 4314-91 P co2 362.730 ... S1 1997 07 28 17 50 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86568 NMB 1997 06 23 10 40 4315-91 P co2 362.870 ... S1 1997 07 28 15 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86569 NMB 1997 06 23 10 40 4316-91 P co2 362.940 ... S1 1997 07 28 15 36 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86570 NMB 1997 08 17 09 25 1117-91 P co2 364.100 ... L3 1997 09 25 12 13 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86571 NMB 1997 08 17 09 25 1118-91 P co2 364.370 ... L3 1997 09 25 12 26 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86572 NMB 1997 08 23 08 12 1777-91 P co2 363.440 ... L3 1997 09 24 16 17 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86573 NMB 1997 08 23 08 12 1778-91 P co2 363.420 ... L3 1997 09 24 16 31 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86574 NMB 1997 08 29 11 04 4621-91 P co2 362.050 ... L3 1997 09 30 13 17 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86575 NMB 1997 08 29 11 04 4622-91 P co2 362.220 ... L3 1997 09 30 13 30 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86576 NMB 1997 09 05 10 35 4623-91 P co2 362.610 ... L3 1997 09 30 12 23 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86577 NMB 1997 09 05 10 35 4624-91 P co2 362.660 ... L3 1997 09 30 12 37 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86578 NMB 1997 09 24 12 50 4617-91 P co2 362.250 ... L3 1997 10 28 15 56 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86579 NMB 1997 09 24 12 50 4618-91 P co2 362.340 ... L3 1997 10 28 16 09 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86580 NMB 1997 10 02 12 15 4615-91 P co2 365.430 -.. L3 1997 10 28 16 23 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86581 NMB 1997 10 02 12 15 4616-91 P co2 365.990 +.. L3 1997 10 28 16 36 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86582 NMB 1997 10 08 11 00 695-91 P co2 363.800 ... L3 1997 12 09 09 26 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86583 NMB 1997 10 08 11 00 696-91 P co2 364.150 ... L3 1997 12 09 09 39 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86584 NMB 1997 10 26 12 00 999-91 P co2 362.020 ... L3 1997 12 09 11 41 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86585 NMB 1997 10 26 12 00 1000-91 P co2 361.750 ... L3 1997 12 09 11 54 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86586 NMB 1997 11 02 11 15 6407-66 P co2 363.850 ... L3 1997 12 03 10 50 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86587 NMB 1997 11 02 11 15 6408-66 P co2 363.840 ... L3 1997 12 03 11 03 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86588 NMB 1997 11 08 17 30 6933-66 P co2 362.120 ... L3 1997 12 03 11 17 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86589 NMB 1997 11 08 17 30 6934-66 P co2 362.220 ... L3 1997 12 03 11 30 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86590 NMB 1997 12 07 18 37 4528-91 P co2 356.700 +.. L3 1998 03 24 09 36 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86591 NMB 1997 12 07 18 37 4557-91 P co2 326.910 -.. L3 1998 03 24 09 50 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86592 NMB 1998 07 05 17 15 699-91 D co2 364.150 +.. L3 1998 08 20 14 58 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86593 NMB 1998 07 05 17 15 700-91 D co2 360.020 -.. L3 1998 08 20 15 11 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86594 NMB 1998 07 10 10 33 1221-91 D co2 366.290 ... L3 1998 08 20 14 30 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86595 NMB 1998 07 10 10 33 1222-91 D co2 366.260 ... L3 1998 08 20 14 44 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86596 NMB 1998 07 17 17 45 175-91 D co2 366.430 ... L3 1998 08 20 16 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86597 NMB 1998 07 24 17 45 227-91 D co2 368.180 ... L3 1998 08 19 13 15 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86598 NMB 1998 07 24 17 45 228-91 D co2 368.230 ... L3 1998 08 19 13 29 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86599 NMB 1998 07 31 16 45 613-91 D co2 366.960 ... L3 1998 09 11 12 24 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86600 NMB 1998 07 31 16 45 614-91 D co2 366.980 ... L3 1998 09 11 12 37 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86601 NMB 1998 08 10 13 57 4359-91 D co2 367.010 ... L3 1998 09 11 11 56 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86602 NMB 1998 08 10 13 57 4360-91 D co2 367.060 ... L3 1998 09 11 12 10 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86603 NMB 1998 08 21 18 45 181-91 D co2 365.660 ... L3 1998 09 22 15 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86604 NMB 1998 08 21 18 45 182-91 D co2 365.680 ... L3 1998 09 22 15 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86605 NMB 1998 08 28 18 45 1655-91 D co2 366.870 ... L3 1998 09 22 14 54 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86606 NMB 1998 08 28 18 45 1656-91 D co2 366.430 ... L3 1998 09 22 15 08 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86607 NMB 1998 09 05 19 00 4597-91 D co2 365.090 ... L3 1998 10 13 12 55 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86608 NMB 1998 09 05 19 00 4598-91 D co2 365.040 ... L3 1998 10 13 13 08 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86609 NMB 1998 09 13 18 40 4589-91 D co2 368.950 .X. L3 1998 10 13 15 28 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86610 NMB 1998 09 13 18 40 4590-91 D co2 368.870 .X. L3 1998 10 13 15 42 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86611 NMB 1998 10 10 18 15 1027-91 D co2 364.870 ... L3 1999 01 04 14 02 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86612 NMB 1998 10 10 18 15 1028-91 D co2 364.910 ... L3 1999 01 04 14 16 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86613 NMB 1998 10 19 17 36 157-91 D co2 367.510 .X. L3 1999 01 04 14 29 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86614 NMB 1998 10 19 17 36 158-91 D co2 367.580 .X. L3 1999 01 04 14 43 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86615 NMB 1998 11 02 19 18 53-98 D co2 365.670 ... L3 1998 12 30 09 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86616 NMB 1998 11 02 19 18 54-98 D co2 365.660 ... L3 1998 12 30 09 48 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86617 NMB 1998 11 09 17 45 51-98 D co2 365.420 ... L3 1998 12 30 09 07 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86618 NMB 1998 11 09 17 45 52-98 D co2 365.330 ... L3 1998 12 30 09 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86619 NMB 1998 11 19 10 55 387-91 D co2 365.800 ... L3 1999 01 05 13 25 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86620 NMB 1998 11 19 10 55 388-91 D co2 365.710 ... L3 1999 01 05 13 39 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86621 NMB 1998 11 26 19 50 313-91 D co2 366.140 ... L3 1999 01 05 12 58 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86622 NMB 1998 11 26 19 50 314-91 D co2 366.160 ... L3 1999 01 05 13 11 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86623 NMB 1998 12 03 19 27 594-91 D co2 365.450 ... L3 1999 03 05 12 07 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86624 NMB 1998 12 10 18 45 632-91 D co2 365.260 ... L3 1999 03 05 11 53 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86625 NMB 1998 12 24 15 30 1631-91 D co2 365.190 ... L3 1999 02 16 13 57 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86626 NMB 1998 12 24 15 30 1632-91 D co2 365.180 ... L3 1999 02 16 14 10 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86627 NMB 1999 01 01 17 00 4357-91 D co2 365.450 ... L3 1999 02 16 12 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86628 NMB 1999 01 01 17 00 4358-91 D co2 365.440 ... L3 1999 02 16 12 48 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86629 NMB 1999 01 07 19 20 4221-91 D co2 365.480 ... L3 1999 02 16 13 29 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86630 NMB 1999 01 07 19 20 4222-91 D co2 365.530 ... L3 1999 02 16 13 43 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86631 NMB 1999 01 16 18 45 1025-91 D co2 365.410 ... L3 1999 02 16 13 02 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86632 NMB 1999 01 16 18 45 1026-91 D co2 365.310 ... L3 1999 02 16 13 16 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86633 NMB 1999 02 05 18 55 649-91 D co2 365.170 ... L3 1999 06 29 13 18 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86634 NMB 1999 02 05 18 55 650-91 D co2 364.920 ... L3 1999 06 29 13 31 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86635 NMB 1999 02 12 20 50 51-98 D co2 365.150 ... L3 1999 06 29 13 45 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86636 NMB 1999 02 12 20 50 52-98 D co2 365.130 ... L3 1999 06 29 13 59 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86637 NMB 1999 02 27 08 00 603-91 D co2 365.580 ... L3 1999 06 23 13 01 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86638 NMB 1999 02 27 08 00 604-91 D co2 365.580 ... L3 1999 06 23 13 15 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86639 NMB 1999 03 09 11 40 169-91 D co2 365.270 ... L3 1999 06 23 12 34 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86640 NMB 1999 03 09 11 40 170-91 D co2 365.350 ... L3 1999 06 23 12 48 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86641 NMB 1999 04 15 16 25 373-91 D co2 365.120 ... L3 1999 06 21 13 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86642 NMB 1999 04 15 16 25 374-91 D co2 365.080 ... L3 1999 06 21 13 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86643 NMB 1999 04 23 17 27 555-91 D co2 365.660 ... L3 1999 06 21 13 49 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86644 NMB 1999 04 23 17 27 556-91 D co2 365.680 ... L3 1999 06 21 14 02 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86645 NMB 1999 05 04 11 45 4103-91 D co2 365.780 ... L3 1999 12 20 13 26 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86646 NMB 1999 05 04 11 45 4104-91 D co2 365.750 ... L3 1999 12 20 13 40 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86647 NMB 1999 06 24 16 10 4731-91 D co2 366.110 ... L3 1999 12 20 12 59 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86648 NMB 1999 06 24 16 10 4732-91 D co2 366.120 ... L3 1999 12 20 13 12 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86649 NMB 1999 09 09 13 35 3-98 D co2 367.090 ... L3 1999 12 17 09 54 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86650 NMB 1999 09 09 13 35 4-98 D co2 367.190 ... L3 1999 12 17 10 07 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86651 NMB 1999 09 15 19 31 999-91 D co2 368.260 ... L3 1999 12 17 10 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86652 NMB 1999 09 15 19 31 1000-91 D co2 368.230 ... L3 1999 12 17 10 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86653 NMB 1999 09 30 12 23 4511-91 D co2 366.710 ... L3 1999 12 17 15 00 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86654 NMB 1999 09 30 12 23 4512-91 D co2 366.580 ... L3 1999 12 17 15 14 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86655 NMB 1999 11 16 18 12 21-91 D co2 369.160 ... L3 1999 12 17 14 31 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86656 NMB 1999 11 16 18 12 22-91 D co2 369.220 ... L3 1999 12 17 14 45 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86657 NMB 1999 11 23 18 20 575-91 D co2 367.480 ... L3 2000 04 07 11 29 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86658 NMB 1999 11 23 18 20 576-91 D co2 367.280 ... L3 2000 04 07 11 42 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86659 NMB 1999 12 03 20 13 319-91 D co2 368.520 ... L3 2000 04 07 12 47 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86660 NMB 1999 12 03 20 13 320-91 D co2 368.500 ... L3 2000 04 07 13 00 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86661 NMB 1999 12 07 18 45 1321-91 D co2 369.060 ... L3 2000 04 04 10 22 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86662 NMB 1999 12 07 18 45 1322-91 D co2 369.220 ... L3 2000 04 04 10 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86663 NMB 1999 12 14 18 50 621-91 D co2 367.730 ... L3 2000 04 04 09 56 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86664 NMB 1999 12 14 18 50 622-91 D co2 367.710 ... L3 2000 04 04 10 09 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86665 NMB 2000 01 07 11 35 395-91 D co2 366.820 ... L3 2000 04 03 10 14 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86666 NMB 2000 01 07 11 35 396-91 D co2 366.710 ... L3 2000 04 03 10 27 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86667 NMB 2000 01 13 11 55 1209-91 D co2 366.940 ... L3 2000 04 03 11 06 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86668 NMB 2000 01 13 11 55 1210-91 D co2 366.980 ... L3 2000 04 03 11 19 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86669 NMB 2000 02 18 17 07 199-98 D co2 330.380 N.. L3 2000 08 21 10 38 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86670 NMB 2000 02 18 17 07 200-98 D co2 330.100 N.. L3 2000 08 21 10 51 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86671 NMB 2000 03 03 12 34 4499-91 D co2 366.420 ... L3 2000 08 21 11 04 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86672 NMB 2000 03 03 12 34 4500-91 D co2 366.290 ... L3 2000 08 21 11 17 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86673 NMB 2000 03 16 13 25 4497-91 D co2 366.940 ... L3 2000 08 17 12 18 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86674 NMB 2000 03 16 13 25 4498-91 D co2 366.950 ... L3 2000 08 17 12 31 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86675 NMB 2000 05 09 17 45 1117-91 D co2 369.070 ... L3 2000 08 17 14 04 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86676 NMB 2000 05 09 17 45 1118-91 D co2 369.030 ... L3 2000 08 17 14 17 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86677 NMB 2000 05 16 17 48 489-91 D co2 366.010 ... L3 2000 08 17 13 38 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86678 NMB 2000 05 16 17 48 490-91 D co2 366.060 ... L3 2000 08 17 13 51 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86679 NMB 2000 06 06 17 20 25-91 D co2 366.720 ... L3 2000 08 21 11 30 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86680 NMB 2000 06 06 17 20 26-91 D co2 366.850 ... L3 2000 08 21 11 43 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86681 NMB 2000 06 17 14 47 4061-91 D co2 367.410 +.. L3 2000 08 21 10 12 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86682 NMB 2000 06 17 14 47 4062-91 D co2 365.240 -.. L3 2000 08 21 10 25 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86683 NMB 2000 12 05 11 15 1363-91 D co2 368.270 ... L3 2001 03 22 09 26 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86684 NMB 2000 12 05 11 15 1364-91 D co2 368.330 ... L3 2001 03 22 09 39 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86685 NMB 2000 12 15 17 55 527-91 D co2 368.280 ... L3 2001 03 22 10 47 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86686 NMB 2000 12 15 17 55 528-91 D co2 368.190 ... L3 2001 03 22 11 00 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86687 NMB 2000 12 27 17 30 4735-91 D co2 367.630 ... L3 2001 03 22 12 07 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86688 NMB 2000 12 27 17 30 4736-91 D co2 367.670 ... L3 2001 03 22 12 20 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86689 NMB 2001 01 02 09 00 4363-91 D co2 368.230 ... L3 2001 03 22 12 33 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86690 NMB 2001 01 02 09 00 4364-91 D co2 368.270 ... L3 2001 03 22 12 46 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86691 NMB 2001 01 10 10 30 4297-91 D co2 367.800 ... L3 2001 03 21 14 01 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86692 NMB 2001 01 10 10 30 4298-91 D co2 367.770 ... L3 2001 03 21 14 14 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86693 NMB 2001 01 18 10 30 1987-91 D co2 367.850 ... L3 2001 03 21 13 35 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86694 NMB 2001 01 18 10 30 1988-91 D co2 367.810 ... L3 2001 03 21 13 48 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86695 NMB 2001 01 29 19 13 1509-91 D co2 365.370 +.. L3 2001 03 27 14 42 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86696 NMB 2001 01 29 19 13 1510-91 D co2 364.220 -.. L3 2001 03 27 14 55 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86697 NMB 2001 02 08 09 30 1061-91 D co2 367.450 ... L3 2001 03 27 14 16 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86698 NMB 2001 02 08 09 30 1062-91 D co2 367.080 ... L3 2001 03 27 14 29 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86699 NMB 2001 02 14 09 30 4315-91 D co2 368.240 ... L3 2001 03 23 14 55 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86700 NMB 2001 02 14 09 30 4316-91 D co2 367.980 ... L3 2001 03 23 15 08 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86701 NMB 2001 02 21 10 30 4189-91 D co2 367.850 ... L3 2001 03 23 15 21 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86702 NMB 2001 02 21 10 30 4190-91 D co2 367.380 ... L3 2001 03 23 15 34 -23.5800 15.0300 0.00 86703 NMB 2006 08 22 04 03 69-99 P co2 392.690 N.. L3 2006 10 05 11 59 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 222974 NMB 2006 08 22 04 03 520-99 P co2 380.960 N.. L3 2006 10 05 11 45 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 222973 NMB 2006 08 30 06 08 70-99 P co2 380.090 ... L3 2006 10 05 11 30 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 222976 NMB 2006 08 30 06 08 519-99 P co2 380.010 ... L3 2006 10 05 11 16 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 222975 NMB 2006 09 05 15 17 845-91 P co2 380.070 ... L3 2006 10 20 14 43 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 223746 NMB 2006 09 05 15 17 4250-91 P co2 380.060 ... L3 2006 10 20 14 57 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 223747 NMB 2006 09 17 15 25 846-91 P co2 380.010 +.. L3 2006 10 20 14 14 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 223748 NMB 2006 09 17 15 25 4249-91 P co2 377.270 -.. L3 2006 10 20 14 28 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 223749 NMB 2006 10 13 14 02 2339-99 P co2 381.650 ... L3 2006 12 05 14 45 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 225665 NMB 2006 10 13 14 02 2505-99 P co2 381.890 ... L3 2006 12 05 14 31 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 225666 NMB 2006 11 10 15 42 3568-99 P co2 379.980 ... L3 2006 12 05 14 59 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 225663 NMB 2006 11 10 15 42 4027-99 P co2 380.020 ... L3 2006 12 05 15 13 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 225664 NMB 2007 02 03 18 00 2794-99 P co2 380.590 ... L3 2007 03 16 13 23 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 230695 NMB 2007 02 03 18 00 3222-99 P co2 380.530 ... L3 2007 03 16 13 09 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 230694 NMB 2007 02 19 17 33 2793-99 P co2 380.370 ... L3 2007 03 16 13 52 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 230693 NMB 2007 02 19 17 33 3221-99 P co2 380.340 ... L3 2007 03 16 13 37 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 230692 NMB 2007 03 08 10 38 1369-91 P co2 380.050 ... L3 2007 04 02 12 59 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 231738 NMB 2007 03 08 10 38 4113-91 P co2 379.980 ... L3 2007 04 02 13 14 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 231739 NMB 2007 03 15 17 15 3567-99 P co2 383.310 .X. L3 2007 04 12 13 55 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 232146 NMB 2007 03 15 17 15 4028-99 P co2 383.340 .X. L3 2007 04 12 14 09 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 232145 NMB 2007 03 23 08 15 2340-99 P co2 379.940 -.. L3 2007 04 12 13 26 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 232143 NMB 2007 03 23 08 15 2506-99 P co2 478.630 +.. L3 2007 04 12 13 40 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 232144 NMB 2007 03 30 17 10 689-99 P co2 380.990 ... L3 2007 05 22 16 20 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234361 NMB 2007 03 30 17 10 3606-99 P co2 381.070 ... L3 2007 05 22 16 06 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234360 NMB 2007 04 08 08 33 690-99 P co2 380.850 ... L3 2007 05 22 15 52 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234363 NMB 2007 04 08 08 33 3605-99 P co2 381.030 ... L3 2007 05 22 15 37 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234362 NMB 2007 04 15 16 35 1072-99 P co2 381.400 ... L3 2007 05 22 15 09 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234356 NMB 2007 04 15 16 35 1753-99 P co2 381.380 ... L3 2007 05 22 15 23 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234357 NMB 2007 04 20 08 50 1071-99 P co2 379.890 ... L3 2007 05 22 14 40 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234358 NMB 2007 04 20 08 50 1754-99 P co2 379.980 ... L3 2007 05 22 14 55 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 234359 NMB 2007 04 29 17 00 197-91 P co2 380.700 ... L3 2007 06 18 09 45 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235885 NMB 2007 04 29 17 00 198-91 P co2 380.730 ... L3 2007 06 18 10 00 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235886 NMB 2007 05 16 10 43 196-91 P co2 380.960 ... L3 2007 06 18 11 11 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235891 NMB 2007 05 16 10 43 519-91 P co2 381.050 ... L3 2007 06 18 11 25 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235892 NMB 2007 05 24 15 50 195-91 P co2 381.250 -.. L3 2007 06 18 10 57 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235890 NMB 2007 05 24 15 50 520-91 P co2 490.500 +.. L3 2007 06 18 10 42 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235889 NMB 2007 06 01 06 40 395-91 P co2 379.460 ... L3 2007 06 18 10 14 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235887 NMB 2007 06 01 06 40 396-91 P co2 379.540 ... L3 2007 06 18 10 28 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 235888 NMB 2007 06 08 15 30 455-99 P co2 380.730 ... L3 2007 07 19 15 24 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238514 NMB 2007 06 08 15 30 1067-99 P co2 380.840 ... L3 2007 07 19 15 10 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238513 NMB 2007 06 22 13 50 456-99 P co2 383.490 ... L3 2007 07 20 09 29 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238512 NMB 2007 06 22 13 50 1068-99 P co2 383.520 ... L3 2007 07 20 09 15 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238511 NMB 2007 06 28 13 54 629-99 P co2 382.710 ... L3 2007 07 19 14 56 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238508 NMB 2007 06 28 13 54 4784-99 P co2 382.680 ... L3 2007 07 19 14 41 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238507 NMB 2007 07 05 13 51 630-99 P co2 383.260 ... L3 2007 07 19 15 38 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238509 NMB 2007 07 05 13 51 4783-99 P co2 383.180 ... L3 2007 07 19 15 52 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 238510 NMB 2007 07 16 09 15 687-99 P co2 383.370 ... L3 2007 09 10 13 33 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241272 NMB 2007 07 16 09 15 4781-99 P co2 383.190 ... L3 2007 09 10 13 18 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241271 NMB 2007 08 03 14 14 522-99 P co2 383.080 ... L3 2007 09 10 14 15 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241265 NMB 2007 08 03 14 14 4103-99 P co2 383.050 ... L3 2007 09 10 14 30 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241266 NMB 2007 08 12 15 15 447-99 P co2 382.450 ... L8 2007 09 10 13 53 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241268 NMB 2007 08 12 15 15 2559-99 P co2 382.570 ... L8 2007 09 10 13 38 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241267 NMB 2007 08 17 14 05 688-99 P co2 383.560 ... L3 2007 09 11 13 25 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241370 NMB 2007 08 17 14 05 4782-99 P co2 383.490 ... L3 2007 09 11 13 11 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241369 NMB 2007 08 24 06 39 1130-99 P co2 381.890 ... L3 2007 09 11 13 39 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241367 NMB 2007 08 24 06 39 1132-99 P co2 382.000 ... L3 2007 09 11 13 53 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241368 NMB 2007 08 31 11 12 633-99 P co2 381.770 ... L3 2007 09 10 14 01 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241270 NMB 2007 08 31 11 12 2891-99 P co2 381.910 ... L3 2007 09 10 13 47 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 241269 NMB 2007 09 06 07 40 198-99 P co2 381.690 ... L3 2007 10 03 11 20 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 242613 NMB 2007 09 06 07 40 361-99 P co2 381.820 ... L3 2007 10 03 11 06 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 242612 NMB 2007 09 19 12 36 197-99 P co2 385.290 ... L3 2007 10 03 11 49 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 242610 NMB 2007 09 19 12 36 362-99 P co2 385.430 ... L3 2007 10 03 11 34 -23.5600 15.0100 461.00 242611 NMB 2007 12 14 09 55 255-91 P co2 382.050 ... L3 2008 01 22 14 29 -23.5700 15.0200 461.00 248011 NMB 2007 12 14 09 55 256-91 P co2 381.960 ... L3 2008 01 22 14 43 -23.5700 15.0200 461.00 248012 NMB 2007 12 28 15 30 489-91 P co2 382.420 ... L3 2008 01 22 14 57 -23.5700 15.0200 461.00 248013 NMB 2007 12 28 15 30 490-91 P co2 382.410 ... L3 2008 01 22 15 11 -23.5700 15.0200 461.00 248014
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MESSAGE NO: 3248209 DATE: 9/5/2003 CATEGORY: ADA TYPE: TER REFERENCE: REFERENCE DATE: CASES: A-580-809 PERIOD COVERED: 11/01/1997 TO 10/31/1998 LIQ SUSPENSION DATE: TO: DIRECTORS OF FIELD OPERATIONS, PORT DIRECTORS FROM: DIRECTOR, SPECIAL ENFORCEMENT RE: TERMINATION OF ANTIDUMPINGN DUTY ORDER ON CIRCULAR, WELDED NON-ALLOY STEEL PIPE FROM THE REPUBLIC OF, KOREA(A-580-809) 1\. THE ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW OF THE ANTIDUMPING DUTY ORDER ON CIRCULAR WELDED NON-ALLOY STEEL PIPE FROM THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA (A-580-809), COVERING THE PERIOD 11/01/97 THROUGH 10/31/98, HAS BEEN TERMINATED AT THE REQUEST OF KOREA IRON AND STEEL CO., LTD., SEAH STEEL CORPORATION AND SHINHO STEEL CO., LTD. THIS NOTICE OF TERMINATION WAS PUBLISHED IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER ON MAY 6, 1999 (64 FR 24327). YOU ARE TO ASSESS ANTIDUMPING DUTIES ON THIS MERCHANDISE ENTERED, OR WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE, FOR CONSUMPTION DURING THE PERIOD LISTED BELOW AT THE CASH DEPOSIT OR BONDING RATE REQUIRED AT THE TIME OF ENTRY SUMMARY. CIRCULAR WELDED NON-ALLOY STEEL PIPE FROM THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA (A-580-809) PERIOD: 11/01/97-10/31/98 LIQUIDATE ALL ENTRY SUMMARIES FROM ALL FIRMS 2\. THESE INSTRUCTIONS CONSTITUTE THE IMMEDIATE LIFTING OF SUSPENSION OF LIQUIDATION OF ENTRY SUMMARIES FOR THE MERCHANDISE AND PERIOD LISTED ABOVE. YOU SHALL CONTINUE TO COLLECT CASH DEPOSITS OF ESTIMATED ANTIDUMPING DUTIES FOR THE MERCHANDISE AT THE CURRENT RATES. 3\. THE ASSESSMENT OF ANTIDUMPING DUTIES BY THE CUSTOMS SERVICE ON ENTRIES OF THIS MERCHANDISE IS SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 778 OF THE TARIFF ACT OF 1930, AS AMENDED. SECTION 778 REQUIRES THAT CUSTOMS PAY INTEREST ON OVERPAYMENTS, OR ASSESS INTEREST ON UNDERPAYMENTS, OF THE REQUIRED AMOUNTS DEPOSITED AS ESTIMATED ANTIDUMPING DUTIES. THE INTEREST PROVISIONS ARE NOT APPLICABLE TO CASH BONDS POSTED AS ESTIMATED ANTIDUMPING DUTIES BEFORE THE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF THE ANTIDUMPING DUTY ORDER. INTEREST SHALL BE CALCULATED FROM THE DATE OF PAYMENT OF ESTIMATED ANTIDUMPING DUTIES THROUGH THE DATE OF LIQUIDATION. THE RATE AT WHICH SUCH INTEREST IS PAYABLE IS THE RATE IN EFFECT UNDER SECTION 6621 OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE OF 1954 FOR SUCH PERIOD. 4\. UPON ASSESSMENT OF ANTIDUMPING DUTIES, CUSTOMS SHOULD REQUIRE THAT THE IMPORTER PROVIDE A REIMBURSEMENT STATEMENT AS DESCRIBED IN SECTION 353.26 OF THE COMMERCE DEPARTMENT REGULATIONS (19 CFR 353, APRIL 1997). THE IMPORTER SHOULD PROVIDE THE REIMBURSEMENT STATEMENT PRIOR TO LIQUIDATION OF THE ENTRY. IF THE IMPORTER HAS BEEN REIMBURSED ANTIDUMPING DUTIES, CUSTOMS SHOULD DOUBLE THE ANTIDUMPING DUTIES IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE ABOVE-REFERENCED REGULATION. ADDITIONALLY, IF THE IMPORTER FAILS TO RESPOND TO YOUR FORMAL REQUEST (VIA CF 28 OR 29) FOR THE REIMBURSEMENT STATEMENT PRIOR TO LIQUIDATION, CUSTOMS SHOULD PRESUME REIMBURSEMENT AND DOUBLE THE ANTIDUMPING DUTIES DUE. 5\. IF THERE ARE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING THIS MATTER BY CUSTOMS OFFICERS, THE IMPORTING PUBLIC, OR INTERESTED PARTIES, PLEASE CONTACT SCOTT HOLLAND, OFFICE OF AD/CVD ENFORCEMENT, IMPORT ADMINISTRATION, INTERNATIONAL TRADE ADMINISTRATION, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AT (202) 482-1279 OR SCOTTunderlineHOLLANDatsymbolITA.DOC.GOV. 6\. THERE ARE NO RESTRICTIONS ON THE RELEASE OF THIS INFORMATION. CATHY SAUCEDA
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# Presentation: 359433 ## Overview of the Cooperative Water Program Task Force Findings - Presentation for the - Advisory Committee on Water Information - Annual Meeting - September 14, 2005 **Barney Austin, Texas Water Development Board *****representing the Western States Water Council*** ## Overview of the Cooperative Water Program - Created in 1895 - _Combine resources_ of the Federal gov’t with other governmental units to collect and analyze water resources data - In 1905 Congress appropriated funds specifically for cooperative studies - Main objectives: - To _collect data_ for the continuing determination and evaluation of the quantity, quality and use of the Nation’s water resources. - To appraise _physical, biological and chemical characteristics_ of surface and groundwater through _data analysis and interpretive studies_. **Notes:** Paraphrased main objectives Limited Federal financial contribution to 50% Previous Task Force recommended a Mission Statement for the Cooperative Water Program: “...to provide reliable, impartial, and timely information needed to understand the Nation’s water resources through a program of shared efforts and funding with State, Tribal, and local partners to enable decision makers to wisely manage the Nation’s water resources”. USGS adopted this Mission Statement. ## Overview of ‘99 Coop Task Force - Task Force established by the ACWI at their August 1998 meeting in Denver, CO - Terms of Reference: - To assess the effectiveness of the Cooperative Water Program; - To make recommendations; - Provide a written report of the findings... **Notes:** Circular 1192 released in August 1999 ## Overview of ‘99 Coop Task Force - Membership: 21 individuals representing 21 organizations - A total of 59 findings in areas of: - Mission; - Priorities for funding; - Funding levels; - A national streamgaging program; - Collaboration and communication; - Competition with the private sector; - Quality of USGS work; - Products - Response letter by Secretary Norton to ACWI with enclosed USGS responses to report recommendations (10/3/01) **Notes:** No members present at today’s meeting??? ## Overview of the 2004 Task Force - ToR: To _review the progress_ of the USGS in implementing the recommendations of the 1999 Coop TF report. - Report will serve as the basis for the ACWI to recommend _mid-course corrections_ to enhance the Program...form the basis for an internal USGS 5-year action plan for the Program. ## Task Force membership | Barney Austin, Chair | Texas Water Development Board | Western States Water Council | | | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Fred Bloetscher | Public Utility Management & Planning Services | American Water Works Assoc. | | | | | Bill Cauthren | Oklahoma Water Resources Board | Assoc. of State & Interstate Water Pollution Control Administrators | | | | | Tom Dietrich | NOAA, National Weather Service | | | | | | John Jansen | Aquifer Science & Technology, Inc. | National Groundwater Association | | | | | Rick Johnson | Camp, Dresser & McKee, Inc. | Water Environment Federation | | | | | Sue Lowry | Wyoming State Engineer's Office | Interstate Council on Water Policy | | | | | Karl Muessig | NJ Geological Survey | American Association of State Geologists | | | | - ***Glenn Patterson** USGS Executive Secretary & Non-voting member ## USGS accomplishments since 1999 - Establishment of NSIP - Identification and partial funding of core network - Improved data collection and dissemination - Development of the CWP web site - Better communication - Avoid competition with the private sector - Several new cooperators - Reports available online ## 2004 TF Report – Appendix B - USGS response – Agree/disagree - Status – Complete/adopted/implemented... - 2004 TF Priority rating* – High/medium/low - 2004 TF Progress Assessment - USGS Implementation Plan ## Status of ’99 TF recommendations - Status of recommendations in the ’99 report: - 6 complete - 50 agree, adopted, ongoing - 2 partially agree, partially adopted - Use of in-kind services (11.3) - Proposals on the web (17.1) - 2 disagree, not implemented - Billing based on actual cost per station (8.2) - Use of outside contractors for data collection (_11.2a_) - TF assessment: 9 “Insufficient progress” **Notes:** Glenn - Do we comment on “disagreements” in 2004 report? ## Chapter III of 2004 TF report - Where the USGS does not fully agree (4) - TF assessment: Insufficient progress (9) ## Chapter III of 2004 TF report - Emphasis on long-term data collection and core competency (10.1, 15.2) - Relationships with cooperators and the private sector (11.2a, 15.3) - Use of in-kind services (11.3) - Accessibility to information on proposals (17.1) - Billing based on actual vs. average costs (8.2) - Scheduling/timing of reports (25.1, 30.1) - Funding issues (4.1) ## Prioritization - ’99 Report did not prioritize - Beyond TF ToR, but may be important to the USGS (limited funding & resources...) - High, medium, low - Rating of all recommendations by all members - Secret formula to compile ratings (G. Patterson) - 14 High, 44 Medium, 2 low ## High Priority & Insufficient Progress - Full match for Coop stations including provision for inflation (4.1) - NSIP...100% funding for national streamgaging network (9.1) - Long-term data collection vs. interpretive studies (10.1) - The CWP should concentrate on its core competency (15.2) - Improve reporting (25.1) - Improve timeliness of deliverables; - Make transparent report procedure; - Accessibility to data in ongoing projects; - Maintain point of contact for long-term projects; - Improve knowledge transfer within USGS. - Increase the use of in-kind services (11.3) **Notes:** Note correction to handout... NSIP is separate line item in USGS budget... Funding is appr. $14 per year. Full implementation would cost $95M, with upfront infrastructure costs of about $103M. 4,425 identified streamgages...appr. 500 are currently funded by NSIP. ## Funding issues! - 4 of 6 “high priority, insufficient progress” - Data quality has improved since 1895! - Real time information invaluable - Access to water info databases & stats - High tech equipment and staff now required for developing rating curves... ## Slide 15 ## Average rate of increase **Average rate of increase** **3.8 % per year** ## Funding issues - Cooperators now pick up 68% of the total cost of running the cooperative program - NSIP has not improved the streamgaging situation due to lack of funding - CWP needs in excess of $71M to bring relationship back to 50-50 cost share - NSIP needs $103M for full funding of core network ## Funding for NSIP and CWP... - Signatories: - WSWC - ICWP - NWRA - Assoc. of State Floodplain managers - etc...20 in total ## The streamgaging funding story! - Peter Evans (Executive Director) - Interstate Council for Water Policy - (703) 243-7383 (office) - (703) 622-6660 (cell) - [email protected]_ - _[www.icwp.org](http://www.icwp.org/)__ ____link!_ ## For more information... - About the Task Force Review: - _[http://](http://water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/coop/)__[water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/coop](http://water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/coop/)__[/](http://water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/coop/)_ - About the Cooperative Water Program: - _[http://water.usgs.gov/coop/](http://water.usgs.gov/coop/)_ - Barney Austin (WSWC/TWDB) - _[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])_ - (512) 463-8856
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+------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ | | | +------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ | ![](me | *\~ **Human Resources Operations**\~ Newsletter* | | dia/image1.png){ | | | width="1.2375in" | | | height="0.9979 | | | 166666666667in"} | | +------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ | Thursday, | | | November 30, | | | 2006 Volume 3 | | +------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ | In This Issue | # **W | | | hat We Do -- *Human Resources Operations (HRO)*** | | - New OST | | | Employees | ![ | | | ](media/image3.jpeg){width="0.9159722222222222in" | | - Changes in | height="0.65625in"} | | 2007 | | | | - **HRO Service Team** | | - e-OPF | | | Initiative | > *HR Consultants in the areas of Recruitment and | | | > Staffing; Pay and Leave; Classification; | | - The Benefits | > Position Management; Employee Relations* | | Corner | | | | - **HRO Processing Team** | | The HRO Team | | | | > *Federal Personnel and Payroll System (FPPS); | | **[Associate | > Pay and Leave Issues; Processing Personnel | | Director | > Actions;* | | ]{.underline}**\ | > | | Deborah Mason -- | > *Official Personnel File Maintenance; Entrance | | X66202 | > on Duty Orientation; Leave Donor Program;* | | | > | | **[Employee | > *eLMS Administrator* | | Relations | | | ]{.underline}**\ | - **HRO Employee Benefits Team** | | John Sutherland | | | -- X69444 | > *Retirement Counseling; Thrift Savings Plan | | | > (TSP); Health Benefits; Flexible Spending | | **[Program | > Account (FSA);* | | Assistant | > | | ]{.underline}**\ | > *Military and Civilian Deposits; Life | | Vacant -- X30554 | > Insurance; Long Term Care Insurance; Workers' | | | > Compensation;* | | **[HR Policy | > | | Manager | > *VERA/VSIP Management* | | ]{.underline}**\ | | | Nancy Raum -- | ! | | X63887 | [](media/image4.wmf){width="0.9944444444444445in" | | | height="0.7388888888888889in"} | | **[HRO Service | | | Team | ***Join us as we welcome the newest*** | | ]{.underline}**\ | | | Sally Ruble | ***members of OST...*** | | (Supervisor) -- | | | X69418\ | *[\ | | Eric Boyd -- | \ | | X69083\ | EMPLOYEE]{.underline} [ORGANIZATION]{.underline}* | | Mark Pinkney -- | | | X68596 | Mary E. Peters Secretary of Transportation | | | | | **[HRO | Neftal A. Burnell Office of the Assistant | | Processing | Secretary for Budget & Programs | | Team | | | ]{.underline}**\ | Robert A. Dehaan Office of the Assistant | | Vanessa Usual | Secretary for Transportation Policy | | (Supervisor) -- | | | X60391\ | Margaret L. Rose Office of the Assistant | | Marquee' Holmes | Secretary for Administration | | -- X63893\ | | | Terrance Sims -- | Leonardo San Roman Office of the Small & | | X68944\ | Disadvantaged Bus. Utilization | | Main Number -- | | | X64075 | Andrew B. Steinberg Office of the Assistant | | | Secretary for Aviation & Intl. Affairs\ | | **[HRO Benefits | Jacqueline D. Stratton Office of the General | | Team | Counsel\ | | ]{.underline}**\ | Karen M. Willard Office of the Secretary | | Casey Schaffer | | | (Supervisor) -- | ! | | X69412\ | [](media/image5.wmf){width="0.9298611111111111in" | | Zee Grant - | height="0.7055555555555556in"} | | X66390\ | | | Delores Griffin | **Changes in 2007...** | | -- X64140 | | | | There are two changes in 2007 that you should  be | | **[SES Political | aware of.  | | Team | | | ]{.underline}**\ | First, during this year, we will have 27 pay | | \ | periods, rather than the usual 26.  This is a | | [Departmental | normal situation that occurs every few years.  It | | Office of Human | is particularly important that employees consider | | Resource | this impact in planning their 2007 deductions for | | Managem | Thrift Savings Plan and Thrift Catch-up.  This | | ent]{.underline} | change [will not]{.underline} have any impact on | | | leave accruals or on employees' Wage and Tax | | Nancy Gauthier | Statement, Form W-2, which will include wages | | -- X69453\ | paid and taxes withheld for 27 pay periods.  | | (SES Appointees) | | | | ! | | Joan Simpson -- | [](media/image6.wmf){width="0.7090277777777778in" | | X63891\ | height="0.6979166666666666in"} | | (Political | | | Appointees) | Second, based on a Federal Law passed in 2005, to | | | take effect in 2007, Daylight Savings Time will | | **"HRO Values"** | start the second Sunday in March, and end the | | | first Sunday in November (03-11-07 through | | - Superior | 11-04-07).  | | Customer | | | Service | **\ | | | ** | | - A Commitment | | | to | ![ | | Excellence | ](media/image7.jpeg){width="1.5402777777777779in" | | | height="1.0277777777777777in"}**e-OPF | | - Personal and | Initiative...** | | | | | Organizational | The Office of Human Resources (HR) is preparing | | | for the Department of Transportation Electronic | | Accountability | Official Personnel Folder (eOPF) initiative.  | | | | | **Customer | The [e]{.underline}lectronic | | Survey Drop | [O]{.underline}fficial [P]{.underline}ersonnel | | Box** | [F]{.underline}older is an electronic web-based | | | system that provides online access to OPF data.  | | ![ | The system allows secured access to employees and | | ](media/image2.w | HR Personnel. | | mf){width="0.434 | | | 0277777777778in" | Over the next several weeks we will be working on | | height="0.45in"} | the following to prepare for the conversion:  | | | | | We want to hear | - Review OPF and purge non-regulatory documents | | from you! Next | | | time you are in | - Prepare the OPF for shipping; and | | our suite, room | | | 2225, please | - Ship OPFs to the Office of Personnel | | take a moment to | Management\'s Conversion Facility in late | | complete our | December/early January   | | customer survey. | | | Your feedback is | ! | | greatly | [](media/image8.gif){width="0.9944444444444445in" | | appreciated. | height="0.9729166666666667in"}Employees who are | | | considering retirement during December/January | | | should notify Casey Schaffer at ext. 69412.  | | | OPF\'s for those employees who are planning to | | | retire during this period will not be shipped. | | | | | | We appreciate your patience during this | | | transition.  | | | | | | ! | | | [](media/image9.png){width="0.8694444444444445in" | | | height="0.7423611111111111in"}**\ | | | The Benefits Corner** | | | | | | ![ | | | ](media/image10.png){width="0.5055555555555555in" | | | height="0.6201388888888889in"} | | | | | | **Is it Time to Change your TSP Election?** | | | | | | **FERS Employees -- Take Note!** | | | | | | As 2006 comes to a close, now is the time to take | | | a look at your TSP contribution for 2007. TSP | | | contributions are limited by the 2007 IRS | | | elective deferral limit of \$15,500. It is | | | especially important for FERS employees to space | | | your contributions throughout the entire year. | | | Once the annual limit is reached your | | | contributions will stop -- ***and so will the | | | agency matching contribution*.** FERS employees | | | who want to put in the full \$15,500 should make | | | their TSP election on Employee Express during the | | | pay period ending December 9, 2006. Your election | | | will be effective on December 10, 2006 and will | | | come out of your pay on January 2, 2007. Since | | | there are 27 pay dates in 2007, an election of | | | \$575 will take you through the entire year. | | | Note: A final contribution of \$550 will be | | | deducted during pay period 27 to meet the IRS | | | limit of \$15,500. | | | | | | **Age 50 or over?** -- If you are age 50 or over | | | at any time during the calendar year AND you are | | | making the maximum amount of regular employee | | | contributions, you may contribute up to \$5,000 | | | in additional catch-up contributions. This is a | | | separate election and can also be done on | | | Employee Express. | | | | | | ![ | | | ](media/image11.png){width="0.9944444444444445in" | | | height="0.6972222222222222in"} | | | | | | Questions? Contact your employee benefits staff. | | | | | | **\ | | | ** | +------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ | | # | +------------------+---------------------------------------------------+
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CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 5 -0.77282 -4.42773 0.18958 0.03808 1.24652 0.10113E+01 0 1534 10 -0.82931 -4.46915 0.18852 0.01901 1.32755 0.10049E+01 0 2339 15 -0.88144 -4.50905 0.18790 0.01994 1.27954 0.10151E+01 0 3987 20 -0.75965 -4.52389 0.18598 0.00198 0.72887 0.00000E+00 0 6434 25 -0.83525 -4.57164 0.18258 0.01447 1.21046 0.11046E+01 0 6610 30 -0.78963 -4.51512 0.17724 0.02034 1.21623 0.10915E+01 0 5719 35 -0.80779 -4.57998 0.17011 0.01495 1.21221 0.11095E+01 0 4386 40 -0.74586 -4.57216 0.16401 0.03059 1.25878 0.10020E+01 0 5184 45 -0.92352 -4.59466 0.16089 0.10313 1.28393 0.10142E+01 0 5574 50 -0.97731 -4.64611 0.15992 0.18048 1.29436 0.10239E+01 0 5496 55 -0.67169 -4.64165 0.16222 0.25196 1.31635 0.10273E+01 0 6001 60 -0.56308 -4.67254 0.17183 0.25325 1.30264 0.10314E+01 0 6251 65 -0.65485 -4.67517 0.18668 0.18598 1.27391 0.10334E+01 0 6977 70 -0.87251 -4.68713 0.19948 0.14304 1.27323 0.10353E+01 0 6045 75 -0.98919 -4.75220 0.20886 0.14192 1.27776 0.10362E+01 0 5994 80 -0.89158 -4.74015 0.21885 0.12980 1.27403 0.10373E+01 14 7175 85 -0.90594 -4.76209 0.23101 0.10360 1.27325 0.10377E+01 12 7421 90 -0.82857 -4.77293 0.24264 0.11159 1.27613 0.10373E+01 0 6939 95 -0.84624 -4.78955 0.25173 0.14489 1.28144 0.10354E+01 0 7198 100 -0.95869 -4.83706 0.25880 0.17027 1.28649 0.10337E+01 0 7476 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 105 -1.04461 -4.85134 0.26429 0.19617 1.29536 0.10311E+01 0 8204 110 -1.15602 -4.88180 0.26620 0.22097 1.29849 0.10285E+01 0 8432 115 -1.09908 -4.88295 0.26076 0.24184 1.30220 0.10259E+01 0 8228 120 -1.17132 -4.87271 0.24436 0.24308 1.29924 0.10246E+01 0 9913 125 -1.26730 -4.90310 0.21581 0.23978 1.29810 0.10242E+01 0 10040 130 -1.18838 -4.95550 0.18010 0.22911 1.28988 0.10243E+01 0 8869 135 -1.17361 -4.91023 0.15013 0.20826 1.28436 0.10229E+01 0 7437 140 -1.09544 -4.91764 0.13823 0.20027 1.29045 0.10195E+01 0 6606 145 -1.26293 -4.94613 0.14571 0.21047 1.30152 0.10161E+01 0 5895 150 -1.07789 -4.92006 0.16389 0.22559 1.30852 0.10125E+01 0 5812 155 -1.22395 -4.93968 0.18204 0.24412 1.31543 0.10065E+01 0 6644 160 -1.27440 -4.96808 0.19347 0.26609 1.32359 0.99766E+00 0 7216 165 -1.18736 -4.95867 0.19659 0.27026 1.32098 0.98819E+00 0 6908 170 -1.24908 -4.98126 0.19453 0.25981 1.31504 0.97940E+00 0 6865 175 -1.11721 -4.99574 0.19269 0.25370 1.31578 0.97232E+00 0 7151 180 -1.22129 -4.99529 0.19573 0.25566 1.32018 0.96690E+00 0 6667 185 -1.16243 -4.99093 0.20441 0.25543 1.32013 0.96327E+00 0 5797 190 -1.15900 -5.01236 0.21450 0.25094 1.31896 0.96071E+00 0 5809 195 -1.25944 -5.03542 0.22060 0.24933 1.31914 0.95946E+00 0 6089 200 -1.38293 -5.04208 0.22154 0.25891 1.32441 0.96006E+00 0 6395 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 205 -1.25754 -5.05255 0.22133 0.27554 1.33195 0.96132E+00 0 7468 210 -1.40874 -5.03477 0.22445 0.28475 1.33590 0.96055E+00 0 9674 215 -1.33440 -5.02610 0.23110 0.28103 1.33318 0.95727E+00 0 10814 220 -1.26522 -5.05607 0.23832 0.26339 1.32443 0.95168E+00 0 10311 225 -1.23427 -5.05037 0.24401 0.23535 1.31429 0.94520E+00 0 9015 230 -1.21221 -5.01663 0.24800 0.20912 1.31030 0.94045E+00 0 7487 235 -1.21638 -5.03028 0.25075 0.20057 1.31534 0.93875E+00 0 6616 240 -1.27267 -5.04164 0.25217 0.20664 1.31997 0.93823E+00 0 6147 245 -1.21968 -5.02217 0.25147 0.21298 1.32033 0.93735E+00 0 6667 250 -1.25209 -4.99885 0.24736 0.21337 1.31861 0.93651E+00 0 7247 255 -1.31328 -4.98375 0.23859 0.20873 1.31529 0.93637E+00 0 7235 260 -1.27800 -4.99155 0.22541 0.20842 1.31477 0.93777E+00 0 8158 265 -1.19077 -5.01464 0.21068 0.22278 1.32094 0.94060E+00 0 8434 270 -1.18412 -5.02484 0.19884 0.24826 1.33054 0.94328E+00 0 7569 275 -1.08977 -5.00979 0.19350 0.27327 1.33967 0.94515E+00 0 6218 280 -1.13457 -5.03084 0.19561 0.29031 1.34545 0.94616E+00 0 5332 285 -1.19444 -5.04217 0.20279 0.29913 1.34769 0.94686E+00 0 5179 290 -1.20823 -5.05379 0.21041 0.30128 1.34696 0.94764E+00 0 5378 295 -1.23209 -5.05543 0.21469 0.29976 1.34491 0.94882E+00 0 6280 300 -1.10793 -5.04465 0.21510 0.29749 1.34356 0.95059E+00 0 6822 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 305 -1.22611 -5.03089 0.21405 0.29568 1.34360 0.95288E+00 0 6509 310 -1.33429 -5.03486 0.21429 0.29166 1.34284 0.95514E+00 0 6199 315 -1.31733 -5.07650 0.21705 0.28372 1.34024 0.95664E+00 0 5687 320 -1.29968 -5.09010 0.22195 0.27415 1.33729 0.95697E+00 0 4896 325 -1.19909 -5.03749 0.22778 0.26648 1.33555 0.95604E+00 0 4669 330 -1.26080 -5.05114 0.23273 0.26300 1.33548 0.95394E+00 0 4460 335 -1.31519 -5.08363 0.23417 0.26253 1.33542 0.95093E+00 0 4442 340 -1.35077 -5.09868 0.22763 0.26249 1.33345 0.94752E+00 0 4440 345 -1.18247 -5.12355 0.20531 0.26271 1.32985 0.94493E+00 0 4477 350 -1.25425 -5.12132 0.15893 0.26504 1.32602 0.94437E+00 0 4475 355 -1.42452 -5.19272 0.09314 0.27007 1.32335 0.94508E+00 0 4614 360 -1.39779 -5.23610 0.03538 0.27479 1.32169 0.94335E+00 0 4852 365 -1.50536 -5.27076 0.00775 0.27652 1.31468 0.94299E+00 0 4894 370 -1.67545 -5.35849 0.00361 0.27531 1.30407 0.98863E+00 0 4819 375 -1.60899 -5.35440 0.03325 0.27216 1.34376 0.95257E+00 0 4664 380 -1.55778 -5.34927 0.09765 0.26726 1.35210 0.94596E+00 0 4615 385 -1.62261 -5.36606 0.14677 0.26177 1.34291 0.94070E+00 0 4400 390 -1.72180 -5.36831 0.16272 0.25833 1.33613 0.93614E+00 0 4071 395 -1.61147 -5.31739 0.16008 0.25922 1.33494 0.93330E+00 0 3941 400 -1.74313 -5.30333 0.15295 0.26448 1.33740 0.93181E+00 0 4115 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 405 -1.59115 -5.30424 0.14900 0.27411 1.34327 0.93117E+00 0 4529 410 -1.60718 -5.32423 0.14544 0.28768 1.34937 0.93072E+00 0 4787 415 -1.56355 -5.35214 0.13718 0.30231 1.35482 0.93066E+00 0 5128 420 -1.66712 -5.35377 0.12877 0.31342 1.35978 0.93076E+00 0 5512 425 -1.49187 -5.29420 0.12768 0.31892 1.36283 0.93046E+00 0 5610 430 -1.59780 -5.31165 0.13148 0.31984 1.36223 0.92993E+00 0 5523 435 -1.52607 -5.33165 0.13367 0.31785 1.35962 0.92987E+00 0 5345 440 -1.68823 -5.40818 0.13571 0.31300 1.35693 0.93052E+00 0 5168 445 -1.67825 -5.44277 0.14155 0.30586 1.35392 0.93145E+00 0 5018 450 -1.65620 -5.38846 0.14859 0.29804 1.35014 0.93231E+00 0 5146 455 -1.78613 -5.40410 0.15413 0.28961 1.34625 0.93290E+00 0 5337 460 -1.73940 -5.46147 0.16143 0.27992 1.34305 0.93300E+00 0 5517 465 -1.93775 -5.48871 0.17350 0.26980 1.34035 0.93248E+00 0 5632 470 -1.82494 -5.49127 0.18751 0.26199 1.33837 0.93158E+00 0 5674 475 -1.71054 -5.48080 0.19913 0.25882 1.33781 0.93059E+00 0 5834 480 -1.78331 -5.48571 0.20701 0.26036 1.33870 0.92961E+00 0 5979 485 -1.90361 -5.52329 0.21181 0.26511 1.34052 0.92864E+00 0 6083 490 -1.78015 -5.51199 0.21371 0.27115 1.34250 0.92772E+00 0 6237 495 -1.95414 -5.47653 0.21228 0.27691 1.34404 0.92691E+00 0 6189 500 -1.96448 -5.49229 0.20836 0.28081 1.34473 0.92621E+00 0 5985 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 505 -1.93243 -5.50894 0.20422 0.28184 1.34433 0.92543E+00 0 5729 510 -1.85891 -5.48549 0.20116 0.28058 1.34307 0.92447E+00 0 5522 515 -1.85200 -5.47575 0.19870 0.27844 1.34150 0.92342E+00 0 5540 520 -1.98859 -5.53394 0.19681 0.27680 1.34053 0.92251E+00 0 5757 525 -1.86071 -5.58119 0.19684 0.27653 1.34061 0.92177E+00 0 5909 530 -2.05194 -5.59135 0.19986 0.27726 1.34120 0.92101E+00 0 5907 535 -2.04939 -5.57819 0.20545 0.27764 1.34129 0.92009E+00 0 5884 540 -2.12175 -5.57245 0.21232 0.27554 1.33977 0.91879E+00 0 5851 545 -2.10356 -5.56685 0.21905 0.26894 1.33582 0.91694E+00 0 5764 550 -2.06227 -5.56679 0.22434 0.25687 1.32952 0.91449E+00 0 5725 555 -2.13929 -5.61546 0.22693 0.24039 1.32213 0.91169E+00 0 5612 560 -2.16369 -5.69204 0.22547 0.22194 1.31493 0.90887E+00 0 5480 565 -2.16335 -5.66883 0.21899 0.20446 1.30907 0.90645E+00 0 5378 570 -2.24687 -5.62244 0.20809 0.18977 1.30494 0.90463E+00 0 5340 575 -2.19281 -5.60890 0.19541 0.17848 1.30254 0.90337E+00 0 5349 580 -2.22443 -5.63510 0.18413 0.17118 1.30178 0.90250E+00 0 5399 585 -2.16089 -5.66953 0.17604 0.16907 1.30257 0.90191E+00 0 5453 590 -2.27396 -5.66581 0.17135 0.17385 1.30525 0.90164E+00 0 5385 595 -2.25000 -5.67677 0.17000 0.18658 1.31038 0.90180E+00 0 5300 600 -2.27517 -5.74122 0.17231 0.20580 1.31786 0.90239E+00 0 5232 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 605 -2.34459 -5.79686 0.17826 0.22654 1.32586 0.90298E+00 0 5239 610 -2.37703 -5.74819 0.18651 0.24214 1.33150 0.90299E+00 0 5371 615 -2.25919 -5.70010 0.19470 0.24892 1.33286 0.90202E+00 0 5514 620 -2.21263 -5.70790 0.20062 0.24702 1.33017 0.90018E+00 0 5597 625 -2.27545 -5.73059 0.20325 0.24087 1.32597 0.89817E+00 0 5598 630 -2.20932 -5.73539 0.20301 0.23617 1.32297 0.89672E+00 0 5608 635 -2.16657 -5.73129 0.20124 0.23731 1.32254 0.89617E+00 0 5696 640 -2.25518 -5.73290 0.19912 0.24429 1.32397 0.89627E+00 0 5921 645 -2.30733 -5.75452 0.19702 0.25358 1.32570 0.89653E+00 0 6090 650 -2.27621 -5.75016 0.19504 0.26063 1.32616 0.89652E+00 0 6212 655 -2.29591 -5.74340 0.19353 0.26239 1.32465 0.89599E+00 0 6231 660 -2.29451 -5.79399 0.19279 0.25946 1.32202 0.89508E+00 0 6140 665 -2.35663 -5.84567 0.19277 0.25566 1.32011 0.89432E+00 0 5985 670 -2.36389 -5.83558 0.19351 0.25517 1.32039 0.89411E+00 0 5774 675 -2.37666 -5.81987 0.19541 0.25946 1.32279 0.89447E+00 0 5752 680 -2.28928 -5.84149 0.19851 0.26682 1.32615 0.89515E+00 0 5830 685 -2.29886 -5.87391 0.20211 0.27372 1.32879 0.89580E+00 0 6001 690 -2.28826 -5.87096 0.20528 0.27729 1.32971 0.89621E+00 0 6103 695 -2.37095 -5.85933 0.20759 0.27648 1.32886 0.89626E+00 0 6205 700 -2.38631 -5.86671 0.20913 0.27240 1.32707 0.89604E+00 0 6200 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 705 -2.34734 -5.87459 0.20979 0.26723 1.32533 0.89565E+00 0 6182 710 -2.27988 -5.85386 0.20904 0.26352 1.32446 0.89523E+00 0 6097 715 -2.19360 -5.83666 0.20632 0.26209 1.32444 0.89482E+00 0 6036 720 -2.22360 -5.84563 0.20181 0.26279 1.32519 0.89448E+00 0 5955 725 -2.43988 -5.86500 0.19642 0.26482 1.32646 0.89430E+00 0 5951 730 -2.34205 -5.88138 0.19119 0.26704 1.32780 0.89423E+00 0 5995 735 -2.34926 -5.90621 0.18685 0.26862 1.32897 0.89427E+00 0 6105 740 -2.35750 -5.93541 0.18402 0.26951 1.33006 0.89438E+00 0 6269 745 -2.46350 -5.95254 0.18332 0.26962 1.33086 0.89445E+00 0 6453 750 -2.17582 -5.94449 0.18495 0.26870 1.33102 0.89435E+00 0 6504 755 -2.38751 -5.91600 0.18846 0.26683 1.33055 0.89415E+00 0 6491 760 -2.42150 -5.90635 0.19303 0.26475 1.32984 0.89402E+00 0 6426 765 -2.42009 -5.94411 0.19789 0.26303 1.32913 0.89411E+00 0 6326 770 -2.30724 -5.99247 0.20249 0.26162 1.32843 0.89450E+00 0 6244 775 -2.32865 -5.98532 0.20653 0.25981 1.32745 0.89513E+00 0 6234 780 -2.22808 -5.95696 0.20986 0.25698 1.32611 0.89591E+00 0 6257 785 -2.31921 -5.96059 0.21249 0.25339 1.32472 0.89681E+00 0 6320 790 -2.38962 -5.99859 0.21453 0.24998 1.32372 0.89776E+00 0 6377 795 -2.37606 -6.01633 0.21591 0.24808 1.32355 0.89869E+00 0 6404 800 -2.39230 -5.99728 0.21637 0.24838 1.32421 0.89946E+00 0 6432 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 805 -2.35009 -5.98827 0.21558 0.25075 1.32552 0.90000E+00 0 6499 810 -2.38947 -5.98519 0.21352 0.25478 1.32740 0.90036E+00 0 6539 815 -2.36477 -5.97607 0.21063 0.25978 1.32965 0.90056E+00 0 6606 820 -2.41116 -5.98413 0.20764 0.26484 1.33188 0.90059E+00 0 6606 825 -2.51642 -6.00731 0.20521 0.26882 1.33352 0.90039E+00 0 6622 830 -2.44588 -6.02357 0.20367 0.27107 1.33432 0.89996E+00 0 6596 835 -2.41012 -6.03955 0.20302 0.27147 1.33429 0.89941E+00 0 6635 840 -2.42788 -6.06681 0.20310 0.27041 1.33363 0.89886E+00 0 6672 845 -2.49125 -6.10740 0.20366 0.26846 1.33266 0.89844E+00 0 6735 850 -2.56002 -6.12937 0.20442 0.26647 1.33178 0.89826E+00 0 6780 855 -2.27914 -6.10164 0.20510 0.26523 1.33126 0.89831E+00 0 6814 860 -2.51287 -6.06777 0.20544 0.26489 1.33103 0.89847E+00 0 6841 865 -2.43172 -6.05335 0.20523 0.26524 1.33100 0.89861E+00 0 6852 870 -2.35662 -6.05711 0.20435 0.26580 1.33097 0.89861E+00 0 6842 875 -2.36992 -6.07443 0.20263 0.26603 1.33073 0.89842E+00 0 6809 880 -2.28303 -6.09642 0.19987 0.26609 1.33048 0.89820E+00 0 6787 885 -2.38531 -6.11779 0.19596 0.26617 1.33029 0.89803E+00 0 6744 890 -2.39570 -6.13248 0.19104 0.26644 1.33029 0.89798E+00 0 6710 895 -2.68914 -6.14633 0.18569 0.26720 1.33074 0.89810E+00 0 6686 900 -2.64920 -6.16047 0.18080 0.26826 1.33149 0.89825E+00 0 6701 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 905 -2.27732 -6.17033 0.17722 0.26906 1.33218 0.89827E+00 0 6680 910 -2.42052 -6.17844 0.17529 0.26893 1.33243 0.89805E+00 0 6706 915 -2.60718 -6.16803 0.17475 0.26791 1.33224 0.89765E+00 0 6706 920 -2.51373 -6.13764 0.17494 0.26645 1.33176 0.89719E+00 0 6750 925 -2.58891 -6.11634 0.17514 0.26492 1.33111 0.89675E+00 0 6796 930 -2.21906 -6.12129 0.17491 0.26349 1.33043 0.89640E+00 0 6787 935 -2.70155 -6.15218 0.17413 0.26224 1.32984 0.89613E+00 0 6809 940 -2.68271 -6.19126 0.17299 0.26108 1.32931 0.89587E+00 0 6788 945 -2.60678 -6.21896 0.17186 0.26017 1.32902 0.89563E+00 0 6806 950 -2.69134 -6.22811 0.17128 0.25987 1.32916 0.89543E+00 0 6831 955 -2.58611 -6.23265 0.17177 0.26056 1.32983 0.89529E+00 0 6857 960 -2.75205 -6.25049 0.17374 0.26241 1.33103 0.89521E+00 0 6908 965 -2.60613 -6.29166 0.17726 0.26531 1.33260 0.89523E+00 0 6961 970 -2.65580 -6.34607 0.18204 0.26885 1.33431 0.89535E+00 0 7025 975 -2.31485 -6.36965 0.18750 0.27247 1.33588 0.89558E+00 0 7052 980 -2.49643 -6.33991 0.19298 0.27571 1.33714 0.89592E+00 0 7108 985 -2.71567 -6.29775 0.19800 0.27828 1.33804 0.89632E+00 0 7153 990 -2.69054 -6.27322 0.20232 0.28017 1.33864 0.89671E+00 0 7195 995 -2.41770 -6.25903 0.20587 0.28138 1.33896 0.89699E+00 0 7227 1000 -2.68268 -6.25400 0.20863 0.28175 1.33885 0.89708E+00 0 7280 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1005 -2.49822 -6.25334 0.21054 0.28105 1.33819 0.89694E+00 0 7318 1010 -2.51298 -6.25542 0.21153 0.27920 1.33703 0.89663E+00 0 7351 1015 -2.70812 -6.26470 0.21166 0.27633 1.33549 0.89624E+00 0 7390 1020 -2.20332 -6.28720 0.21109 0.27292 1.33389 0.89586E+00 0 7397 1025 -2.78554 -6.31462 0.21011 0.26946 1.33243 0.89551E+00 0 7373 1030 -2.88626 -6.33039 0.20900 0.26643 1.33131 0.89524E+00 0 7350 1035 -2.61171 -6.33344 0.20804 0.26413 1.33060 0.89503E+00 0 7337 1040 -2.47242 -6.32857 0.20741 0.26278 1.33032 0.89488E+00 0 7319 1045 -2.75849 -6.32181 0.20724 0.26241 1.33044 0.89481E+00 0 7280 1050 -2.66102 -6.32619 0.20752 0.26287 1.33084 0.89482E+00 0 7274 1055 -2.48630 -6.34380 0.20811 0.26382 1.33134 0.89490E+00 0 7261 1060 -2.66111 -6.37019 0.20881 0.26487 1.33178 0.89506E+00 0 7276 1065 -2.85295 -6.38399 0.20933 0.26566 1.33200 0.89527E+00 0 7321 1070 -2.93843 -6.37824 0.20942 0.26604 1.33198 0.89552E+00 0 7333 1075 -2.32685 -6.37729 0.20883 0.26577 1.33160 0.89573E+00 0 7360 1080 -2.59737 -6.39764 0.20748 0.26474 1.33086 0.89581E+00 0 7345 1085 -3.04626 -6.43045 0.20540 0.26294 1.32982 0.89572E+00 0 7338 1090 -2.87427 -6.45804 0.20280 0.26045 1.32854 0.89549E+00 0 7333 1095 -2.64838 -6.47851 0.19994 0.25749 1.32716 0.89523E+00 0 7307 1100 -2.75074 -6.49562 0.19710 0.25437 1.32584 0.89507E+00 0 7292 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1105 -2.85040 -6.49246 0.19448 0.25148 1.32473 0.89512E+00 0 7254 1110 -3.04429 -6.46828 0.19228 0.24922 1.32397 0.89538E+00 0 7244 1115 -2.79201 -6.43505 0.19064 0.24784 1.32361 0.89578E+00 0 7221 1120 -2.93711 -6.40901 0.18966 0.24741 1.32363 0.89619E+00 0 7217 1125 -2.87712 -6.39946 0.18940 0.24787 1.32398 0.89652E+00 0 7220 1130 -2.66220 -6.40367 0.18981 0.24897 1.32451 0.89669E+00 0 7230 1135 -2.79425 -6.40912 0.19078 0.25041 1.32510 0.89674E+00 0 7243 1140 -2.48470 -6.40428 0.19211 0.25190 1.32563 0.89674E+00 0 7252 1145 -2.79508 -6.40489 0.19355 0.25337 1.32611 0.89680E+00 0 7259 1150 -2.25823 -6.42262 0.19486 0.25508 1.32669 0.89704E+00 0 7252 1155 -2.54114 -6.46615 0.19577 0.25724 1.32742 0.89750E+00 0 7255 1160 -2.43549 -6.51811 0.19615 0.25982 1.32828 0.89812E+00 0 7263 1165 -2.61023 -6.55279 0.19597 0.26276 1.32930 0.89883E+00 0 7298 1170 -2.52437 -6.56874 0.19539 0.26584 1.33038 0.89954E+00 0 7326 1175 -2.53166 -6.55469 0.19466 0.26876 1.33143 0.90017E+00 0 7360 1180 -2.75288 -6.52711 0.19406 0.27128 1.33236 0.90070E+00 0 7395 1185 -2.67329 -6.50507 0.19385 0.27319 1.33307 0.90115E+00 0 7415 1190 -2.58073 -6.50501 0.19415 0.27443 1.33352 0.90157E+00 0 7439 1195 -2.85526 -6.53483 0.19501 0.27507 1.33375 0.90201E+00 0 7449 1200 -2.63178 -6.56335 0.19631 0.27522 1.33377 0.90245E+00 0 7457 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1205 -2.58917 -6.57837 0.19787 0.27494 1.33359 0.90283E+00 0 7469 1210 -2.28620 -6.58976 0.19945 0.27435 1.33328 0.90305E+00 0 7474 1215 -2.63439 -6.60935 0.20084 0.27361 1.33291 0.90306E+00 0 7474 1220 -2.71238 -6.58667 0.20191 0.27283 1.33255 0.90288E+00 0 7485 1225 -2.65196 -6.55306 0.20257 0.27203 1.33218 0.90256E+00 0 7485 1230 -2.57681 -6.53544 0.20281 0.27117 1.33181 0.90225E+00 0 7475 1235 -2.51931 -6.52403 0.20267 0.27029 1.33149 0.90207E+00 0 7456 1240 -2.85249 -6.52012 0.20220 0.26957 1.33130 0.90216E+00 0 7439 1245 -3.06551 -6.53099 0.20149 0.26903 1.33122 0.90247E+00 0 7430 1250 -2.63714 -6.53978 0.20065 0.26865 1.33124 0.90295E+00 0 7407 1255 -2.77202 -6.56456 0.19982 0.26836 1.33131 0.90349E+00 0 7393 1260 -3.03532 -6.58729 0.19911 0.26808 1.33138 0.90396E+00 0 7381 1265 -2.97497 -6.59863 0.19859 0.26774 1.33140 0.90429E+00 0 7387 1270 -2.50191 -6.62632 0.19826 0.26724 1.33133 0.90447E+00 0 7399 1275 -2.75288 -6.63857 0.19807 0.26655 1.33112 0.90449E+00 0 7417 1280 -2.57217 -6.62875 0.19800 0.26569 1.33084 0.90443E+00 0 7433 1285 -2.64268 -6.61822 0.19802 0.26485 1.33057 0.90437E+00 0 7433 1290 -2.88104 -6.60163 0.19813 0.26401 1.33028 0.90433E+00 0 7432 1295 -2.86460 -6.59109 0.19832 0.26313 1.32995 0.90434E+00 0 7434 1300 -3.11300 -6.59975 0.19858 0.26226 1.32962 0.90437E+00 0 7436 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1305 -2.47032 -6.61640 0.19886 0.26147 1.32930 0.90443E+00 0 7443 1310 -2.90071 -6.63570 0.19912 0.26084 1.32903 0.90448E+00 0 7470 1315 -2.90578 -6.64491 0.19934 0.26040 1.32883 0.90454E+00 0 7470 1320 -2.81265 -6.63269 0.19952 0.26018 1.32871 0.90458E+00 0 7477 1325 -2.81134 -6.63615 0.19968 0.26026 1.32872 0.90467E+00 0 7461 1330 -3.06000 -6.65274 0.19986 0.26062 1.32886 0.90478E+00 0 7469 1335 -2.52094 -6.65622 0.20010 0.26125 1.32914 0.90495E+00 0 7460 1340 -2.71465 -6.65078 0.20049 0.26216 1.32955 0.90519E+00 0 7473 1345 -2.59608 -6.64504 0.20106 0.26323 1.33003 0.90549E+00 0 7481 1350 -2.74039 -6.64219 0.20180 0.26435 1.33050 0.90581E+00 0 7472 1355 -2.76820 -6.63992 0.20265 0.26537 1.33092 0.90614E+00 0 7482 1360 -2.65704 -6.63601 0.20354 0.26619 1.33121 0.90644E+00 0 7490 1365 -2.79316 -6.64114 0.20436 0.26675 1.33137 0.90668E+00 0 7506 1370 -2.53707 -6.64732 0.20499 0.26705 1.33139 0.90684E+00 0 7519 1375 -2.80823 -6.66608 0.20533 0.26712 1.33131 0.90693E+00 0 7542 1380 -2.16510 -6.68661 0.20528 0.26708 1.33116 0.90696E+00 0 7548 1385 -2.52719 -6.70965 0.20481 0.26701 1.33100 0.90697E+00 0 7535 1390 -2.47654 -6.73565 0.20390 0.26701 1.33087 0.90697E+00 0 7529 1395 -2.69583 -6.75041 0.20262 0.26707 1.33077 0.90698E+00 0 7535 1400 -2.90191 -6.74388 0.20107 0.26713 1.33068 0.90697E+00 0 7524 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1405 -2.93101 -6.74984 0.19942 0.26719 1.33063 0.90696E+00 0 7509 1410 -2.84608 -6.74133 0.19785 0.26728 1.33065 0.90693E+00 0 7496 1415 -2.47195 -6.72925 0.19653 0.26736 1.33072 0.90686E+00 0 7498 1420 -2.81314 -6.74091 0.19559 0.26740 1.33079 0.90677E+00 0 7476 1425 -2.89867 -6.73022 0.19509 0.26739 1.33088 0.90667E+00 0 7472 1430 -2.78641 -6.70330 0.19501 0.26736 1.33096 0.90656E+00 0 7472 1435 -2.93184 -6.67497 0.19521 0.26733 1.33104 0.90646E+00 0 7472 1440 -3.03728 -6.63999 0.19553 0.26732 1.33108 0.90635E+00 0 7462 1445 -2.83584 -6.62941 0.19575 0.26729 1.33107 0.90625E+00 0 7487 1450 -3.05735 -6.64860 0.19573 0.26721 1.33101 0.90614E+00 0 7492 1455 -3.07193 -6.68143 0.19538 0.26703 1.33089 0.90601E+00 0 7494 1460 -2.93602 -6.74189 0.19469 0.26674 1.33072 0.90589E+00 0 7501 1465 -2.58217 -6.78817 0.19376 0.26642 1.33057 0.90578E+00 0 7502 1470 -2.90732 -6.80640 0.19273 0.26609 1.33044 0.90567E+00 0 7491 1475 -2.97546 -6.79871 0.19177 0.26575 1.33035 0.90558E+00 0 7498 1480 -2.76165 -6.78973 0.19111 0.26548 1.33033 0.90550E+00 0 7490 1485 -2.85991 -6.79347 0.19090 0.26530 1.33037 0.90544E+00 0 7491 1490 -2.46667 -6.78610 0.19125 0.26524 1.33047 0.90537E+00 0 7490 1495 -2.84647 -6.80260 0.19215 0.26536 1.33065 0.90532E+00 0 7502 1500 -2.84371 -6.79610 0.19352 0.26564 1.33086 0.90527E+00 0 7512 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1505 -2.40601 -6.78064 0.19520 0.26606 1.33109 0.90524E+00 0 7532 1510 -2.64597 -6.79503 0.19703 0.26664 1.33137 0.90523E+00 0 7551 1515 -2.78523 -6.80218 0.19884 0.26731 1.33164 0.90526E+00 0 7565 1520 -2.62737 -6.81148 0.20047 0.26800 1.33188 0.90532E+00 0 7588 1525 -2.76645 -6.84983 0.20184 0.26862 1.33208 0.90542E+00 0 7607 1530 -2.62315 -6.83587 0.20289 0.26910 1.33220 0.90552E+00 0 7629 1535 -2.69943 -6.79390 0.20360 0.26945 1.33227 0.90562E+00 0 7639 1540 -2.75141 -6.76686 0.20400 0.26967 1.33230 0.90572E+00 0 7647 1545 -2.66887 -6.73120 0.20415 0.26978 1.33229 0.90580E+00 0 7645 1550 -2.82873 -6.72211 0.20414 0.26980 1.33226 0.90586E+00 0 7638 1555 -2.80619 -6.73950 0.20407 0.26977 1.33224 0.90591E+00 0 7630 1560 -2.44406 -6.74145 0.20404 0.26970 1.33223 0.90595E+00 0 7631 1565 -2.42535 -6.76567 0.20410 0.26959 1.33219 0.90599E+00 0 7622 1570 -2.70190 -6.79808 0.20426 0.26940 1.33213 0.90602E+00 0 7621 1575 -2.89549 -6.80350 0.20450 0.26910 1.33200 0.90604E+00 0 7633 1580 -2.67867 -6.82647 0.20477 0.26867 1.33181 0.90605E+00 0 7630 1585 -2.56171 -6.85468 0.20498 0.26810 1.33155 0.90604E+00 0 7641 1590 -2.46050 -6.85381 0.20505 0.26742 1.33123 0.90599E+00 0 7626 1595 -2.55130 -6.86540 0.20488 0.26665 1.33086 0.90592E+00 0 7618 1600 -2.62463 -6.88868 0.20443 0.26585 1.33048 0.90584E+00 0 7609 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1605 -2.96302 -6.87829 0.20367 0.26505 1.33010 0.90575E+00 0 7602 1610 -2.64661 -6.88429 0.20265 0.26429 1.32975 0.90567E+00 0 7590 1615 -2.89240 -6.90713 0.20141 0.26362 1.32946 0.90559E+00 0 7579 1620 -2.43336 -6.86544 0.20008 0.26312 1.32927 0.90553E+00 0 7574 1625 -2.82632 -6.88647 0.19877 0.26284 1.32920 0.90546E+00 0 7572 1630 -2.62533 -6.90361 0.19759 0.26279 1.32924 0.90542E+00 0 7568 1635 -2.77158 -6.87457 0.19664 0.26293 1.32936 0.90540E+00 0 7565 1640 -2.77511 -6.89601 0.19595 0.26316 1.32950 0.90539E+00 0 7568 1645 -2.61047 -6.87698 0.19553 0.26341 1.32964 0.90540E+00 0 7578 1650 -2.33301 -6.84948 0.19538 0.26361 1.32973 0.90542E+00 0 7583 1655 -2.84868 -6.83974 0.19543 0.26368 1.32974 0.90543E+00 0 7583 1660 -2.85708 -6.82202 0.19563 0.26364 1.32970 0.90542E+00 0 7596 1665 -2.41677 -6.81751 0.19591 0.26355 1.32963 0.90540E+00 0 7595 1670 -2.60116 -6.82528 0.19621 0.26348 1.32955 0.90537E+00 0 7594 1675 -2.65922 -6.84861 0.19649 0.26348 1.32951 0.90534E+00 0 7601 1680 -2.40695 -6.86473 0.19673 0.26359 1.32950 0.90533E+00 0 7615 1685 -2.45265 -6.88218 0.19691 0.26384 1.32957 0.90534E+00 0 7628 1690 -2.41086 -6.91464 0.19707 0.26430 1.32974 0.90538E+00 0 7638 1695 -2.29372 -6.91475 0.19721 0.26498 1.33001 0.90544E+00 0 7642 1700 -2.71248 -6.92457 0.19737 0.26584 1.33036 0.90553E+00 0 7649 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1705 -2.37961 -6.93566 0.19758 0.26679 1.33075 0.90562E+00 0 7646 1710 -2.28740 -6.92206 0.19788 0.26774 1.33114 0.90571E+00 0 7655 1715 -2.63127 -6.95074 0.19828 0.26862 1.33151 0.90578E+00 0 7654 1720 -2.74188 -6.95523 0.19877 0.26938 1.33182 0.90584E+00 0 7660 1725 -2.81569 -6.94967 0.19935 0.26996 1.33205 0.90587E+00 0 7665 1730 -2.59532 -6.95214 0.19998 0.27036 1.33220 0.90589E+00 0 7678 1735 -2.60047 -6.98277 0.20062 0.27059 1.33228 0.90587E+00 0 7691 1740 -2.36268 -6.93940 0.20120 0.27067 1.33229 0.90584E+00 0 7695 1745 -2.79299 -6.92673 0.20166 0.27062 1.33223 0.90577E+00 0 7702 1750 -2.84064 -6.95260 0.20195 0.27047 1.33214 0.90568E+00 0 7715 1755 -2.61270 -6.90098 0.20207 0.27025 1.33202 0.90558E+00 0 7719 1760 -2.90845 -6.91205 0.20200 0.26997 1.33188 0.90548E+00 0 7714 1765 -2.68343 -6.91170 0.20175 0.26965 1.33174 0.90538E+00 0 7711 1770 -2.73518 -6.86486 0.20137 0.26929 1.33159 0.90529E+00 0 7698 1775 -2.78216 -6.90906 0.20091 0.26895 1.33148 0.90520E+00 0 7702 1780 -2.95262 -6.90586 0.20046 0.26867 1.33142 0.90512E+00 0 7713 1785 -2.52866 -6.90506 0.20007 0.26839 1.33135 0.90502E+00 0 7706 1790 -2.64641 -6.95863 0.19980 0.26804 1.33125 0.90490E+00 0 7706 1795 -2.35782 -6.95298 0.19966 0.26764 1.33114 0.90477E+00 0 7697 1800 -2.68193 -6.97513 0.19967 0.26718 1.33100 0.90464E+00 0 7694 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1805 -2.81114 -6.99827 0.19977 0.26668 1.33084 0.90451E+00 0 7696 1810 -2.98857 -6.97960 0.19994 0.26621 1.33069 0.90440E+00 0 7705 1815 -2.82246 -6.96748 0.20010 0.26574 1.33052 0.90428E+00 0 7711 1820 -2.74364 -6.99527 0.20020 0.26530 1.33035 0.90418E+00 0 7709 1825 -2.64859 -6.99215 0.20022 0.26494 1.33021 0.90410E+00 0 7696 1830 -2.77701 -7.00620 0.20013 0.26462 1.33007 0.90404E+00 0 7707 1835 -2.72469 -7.02523 0.19993 0.26436 1.32996 0.90401E+00 0 7704 1840 -2.90365 -7.00937 0.19964 0.26419 1.32988 0.90398E+00 0 7710 1845 -2.52377 -6.98055 0.19930 0.26410 1.32984 0.90397E+00 0 7714 1850 -2.68989 -6.97523 0.19898 0.26412 1.32986 0.90397E+00 0 7723 1855 -2.88855 -6.96371 0.19872 0.26425 1.32992 0.90397E+00 0 7721 1860 -2.43971 -6.93592 0.19859 0.26445 1.33001 0.90400E+00 0 7723 1865 -2.68439 -6.95749 0.19860 0.26471 1.33014 0.90405E+00 0 7729 1870 -2.79388 -6.97035 0.19879 0.26505 1.33029 0.90412E+00 0 7738 1875 -2.66626 -6.93491 0.19913 0.26543 1.33045 0.90419E+00 0 7740 1880 -2.83661 -6.97606 0.19959 0.26584 1.33061 0.90428E+00 0 7746 1885 -2.86056 -6.98123 0.20012 0.26622 1.33073 0.90435E+00 0 7751 1890 -2.76094 -6.97040 0.20066 0.26657 1.33084 0.90442E+00 0 7766 1895 -2.70162 -7.03025 0.20114 0.26689 1.33093 0.90447E+00 0 7769 1900 -2.79892 -7.00291 0.20152 0.26719 1.33100 0.90452E+00 0 7782 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 1905 -2.55326 -6.96773 0.20174 0.26743 1.33103 0.90455E+00 0 7795 1910 -2.73463 -6.99492 0.20178 0.26759 1.33103 0.90458E+00 0 7799 1915 -2.80519 -6.98053 0.20166 0.26769 1.33102 0.90459E+00 0 7788 1920 -2.54099 -6.93403 0.20139 0.26777 1.33101 0.90459E+00 0 7784 1925 -2.70838 -6.96993 0.20100 0.26785 1.33102 0.90459E+00 0 7789 1930 -2.72843 -6.96447 0.20057 0.26796 1.33106 0.90457E+00 0 7785 1935 -2.78177 -6.92409 0.20015 0.26805 1.33109 0.90454E+00 0 7800 1940 -2.86226 -7.00273 0.19979 0.26809 1.33111 0.90449E+00 0 7803 1945 -2.63098 -6.98374 0.19952 0.26806 1.33111 0.90443E+00 0 7813 1950 -2.70091 -6.96904 0.19937 0.26797 1.33109 0.90437E+00 0 7814 1955 -2.77167 -7.03947 0.19931 0.26788 1.33109 0.90430E+00 0 7821 1960 -2.97395 -6.96193 0.19932 0.26778 1.33106 0.90423E+00 0 7830 1965 -2.45269 -6.96623 0.19933 0.26765 1.33100 0.90414E+00 0 7833 1970 -2.81657 -6.97850 0.19930 0.26746 1.33092 0.90403E+00 0 7836 1975 -2.83586 -6.97203 0.19919 0.26724 1.33081 0.90392E+00 0 7826 1980 -2.63193 -6.97505 0.19897 0.26700 1.33070 0.90381E+00 0 7835 1985 -2.71854 -6.98727 0.19864 0.26678 1.33060 0.90371E+00 0 7834 1990 -2.64956 -7.00038 0.19823 0.26662 1.33054 0.90362E+00 0 7831 1995 -2.69248 -6.98665 0.19779 0.26649 1.33050 0.90353E+00 0 7837 2000 -2.94068 -7.04073 0.19740 0.26642 1.33051 0.90345E+00 0 7836 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2005 -2.47107 -7.02229 0.19710 0.26641 1.33055 0.90338E+00 0 7847 2010 -2.73462 -7.01668 0.19695 0.26643 1.33060 0.90333E+00 0 7850 2015 -2.84053 -7.09136 0.19699 0.26650 1.33068 0.90329E+00 0 7854 2020 -3.00119 -7.04164 0.19720 0.26661 1.33077 0.90326E+00 0 7867 2025 -2.79229 -7.04129 0.19758 0.26671 1.33083 0.90323E+00 0 7871 2030 -2.89961 -7.05701 0.19807 0.26680 1.33089 0.90320E+00 0 7876 2035 -2.48629 -7.01763 0.19862 0.26684 1.33090 0.90317E+00 0 7893 2040 -2.69926 -7.03763 0.19916 0.26683 1.33088 0.90315E+00 0 7897 2045 -2.62158 -7.03738 0.19965 0.26683 1.33087 0.90314E+00 0 7903 2050 -2.77776 -7.07299 0.20005 0.26684 1.33086 0.90314E+00 0 7919 2055 -2.54341 -7.04149 0.20035 0.26685 1.33083 0.90313E+00 0 7918 2060 -2.68400 -7.05219 0.20056 0.26689 1.33083 0.90312E+00 0 7927 2065 -2.68158 -7.04219 0.20069 0.26694 1.33084 0.90311E+00 0 7935 2070 -2.54754 -6.98704 0.20078 0.26702 1.33086 0.90311E+00 0 7929 2075 -2.83886 -7.03090 0.20084 0.26717 1.33094 0.90314E+00 0 7934 2080 -2.56541 -6.98856 0.20093 0.26738 1.33104 0.90317E+00 0 7947 2085 -2.82797 -6.97835 0.20107 0.26758 1.33113 0.90320E+00 0 7951 2090 -2.80362 -7.03814 0.20125 0.26778 1.33122 0.90323E+00 0 7943 2095 -2.89435 -7.01306 0.20147 0.26792 1.33127 0.90325E+00 0 7940 2100 -2.48513 -7.02451 0.20170 0.26799 1.33130 0.90325E+00 0 7950 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2105 -2.74579 -7.06569 0.20192 0.26803 1.33131 0.90326E+00 0 7960 2110 -2.89087 -7.01285 0.20210 0.26801 1.33128 0.90325E+00 0 7974 2115 -2.57550 -7.02773 0.20220 0.26788 1.33119 0.90322E+00 0 7976 2120 -2.89590 -7.07119 0.20219 0.26769 1.33107 0.90319E+00 0 7977 2125 -2.66299 -7.03047 0.20206 0.26740 1.33092 0.90314E+00 0 7973 2130 -2.52311 -7.01969 0.20180 0.26708 1.33075 0.90309E+00 0 7981 2135 -2.62560 -7.06065 0.20144 0.26678 1.33061 0.90304E+00 0 7982 2140 -2.48445 -6.99541 0.20098 0.26651 1.33049 0.90299E+00 0 7982 2145 -2.88217 -7.03317 0.20048 0.26625 1.33038 0.90294E+00 0 7986 2150 -2.86528 -7.09606 0.19998 0.26606 1.33032 0.90290E+00 0 7981 2155 -2.74654 -7.01873 0.19952 0.26592 1.33027 0.90287E+00 0 7983 2160 -2.68314 -7.07349 0.19913 0.26581 1.33025 0.90283E+00 0 7988 2165 -2.77135 -7.07154 0.19881 0.26578 1.33027 0.90281E+00 0 8001 2170 -2.58043 -7.00657 0.19858 0.26578 1.33030 0.90279E+00 0 8003 2175 -2.71499 -7.04413 0.19844 0.26578 1.33031 0.90275E+00 0 8002 2180 -2.80855 -7.05297 0.19837 0.26577 1.33031 0.90273E+00 0 8003 2185 -2.44155 -7.00916 0.19833 0.26571 1.33027 0.90270E+00 0 8008 2190 -2.57255 -7.02852 0.19832 0.26565 1.33025 0.90268E+00 0 8019 2195 -2.74074 -7.05200 0.19832 0.26564 1.33025 0.90266E+00 0 8022 2200 -2.54547 -7.00998 0.19833 0.26565 1.33025 0.90264E+00 0 8026 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2205 -2.76299 -7.05072 0.19833 0.26570 1.33026 0.90263E+00 0 8036 2210 -3.03226 -7.09882 0.19832 0.26580 1.33029 0.90261E+00 0 8040 2215 -2.44243 -7.04366 0.19830 0.26592 1.33033 0.90259E+00 0 8050 2220 -2.49483 -7.05477 0.19831 0.26609 1.33041 0.90260E+00 0 8052 2225 -2.72677 -7.09462 0.19834 0.26635 1.33052 0.90261E+00 0 8055 2230 -2.49548 -7.02163 0.19842 0.26665 1.33065 0.90262E+00 0 8059 2235 -2.78288 -7.05724 0.19857 0.26695 1.33078 0.90263E+00 0 8067 2240 -2.63542 -7.08052 0.19880 0.26723 1.33090 0.90264E+00 0 8071 2245 -2.41835 -7.01864 0.19908 0.26745 1.33098 0.90263E+00 0 8076 2250 -2.62762 -7.05528 0.19942 0.26763 1.33105 0.90263E+00 0 8091 2255 -2.77326 -7.07679 0.19978 0.26780 1.33113 0.90264E+00 0 8104 2260 -2.52949 -6.99948 0.20014 0.26794 1.33117 0.90263E+00 0 8102 2265 -2.87512 -7.07177 0.20048 0.26803 1.33119 0.90261E+00 0 8106 2270 -2.91545 -7.08703 0.20076 0.26809 1.33120 0.90258E+00 0 8109 2275 -2.45262 -7.02011 0.20096 0.26809 1.33117 0.90255E+00 0 8120 2280 -2.53738 -7.06522 0.20108 0.26808 1.33117 0.90252E+00 0 8127 2285 -2.73233 -7.05952 0.20111 0.26809 1.33117 0.90250E+00 0 8137 2290 -2.50652 -6.99944 0.20105 0.26809 1.33116 0.90248E+00 0 8140 2295 -2.78520 -7.06208 0.20093 0.26805 1.33114 0.90245E+00 0 8150 2300 -2.71252 -7.06041 0.20077 0.26799 1.33112 0.90242E+00 0 8152 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2305 -2.55159 -7.01819 0.20059 0.26788 1.33107 0.90238E+00 0 8153 2310 -2.81703 -7.07623 0.20041 0.26775 1.33104 0.90235E+00 0 8157 2315 -2.92000 -7.06493 0.20026 0.26764 1.33101 0.90232E+00 0 8169 2320 -2.60812 -7.02259 0.20015 0.26750 1.33097 0.90227E+00 0 8172 2325 -2.85958 -7.08402 0.20009 0.26733 1.33091 0.90222E+00 0 8172 2330 -2.99326 -7.10080 0.20006 0.26713 1.33083 0.90217E+00 0 8186 2335 -2.53210 -7.03938 0.20005 0.26688 1.33074 0.90211E+00 0 8198 2340 -2.74211 -7.09580 0.20004 0.26666 1.33066 0.90206E+00 0 8208 2345 -2.87727 -7.07327 0.20002 0.26647 1.33059 0.90201E+00 0 8217 2350 -2.57651 -7.01964 0.19997 0.26628 1.33050 0.90195E+00 0 8222 2355 -2.92533 -7.09660 0.19987 0.26610 1.33043 0.90190E+00 0 8230 2360 -2.91240 -7.08302 0.19973 0.26594 1.33036 0.90184E+00 0 8230 2365 -2.46698 -7.04877 0.19956 0.26578 1.33029 0.90180E+00 0 8231 2370 -2.71014 -7.09912 0.19937 0.26566 1.33026 0.90176E+00 0 8241 2375 -2.86791 -7.06921 0.19919 0.26563 1.33026 0.90174E+00 0 8245 2380 -2.54805 -7.02816 0.19905 0.26564 1.33027 0.90172E+00 0 8250 2385 -2.65477 -7.08968 0.19897 0.26569 1.33031 0.90171E+00 0 8261 2390 -2.91538 -7.07541 0.19897 0.26575 1.33034 0.90170E+00 0 8255 2395 -2.57369 -7.02554 0.19905 0.26581 1.33037 0.90170E+00 0 8268 2400 -2.82726 -7.10473 0.19919 0.26592 1.33043 0.90171E+00 0 8272 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2405 -2.80416 -7.04884 0.19938 0.26608 1.33050 0.90174E+00 0 8282 2410 -2.67851 -7.01232 0.19959 0.26623 1.33055 0.90175E+00 0 8287 2415 -2.91132 -7.09660 0.19981 0.26638 1.33059 0.90177E+00 0 8292 2420 -3.05299 -7.06308 0.19999 0.26650 1.33061 0.90178E+00 0 8300 2425 -2.84010 -7.04814 0.20012 0.26658 1.33062 0.90179E+00 0 8296 2430 -2.75902 -7.09828 0.20020 0.26669 1.33065 0.90181E+00 0 8306 2435 -2.86122 -7.04843 0.20022 0.26682 1.33069 0.90183E+00 0 8313 2440 -2.55969 -7.01088 0.20019 0.26694 1.33071 0.90183E+00 0 8318 2445 -2.72136 -7.08956 0.20014 0.26706 1.33075 0.90185E+00 0 8319 2450 -2.76906 -7.04550 0.20006 0.26716 1.33077 0.90185E+00 0 8325 2455 -2.49763 -7.00156 0.19999 0.26723 1.33079 0.90184E+00 0 8330 2460 -2.74780 -7.09530 0.19994 0.26731 1.33083 0.90184E+00 0 8338 2465 -2.78236 -7.02501 0.19990 0.26742 1.33088 0.90184E+00 0 8340 2470 -2.78443 -7.01167 0.19990 0.26749 1.33091 0.90182E+00 0 8341 2475 -2.78908 -7.10122 0.19993 0.26755 1.33094 0.90181E+00 0 8349 2480 -2.58723 -7.02911 0.19997 0.26753 1.33092 0.90178E+00 0 8350 2485 -2.71915 -7.05059 0.20002 0.26746 1.33089 0.90174E+00 0 8356 2490 -2.72225 -7.10083 0.20003 0.26739 1.33086 0.90171E+00 0 8366 2495 -2.81447 -7.03143 0.20000 0.26731 1.33083 0.90167E+00 0 8372 2500 -2.76132 -7.03901 0.19993 0.26720 1.33077 0.90161E+00 0 8377 CYCLE MAXIMUM RMS MASS MASS PRESSURE ADIABATIC NUMBER NUMBER NUMBER ERROR ERROR INFLOW OUTFLOW RATIO EFFICIENCY SS PTS SEPPTS ------ ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ------ ------ 2505 -2.93497 -7.10612 0.19980 0.26707 1.33071 0.90155E+00 0 8377 2510 -2.61235 -7.05125 0.19962 0.26691 1.33063 0.90149E+00 0 8375 2515 -2.70432 -7.05675 0.19942 0.26673 1.33056 0.90143E+00 0 8376 2520 -2.72690 -7.11534 0.19921 0.26662 1.33054 0.90138E+00 0 8385 2525 -2.79756 -7.05263 0.19901 0.26655 1.33053 0.90132E+00 0 8390 2530 -2.82093 -7.05040 0.19886 0.26651 1.33053 0.90127E+00 0 8392 2535 -3.01513 -7.13002 0.19877 0.26649 1.33054 0.90122E+00 0 8399 2540 -2.48031 -7.03561 0.19875 0.26646 1.33055 0.90118E+00 0 8398 2545 -2.75596 -7.06638 0.19879 0.26643 1.33055 0.90114E+00 0 8401 2550 -2.76672 -7.11014 0.19887 0.26645 1.33058 0.90111E+00 0 8411 2555 -2.97813 -7.03372 0.19898 0.26647 1.33060 0.90109E+00 0 8412 2560 -2.58197 -7.05158 0.19912 0.26648 1.33061 0.90105E+00 0 8416 2565 -2.75965 -7.11118 0.19927 0.26648 1.33061 0.90103E+00 0 8422 2570 -2.73603 -7.04818 0.19941 0.26644 1.33058 0.90099E+00 0 8417 2575 -2.51932 -7.04531 0.19952 0.26640 1.33056 0.90097E+00 0 8422 2580 -2.70681 -7.10923 0.19961 0.26640 1.33057 0.90096E+00 0 8426 2585 -2.55536 -7.01703 0.19967 0.26643 1.33058 0.90095E+00 0 8436 2590 -2.73905 -7.03601 0.19972 0.26649 1.33060 0.90094E+00 0 8439 2595 -2.94515 -7.10939 0.19976 0.26656 1.33062 0.90094E+00 0 8445 2600 -2.41634 -7.00617 0.19980 0.26660 1.33063 0.90092E+00 0 8442
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##### U.S. Department of Education September 2003 **2003-2004 *No Child Left Behind---Blue Ribbon Schools Program*** **Cover Sheet** Name of Principal [Mr. Terry L. Bowers\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]{.underline} (Specify: Ms., Miss, Mrs., Dr., Mr., Other) (As it should appear in the official records) Official School Name [Milledgeville Elementary School]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ (As it should appear in the official records) School Mailing Address [100 Eighth Street; P.O. Box 609\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]{.underline} (If address is P.O. Box, also include street address) [Milledgeville Illinois 61051-0609\_\_]{.underline} City State Zip Code+4 (9 digits total) Tel. [(815) 225-7141, ext. 225 Fax (815) 225-7847\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]{.underline} Website/URL [www.dist399.net]{.underline} E-mail [[email protected]\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]{.underline} I have reviewed the information in this application, including the eligibility requirements on page 2, and certify that to the best of my knowledge all information is accurate. Date\_\_\_\_[2/8/04]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ (Principal's Signature) Name of Superintendent\*\_\_\_\_\_[Mr. Terry L. Bowers]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ (Specify: Ms., Miss, Mrs., Dr., Mr., Other) District Name [Chadwick-Milledgeville CUSD #399 Tel. (815) 225-7141, ext. 225\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_]{.underline} I have reviewed the information in this application, including the eligibility requirements on page 2, and certify that to the best of my knowledge it is accurate. Date\_\_\_\_\_\_[2/8/04]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ (Superintendent's Signature) Name of School Board Mrs. DiAnn Adolph President/Chairperson (Specify: Ms., Miss, Mrs., Dr., Mr., Other) I have reviewed the information in this package, including the eligibility requirements on page 2, and certify that to the best of my knowledge it is accurate. Date\_\_\_\_\_\_[2/8/04]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ (School Board President's/Chairperson's Signature) *\*Private Schools: If the information requested is not applicable, write N/A in the space.* -1- **PART I ‑ ELIGIBILITY CERTIFICATION** **\[Include this page in the school's application as page 2.\]** The signatures on the first page of this application certify that each of the statements below concerning the school\'s eligibility and compliance with U.S. Department of Education, Office of Civil Rights (OCR) requirements is true and correct. 1. The school has some configuration that includes grades K-12. (Schools with one principal, even K-12 schools, must apply as an entire school.) 2. The school has not been in school improvement status or been identified by the state as \"persistently dangerous\" within the last two years. To meet final eligibility, the school must meet the state's adequate yearly progress requirement in the 2003-2004 school year. 3. If the school includes grades 7 or higher, it has foreign language as a part of its core curriculum. 4. The school has been in existence for five full years, that is, from at least September 1998. 5. The nominated school or district is not refusing the OCR access to information necessary to investigate a civil rights complaint or to conduct a district‑wide compliance review. 6. The OCR has not issued a violation letter of findings to the school district concluding that the nominated school or the district as a whole has violated one or more of the civil rights statutes. A violation letter of findings will not be considered outstanding if the OCR has accepted a corrective action plan from the district to remedy the violation. 7. The U.S. Department of Justice does not have a pending suit alleging that the nominated school, or the school district as a whole, has violated one or more of the civil rights statutes or the Constitution\'s equal protection clause. 8. There are no findings of violations of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act in a U.S. Department of Education monitoring report that apply to the school or school district in question; or if there are such findings, the state or district has corrected, or agreed to correct, the findings. -2- **PART II ‑ DEMOGRAPHIC DATA** **All data are the most recent year available.** **DISTRICT** (Questions 1‑2 not applicable to private schools) 1\. Number of schools in the district: \_\_[2]{.underline}\_\_ Elementary schools \_\_[0]{.underline}\_\_ Middle schools \_\_[1]{.underline}\_\_ Junior high schools \_\_[1]{.underline}\_\_ High schools \_\_[0]{.underline}\_\_ Other (Briefly explain) \_\_[4]{.underline}\_\_ TOTAL 2\. District Per Pupil Expenditure: [\$4,457 instructional; \$7,492 operating]{.underline} Average State Per Pupil Expenditure: [\$4,842 instructional; \$8,181 operating]{.underline} **SCHOOL** (To be completed by all schools) 3\. Category that best describes the area where the school is located: > \[ \] Urban or large central city > > \[ \] Suburban school with characteristics typical of an urban area > > \[ \] Suburban > > \[ X\] Small city or town in a rural area > > \[ \] Rural 4\. [18]{.underline} Number of years the principal has been in her/his position at this school. If fewer than three years, how long was the previous principal at this school? 5\. Number of students enrolled at each grade level or its equivalent in applying school: ----------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------- -- ----------- --------- ----------- --------- **Grade** **\# of **\# of **Grade **Grade** **\# of **\# of **Grade Males** Females** Total** Males** Females** Total** **K** 20 21 **41** **7** **1** 18 19 **37** **8** **2** 12 18 **30** **9** **3** 9 24 **33** **10** **4** **11** **5** **12** **6** Other **TOTAL 141 STUDENTS IN THE APPLYING SCHOOL →** ----------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------- -- ----------- --------- ----------- --------- -3- 6\. Racial/ethnic composition of [99.97]{.underline} % White the students in the school: [0]{.underline} % Black or African American [.01]{.underline} % Hispanic or Latino [.02]{.underline} % Asian/Pacific Islander [0]{.underline} % American Indian/Alaskan Native **100% Total** 7\. Student turnover, or mobility rate, during the past year: \_[12.41]{.underline}\_\_% > (This rate includes the total number of students who transferred to or > from different schools between October 1 and the end of the school > year, divided by the total number of students in the school as of > October 1, multiplied by 100.) ----------- ---------------------------------- ------------------------ **(1)** Number of students who transferred 7 ***to*** the school after October 1 until the end of the year. **(2)** Number of students who transferred 10 ***from*** the school after October 1 until the end of the year. **(3)** Subtotal of all transferred 17 students \[sum of rows (1) and (2)\] **(4)** Total number of students in the 137 school as of October 1 **(5)** Subtotal in row (3) divided by .1241 total in row (4) **(6)** Amount in row (5) multiplied by 12.41 100 ----------- ---------------------------------- ------------------------ 8\. Limited English Proficient students in the school: \_\_\_[0]{.underline}\_\_\_% \_\_\_[0]{.underline}\_\_\_Total Number Limited English Proficient Number of languages represented: \_\_[1]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_ Specify languages: English 9\. Students eligible for free/reduced-priced meals: \_\_[18.44]{.underline}\_% \_\_\_[26]{.underline}\_\_\_Total Number Students Who Qualify > If this method does not produce a reasonably accurate estimate of the > percentage of students from low‑income families or the school does not > participate in the federally‑supported lunch program, specify a more > accurate estimate, tell why the school chose it, and explain how it > arrived at this estimate. 10\. Students receiving special education services: \_\_[4.97]{.underline}\_\_% -4- \_\_[7]{.underline}\_\_\_\_\_Total Number of Students Served > Indicate below the number of students with disabilities according to > conditions designated in the Individuals with Disabilities Education > Act. \_\_\_\_Autism \_\_\_\_Orthopedic Impairment \_\_\_\_Deafness \_\_\_\_Other Health Impaired \_\_\_\_Deaf-Blindness \_[1]{.underline}\_Specific Learning Disability \_\_\_\_Hearing Impairment \_\_\_\_Speech or Language Impairment \_\_\_\_Mental Retardation \_\_\_\_Traumatic Brain Injury \_[6]{.underline}\_\_Multiple Disabilities \_\_\_\_Visual Impairment Including Blindness 11. Indicate number of full‑time and part‑time staff members in each of the categories below: **Number of Staff** **[Full-time]{.underline}** **[Part-Time]{.underline}** Administrator(s) \_\_\_\_\_\_\_ \_\_\_[1]{.underline}\_\_\_\_ Classroom teachers \_\_\_[6]{.underline}\_\_\_ \_\_\_[2]{.underline}\_\_\_\_ Special resource teachers/specialists \_\_\_[2]{.underline}\_\_\_ \_\_\_[6]{.underline}\_\_\_\_ Paraprofessionals \_\_\_\_\_\_\_ \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ > Support staff \_\_\_[1]{.underline}\_\_\_ \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ > > Total number \_\_\_[9]{.underline}\_\_\_ \_\_\_[9]{.underline}\_\_\_\_ 12\. Average school student-"classroom teacher" ratio: \_[17.6/1]{.underline} 13\. Show the attendance patterns of teachers and students as a percentage. The student dropout rate is defined by the state. The student drop-off rate is the difference between the number of entering students and the number of exiting students from the same cohort. (From the same cohort, subtract the number of exiting students from the number of entering students; divide that number by the number of entering students; multiply by 100 to get the percentage drop-off rate.) Briefly explain in 100 words or fewer any major discrepancy between the dropout rate and the drop-off rate. (Only middle and high schools need to supply dropout rates and only high schools need to supply drop-off rates.) ------------------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- 2002-2003 2001-2002 2000-2001 1999-2000 1998-1999 Daily student attendance 97.1 96.3 97.3 97.1 96.7 Daily teacher attendance 95.58 96.99 96.93 96.61 96.58 Teacher turnover rate 0 10% 0 0 0 Student dropout rate N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Student drop-off rate N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A ------------------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- -5- **[Part III - Summary]{.underline}** Milledgeville Elementary School is a small rural school located in northwest Illinois. The school is located in Milledgeville, Illinois and is part of the Chadwick-Milledgeville Community Unit District #399. Our school district is committed to assisting students to discover and build from their individual strengths toward the realization of their full personal potentials. Although we are a very small school we are able to provide a comprehensive curriculum and the opportunities for students to develop a solid foundation of intellectual, physical, social, and emotional skills. Our competent staff provides a caring, nurturing environment in which students are encouraged and challenged to become responsible, life-long learners in our ever-changing world. Our student population is predominately white with most children coming from single-family homes. Nearly all of our students use English as their first language. We are fortunate to have only 18.44% of our student population coming from economically disadvantaged homes. Our school has very low mobility and truancy rates compared to state averages, and we have excellent student attendance. One huge advantage of our small school is a pupil-teacher ratio of 17.6 to 1. Our small class sizes have enabled our staff to spend a great deal of time on task and teaching to meet the needs of our students who come to us with a variety of learning styles. Besides the regular classroom teachers that our students see every day our children are fortunate enough to have the services of full-time music, art, and physical education teachers, full-time speech, Reading Recovery (for first grade), and Title 1 specialists, plus a part-time gifted teacher, and the full attention of their own media services specialist who assists them daily in the elementary computer lab and library. When needed, our school has the services of a part-time school psychologist and a social worker. Our high school guidance counselor fills in as our counselor if needed when the others cannot be at our school. Since our elementary school is in the rather unusual situation of being housed in the same building as our high school, our teachers have always had the luxury of having high school students as teacher aides. In this arrangement, our teachers are able to further aid our children with more one-on-one assistance and our young students are also exposed to older students who are academically strong, and who are usually excellent role models. The high school Spanish students also provide our youngsters with foreign language lessons once a week, which helps to broaden our children even further in their learning. Due to our small size and all of the other advantages listed in the above paragraph, our students have consistently scored very well on nationally standardized tests and we have consistently exceeded the state averages in all areas on the ISAT tests. In order to maintain these high levels of achievement year after year our staff has implemented the Accelerated Reading Program, teachers have been trained well in the Four-Block writing method, and we have increasingly been able to use our computer technology to strengthen our students' math skills. To further hone our skills in the math area, several of our teachers have been investigating the Accelerated Math program and we are looking for ways to fund this program so our students can take advantage of this wonderful learning tool as well. In our current world, where often the term "Bigger is better" is what the general public has come -6- to believe about so many things, we here at Milledgeville Elementary School feel that another cliché fits our school quite well - "Small, but mighty." The staff and administration at Milledgeville Elementary School are fully committed to helping every child reach his/her full potential. We are proud of our small school and all that we have to offer our children from our small rural communities of Chadwick and Milledgeville. # [Part IV, #1 - Assessment Results]{.underline} Milledgeville Elementary School administers the *[Illinois Standards Achievement Test]{.underline}* (ISAT) which is published by NCS Pearson / Illinois State Board of Education. These tests were designed by the State of Illinois to allow parents and educators to document the educational progress of their children in relation to state standards. The tests are given each spring to third grade students in our state. The levels of achievement are reported in both Reading and Mathematics. The Performance Level Descriptors for both reading and math are: *Academic Warning --* Student work demonstrates limited knowledge and skills in the subject and because of major gaps in learning, students apply knowledge and skills ineffectively; *Below Standards* -- Student work demonstrates basic knowledge and skills in the subject; however, because of gaps in learning, students apply knowledge and skills in limited ways; *Meets Standards* -- Student work demonstrates proficient knowledge and skills in the subject, with students effectively applying knowledge and skills to solve problems; *Exceeds Standards --* Student work demonstrates advanced knowledge and skills in the subject, with students creatively applying knowledge and skills to solve problems and evaluate the results. Milledgeville Elementary School has ISAT data from 1999-2003. Prior to 2001, some special needs (disabled) students with Individual Education Plans (IEPs) were excluded from the ISAT as the result of the IEP team's decision that standardized testing in reading and/or math was not appropriate. The excluded students were assessed by locally developed tests. There were 2 students excluded in 1999 and 3 in 2000. One hundred percent of our students took the ISAT in 2001, 2002, and 2003, with disabled students receiving test accommodations specified by their IEP teams. Due to our low enrollment, we are unable to provide disaggregated data for low income, racial/ethnic, or disabled student populations, because the groups are not comprised of sufficient numbers to be a part of the state's assessment reports. Our display tables for reading and math instead include disaggregated data for non-disabled, not low income, female, and male student populations. Our faculty and administration continually work to align our curricula with the Illinois Learning Standards. Our third graders have shown marked progress in both reading and math as a result of these consistent efforts. In 1999, 81% of our students scored in either the *Meets* or *Exceeds* category in math, which was 13% higher than the state average. The students demonstrating *Meets* or *Exceeds* achievement represented 95% in 2000, which was 26% higher than the state average; 87% in 2001, which was 13 % higher than the state average; and 91% in 2002, which was 17 % higher than the state average. Last year, 2003, students demonstrating *Meets* or *Exceeds* achievement came in at an exciting 100%, which was 24.3% higher than the state average. The percentage of our 3^rd^ graders scoring in the *Exceeds Standards* level in math has -7- increased steadily from 20% in 1999, to 33% in 2000, 50% in 2001, 61% in 2002, and 75% in 2003. Our Reading levels have also shown continued growth. In 1999, 69% of our students scored in either the *Meets* or *Exceeds* category in reading, which was 8% higher than the state average. The students demonstrating *Meets* or *Exceeds* achievement represented 75% in 2000, which was 13% higher than the state average; 87% in 2001, which was 25 % higher than the state average; 88% in 2002, which was 25% higher than the state; and 91.7% in 2003, which was 29.7% higher than the state. The percentage of our 3^rd^ graders scoring in the *Exceeds Standards* level in reading has increased steadily from 5% in 1999, to 18% in 2000, 24% in 2001, 27% in 2002, and 55.6 in 2003. These test results have allowed our school to assess and identify our strengths and our weaknesses. We consistently reevaluate the needs of our students so that we may give each child an education that will prepare him for each new level of learning. **[Part IV, #2 - Use of Assessment Data]{.underline}** The commitment to use assessment data has driven our school improvement process. Our district believes that in order to improve teaching and student learning we must use different types of assessment tools to set goals for improving student achievement. The disaggregation of data from the Illinois Standards Achievement Test, the Stanford Achievement Tests - 9^th^ Edition, and the Otis-Lennon School Ability Tests provide a focus for professional development and for adjustments to be made in our instructional program in order to address the diverse academic needs of each group of children. Our district also uses a variety of formal and informal strategies to make instructional decisions and to monitor student progress. Any information that we are able to obtain through assessment is passed on to students and their parents in order to involve them in understanding the achievement successes or failures of the students. Our staff uses full-day Teacher Institutes, half-day School Improvement Planning Institutes, as well as 1¾ -hour Inservice Programs to network and continually identify instructional targets to improve student achievement. The on-going meetings throughout the school year ensure that there is communication and planning between grade levels as to the expectations for each student. The district uses assessment data to understand and improve student and school performance by: - Making instructional modifications in curriculum scope, sequence and delivery for individuals and small groups, - Involving specialized support staff including Reading Recovery, Title One reading and math, Helping Steps, special education resources, a speech and language specialist, and a summer school program to meet children's needs, and - Aligning the curriculum more closely to State standards. -8- **[PART IV, #3 - COMMUNICATING STUDENT PERFORMANCE]{.underline}** The mission statement of the Chadwick-Milledgeville CUSD #399 commits our district to assisting students to discover and build from their individual strengths toward the realization of their full personal potentials. As we do this, we are constantly and in many ways communicating student performance and assessment to parents, students, and the community. Student handbooks are distributed to families at registration. An Open House is held early in the school year and parent-teacher conferences are held each November. Parents are encouraged to request a conference with teachers whenever they feel a need and teachers contact parents throughout the year for additional conference times. Report cards and progress reports are sent home a minimum of 4 times a year, with many teachers sending weekly or bi-weekly progress reports, as well as classroom calendars and newsletters. Computer-generated reading reports are sent home weekly to apprise parents of students' progress in the Accelerated Reading program. Annual test results for the Illinois Standards Achievement Tests, the Otis-Lennon School Ability Tests, and the Stanford Achievement Tests are conveyed to parents via printed reports. Parents of Title I/Reading Recovery students receive written reports periodically through the year. News releases and pictures of school events appear regularly in the local newspapers along with a monthly newsletter insert. A great deal of information is posted on the district's website ([www.dist399.net](http://www.dist399.net/)), including the state-mandated School District Report Card, teachers' voice mail numbers and e-mail addresses, and the electronic version of the monthly district newsletter. A Fine Arts Festival is held in May to showcase students' art work and music for the community. **[Part IV, \# 4 - Sharing School Successes with other Schools]{.underline}** A Blue Ribbon School is made up of a group of people working together toward the goal of helping our most precious assets, our children, become the best that they can be. Perpetual and unthreatening communication between the teachers, administrators, parents and students within the school community is imperative. Education is, however, always evolving and the ongoing commitment to improvement requires communication with those outside of the local community as well. Milledgeville Elementary School has improved because of interaction with outside resources such as the Special Education Cooperative, the Regional Office of Education and the State Board of Education. Our district has sought and utilized outside resources such as categorical grants, competitive school improvement grants and technology grants to provide opportunities for growth of students and teachers alike. Milledgeville Elementary School has also improved because staff members attend university classes, workshops and professional meetings, and utilize educational publications, news articles and Internet resources. In pursuit of improvement, our staff members have networked with other educators. As we experience improvement we recognize and celebrate the students' academic performance, the teachers' dedication to improvement and the parents' continuing assistance. We firmly believe that Blue Ribbon Schools have the obligation to contribute information to other districts to help them more successfully meet the needs of their students. We will welcome visitors to our school and will share how we developed our curriculum and utilized our assets to make a learning climate rich in possibilities for student achievement. We will also share our -9- State School Report Card, our monthly district newsletter and our successes via the school district website at [www.dist399.net](http://www.dist399.net/). As we have reaped the benefits of networking, we will put the word out that networking with a Blue Ribbon School can be mutually beneficial as we exchange a variety of ideas and a wealth of diverse information, making all interacting schools stronger and more productive. **[Part V, \# 1 -Curriculum and Instruction]{.underline}** The curriculum at Milledgeville Elementary School is aligned to and obligated by Illinois State Standards and the Chadwick-Milledgeville CUSD #399 goals. The curriculum reflects the communities' high expectations for our children's intellectual and personal growth. Using the state standards, current research, and best practice, we have developed programs and materials to support an environment encouraging each child to achieve high expectations and find success in learning. Our curriculum provides multiple opportunities to develop oral and written language skills, as well as critical thinking skills. - The teaching of basic skills in all curricular areas is combined with life-skills and problem solving skills. For example, third graders study beyond traditional assessment methods by using open-ended questions that have been written and chosen from different sources requiring students to communicate their mathematical thinking. Our students feel more confident showing understanding at test time with proficient and well-supported test answers. - A strong literacy curriculum integrating reading, writing, speaking, and listening forms the foundation for all curricular areas. For example, after reading about snakes in their basal readers, the second graders formed groups, studied about snakes in the library and on the computer, and then prepared presentations. - Conceptual development spirals and increases in difficulty as students progress through the grade levels in mathematics. For example, first graders keep an individual running assessment on their developing skills in addition, subtraction, money. Parents are kept aware of their child's development of skills through teacher to home notes. - Homework is an expectation that develops an explicit connection between school and home to reinforce and expand children's learning and unites teacher/parent relationships. Parent awareness of daily schoolwork supports understanding of a child's strengths and weaknesses. - Planned enrichment experiences such as field trips, art enrichment programs and cultural arts programs build background knowledge and engage the diverse interests of all children. High school Spanish students visit K-3 classrooms weekly, introducing Spanish language skills. - An Outdoor Educational Learning Lab, The Prairie Project, develops inquiry-based learning experiences and supports each child's individual learning style while encouraging habitat restoration. Each student is encouraged to learn about native plants and grasses, to plant seeds and bulbs and to view and identify native birds and butterflies. - A variety of assessments including state-assessments, district-wide achievement tests, diagnostic reading evaluations, and portfolios help inform instruction and evaluate the needs of individual children. For example, the Accelerated Reader Program is based on individual ability, with success and reading levels that are matched to students' individual skills. They are encouraged to get a book for enjoyment of reading and testing and one for the parents to read to them. -10- - High quality resources, (literature, textbooks, technology and high school students), selected by the staff, support the varied interests and abilities of children and enable students to reach their learning potential. High school students serve as tutors and teacher helpers. - Our school provides resources that enhance a student's education through the use of technology, including networked computers, curriculum specific software and the Internet. Our goal in providing technology resources is to promote educational excellence by facilitating resource sharing, innovation, communication and collaboration. # [Part V, #2 -- Reading Curriculum]{.underline} Our school district has high expectations for students and desired a reading program that would aid them in becoming flourishing and enduring readers. Teachers collaborated within the district and researched reading programs implemented in other school districts. Our school district selected the [Scott Foresman]{.underline} literature based reading series. This reading series contains high-quality literature which integrates writing, grammar and spelling into its curriculum. Supplementary materials include audiotapes that introduce vocabulary to students, read-alongs and a website resource for students, parents and educators. Test preparation provided in this reading program assists students in becoming successful readers who are prepared for state and national tests. Teachers use various teaching methods to aid students in reaching their maximum reading potential: - Phonemic awareness, sound/symbol association, letter recognition, phonics, word identification, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension are incorporated into instructional lessons in the reading program. - Independent study and shared reading activities allow students to develop comprehension of material and fluency while reading. - High school helpers are available to assist students with reading material. - Progress is measured by informal and formal assessment measures- fluency in oral readings, vocabulary quizzes following each story and a test following each book. - Different reading levels are incorporated into the reading program to adapt to individualized performance. - Reading Recovery, a program designed for at risk 1^st^ grade students, provides individual assistance by a specialized reading teacher. - Title I is a program offered to elementary students who display difficulty developing grade-level reading skills; it gives students the opportunity to receive assistance from a specialized reading teacher in a small group. - A gifted program in our district encourages students to excel by offering more challenging material. - Accelerated Reader is a program designed to allow students to read at their grade level while progressing in difficulty; comprehension and retention of material are measured by a quiz at the end of each book. -11- **[Part V, #3 -- Writing Curriculum]{.underline}** It is our mission to build students' strengths toward their full personal potentials. Through a comprehensive writing curriculum, it is our objective to provide the opportunities for students to develop a solid foundation for communication for a variety of purposes. Journal writing, letter writing, reports, comparison essays, and descriptive essays are a few of our on-going writing curriculum activities. Of course, narrative, persuasive, and expository writing are a large part of our program since we are tested in those areas. The Four Square method is implemented to achieve success in those areas. Science and social studies units are often reviewed by having the students write expository essays. To improve our writing skills, we utilize great literature in order to increase the students' vocabulary and increase their thought and imagination. Therefore, we are lucky to have an outstanding library/media specialist who introduces the students to various types of literature and discusses the writing styles of different authors. Another part of our writing program consists of the mechanics. We use Daily Oral Language to emphasize this part of writing. Writing is encouraged across all content areas so that students recognize its relevance in every aspect of life. # [Part V, #4 -- Instructional Methods]{.underline} Teachers at Milledgeville Elementary School utilize a variety of instructional methods to improve student learning. They align the curricula to meet the Illinois Learning Standards and set high expectations for student achievement. Their research-based methods of instruction help meet the needs of all students regardless of their learning styles. Some of the strategies used include: - Direct instruction, which develops skills necessary to become independent learners. - Cooperative learning experiences in many subject areas to help promote learning and build social skills. - Problem-based learning experiences to help students apply what they are learning to the real world. This gives their learning meaning. - Modeling, guided practice, and the use of manipulatives to reach students with a variety of learning styles. - Small, flexible grouping strategies allow the teacher or aides to work with smaller numbers of students on specific skills or subject areas (one-on-one instruction, differentiated instruction for special needs students). - Specialized instruction for students with IEPs. Regular classroom teachers work closely with support staff to individualize instruction and provide needed accommodations. - Technology/media center use. All classrooms are equipped with computers and have Internet access. Each class has scheduled visits to the computer lab and library. -12- **[STATE CRITERION-REFERENCED TESTS]{.underline}** The Data Display Table is illustrated on the following page. Provide the following information for all tests in reading (language arts or English) and mathematics. Complete a separate form for reading (language arts or English) and mathematics at each grade level. Grade [3 Reading]{.underline} Test [Illinois Standards Achievement Test]{.underline} Edition/publication year [1999-2003]{.underline} Publisher [Illinois State Board of Education]{.underline} Number of students in the grade in which the test was administered: 1999 = 52 2000 = 63 2001 = 38 2002 = 33 2003 = 36 Number of students who took the test: 1999 = 42 2000 = 60 2001 = 38 2002 = 33 2003 = 36 What groups were excluded from testing? Why, and how were they assessed? Prior to 2001 some students with IEP's were excluded as the result of the IEP team's decision that standardized testing in reading was not appropriate. Excluded students were assessed by locally-developed tests. Number excluded Year Percent excluded 2 1999 4 3 2000 5 0 2001 0 0 2002 0 0 2003 0 For the school and state, report scores as the percentage of students tested whose performance was scored at or above the cutpoint used by the state for 1) basic, 2) proficient, and 3) advanced, or similar categories as defined by the state. States will vary in their terminology and cutpoints. Note that the reported percentage of students scoring above the basic cutpoint should include students scoring above the proficiency, and advanced cutpoints. Explain the standards for basic, proficient, and advanced, and make clear what the test results mean in a way that someone unfamiliar with the test can interpret the results. -13- **[STATE CRITERION-REFERENCED TESTS, Continued]{.underline}** Data Display Table for Reading +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | | **2 | * | * | * | * | | | 002 | *20 | *20 | *19 | *19 | | | -** | 01- | 00- | 99- | 98- | | | | 200 | 200 | 200 | 199 | | | ** | 2** | 1** | 0** | 9** | | | 200 | | | | | | | 3** | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Testing Month -- March/April | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | # SCHOOL SCORES | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Total -- Percent of students... | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 97 | 95 | 98 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 9 | 88 | 87 | 75 | 69 | | | 1.7 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 5 | 27 | 24 | 18 | 5 | | | 5.6 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Number of students tested | 36 | 33 | 38 | 60 | 4 | | | | | | | 2\* | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Percent of total students tested | 100 | 100 | 100 | 95 | 8 | | | | | | | 1\* | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Number of students excluded | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Percent of students excluded | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 4 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | # Subgroup Scores | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 1\. **Non-Disabled** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 100 | 100 | 98 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 9 | 100 | 94 | 75 | 69 | | | 1.7 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 5 | 32 | 28 | 18 | 5 | | | 5.6 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 2\. **Not Low Income** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 96 | 93 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 100 | 88 | 84 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 63 | 28 | 28 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 3\. **Female** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 100 | 89 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 95 | 84 | 77 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 65 | 38 | 24 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 4\. **Male** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 95 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 8 | 90 | 95 | | | | | 7.6 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 4 | 20 | 24 | | | | | 3.8 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | State Scores | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Total-- Percent of students... | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 9 | 94 | 93 | 94 | 92 | | | 1.9 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 62 | 63 | 62 | 62 | 61 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 2 | 19 | 19 | 21 | 17 | | | 1.9 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ NOTE: Empty cells = data not available as a part of the State's assessment reports. \* = 3 students absent and 5 tests not scored by State -14- **[STATE CRITERION-REFERENCED TESTS]{.underline}** The Data Display Table is illustrated on the following page. Provide the following information for all tests in reading (language arts or English) and mathematics. Complete a separate form for reading (language arts or English) and mathematics at each grade level. Grade [3 Math]{.underline} Test [Illinois Standards Achievement Test]{.underline} Edition/publication year [1999-2003]{.underline} Publisher [Illinois State Board of Education]{.underline} Number of students in the grade in which the test was administered: 1999 = 52 2000 = 63 2001 = 38 2002 = 33 2003 = 36 Number of students who took the test: 1999 = 49 2000 = 60 2001 = 38 2002 = 33 2003 = 36 What groups were excluded from testing? Why, and how were they assessed? Prior to 2001 some students with IEP's were excluded as the result of the IEP team's decision that standardized testing in math was not appropriate. Excluded students were assessed by locally-developed tests. Number excluded Year Percent excluded 2 1999 4 3 2000 5 0 2001 0 0 2002 0 0 2003 0 For the school and state, report scores as the percentage of students tested whose performance was scored at or above the cutpoint used by the state for 1) basic, 2) proficient, and 3) advanced, or similar categories as defined by the state. States will vary in their terminology and cutpoints. Note that the reported percentage of students scoring above the basic cutpoint should include students scoring above the proficiency, and advanced cutpoints. Explain the standards for basic, proficient, and advanced, and make clear what the test results mean in a way that someone unfamiliar with the test can interpret the results. -15- **[STATE CRITERION-REFERENCED TESTS, Continued]{.underline}** Data Display Table for Math +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | | **2 | * | * | * | * | | | 002 | *20 | *20 | *19 | *19 | | | -** | 01- | 00- | 99- | 98- | | | | 200 | 200 | 200 | 199 | | | ** | 2** | 1** | 0** | 9** | | | 200 | | | | | | | 3** | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Testing Month -- March/April | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | # SCHOOL SCORES | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Total -- Percent of students... | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 91 | 98 | 100 | 97 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 91 | 87 | 95 | 81 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 75 | 61 | 50 | 33 | 20 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Number of students tested | 36 | 33 | 38 | 60 | 4 | | | | | | | 9\* | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Percent of total students tested | 100 | 100 | 100 | 95 | 9 | | | | | | | 4\* | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Number of students excluded | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Percent of students excluded | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 4 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | # Subgroup Scores | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 1\. **Non-Disabled** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 100 | 100 | 90 | 95 | 83 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 75 | 69 | 56 | 33 | 21 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 2\. **Not Low Income** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 92 | 96 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 100 | 92 | 87 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 7 | 67 | 53 | | | | | 7.8 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 3\. **Female** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 86 | 94 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 100 | 86 | 70 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 80 | 43 | 35 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | 4\. **Male** | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 100 | 95 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 100 | 95 | 100 | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 6 | 74 | 62 | | | | | 8.8 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | State Scores | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | Total-- Percent of students... | | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Academic Warning | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Below Standards | 9 | 93 | 92 | 90 | 88 | | | 3.1 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Meeting Standards | 7 | 74 | 74 | 69 | 68 | | | 5.7 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ | At or above Exceeds Standards | 3 | 30 | 28 | 23 | 21 | | | 1.1 | | | | | +-------------------------------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+ NOTE: Empty cells = data not available as a part of the State's assessment reports. \* = 1 student absent -16-
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89,"t",": Released October 30, 2007, by National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Agricultural Statistics Board, U.S. Department of Agriculture." 89,"t","Table 55 - Potatoes: Used for processing, selected areas, 2005 and 2006 crops 1/" 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"h","Storage","","","","","","","","Entire" 89,"h","season","To Dec. 1","To Jan. 1","To Feb. 1","To Mar. 1","To Apr. 1","To May 1","To Jun. 1","season" 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"u","","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt.","1,000 cwt." 89,"h","","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon","Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon" 89,"d","2005-2006",22840,29300,35970,43300,50820,57830,65030,77360 89,"d","2006-2007",27090,34070,41350,48940,56650,63680,71220,85630 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"h","","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon","Washington and other areas, Oregon" 89,"d","2005-2006",30310,35895,40545,48290,55320,61855,69360,78550 89,"d","2006-2007",30980,37060,42190,49930,56690,63170,70410,77355 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"h","","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/","Maine 2/" 89,"d","2005-2006",1365000,1880000,2485000,3090000,3800000,4450000,5130000,6825000 89,"d","2006-2007",1755000,2360000,2910000,3465000,4185000,4810000,5470000,7560000 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"h","","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/","Other states 3/" 89,"d","2005-2006",11055,14070,17005,19895,22520,25270,27740,35535 89,"d","2006-2007",14270,17695,21290,24545,28040,31370,34830,43315 89,"h","","","","","","","","","" 89,"h","","Total","Total","Total","Total","Total","Total","Total","Total" 89,"d","2005-2006",65570000,81145000,96005000,114575000,132460000,149405000,167260000,198270000 89,"d","2006-2007",74095000,91185000,107740000,126880000,145565000,163030000,181930000,213860000 89,"c","" 89,"f","1/ Total quantity received and used for processing regardless of the state in which the potatoes were produced. Total excludes quantities used for potato chips in Maine, Michigan, and Wisconsin." 89,"f","2/ Includes potatoes grown in Maine only." 89,"f","3/ Colorado, Minnesota, Nevada, North Dakota, and Wisconsin."
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converted_docs
908927
![](media/image1.png){width="0.8in" height="0.8in"}Information Management Group **INFORMATION COLLECTION TRACKING** +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | **CFDA:** | | | | ***Analyst*** | | **     ** | | | | | | | | | | Ingalls | | **Title:** | | | | | | Charter | | | | | | Schools | | | | | | Program | | | | | | (CSP) | | | | | | Grant | | | | | | Award | | | | | | Database | | | | | | (JH) | | | | | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | Principal | Office of | | | Schubart | | Office | Innovation | | | | | | and | | | | | | I | | | | | | mprovement | | | | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | Sponsor | Sharon | Telephone | 202-2 | Axt | | | Horn/Dean | \# | 60-1882 | | | | Kern | | | | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | | | Fax \# |       | Carey | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | Current | 1855-0016 | Assignment | 3780 |       | | OMB \# | | \# | | | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ | Regulatory | Final | Priority | Other | | | tie-in: | | | | | | | | | | | | NPRM | | | | | +------------+------------+-------------+---------+-------------------+ ***PROCESSI***NG ------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------------- Date Date Comments Returned Date IMG Formally Received             Sent to Budget                   Sent to Planning                   60-day Federal Register sent             60-day Federal Register             published 30-day OMB Federal Register             sent 30-day OMB Federal Register             published Emergency Federal Register             sent Emergency Federal Register             published Reviewed                   Sponsor Corrected                   OMB comments received                   Sponsor answered OMB                   **Notice of Action:** **Approved** **Disapproved** ------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------------- Other Comments:      
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187825
# Presentation: 187825 ## Materials Science & Technology Division **Corrosion Science & Technology** - B. A. PINT **Superconductive & Energy Efficient Materials** - D. K. CHRISTEN **Alloying Behavior & Design** - E. P. GEORGE **X-Ray Scattering & Microscopy** - G. E. ICE **Polymer Matrix Composites** - R. E. NORRIS, JR. **Surface Processing & Mechanics** - T.M. BESMANN - Steven J. Zinkle**Division Director** - Division Director’s Office - J. F. McKinney **Secretary** - K. P. Simonson**Administrative Assistant** **Diffraction & Thermophysical Properties** - C. R. HUBBARD **Materials Joining** - Z. FENG - H. M. CHRISTEN - L. A. BOATNER **Correlated Electron Materials** - D. G. MANDRUS **Ceramic Science & Technology** - H. T. LIN - C. K. NARULA **Nuclear Fuel Materials** - R. C. MARTIN **FINANCE OFFICE** **DIVISION SUPPORT** **Synthesis & Properties of Novel Materials** **Thin Films &** **Nanostructures** **Physical Chemistry of Materials** **Carbon Materials Technology** - T. D. BURCHELL **Electron Microscopy** - S. J. PENNYCOOK **Materials Theory** - G. M. STOCKS **Low-Dimensional Materials Physics** - J. F. WENDELKEN **Microscopy** - K. L. MORE. - E. K. OHRINER - (INTERIM) **Mechanical Properties & Mechanics** - E. LARA-CURZIO **Nuclear Materials Science & Technology** - R. K. NANSTAD **Research Support** - F. K. EDWARDS, JR. **Materials Processing**
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173728
AXNT20 KNHC 100528 TWDAT TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION NWS TPC/NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL 205 AM EDT MON OCT 10 2005 TROPICAL WEATHER DISCUSSION FOR NORTH AMERICA...CENTRAL AMERICA...GULF OF MEXICO...CARIBBEAN SEA...NORTHEASTERN SECTIONS OF SOUTH AMERICA...AND ATLANTIC OCEAN TO THE AFRICAN COAST FROM THE EQUATOR TO 32N. THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS BASED ON SATELLITE IMAGERY...WEATHER OBSERVATIONS...RADAR...AND METEOROLOGICAL ANALYSIS. BASED ON 0000 UTC SURFACE ANALYSIS AND SATELLITE IMAGERY THROUGH 0345 UTC. ...SPECIAL FEATURE... HURRICANE VINCE IS CENTERED NEAR 34.5N 17.8W AT 10/0300 UTC ABOUT 490 NM ESE OF THE AZORES OR ABOUT 110 NM NNW OF MADEIRA ISLANDS MOVING NE AT 6 KT. ESTIMATED MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE IS 987 MB. MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WIND SPEED IS 65 KT WITH GUSTS TO 80 KT. SEE THE LATEST NHC FORECAST/ADVISORY UNDER AWIPS/WMO HEADERS MIATCMAT3/WTNT23 KNHC FOR MORE DETAILS. VINCE REMAINS A SMALL HURRICANE WITH VERY LITTLE CONVECTION. HURRICANE FORCE WINDS EXTEND OUT ONLY 15 NM FROM THE CENTER. SCATTERED MODERATE/ ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION IS MAINLY E OF THE CENTER FROM 33N-35N BETWEEN 16.5W-18W. ...TROPICAL WAVES... E ATLC TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 30W S OF 19N MOVING W 10 KT. THIS WAVE CONTINUES TO BE NEAR THE LEADING EDGE OF AFRICAN DUST AND IS ALSO ENHANCING SOME ITCZ CONVECTION S OF THE ITCZ AXIS. CENTRAL ATLC TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 42W S OF 15N MOVING W 10 KT. VERY LOW AMPLITUDE WAVE WITH LITTLE SATELLITE SIGNATURE AND NO ASSOCIATED CONVECTION. W/CENTRAL ATLC TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 55W S OF 20N MOVING W 10 KT WITH A 1009 MB LOW ON THE WAVE NEAR 13N. WELL-DEFINED WAVE WITH CYCLONIC CURVATURE OBSERVED ON INFRARED SATELLITE IMAGERY. SCATTERED MODERATE/STRONG CONVECTION IS NEAR THE LOW FROM 13N-16N BETWEEN 53W-56W. SCATTERED MODERATE/ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION IS FROM 8N-13N BETWEEN 53W/56W. W CARIBBEAN TROPICAL WAVE IS ALONG 82W S OF 16N MOVING W 10 KT. WAVE IS EMBEDDED UPPER LEVEL EASTERLY FLOW AND SSW SURFACE FLOW...THUS WAVE SATELLITE SIGNATURE IS MASKED WITH NO ASSOCIATED CONVECTION. ...ITCZ... ITCZ AXIS IS CENTERED ALONG 12N16W 7N28W 9N44W 13N52W. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION ARE FROM 2N-12N BETWEEN 15W-40W AND FROM 8N-12N BETWEEN 40W-51W. ...DISCUSSION... GULF OF MEXICO... WEAK SURFACE RIDGING IS OVER THE GULF OF MEXICO WITH AN UNANALYZED HIGH ALONG THE COAST OF LOUISIANA. A SMALL 1006 MB LOW NEAR TAMPA FLORIDA IS MOVING E TO INLAND NW OF LAKE OKEECHOBEE. IN THE UPPER LEVELS...DEEP LAYERED TROUGH IS INLAND OVER THE SE U.S. DIPPING TO THE N GULF COAST. ASSOCIATED FRONTAL BOUNDARY IS MOVING OFF THE U.S. COAST INTO THE W ATLC. UPPER HIGH IN THE NW CARIBBEAN IS DRAWING W UPPER FLOW ACROSS THE ENTIRE GULF WITH IT STRONG SUBSIDENCE. THIS IS CREATING A VERY TRANQUIL NIGHT WITH NO SHOWERS AND LIGHT TO MODERATE SURFACE WINDS. THIS HOWEVER WILL CHANGE BY MON NIGHT/TUE MORNING AS A WEAK FRONTAL BOUNDARY WILL MOVE TO ALONG THE TEXAS COAST. CARIBBEAN SEA... SURFACE TROUGH IS OVER THE NW CARIBBEAN EXTENDING FROM CENTRAL CUBA THROUGH A 1008 MB LOW IN THE GULF OF HONDURAS NEAR 17N84W TO THE NW COAST OF HONDURAS. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/ ISOLATED STRONG CONVECTION ARE W OF THE TROUGH WITHIN 60/75 NM OF LINE FROM 21N83W SW TO THE GULF OF HONDURAS NEAR 17N87W. BROAD UPPER HIGH CENTERED OVER THE NW CARIBBEAN NEAR 20N81W WITH AN UPPER RIDGE EXTENDING ACROSS THE ENTIRE CARIBBEAN TO THE LESSER ANTILLES NEAR 14N61W. ABUNDANT TROPICAL MOISTURE AND UNUSUAL SW SURFACE FLOW IS GENERATING LARGE CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/STRONG WITH EMBEDDED CLUSTERS OF NUMEROUS STRONG CONVECTION E OF 80W AND CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/ STRONG CONVECTION S OF 15N W OF 80W. TROPICAL MOISTURE IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN OVER MOST OF THE CARIBBEAN THROUGH MID WEEK AS THE UPPER LEVEL PATTERN WILL BECOME MORE COMPLEX. THIS WILL CONTINUE AREAS OF CONVECTION ACROSS MOST THE AREA THROUGH WED. ATLANTIC OCEAN... UPPER LEVEL TROUGH OVER THE E UNITED STATES EXTENDS JUST INTO THE W ATLC WITH THE ATTENDANT FRONTAL BOUNDARY N OF THE REGION. UPPER HIGH IN THE NW CARIBBEAN EXTENDS A WEAK RIDGE ACROSS CENTRAL CUBA TO OVER THE N BAHAMA ISLANDS. THE REMAINDER OF THE W ATLC IS DOMINATED BY A LARGE...STRONG CUT-OFF UPPER LOW BETWEEN BERMUDA AND THE LEEWARD/VIRGIN ISLANDS NEAR 26N63W. THIS IS PROVIDING DIFFLUENCE AROUND THE LOW FROM OVER THE BAHAMA ISLANDS...THE GREATER ANTILLES EXTENDING INTO THE CARIBBEAN... AND INTO THE CENTRAL ATLC. CLUSTERS OF SCATTERED MODERATE/STRONG CONVECTION ARE S OF LINE FROM 26N76W 19N66W TO 21N62W TO OVER THE CARIBBEAN...WITHIN 350/400 NM SE OF LINE 21N62W TO 24N60W... AND WITHIN 90/120 NM OF LINE FROM 22N52W TO 30N60W ON THE E SIDE OF THE UPPER LOW. EMBEDDED BENEATH IS UPPER LOW...A SURFACE TROUGH EXTENDS ALONG 75W FROM THE S BAHAMA ISLANDS NEAR 22N TO 28N AND A 1011 MB LOW...REMNANTS OF SUBTROPICAL DEPRESSION TWENTY-TWO...IS CENTERED SW OF BERMUDA NEAR 31N66W. BROAD UPPER TROUGH COVERS THE REMAINDER OF THE ATLC N OF THE CAPE VERDE ISLANDS E OF 50W WITH THE UPPER TROUGH AXIS EXTENDING FROM JUST E OF THE MADEIRA ISLANDS...W OF THE CANARY ISLANDS THROUGH 23N27W TO NEAR 18N36W. AT THE SURFACE...BROAD HIGH PRESSURE DOMINATES THE CENTRAL ATLC N OF 20N FROM 24W-50W WITH A 1026 MB HIGH N OF THE REGION. AFRICAN DUST CAN BE SEEN ON INFRARED SATELLITE IMAGERY...HINTING AT ITS DENSITY...S OF A LINE FROM THE CANARY ISLANDS SW TO 20N30W. ALL OF THIS IS PRODUCING RATHER TRANQUIL CONDITIONS ACROSS THE E AND CENTRAL ATLC E OF 50W. THE UPPER TROUGH OVER THE E/CENTRAL ATLC WILL NARROW AS AN UPPER LOW IN THE W ATLC MOVES SE INTO THE CENTRAL ATLC...THUS ALLOWING TROPICAL MOISTURE TO MOVE N FROM THE DEEP TROPICS. THE W ATLC WILL REMAIN MOISTURE LADEN AND SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE WILL CONTINUE TO DOMINATE MOST THE ATLC WATERS THROUGH MID WEEK. $$ WALLACE
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527425
# Presentation: 527425 ## Patient Safety Component –Annual Facility Survey | * required for saving | Tracking #: | | --- | --- | | Facility ID: | *Survey Year: | | Facility Characteristics | | | *Ownership (check one): □ For profit □ Not for profit, including church □ Government □ Military □ Veteran’s Affairs □ Physician owned □ Managed Care Organization | | | If facility is a Hospital: *Number of Patient Days: _________ *Number of Admissions: _________ | | | For any Hospital except Long Term Acute Care Hospitals: | | | *Is your hospital affiliated with a medical school? : Yes No | | | If Yes, what type of affiliation: ____ MAJOR ____ GRADUATE ____ LIMITED | | | Number of beds set up and staffed: a. ICU beds (including adult, pediatric, and neonatal levels II/III and III): ___________ b. Specialty care beds (including hematology/oncology, bone marrow transplant, solid organ transplant, inpatient dialysis, and long term acute care [LTAC]): ___________ c. All other beds: ___________ | | | For Hospitals that are Long Term Acute Care (LTAC): Setting: ___ Within a hospital ___ Free-standing Number of beds set up and staffed: a. Ventilator beds: ___________ b. High-observation beds: ___________ c. All other beds: ___________ | | | If facility is an Ambulatory Surgery Center: Setting: ___ Within a hospital ___ Free-standing Total number of procedures: ________ Percent of procedures that are surgical: ________ % What percentage of your ambulatory surgery patients were discharged or transferred to the following places: Home/Customary residence: _______% Recovery care center (facility other than this one): _______ % Acute care hospital (Emergency or inpatient): _______ % | | | If facility is a Long Term Care (LTC) Facility: Number of resident days: ______ Average length of stay: ___________ | | | Infection Control Practices *Number of infection control professionals (ICPs) in facility: __________ a. Total hours per week performing surveillance: __________ b. Total hours per week for infection control activities other than surveillance: __________ Continued >> | | | Assurance of Confidentiality: The information obtained in this surveillance system that would permit identification of any individual or institution is collected with a guarantee that it will be held in strict confidence, will be used only for the purposes stated, and will not otherwise be disclosed or released without the consent of the individual, or the institution in accordance with Sections 304, 306 and 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act (42 USC 242b, 242k, and 242m(d)). Public reporting burden of this collection of information is estimated to average 30 minutes per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden to CDC, Reports Clearance Officer, 1600 Clifton Rd., MS D-74, Atlanta, GA 30333, ATTN: PRA (0920-0666). CDC 57.103 (Front) Rev.2, v1.3.5 | | **Patient Safety Component** –**Annual** **Facility Survey ** - Page 1 of 2 - OMB No. 0920-0666 - Exp. Date: 03-31-2011 ## Patient Safety Component - Annual Facility Survey | Facility Microbiology Laboratory Practices | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | *1. Does your facility have its own laboratory that performs antimicrobial susceptibility testing? □ Yes □ No If No, where is your facility's antimicrobial susceptibility testing performed (check one)? □ Affiliated medical center of hospital □ Commercial referral laboratory *2. Does the laboratory use CLSI (formerly NCCLS) antimicrobial susceptibility standards? □ Yes □ No If Yes, specify what version of the M100 document the laboratory uses? ____________________ *3. For the following organisms please indicate which methods are used for: (1) primary susceptibility testing and (2) secondary, supplemental, or confirmatory testing (if performed). If your laboratory does not perform susceptibility testing, please indicate the methods used at the referral laboratory. Please use the testing codes listed below the table. | | | | | | | Pathogen | | Primary | (2) Secondary | | Comments | | Coagulase-negative staphylococci Staphylococcus aureus Enterococcus spp. Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae or K. oxytoca Serratia marcescens Enterobacter spp. Pseudomonas aeruginosa Acinetobacter spp. Stenotrophomonas maltophilia | | | | | | | 1 = Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion 2 = Vitek 2.1 = Vitek 2 3 = Sceptor 3.1 = BD Phoenix 4 = Sensititre | 5.1 = MicroScan walkaway rapid 5.2= MicroScan walkaway conventional 5.3 = MicroScan auto or touchscan 6 = Other micro-broth dilution method 7 = Agar dilution method 8 = Pasco | | | 9 = Micromedia 10 = Etest 11 = Oxacillin screen (MHA + salt) 12 = Vancomycin agar screen (BHI + vancomycin) 13 = Other (describe in Comments column) | | | *4. Are staphylococci that test as vancomycin resistant repeated using the same method? □ Yes □ No *5. Does the laboratory confirm vancomycin resistant staphylococci using a second method? □ Yes □ No If Yes, please check all methods performed either in your lab or at a referral laboratory: □ Disk diffusion □ Etest □ Vancomycin agar screen plate □ Other, please indicate using method codes in Question 3 above: ____________________ *6. Does the laboratory do either screening or confirmatory testing for extended spectrum ß-lactamase (ESBL) production according to CLSI? □ Yes □ No *7. If ESBL production is suspected how does the laboratory report the results to the clinician? □ Change susceptible and intermediate interpretations for third generation cephalosporins and aztreonam to resistant □ Suppress the results for third generation cephalosporins and aztreonam for the report □ No changes are made in the interpretations reported to clinicians | | | | | | **Patient Safety Component - Annual Facility Survey ** - Page 2 of 2 - CDC 57.103 (Back) Rev. 2 - OMB No. 0920-0666 - Exp. Date: 03-31-2011
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879471
Expires:200812100215;Remove:200812100215;863848 WWUS54 KJAN 100159 SVSJAN SEVERE WEATHER STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON MS 759 PM CST TUE DEC 9 2008 MSC021-049-089-149-163-100215- /O.CON.KJAN.TO.W.0292.000000T0000Z-081210T0215Z/ CLAIBORNE MS-HINDS MS-WARREN MS-MADISON MS-YAZOO MS- 758 PM CST TUE DEC 9 2008 ...A TORNADO WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 815 PM CST FOR SOUTH CENTRAL YAZOO...SOUTHWESTERN MADISON...SOUTHEASTERN WARREN...NORTHERN HINDS AND NORTHEASTERN CLAIBORNE COUNTIES... AT 758 PM CST...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS CONTINUE TO TRACK A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING A TORNADO. THIS TORNADO WAS LOCATED NEAR BROWNSVILLE...OR 9 MILES NORTHWEST OF CLINTON...MOVING NORTHEAST AT 50 MPH. THE TORNADO WILL BE NEAR... RURAL SOUTHWESTERN MADISON COUNTY AT 810 PM CST RURAL NORTHERN HINDS COUNTY AT 810 PM CST IN ADDITION TO THIS STORM...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS DETECTED ANOTHER STORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING A TORNADO IN FAR WESTERN HINDS COUNTY NEAR EDWARDS...MOVING NORTHEAST AT 50 MPH. A TORNADO WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 1100 PM CST TUESDAY EVENING FOR NORTHEAST LOUISIANA AND MISSISSIPPI. LAT...LON 3238 9078 3265 9048 3238 9021 3205 9093 3209 9097 TIME...MOT...LOC 0158Z 236DEG 42KT 3244 9042 $$ BYB
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402504
# Presentation: 402504 ## An Overview of MSFC Quantitative - Risk Assessment (QRA) Practices - Fayssal Safie/MSFC - October 25, 2000 ## Agenda - Quantitative Risk Assessment System (QRAS) - Other PRA-Related Practices - Reliability Prediction - Probabilistic Structural Analysis - Similarity Analysis - Reliability Demonstration ## MSFC Propulsion Elements QRAS ## QRAS - _Background_ - Space Shuttle probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) studies - 1988 - Space Shuttle PRA for Galileo mission (PRC) - 1993 - Galileo PRA update (SAIC) - 1995 - Space Shuttle PRA (SAIC) - 1997/2000 - Space Shuttle PRA (NASA/Code Q) ## QRAS - _Background (cont’d)_ - 1997/2000 NASA QRA study - In July 1996, the NASA Administrator directed NASA Headquarters to develop a software system to quantitatively assess the overall shuttle risk and serve as a tool to estimate risk changes due to proposed shuttle upgrades. - At the request of NASA Headquarters, MSFC and JSC, supported by their prime contractors, are modeling their respective elements. - The software system, called QRAS (Quantitative Risk Assessment System), is designed and developed by NASA Headquarters Code Q. ## QRAS - Assess the reliability/risk of the overall shuttle vehicle, its major elements, and their components - Evaluate risk reduction due to proposed shuttle upgrades - Rank shuttle failure modes - Perform trade studies/sensitivity analyses - _QRAS_ - _Objectives_ ## QRAS - _QRAS_ - _Model Requirements_ - Model builds on work done by SAIC 1993-1995 Shuttle PRA model. - Model is modular, reflecting shuttle modularity with its discrete elements, subsystems, and components (flexible to accommodate upgraded components and additional details). - Model must be most detailed in high risk areas to allow sensitivity analysis and trade studies to be performed. - Model/tool must be user-friendly and easily updateable. - Model must be capable of identifying, quantifying, and prioritizing the major risk contributors. - Model must support NASA decision-making process (evaluating shuttle upgrades and supporting flight issues). ## QRAS - _QRAS_ - _Modeling Approach_ - Space - Shuttle - ORBITER - MCC - HEX - HPFTP - LPFTP - - - - **Products** - 1. Space Shuttle Risk - 2. Element Risk - 3. Subsystem Risk - 4. Risk Ranking - 5. Sensitivity Analysis - etc.. - Turbine Blade Porosity - Turn-Around Duct Fail. - Housing Retaining Lug Fail. - FLIGHT/TEST DATA - PROBABILISTIC STRUCTURAL MODELS - SIMILARITY ANALYSIS - ENGINEERING JUDGMENT **System Hierarchy** - Turbine - Blade Porosity - Inspection - Not Effective - Porosity Present - in Critical - Location - ET - SSME - ISRB - UNCERTAINTY DISTRIBUTION FOR LOV DUE - TO TURBINE - BLADE POROSITY **Event Tree** ** **RISK AGGREGATION - OF BASIC EVENTS **Functional Event Sequence Diagram (FESD)** - End State - or Transfer - Porosity Present in Critical Location Leads to Crack in <4300 sec - Scenario - Number - 1 - LOV - 3 - MS - 4 - MS - 2 - MS - Turbine - Blade - Porosity - Inspection - Not - Effective - Porosity - Present in - Critical - Location - QUANTIFICATION - OF FESD - INITIATING & - PIVOTAL EVENTS - UNCERTAINTY DISTRIBUTION FOR EVENT PROBABILITY - EVENT PROBABILITY - DISTRIBUTION - BASIC/INITIATING EVENTS - Porosity in Critical Location Leads to Crack in <4300 sec - Loss of - Vehicle - (LOV) - Blade - Failure - 5 - MS ## QRAS - _QRAS_ - _MSFC Team Participants_ - MSFC - Safety & Mission Assurance (S&MA) - Chief engineer & project offices - Engineering - Prime contractors - Reliability engineering - Design & manufacturing engineering - Hernandez Engineering Inc. (HEI) - Reliability engineering and simulation ## QRAS - _QRAS_ - _Databases_ - Problem Reporting and Corrective Action (PRACA) - Automated Configuration data Tracking System (ACTS) - Logbooks - Engineering data/analyses - Generic data - Lessons learned - SAIC study ## QRAS Propulsion Element Models Significant Observations - _Strength:_ - QRAS modeling effort has contributed towards drawing management attention in using statistical and probabilistic information in the decision making process. - Event Sequence Diagram (ESD) provides a better understanding of the failure mode risk and an excellent way to address risk mitigation. - Data contained in the individual ESD packages are an excellent source of reference material and lessons learned. - QRAS models constitute: - The best source of failure rate data for the shuttle program to evaluate upgrades. - The best source of information to understand the risk mitigation in place. - The best source to understand the physics of failure for critical failure modes/events. ## QRAS Propulsion Element Models Significant Observations (cont’d) - _Considerations:_ - QRAS is a large scale QRA study which is very complex and require extensive knowledge of the system, a large amount of data, and extensive modeling. - Use of engineering judgment introduces significant amount of uncertainty. - Quantification methods, in most cases, are not robust. Overlooking one piece of data may dramatically change the probability of loss of vehicle. - _QRAS__Propulsion Element Models__Significant Observations (cont’d)_ ## Considerations (cont’d): Modeling of human error/process error is a big challenge. Human error/process error has been incorporated implicitly where flight and test data exist. For structural failures which are modeled using design information, the human error/process error has been incorporated explicitly using placeholders based on historical data. The QRAS modeling effort has shown that developing explicit models for the human error/process error is extremely difficult because of lack of adequate data. - Modeling of human error/process error is a big challenge. - Human error/process error has been incorporated implicitly where flight and test data exist. - For structural failures which are modeled using design information, the human error/process error has been incorporated explicitly using placeholders based on historical data. - The QRAS modeling effort has shown that developing explicit models for the human error/process error is extremely difficult because of lack of adequate data. - _QRAS__Propulsion Element Models__Significant Observations (cont’d)_ ## Considerations (cont’d): QRAS/PRA failure probabilities are imbalanced Some failure probabilities are derived using mainly design information ( P&W Turbopumps), while others are derived using mainly test and flight data (RKDN SSME hardware). Generic data are also used in other cases. Some failure probabilities are derived using limited data (solid propulsion elements), while others are derived based on a lot of data (liquid propulsion elements). Difficult to model common cause failures Incomplete interface models - QRAS/PRA failure probabilities are imbalanced - Some failure probabilities are derived using mainly design information ( P&W Turbopumps), while others are derived using mainly test and flight data (RKDN SSME hardware). Generic data are also used in other cases. - Some failure probabilities are derived using limited data (solid propulsion elements), while others are derived based on a lot of data (liquid propulsion elements). - Difficult to model common cause failures - Incomplete interface models - _QRAS__Propulsion Element Models__Significant Observations (cont’d)_ ## QRAS Conclusions - Following a well defined and documented systematic procedure, involving the appropriate disciplines (reliability, design, and manufacturing engineering), and using the appropriate data are the key elements for a successful QRA study. - Information derived from QRA studies are most accurate and useful at lower levels (within components and failure modes). - QRAS tool is the best QRA tool available to support the shuttle program management decisions. ## Other PRA-Related Practices Reliability Prediction ## Reliability Prediction - Reliability prediction techniques are dependent on the degree of the design definition and the availability of historical data. Two commonly used techniques are: - Probabilistic design techniques: Reliability is predicted using engineering failure models. - Similarity analysis techniques: Reliability of a new design is predicted using reliability of similar parts. ## Reliability Prediction - _Probabilistic Structural Analysis_ - It is a tool to probabilistically characterize the design and analyze its reliability using engineering failure models. - It is a tool to evaluate the expected reliability of a part given the structural capability and the expected operating environment. - It is used when failure data is not available and the design is characterized by complex geometry or is sensitive to loads, material properties, and environments. **FRACTURE** **LOCATION** - During rig testing the AT/HPFTP Bearing experienced several cracked races. - Summary of 440C race fractures / tests: 3 of 4 Fractured - _Reliability Prediction_ - _Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d)_Turbo-Pump Bearing Example ## Reliability Prediction Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d) Turbo-Pump Bearing Example - _Reliability Prediction__Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d)_Turbo-Pump Bearing Example ## Reliability Prediction Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d) Turbo-Pump Bearing Example - Using rig fits and clearances - Crack size data from actual cut-ups - Stresses associated with manufacturing (ideal) - Materials properties and their variations - Failure mode being analyzed is over-stress - _Reliability Prediction__Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d)_Turbo-Pump Bearing Example ## Reliability Prediction Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d) Turbo-Pump Bearing Example - HPFTP Roller Bearing Inner Race - Model Flow - Randomly select values for inner race material properties -  -  -  - Randomly select values for shaft and sleeve material properties -  -  -  - Tolerance fits of rig test bearing - Inner race hoop stress contribution at given conditions - Shaft and sleeve hoop stress contribution at given conditions. - Total hoop stress - Stress due to Manufacturing - Stress > Allowable Load - Iterate and compute Failure Probability - Variation in: - o Fracture Toughness - o Yield Strength - o No. of Cracks - o Crack Depth - o Crack Length - Compute Allowable - Load for each crack - Compute Allowable - Load (worst crack) - _Reliability Prediction__Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d)_Turbo-Pump Bearing Example ## Reliability Prediction Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d) Turbo-Pump Bearing Example - _At Test_ - 3 of 4 failed - --- - --- - In 15+ tests - never had a - through ring - fracture - _Race Configuration_ - 440C w/ actual manufacturing - stresses (ie ideal + abusive - grinding) - 440C w/no manf. stresses - 440C w/ideal manf. stresses - 9310 w/ ideal manf stresses - _Probabilistic Structural Analysis_ - 68,000 fail/100k firings - 1,500 fail/100k firings - 27,000 fail/100k firings - 10 fail/100k firings - It is estimated that 50% of the through ring fractures would result in an engine shutdown. The shutdown 9310 HPFTP Roller Bearing Inner Race Failure Rate is then: 0.50 X 10/100k = 5 fail/100k firings - _Reliability Prediction__Probabilistic Structural Analysis (cont’d)_Turbo-Pump Bearing Example ## Reliability Prediction - _Similarity Analysis_ - Similarity Analysis is a technique for predicting the reliability of a new design based on historical data of similar designs (heritage hardware). - Failure rates derived from historical data are modified to reflect the design and environment of the new hardware. - Similarity Analysis is best performed at the lowest level possible, where more data is available and more appropriate judgment is made. ## Reliability Prediction - _Similarity Analysis (cont’d)_ Fuel Turbo Pump Example - Assume a Fuel Turbo Pump (FTP) has a historical failure rate of: - 50 per 100k firings - Assume also the failure mode break down is: - Then the Cracked/Fractured Failure rate is: .35 X 50 = 17.5/100k firings ## Reliability Prediction Similarity Analysis (cont’d) Fuel Turbo Pump Example - Then the Thermal Stress Failure Rate is: - 0.57 X 17.5 = 10/100k firings - 100% - _Reliability Prediction__Similarity Analysis (cont’d)_ Fuel Turbo Pump Example ## Reliability Prediction Similarity Analysis (cont’d) Fuel Turbo Pump Example - Test Results - Preliminary Analyses - Integrated Product Team (IPT) Input - Address "high hitters" - Using Thermal Stress failure rate of 10.0/100k firing - Design changes to improve reliability - Cum - Percent Failure Rate - Improvement Reduction - Lower Operating Temperatures 20% 2.00 - (Test) - Hollow Blades 30% (additional) 4.40 - (Analysis, Expert Opinion) - Material Change 20% (additional) 5.52 - (Analysis) - _Reliability Prediction__Similarity Analysis (cont’d)_ Fuel Turbo Pump Example ## Reliability Prediction Similarity Analysis (cont’d) Fuel Turbo Pump Example - 50 - 5.52 = 44.48 / 100k firings - _Reliability Prediction__Similarity Analysis (cont’d)_ Fuel Turbo Pump Example ## Other PRA-Related Practices Reliability Demonstration ## Reliability Demonstration - Reliability Demonstration is a reliability estimation method that primarily uses test data (objective data) to calculate demonstrated reliability with some statistical confidence. - Some commonly used models and techniques for reliability demonstration include Binomial, Exponential, and Weibull models. Reliability growth techniques, such as the U.S. Army Material Systems Analysis Activity (AMSAA) and Duane models can also be used to calculate demonstrated reliability. ## SFR Criteria is an optimization tool based on the demonstrated reliability of SSME hardware. SFR is used by the SSME Program as a quantitative probabilistic risk management tool for SSME critical hardware. SFR Criteria: Extensive fleet hot-fire experience No failures or MR history No periodic inspection Use discrete optimization for life limit determination Extend life limit up to 50% fleet leader but not to exceed the minimum run time of the six leading samples New life limit should not be less than 25% of the fleet leader Advantages include: Maximize hardware usage Use of all operational history - SFR is used by the SSME Program as a quantitative probabilistic risk management tool for SSME critical hardware. - SFR Criteria: - Extensive fleet hot-fire experience - No failures or MR history - No periodic inspection - Use discrete optimization for life limit determination - Extend life limit up to 50% fleet leader but not to exceed the minimum run time of the six leading samples - New life limit should not be less than 25% of the fleet leader - Advantages include: - Maximize hardware usage - Use of all operational history - _Reliability Demonstration_ - Example - SSME Single Flight Reliability (SFR) Criteria ## Reliability Demonstration - Example - SSME Single Flight Reliability (SFR) Criteria – Powerhead Assembly Example - Serial - Number - 4873937 - 4876118 - 4881840 - 4101464 - 4103704 - 4887803 - 4886959 - 4107624 - 4881353 - 4891093 - 4883915 - 4882395 - 4892855 - 4887018 - 4881159 - 4101420 - 4106454 - 4889036 - 4885515 - 4873558 - 4915695 - 4889794 - 4886294 - 4878165 - 4891738 - 4876216 - 4102590 - 4881664 - 4876351 - 4877733 - Seconds - 33329 - 24716 - 21017 - 20327 - 20046 - 19908 - 16473 - 16444 - 15346 - 12194 - 11843 - 11125 - 9338 - 9230 - 9137 - 8821 - 8199 - 8070 - 7797 - 6583 - 5893 - 5577 - 5031 - 4989 - 4980 - 4643 - 4391 - 4376 - 3716 - 3636 - (Partial Listing) - Beta = 2.08 - Powerhead Assembly LRU Code A050 **25% F/L – 8332 50% F/L - 16665**
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# Presentation: 656030 ## Super LHC - SLHC ** ****LHC Detector Upgrade ** **Dan Green** **Fermilab** ## Outline **Physics Basics** **Z’ vs** **Rapidity Range** **Minbias** **Pileup and Jets** **Occupancy and Radiation Dose ** **Tracker Upgrade** **Calorimetry** **Muons** **Trigger and DAQ** **CERN-TH/2002-078 “Physics Potential and Experimental Challenges of the LHC Luminosity Upgrade”** **10x will be challenging!** ## Mass “Reach” and L **The number of Z’ detected in leptonic decays is:** **For , if N = 100 is discovery level then M ~ 5.3 TeV is ~ the mass “reach” in 1 year (M=4 -> 5.3 TeV).** **The leptons will be sharply limited to low |y| or large angles (“barrel”).** ## Mass Reach vs L **In general mass reach is increased by ~ 1.5 TeV for Z’, heavy SUSY squarks or gluinos or extra dimension mass scales. A ~ 20% measurement of the HHH coupling is possible for Higgs masses < 200 GeV. However, to realize these improvements we need to maintain the capabilities of the LHC detectors.** **VLHC** **LHC** **Tevatron** ## Kinematics **Heavy States decay at wide angles. For example Z’ of 1 and 5 TeV decaying into light pairs. Therefore, for these states we will concentrate on wide angle detectors.** - 1 TeV - 5 TeV - barrel **y** barrel ## Inclusive Interactions **The inclusive p-p interaction has an inelastic, non-diffractive cross section ~ 50 mb.** **It produces ~ equal numbers of which are distributed ~ uniform in rapidity, y, with a “density” ~ 9 pions per unit of y.** **The pions have a distribution in transverse momentum with a mean, ~ 0.6 GeV**. ## Detector Environment **Bunch spacing reduced 2x. Interactions/crossing increased 5 x. Pileup noise increased by 2.2x if crossings are time resolvable.** ## Pileup and Luminosity **For ~ 50 mb, and = 6 charged pions/unit of y with a luminosity ** ** ****and a crossing time of 12.5 nsec :** **In a cone of radius = 0.5 there are ~ 70 pions, or ~ 42 GeV of transverse momentum per crossing. This makes low E****t**** jet triggering and reconstruction difficult**. ## Z’(120) at L/5 and L **dR** **Log(z), z = k/E****T** - ET(GeV) **Jet cone and 90 degrees to cone in ****** ## Z’(120) Mass Resolution **Note that the calorimeter cells are still fairly sparsely populated (granularity ** ** ****) at 10****34**** . With the cuts shown, the dM/M with Gaussian fits is the same at L/5 and at L. Use the fact that QCD implies that there is a core of the jet at small dR and large z. Extend to 10x L using tracker and energy flow inside the jet? If x-ing is time resolvable, pileup is “only” 5x. Tracker can be used (energy flow) to remove charged energy deposits from vertices within the x-ing which are not of interest. ** - M(GeV) ## Tracker and Energy Flow **For 120 GeV Z’ match tracks in ******** and ******** to “hadronic” clusters within the jet. Improves dijet mass resolution. Units are HCAL tower sizes. Also use track match to remove charged pion deposits from pileup vertices ?** - d - d **E****T****(GeV)** ## WW Fusion and “Tag Jets” **These jets have** ** ****~ pileup R = 0.5 and <y> ~ 3. Lose 5x in fake rejection. We must use the energy flow inside a jet cone to further reduce the fake jets due to pileup (~ uniform in R). ** - WW fusion **Pileup, R=0.5, |y|=3** ## Tracking Detectors ** ****Clearly, the tracker is crucial for much of the LHC physics [e.g. e, ********, jets (pileup, E flow), b tags].** **The existing trackers will not be capable of utilizing the increased luminosity as they will be near the end of their useful life.** **It is necessary to completely rebuild the LHC tracking detectors.** ## Tracker - Occupancy **The occupancy, O, for a detector of area dA and sensitive time time dt at (r,z) is** **e.g. Si strip 10 cm x 100 ********m in a 12.5 nsec crossing at r = 20 cm is 1.5 %** **For higher luminosity, decrease dA, or decrease dt (limit is x-ing time) or increase r – smaller, faster or further away. ** ## Tracker Occupancy **Preserve the performance using :** **Push Si strips out to ~ 60 cm. – development** **Push pixels out to 20 cm. – development** **For r < 20 cm. Need new technologies – basic research** **Shrink dA 5x at fixed r to preserve b tagging? If 12.5 nsec bunch x-ing, need 5x pixel size reduction.** **Possibilities** **3-d detectors – electrodes in bulk columns** **Diamond (RD42) - radhard** **Cryogenic (RD39) – fast, radhard** **Monolithic – reduced source capacity.** ## Monolithic Pixel - DEPFET **Combine the detector and the readout for pixels?** ## Tracker – Ionizing Dose **The ionizing dose due to charged particles is:** **The dose depends only on luminosity, r, and exposure time ********.** **For example, at r = 20 cm, the dose is ~3 Mrad/yr – ignoring “loopers”, interactions, .... ******** “naïve” expectation.** ## Tracker ID vs. Radius ** ****naive** - 1 - 2 - 3 **Define 3 regions. With 10x increase in L, need a ~ 3x change in radius to preserve an existing technology. ** ## Tracking R&D -I **Region 1: r < 20cm** - Occupancy -> Need pixels of a size factor ~ 5 smaller than used today - (125x125 m2 -> ~ 50 x ~ 50 m2) -> benefit b-tagging **R&D**: Pixels Sensor Technologies - new sensor materials – defect engineered Si, CVD diamond, SiC, passivated amorphous Si etc. - 3-D detectors and new biasing schemes - Cryogenic Si tracker development - monolithic pixel detectors **Region 2: 20<r<60 cm** - Need cell sizes 10 times larger than current pixels but at 10 times lower cost/channel than current Si microstrips -> benefit p-resolution and pattern recognition - Si Macro-pixels of an area < 1mm2 : pads or shorter  strips ? - Could be upgrades of innermost Si  strip layers of current detectors **R&D**: to demonstrate low-cost macro-pixels concept, thin Si detectors. ## Tracking R&D - II **Region 3: r > 60 cm** **Si-strips –decrease size of strips i.e. increase no. of channels by > 50%** **Use standard ‘radiation resistant’ ******** strip technology** **R&D: Feasibility of processing detectors on 8” or 12’ Si wafers. Monitor commercial production progress.** **Engineering** **R&D: new materials, light weight, stable structures, cooling, alignment, implications for cryogenic operation, installation and maintenance aspects** **Activation: 250 mSv/h – implications for access and maintenance** **Cost: Reduce cost/channel by a factor of 10** **Timescale : Need ~ 8-10 years from launch of R&D** ** ****~ 4 years to build, after ~ 4 years of R&D and prototyping** ? **Notes:** Standard microstrip technology :single sided, p+n technology, integrated AC coupling, polysilicon bias, 100 crystal orientation, standard 0.20-0.25 w/p ratio and metal overhang ## Electronics – Moore’s Law **Micro-electronics: line-widths decrease by a factor 2 every 5 years. DSM (0.25 ********m) is radiation hard.Today 0.13 ********m is commercially available. In the lab 0.04 ********m, e.g. extreme UV lithography, is in existence. Expect trend will continue for a decade.** **R&D** ** ****Characterize emerging technologies** ** ****more radiation tolerance required – dose and Single Event Effects** ** ****advanced high bandwidth data link technologies** ** ****system issues addressed from the start ** **Notes:** The current LHC experiments would not have been possible without extensive use of microelectronics technology. Successful application result of intensive R&D programme (DRDC) ## ECAL – Shower Dose **The dose in ECAL is ~ due to photon showers and is: ** **In the barrel, SD is ~ . In the endcap, SD ~ ** **At r = 1.2 m, for Pb with Ec = 7.4 MeV, the dose at y=0 is 3.3 Mrad/yr, at |y|=1.5 it is 7.8 Mrad/yr.** ** ** ## HCAL and ECAL Dose **The dose ratio is ~ . Barrel doses are not a problem. For the endcaps a technology change may be needed for 2 < |y| < 3 for the CMS HCAL. Switch to quartz fiber as in HF?** ** ****naive** **ecal** **hcal** ## ECAL **For both ATLAS and CMS the barrel will probably tolerate the increased dose. There are issues of ~ 2.2x increased pileup noise and poorer isolation for electrons. Shorter shaping times to resolve x-ing?** **ATLAS LA has space charge and current draw issues. CMS has APD leakage current noise issues in the barrel. The CMS endcap needs development. ** ## HCAL - CMS **Both ATLAS and CMS will function in the barrel region.** **In the 3<|y|<5 region, a reduction to y < 4.2 keeps the dose constant. The loss of efficiency is not terrible (peak “tag”rate at |y|=3). Or replace quartz fibers with high pressure gas? Better tower granularity might be needed due to pileup and “fake” jets.** **At |y| ~ 3 the CMS scintillator needs development – improved scintillator or go to quartz fibers ( volume degraded is quite small).** ## HCAL - Coverage **Reduced forward coverage to compensate for 10x L is not too damaging to “tag jet” efficiency** ## Scintillator - Dose/Damage **This technology will not survive gracefully at |y| ~ 3. Use the technology that works at LHC up to |y|~ 5, quartz fibers?** - |y|=2, 1 yr. ## Muons and Shielding **There is factor ~ 5 in headroom at design L. With added shielding, dose rates can be kept constant if angular coverage goes from |y|<2.4 to |y|<2. ** - r - r - z ## Trigger and DAQ **Assuming LHC initial program is successful, raise the trigger thresholds.** **Rebuild trigger system to run at 80 MHz. Utilize those detectors which are fast enough to give a BCID within 12.5 nsec (e.g. Calorimetry, Tracking).** **Examine algorithms to alleviate degraded e isolation, for example.** **Design for the increased event size (pileup) with reduced L1 rate and/or data compression.** **For DAQ track the evolution of communication technologies, e.g. 10 Gb/sec Ethernet.** ## 300 GeV Pion – H2 test Beam **HTR - Bunch crossing number (LHC)** **The shape of the pulse in time is ~ as expected – due largely to scint flours. Bunch crossing ID can be extended to 12.5 nsec ( 80 MHz) as established in test beam.** **E** ## Summary **The LHC Physics reach will be substantially increased by higher luminosity.** **To realize that improvement, the LHC detectors must preserve performance.** **The trackers must be rebuilt – with new technology at r < 20 cm.** **The calorimeters, muon systems, triggers and DAQ will need development.** **The upgrades are likely to take ~ (6-10) years. Accelerator is ready ~ (2012, 2014). The time to start is now, and the people to do the job are those who did it for the present detectors.** ## SLHC Detector - Summary - Tracking and b-tagging - Isolated high pT (> 20 GeV) tracks - it should be possible to maintain similar efficiency and momentum resolution - without a tracker upgrade, for fixed b-tagging efficiency, rejection against light quarks will deteriorate by factor ~8 (pT ~ 50 GeV) - Electron identification and measurement - For electron efficiency of 80% jet rejection decreases by ~ 50% - Muon identification and measurement - If enough shielding is provided expect reconstruction efficiency and momentum resolution not to deteriorate much - Forward jet-tagging and central veto - Essential handle to increase S/N for WW and ZZ fusion processes - Performance can be significantly degraded – though algorithms could be optimized - Trigger - High thresholds for inclusive triggers; use of exclusive triggers selecting specific final states. ## Calorimeters: CMS ECAL **Crystals ** ** ****Barrel: OK** ** ****Endcap : 3krad/hr at y=2.6 ** ** ****Further studies at high dose rates, long term irradiation** **Photosensors** ** ****Barrel: APDs – higher leakage current a higher noise ~100 MeV/ch** ** ****Endcaps: VPTs – R&D: on new devices may be needed** **Electronics** ** ****Barrel: OK** ** ****Endcap: R&D: More rad-hard electronics at |y|~3? ** **Activation: in endcaps reach several mSv/h – access will be difficult** ## Calorimeters: ATLAS LAr **Space Charge Effects** - GeV/cm2/s - Comfortable margin in - Barrel. Inner parts of - em endcap and FCAL - may be affected **HV Voltage Drop** - Comfortable margin in - Barrel. Small ‘wheel’ - of em endcap sees a - large current - Precision meas. not - possible **Electronics**: Probably OK? ** ****R&D**: Use of another cryogenic liquid, with less charge - deposited per GeV, or a cold dense gas to address issues - of space-charge and HV voltage drop **Critical density** **Notes:** Critical density where charge losses of ~ 1% occur. Current induced by the drift of electrons and ions in the gap. This current circulates in the HV chain which incorporates resistors to isolate channels hooked onto the same HV supply. The expected voltage drop is ## Muon System **Current ATLAS/CMS muon systems designed with safety factor of 3-5 w.r.t. background estimations (establish real safety margin once LHC operates)** **Strong geometric dependence of radiation rates , ** **Possible strategy: ** ** ****extra shielding at high |y| reduces background everywhere** ** ****restrict high |y| limit of muon acceptance ** **Radio-activation at high |y| of shielding, supports and nearby detectors - may limit maintenance access** **Balance super robust detectors vs shielding and reduced high- |y| acceptance** **R&D: Study limit of current detectors - use of CSCs in barrel,** ** ****at high- |y| - higher rates – use straw chambers? MSGCs/GEMs**? ## Level-1 Trigger **Trigger Menus** ** ****Triggers for very high p****T**** discovery physics: no rate problems – higher p****T**** thresholds** ** ****Triggers to complete LHC physic program: final states are known – use exclusive menus** ** ****Control/calibration triggers with low thresholds (e.g. W, Z and top events): prescale** **Impact of Reduced Bunch Crossing Period** ** ****Advantageous to rebuild L1 trigger to work with data sampled at 80 MHz ** ** ****Could keep some L1 trigger electronics clocked at 25 ns** ** ****Require modifications to L1 trigger and detector electronics** **R&D Issues** ** ****Data movement is probably the biggest issue for processing at 80 MHz sampling**** ** ** ****Processing at higher frequencies and with higher input/output data rates to the processing elements. Technological advances (e. g. FPGA ) will help** ** ****Synchronization (TTC) becomes an issue for short x-ing period** ## DAQ **Continuous and extraordinary evolution of computing and communication technologies – monitor the evolution of:** **Readout Network** ** ****Follow LHC machine luminosity – exploit parallel evolution of technologies** ** ****main building block of DAQ is the switch – interconnecting data sources (event digitizers) and processing nodes (event filters)** ** ****rapid progress in interconnection technologies started recently – LHC needs cannot yet be satisfied using a completely off-the-shelf system ** ** ****Technology Tracking** ** ****Complexity Handling** ** ****Online computing systems will have ~ 10000 CPUs, issues of hardware and software management, reliability,remote access, security, databases ** ** ****Technology Tracking (e.g. those found in ISPs) ** ** ****R&D: How to handle bandwidth (rate  size) Bandwidth is an issue both for readout and for event building**
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# Presentation: 174933 ## The Implications of Flow Measurements - The Implications of Flow Measurements - at RHIC ## There are known knowns. **There are known knowns. ** ***These are things we know that we know. *** **There are known unknowns. ** ***That is to say, there are things that we know we don't know*****.** ** ****But there are also unknown unknowns. ** ***There are things we don't know we don't know*** - _[Donald Rumsfeld](http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/d/donaldrums148142.html)_ ## Slide 3 ## Promise of the Flow Probe ***From E******T****** Distributions*** ***Large Pressure Gradients ************ Hydro Flow*** **Promise of the Flow Probe** ***“******Control Params.”*** ***Hydro Flow exhibit specific scaling properties which can be (in)validated*** ## Scaling Characteristics of Hydrodynamic flow **Fluid hydrodynamics is scale invariant**. - Important parameters - **There are several generic scaling predictions that can be readily tested;** ***v******2****** should scale with KE******T*** ***All scaling tests can be in/validated*** ***Relationship between harmonics is specific*** ## Eccentricity Scaling – **Eccentricity Scaling –** **Known Known's ** ***Incomplete equilibration breaks the scale invariance of ideal fluid dynamics *** *Length scale for elliptic flow - * *Time scale for elliptic flow -* ## Eccentricity Scaling – Known Known's **Eccentricity Scaling – Known Known's ** ***The density is relatively constant for b = 0 – 8 fm*** *8 fm* ## Eccentricity Scaling – Known Known's **Eccentricity Scaling – Known Known's ** ***Hydro calculations validate v******2****** scaling over broad range of centralities*** ## Energy Dependence **Energy Dependence** ***The change in multiplicity density is not reflected in v******2*** - Comparison of - s = 62.4 and 200 GeV ## The eccentricity scaled v2 is reasonable over the relevant centrality range ***The eccentricity scaled v******2 ****** is reasonable over the relevant centrality range*** **Experimental Truth or Myth ** **Notes:** NpartとNcollの説明が必要 もしv2が反応関与部のεからくる圧力勾配のみで決まっているとしたら、v2/εは、どのようなサイズの衝突でも一定の値をとるはず。 ## Eccentricity scaling - http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/nucl-ex/0610037 **Eccentricity scaling** **Truth or Myth ?** *Same* *N**part* *Hydro + AB* *- Hirano* *Same* *eccentricity* ## The prediction for thermalization is explicit and specific **Hexadecapole Flow (v****4****)** **As a predictor of Thermalization** ## The prediction for thermalization is **explicit and specific** **Hexadecapole Flow (v****4****)** **As a predictor of Thermalization** *1/Kn* *A Story that must * *change !!* ## We hold these truths to be self evident ! **initial state** **pre-equilibrium** **QGP and** **hydrodynamic ** **expansion** **hadronization** **hadronic phase** **and freeze-out** _**Courtesy S. Bass**_ **We hold these truths to be self evident !** *Scaling for identified hadrons** * *Scaling for Heavy Quark** * *Scaling for Phi Mesons** * *Universal Scaling** * *Charm Flow** * ## The partonic fluid is thermalized ***Quark Degrees of Freedom Evident*** ## The ratio of the harmonics for quarks is compatible with hydrodynamic prediction **initial state** **pre-equilibrium** **QGP and** **hydrodynamic expansion** **hadronization** **hadronic phase** **and freeze-out** _**Courtesy S. Bass**_ **The ratio of the harmonics for quarks is compatible with hydrodynamic prediction** *Scaling for Higher Harmonics** * ## Saturation of Elliptic flow consistent with a soft EOS associated with Crossover **Saturation of Elliptic flow consistent with a soft EOS associated with Crossover** **Transport Coefficient** **Phys.Rev.Lett.94:232302,2005*** * ## Transport Coefficient Estimates - I _**Model **_ _**Comparison**_ **Transport Coefficient Estimates - I** ***1-2 X the conjectured lower bound*** ## Transport Coefficient **Transport Coefficient** ***Thermalization facilitated by 2************3 processes*** *C. Greiner et al* ## Setting an upper limit on **QCD Sonic Boom** ***Gives sound speed directly; Sets upper limit on viscosity.*** **Setting an upper limit on ** **The viscosity** ## QCD Sonic Boom? **The data is compatible with the presence of a Mach Cone away-side jet ** **Total 3PC jet correlations** **QCD Sonic Boom?** ## CEP Search **CEP Search** **Lacey et al.** **arXiv:0708.3512** [nucl-ex]* * ## How to find the CEP? **How to find the CEP?** ***First estimate T ~ 165-170 ******μ****** ~ 120-150 MeV*** ***Need two energies ******immediately*** ## Epilogue **Flow measurements tell us that the hot QCD matter created at RHIC is a strongly coupled plasma that:** ** ** ***flows *****as a (nearly) perfect fluid with systematic patterns consistent with *****quark degrees of freedom.****** *** *** *** **has a soft EOS and a viscosity to entropy density ratio close to *****the conjectured quantum bound *** *** ******A Wealth of other Experimental Results Provide Constraints *** *** ******for first estimates of the Thermodynamic and Transport Properties *** *** ******of the plasma*** ***Extracted Transport Coefficients Suggest Decay Trajectories “close’’ to the Critical End Point (CEP)*** ***First estimate T ~ 165-170 ******μ****** ~ 150-180 MeV *** ***Need two energies ***_***immediately***_ ## Epilogue **Strong evidence for crossover to the QGP at RHIC.** ** ** **Short emission lifetimes** **Matter quenches Jets and *****flows *****as a (nearly) perfect fluid with systematic patterns consistent with *****quark degrees of freedom.****** *** *** *** **Matter has a soft EOS and a shear viscosity to entropy density ratio *****lower *****than any other known fluid -- a value close to *****the conjectured quantum bound*** ***Corresponding bulk viscosity to entropy density is large *** *** *** ***Extracted Transport Coefficients Suggest Decay Trajectories close to the Critical End Point (CEP)*** ***Energy scans now required to do the trick !!*** ***First estimate T ~ 165 ******μ****** ~ 120 -150 MeV*** ***Need two energies ***_***immediately***_ ## The EOS of the **The EOS is harder than that for the hadron gas but softer ** **than for the hard QGP ******** no strong first order phase transition** *Hydro Calculations* *(Bhalerao et al.)* **The EOS of the ** **Partonic Fluid is Soft ** ## Slide 27 ## A Crossover transition to the strongly coupled thermalized QGP occurs at RHIC **initial state** **pre-equilibrium** **QGP and** **hydrodynamic expansion** **hadronization** **hadronic phase** **and freeze-out** _**Courtesy S. Bass**_ **A Crossover transition to the strongly coupled thermalized QGP occurs at RHIC** **We hold these truths to be self evident !** ## A Central Question of the Field? ***A Central Question of the Field? *** **The location of the critical End point and the phase boundaries are fundamental to the QCD phase diagram***** !*** ## The Space-Time probe **hadronization** **Are source Imaging measurements consistent with the crossover transition ?** **A Cross Over strongly affects ** **the Space-time Dynamics** **Theory indicate a crossover transition** **The space-time extent (Source Image) can lend crucial insights** - Puzzle ? **The Space-Time probe** ## Source Imaging Methodology (1D) **Source Imaging Methodology (1D)** **Inversion of this integral equation** ****** ****Source Function** _**1D Koonin Pratt Eqn.**_ ***Reliable measurement of the full*** ***1D Source Function ! *** ## Source Imaging Methodology (3D) **Source Imaging Methodology (3D)** _**3D Koonin Pratt Eqn.**_ ***Reliable measurement of the full Source Function in 3D ! *** ## PHENIX Data ***Robust Experimental Source Functions obtained from moments*** **PHENIX Data** - Contributions from - l > 6 is negligible ## The transition is Not a Strong ***Source Function Comparison to Models Give robust life time estimates ************ Consistent with Crossover transition*** - _Therminator:_ - A.Kisiel et al. Comput.Phys.Commun.174, 669 (2006) **Thermal model with Bjorken longitudinal expansion and transverse Flow** - Spectra & yields constrain thermal properties - Transverse radius ρmax : controls - transverse extent - Breakup time in fluid element rest frame, - : controls longitudinal extent - Emission duration : controls tails in - long and out directions - a controls x-t correlations **The transition is Not a Strong ** **First order Phase Transition?** ## Boltzmann coincides with hydro for small values of K **Boltzmann coincides with hydro for small values of** K **Eccentricity Scaling – A Known Known ** ## Eccentricity Scaling – Known Known's ***The density is relatively constant for b = 0 – 8 fm*** ## Lessons *** ***_**Lessons**_ ***``Dynamic recombination’’*** ***2. ******Partonic Thermalization!*** ***3. Strongly coupled QGP*** **The partonic fluid is thermalized** ## The partonic fluid is Strongly coupled? - KET & nq2 scaling validated for v4 ***Quark recombination extend to lower pT/KE******T ******?*** ## CEP Search **CEP Search**
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July 1, 2002 Hon. Jo Ann B. Barnhardt Commissioner of Social Security P.O. Box 17703 Baltimore, Maryland 21235 -7703 Re: Comments on Proposed Regulation Requiring Claimants to Obtain Third Party Authorization Allowing the Social Security Administration to Access Their Financial Records. Dear Commissioner Barnhardt: We appreciate the opportunity to comment on the proposed regulations of the Social Security Administration published in the May 2, 2002 Federal Register (volume 67, Number 85). One effect of the proposed regulation would be to categorically deny disability benefits to otherwise eligible individuals who, through no fault of their own, are unable to obtain from third parties over whom they have no control, permission for the Social Security Administration to access their financial information. We are very concerned that without substantial changes, the proposed regulation will deprive individuals with disabilities who have done everything in their power to cooperate with the Social Security Administration the material benefits and sense of dignity that they deserve. Since such a result is neither justified nor required under the terms of Title II of the Foster Care Independence Act of 1999, Public Law 106‑169, pursuant to which the regulations are being proposed, we respectfully request that the Social Security Administration rescind and rewrite the proposed regulation. Founded in 1876, the Legal Aid Society is the nation's oldest non-profit law firm dedicated to serving low-income families throughout New York City. The staff of the Society's Civil Division includes some 140 attorneys and paralegals who work on issues ranging from health care, housing, employment and training, economic development, public assistance, immigration, and domestic violence as well as disability-related issues. In the past year our Disability Advocacy Project served approximately 1500 individuals, providing them with information, advice, or direct representation. Our comments are based on interactions of our field staff with many individuals who have sought our assistance over the past several years, and the experience of colleagues in other legal services and advocacy organizations with whom we regularly collaborate. **1.** **The proposed regulation will result in the denial of benefits to otherwise eligible individuals who simply cannot obtain permission from third parties to grant SSA access to their financial records and information.** In addition to granting SSA permission to contact any financial institution and request financial records the institution has about the individual receiving or applying for benefits, the newly proposed Section 416.207 (a), also requires, as a condition of eligibility that: > You must also provide us with permission from *anyone* whose income > and resources we consider as being available to you \[to access > *their* financial records\]*.* (*Id*.., emphasis supplied) Similarly, the proposed Section 416.207 (d) states: > We may ask any financial institution for information on any financial > account concerning you. We may also ask for information on any > financial accounts for *anyone* whose income and resources we consider > as being available to you (see Sec. 416.1160, 416.1202, 416.1203, and > 416. 1204). (*Id.* emphasis supplied.) The proposed Section 416.207 (g), underscores how totally reliant an applicant or recipient will be on the willingness of third parties to grant the SSA broad consent to inquire as to any of that person's financial information. It states in unequivocal terms: > Also, if *anyone* whose income and resources we consider as being > available to you (see Sec. 416.1160, 416.1202, 416.1203, and 416. > 1204) doesn't give SSA permission to contact any financial institution > and request any financial records about theat person when we think it > is necessary to determine your eligibility or payment amount, you > *cannot be eligible* for SSI payments. This means that if you are > applying for SSI payments you cannot receive them. If you are > receiving SSI payments, we *will stop* your payments. (*Id*., emphasis supplied) Whether intended or not, the rigid language and structure of the proposed regulation appears to leave no room for the type of situations that arise in the real world when claimants are fully cooperative with the SSA but are unable, through no fault of their own, to obtain the required permission for financial disclosure from third parties. The apparent lack of any allowance for such circumstances in the proposed regulation will inevitably cause harm to individuals who may be most in need of the protections against undeserved abject poverty that are the hallmark of the Social Security Act. One obvious example is the completely incongruous situation that would arise under the regulations when an abused spouse would be instructed that, in order to obtain or continue obtaining benefits, the claimant (used here to include both recipients and applicants) *must* produce permission from the abuser to allow the government access to any and of that person's own financial records. As has been noted, the absurd result in this scenario is that the abusive spouse would end up -- courtesy of a government regulation -- with the complete control and virtual veto power over whether the victim received any benefits at all. Given the sheer magnitude of the domestic violence problem in this country, and the likelihood that a fair percentage of claimants, especially women claimants, may be victims of physical and mental abuse at the hands of their partners, the Social Security Administration cannot adopt a regulation which threatens to further victimize such claimants through the omission of a "good cause" type exception. As recently confirmed in a National Institute of Justice study, "\[i\]ntimate partner violence is pervasive in U.S. society". > Nearly 25 percent of surveyed women and 7.5 percent of surveyed men > said they were raped and/or physically assaulted by a current or > former spouse, cohabiting partner, or date at some time in their > lifetime\.... According to these estimates, approximately 1.5 million > women and 834,732 men are raped and/or physically assaulted by an > intimate partner annually in the United States. Because many victims > are victimized more than once, the number of intimate partner > victimizations exceeds the number of intimate partner victims > annually. Thus, approximately 4.9 million intimate partner rapes and > physical assaults are perpetrated against U.S. women annually, and > approximately 2.9 million intimate partner physical assaults are > committed against U.S. men annually\...intimate partner violence is a > serious criminal justice and public health concern. Id. Tjaden, P. and Thoennes, N. **Extent, Nature, and Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence Series: Research Report**. National Institute of Justice and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, July 2000 The Social Security Administration itself has acknowledged the breadth of this epidemic and its relationship to its work. > Millions of people in all walks of domestic life are victims of > harassment, abuse or life threatening situations in their daily lives. > If you are such a victim we can help you. **New Numbers For Domestic Violence Victims and Others**. SSA Publication No. 05-10093. While we are unaware of any specific study estimating the prevalence of domestic violence against individuals applying for or receiving disability benefits, the New York City Mayor's Office to Combat Domestic Violence has cited a 1997 study of over 500 women involved with the City's preventative services child welfare agencies in which 49% of those surveyed reported violence in their intimate relationship. **Family Violence Prevention Project Data, 1996-97, Administration for Children's Services.** (Cited at [www.nyc.gov/html/ocdv/html/stats.html.]{.underline} In addition to the inferences that can be drawn from this data, anecdotal evidence, our organizational experience and common sense tells us that the prevalence of domestic violence amongst eligible applicants and recipients is substantial. In some cases our clients' physical and mental impairments are sometimes a direct result of abuse they have suffered. For many of our clients, obtaining disability benefits may be critical to securing their physical safety and well being as well as their financial independence. The risk that victims of domestic violence or other abusive relationships who are suffering real physical and mental disabilities will be denied benefits due to a lack of a reasonably drawn regulation with "good cause" type exceptions and recourse to review is a risk that we, as a society, need not and should not take. > **2. The proposed regulation will have a misdirected punitive impact > that does not reflect common sense or Congressional intent.** The unwarranted deprivations of benefits that the proposed regulation threatens are not limited to victims of domestic violence. Eligible aliens may be deprived of benefits by their inability to secure permission from abusive sponsors. Other situations will arise, including some situations wherein the claimant's very mental or physical disability itself may make compliance with this requirement impracticable, and the inequities inherent in the bald all-or-nothing language will be all too apparent. A "good cause" exception to the requirement that claimants provide third party authorization to SSA to access their financial records is supported both by a common sense of fairness and a reasonable reading of the very act the of Congress upon which these proposed "fraud prevention" regulations are based. In Section 213 of the "SSI Fraud Prevention" provisions (Title II) (P.L. 106-169), of the Foster Care and Independence Act of 1999, Congress was careful to use permissive language indicating only that the Commissioner *may require* applicants or recipients to provide the Commissioner authorization from third parties to access their financial records and information. *Id*., *amending* 42 U.S.C. § 163 (e) (1) (b) by adding 42 U.S.C. § 163 (e)(1)(b)(ii)(I). (emphasis supplied). In the concluding paragraph of this section, Congress also chose language which suggests that individuals who, through no fault of their own *cannot* comply with a requirement for third-party authorization, should not be categorically excluded from the program. As amended by Section 213 of the Act, 42 U.S.C. § 163 (e)(1)(b)(ii)(V) states that > If an applicant for, or recipient of, benefits under this Title (SSI), > (or any such other person referred to in subclass I) \[e.g., > third-parties\], refuses to provide, or revokes any authorization made > by the applicant or recipient for the Commissioner of Social Security > to obtain \...any financial records, the Commissioner *may*, on that > basis determine that the applicant or recipient is ineligible for > benefits under this title. *Id.* (emphasis supplied*).* In addition to used the permissive term *may*, Congress chose active verbs indicating wilful conduct, e.g, authorizing the Commissioner to declare as categorically ineligible an applicant who *"refuses to provide "* or *"revokes"* an authorization. Although this section does not explicitly proscribe the Commissioner from declaring ineligible a claimant when a third party refuses to provide or revokes authorization, other, relevant sections of the same statute demonstrate that it is highly unlikely that Congress intended that the Commissioner would adopt a regulation that would routinely inflict such a harsh penalty as total disqualification on non-culpable disability claimants without providing them any "good cause" exception and recourse to administrative or judicial remedies. In choosing administrative penalties for those who *willfully* misrepresented material facts relevant to their benefits applications, Congress chose a three- tiered penalty system, requiring that the Commissioner declare a person ineligible for a period of six, twelve, or twenty-four months, for a first, second, third, or subsequent offense respectively. *See*, Section 207, Title II, SSI Fraud Prevention, Foster Care Independence Act of 1999, *amending* 42 U.S.C. 1301 et seq. by adding § 1129A. Thus, while Congress itself crafted a range of time-limited sanctions as a program penalty for outright fraud, the proposed regulation imposes a total and perhaps permanent exclusion of claimants who have otherwise complied with the disclosure requirements under their control, and grants them no administrative review or recourse. A more balanced approach is clearly in order. **Conclusion** The Commissioner should rescind or rewrite the proposed regulation to make it clear that applicants and recipients who have bona fide reasons why they are unable to obtain authorization from third parties will not be penalized due to their inability to do so. Claimants who are not guilty of any misconduct themselves should have at least the same level of procedural protections and recourse afforded to those who are accused of wilful acts of deceit and fraud. The Social Security Administration has shown a degree of institutional sensitivity to issues of abuse, evidenced, for instance in the protocol on assisting victims of family violence and other abusive situations with applications for new Social Security numbers. This same sensitivity should be carried over into the new regulations and any implementing instructions. Thank you for your consideration of these comments and suggestions. Respectfully Submitted, Kenneth R. Stephens Staff Attorney.
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# Presentation: 265281 ## Description of the NIST TXR - Joe Rice - National Institute of Standards and Technology - Gaithersburg, MD ## Introduction - The Thermal-infrared Transfer Radiometer (TXR) was developed as part of a larger, multi-year calibration program between the NASA EOS Project Science Office and the NIST Optical Technology Division. - The NIST part of any deployment of the TXR to facilities related to calibrations of NASA EOS instruments is already part of the NIST statement of work with the EOS Project Science Office, and hence does not have to funded out of individual EOS project funds. - The host calibration facility part of such a TXR deployment would have to be funded by the individual EOS project funds. - The TXR is a two-channel portable radiometer for providing thermal- infrared scale **verifications** of large-area calibration sources. - The goal is to provide *in-situ* measurements of the radiance that the flight instrument actually sees during its chamber calibration. - The TXR is continuously being characterized and its calibration improved by new facilities and measurement capabilities being developed at NIST. ## Slide 3 ## TXR Anticipated Version 2 Changes - Units: - Inches ## Using Checksource - Using - Turning Mirror ## Typical TXR InSb (or scaled MCT) Pre-amp Output Signal ## NIST Water Bath Black Body - Used for TXR calibration in ambient environmental conditions. - Used over temperature range 15 °C to 80 °C. - 10.8 cm diameter aperture, usually apertured down to 4 cm for TXR. ## TXR Calibration at NIST Water Bath Black Body (WBBB) **TXR Calibration at NIST Water Bath Black Body (WBBB)** ## TXR Calibration Equation ## TXR 5-m Channel Reproducibility at NIST WBBB **TXR 5****-********m Channel Reproducibility at NIST WBBB** ## TXR 10-m Channel Reproducibility at NIST WBBB **TXR 10-********m Channel Reproducibility at NIST WBBB** ## TXR at Los Alamos Radiometric Calibration Chamber Facility ## Delta-Response Comparison Method **Delta-Response Comparison Method** **Predicted Response:** ## Component (Tc) vs. System (r) **Slope gives mirror ******** and intercept gives ********L(bkd)** ## Delta-Delta Response Comparison Method ## Component (Tc) vs. System (r) **Component (T****c****) vs. System (************r)** **Slope gives mirror ******** and intercept is zero** ## Resulting comparison of SBB contact temperature Tc **Resulting comparison of SBB contact temperature T****c** **and SBB brightness temperature T****b** ## Final result is recommended values for **Final result is recommended values for** **band-integrated, chopped (SBB - LZ) radiance:** - Planck function ## Summary of LANL Deployment Example **Summary of LANL Deployment Example** - TXR has successfully enabled a system level verification - of the component-based scale at LANL facility. - Mirror reflectance parameter 0.9904 - compares well with LANL component value of 0.989. - Delta-background value makes sense - and provides new information to LANL. - Standard uncertainty is below 0.1 K, 2 within range, - relative to NIST Water Bath Black Body. ## TXR Calibration Methods - TXR against Water Bath Black Body - scale derived from temperature and emissivity modelling. - limited temperature range of source and background. - automated and easy: will continue to play a role for reproducibility. - TXR against Cryogenic Black Body at NIST MBIR facility. - full temperature range of source and background. - scale derived from temperature and emissivity modelling AND can be derived from measurements by electrical substitution radiometry. - TXR against tunable laser-illuminated integrating sphere at a new NIST facility: the IR-SIRCUS (Spectral Irradiance & Radiance Response Calibrations with Uniform Sources) - full range of radiance, background chopped at source - scale derived from High Accuracy Cryogenic Radiometer, the primary standard electrical substitution radiometer at NIST. - believed to be the best way ultimately to calibrate the TXR. ## Summary - Some other TXR Characterization Measurements Planned at NIST - Check-source functionality and repeatability. - More end-to-end relative spectral response measurements. - More relative spatial response and size-of-source effect measurements. - Polarization sensitivity measurements. - The TXR has been deployed successfully in chamber-mode. - Small upgrade planned during May-July 2000, to install new can, baseplate and check-source, and reduce field of view.
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HQ 081201 October 3, 1988 CLA-2 CO:R:C:G 081201 SM CATEGORY: Classification TARIFF NO.: 9503.49.0020 Ms. Eva Stark EFS Marketing Associates 164 Central Avenue Farmingdale, NY 11735 RE: Tariff classification of certain troll figures Dear Ms. Stark: Your letter of October 10, 1987, requests a tariff clas- sification ruling under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States Annotated (HTSUSA) for certain troll figures. The country of origin is not stated. FACTS: Two samples were submitted. One is a pot-bellied flesh- colored plastic figure standing erect on two legs, about nine inches tall, with positionable arms and head. Each foot has four toes, and the hand appendages have four fingers. The head has straight white textile hair, large pointed ears, pointed \"eyebrows,\" virtually no forehead, and an upturned snout. The figure is dressed in a removable textile jacket and pants. The second figure is referred to as a \"pen troll.\" It is similar to the first, but only about two inches tall, and has no clothing. A hole inside the torso of the figure allows it to be placed on the end of a pencil or pen. You believe that the trolls should be classified as toys representing animals or non-human creatures under heading 9503, HTSUSA, rather than as dolls. You state that they are based on non-human creatures and are not sold or perceived as dolls. ISSUE: Are the troll figures classified as dolls, as toys representing non-human beings, or as something else? -2- LAW AND ANALYSIS: The HTSUSA is a new statute with new rules for the classification of imported merchandise. Merchandise may not classified under parallel or similar provisions in the TSUSA and HTSUSA because the rules under which the classification is reached are different. The term doll is not defined in the HTSUSA. Heading 9502, HTSUSA, provides for \"dolls representing only human beings.\" Thus, while there is no requirement that a \"doll\" be anatomically correct, it must, at a minimum, represent a human being. The Explanatory Notes, the official interpretation of the HTSUSA at the international level, state, with regard to heading 9502, HTSUSA, that it includes \"not only dolls de- signed for the amusement of children, but also dolls intended for decorative purposes (e.g., boudoir dolls, mascot dolls), or for use in Punch and Judy or marionette shows, or those of a caricature type.\" Inspection of the troll figures reveals that, while they may somewhat resemble humans to the extent that they are erect bipeds with facial features located on the head, they do not represent human beings. Webster\'s Third New International Dictionary (1961) gives the following pertinent definitions of represent: 3\. to portray by pictorial, plastic, or musical art: delineate, depict. 6\. . . . to serve as the counterpart or image of: typify. syn represent, depict, portray, delineate, pic- ture and limn can mean to present an image or life- lifelike imitation of, as in art. Represent im- plies a placing before the mind as if real or as if living, as by a picture, description, or piece of sculpture. You discuss at length the origin of \"trolls\" in Scandinavian folklore. Be that as it may, Customs does not classify the concept or mythology of \"trolls\"; we must classify the im- ported article. Examination of the figure reveals that it cannot be said to portray, serve as an image of, or present a lifelike imitation of, a human being. Therefore, we agree that it cannot be classified as a doll under the HTSUSA. -3- Heading 9503, HTSUSA, provides for \"other toys,\" includ- ing scale models and puzzles. The Explanatory Notes for this heading state that it covers all toys not included in headings 9501 or 9502. As indicated above, the troll figures are not covered by heading 9502, HTSUSA. Heading 9501, HTSUSA, pro- vides for wheeled toys, and is therefore also inapplicable. Thus, if the troll figures are toys, it appears that they would fall under heading 9503, HTSUSA. The term toy is not defined in the HTSUSA. The Explana- tory Notes for Chapter 95 state that it covers \"toys of all kinds whether designed for the amusement of children or adults.\" Thus, a toy must at least be something designed for amusement. You state that the trolls are marketed and perceived as toys. The newspaper articles and other materials you have submitted indicate that when purchased or used by children, they serve as a source of amusement. Sometimes they are pro- moted as good luck charms, but it appears that adults, too, regard them as cute, charming, and amusing. We conclude that they are classifiable as \"other toys.\" The superior heading for subheadings 9503.41-9503.49, HTSUSA, provides for \"\[t\]oys representing animals or non-human creatures (for example, robots and monsters).\" The Explana- tory Notes for heading 9503 give angels and devils as addi- tional examples and add that \"toys representing animals or non-human creatures\" are included here \"even if possessing predominantly human physical characteristics.\" As non-human figures, the trolls are covered by this provision. HOLDING: The troll figures are classified under subheading 9503.49.0020, HTSUSA, as toys representing animals or non- human creatures, other than stuffed, not having a spring mechanism, other than of metal. This classification repre- sents the present position of the Customs Service under the HTSUSA. If there are changes before the effective date of January 1, 1989, this advice may not continue to be applic- able. Sincerely, John Durant, Director Commercial Rulings Division 6cc: Area Director, NY Seaport cc: NIS Tom McKenna cc: D. Cahill
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U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services Image of United States Department of Justice seal EIS GUIDE Strategies for Intervening with Officers through Early Intervention Systems: A Guide for Front-Line Supervisors Authors: Samuel Walker, Ph.D. Stacy Osnick Milligan with Anna Berke EIS GUIDE For More Information: U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services 1100 Vermont Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20530 To obtain details on COPS programs, call the COPS Office Response Center at 800.421.6770 or visit: www.cops.usdoj.gov e01060004 Strategies for Intervening with Officers through Early Intervention Systems: A Guide for Front-Line Supervisors This study of early intervention systems (EIS), conducted by the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), was supported by grant #2003 HS-WX-K046 by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS Office). Points of views or opinions contained in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice or members of PERF. The opinions expressed are generally those based on the consensus of participants in interviews, site visits, or expert panel meetings. However, not every view or statement presented in this report can necessarily be attributed to each individual participant. Websites and sources listed provide useful information at the time of this writing, but the authors do not endorse any information of the sponsor organization or other information on the websites. Published by the Police Executive Research Forum U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services Police Executive Research Forum Washington, DC 20036 United States of America February 2006 ISBN: 1-878734-93-8 Cover Design by Michael A. Sogunro, Aspen System Corporation, contractor to U.S. Department of Justice COPS Office Table of Contents Acknowledgments..............................................................v Foreword...................................................................vii Introduction.................................................................1 About this Guide.............................................................2 Guiding Principles ..........................................................4 Organization of the Guide .................................................. 5 Knowing the System and Conveying the Message ............................... 9 Knowing the System ..........................................................9 Educating Officers about EIS ...............................................11 A Note on Supervisors Terminology .........................................13 The New Role of the Supervisor .............................................17 Proactive Supervision and Early-Early Intervention .......................18 Supervisors as Data Analysts ...............................................20 Managing Paperwork .........................................................22 Intervention Follow-Through ................................................23 Interventions ..............................................................27 Intervention versus Discipline .............................................27 Engaging Officers in an Intervention .......................................28 Choosing Interventions .....................................................29 Interventions Based on a Problem-Solving Approach ..........................30 Intervention Programs and Services .........................................31 Integrity and Other Benefits of EIS ........................................39 Providing Oversight ........................................................39 Dealing with Hostility and Morale Problems .................................40 Conclusion..................................................................43 References..................................................................45 Appendices..................................................................49 Appendix A: Participating Agencies .........................................49 Appendix B: Telephone Survey Participants ..................................51 Appendix C: COPS Office/PERF Staff .........................................52 About the Authors/Contributor ..............................................55 About the Police Executive Research Forum...................................59 About the PERF Center on Force and Accountability ..........................63 About the COPS Office ......................................................67 Acknowledgments This guide is a culmination of the valuable contributions, keen observations, and hard work of many individuals. We would first like to extend a special thanks to the chiefs and sheriffs of the agencies we visited who so willingly gave their time and resources to help us better understand their unique and successful early intervention systems: Sheriff Leroy Baca (Los Angeles County [California] Sheriffs Department), Chief Robert Davis (San Jose [California] Police Department), Chief Charlie Deane (Prince William County [Virginia] Police Department), Chief Edward Guthrie (Pocatello [Idaho] Police Department), Chief Stephen Hogue (Tampa [Florida] Police Department), Chief Sidney Klein (Clearwater [Florida] Police Department), Chief Ken McGuire (West Jordan [Utah] Police Department), Chief Robert McNeilly (Pittsburgh [Pennsylvania] Bureau of Police), and Sheriff William Young (Las Vegas [Nevada] Metropolitan Police Department). We also thank the staffs of these agencies who participated in our interviews and provided invaluable information about their EIS, as well as those who assisted the PERF team in organizing and scheduling these visits. Of course, this guide and project would not have been possible without the generous support of the COPS Office. Director Carl Peed and COPS staff have demonstrated a real commitment to the issues surrounding integrity, accountability, and the role of EIS in law enforcement agencies. We appreciate the incredible efforts of our Project Manager, Amy Schapiro, who provided stellar guidance and support throughout the project. We thank Michael A. Sogunro for his artistic design and layout of this publication. In addition to the site visits, PERF convened an exceptional group of individuals from both the law enforcement community and the private sector who have expertise in EIS and/or supervision and leadership. This group of very busy individuals graciously agreed to spend one day discussing how law enforcement agencies could improve supervision within the context of an early intervention system. This discussion later became the basis for some of the recommendations included in this guide. For their participation and thoughtful insight, we would like to thank Commander Linda Barone (Pittsburgh Bureau of Police), Lieutenant Tim Canas (Arlington [Texas] Police Department), Michael Cortrite (UCLA), Captain Joan Dias (Tampa [Florida] Police Department), Mollie Haines (Vice President, D.C. Chamber of Commerce), Assistant Sheriff Rod Jett (Las Vegas [Nevada] Metropolitan Police Department), Gail Kettlewell (George Mason University), Lynn Leavitt (George Mason University), Chief Ken McGuire (West Jordan, Utah, Police Department), John Markovic (International Association of Chiefs of Police), Chief Robert McNeilly (Pittsburgh [Pennsylvania] Bureau of Police), Commander Catherine McNeilly (Pittsburgh [Pennsylvania] Bureau of Police), Chief Bill McSweeney (Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department), Toye Nash (Phoenix Police Department), Lieutenant Larry Oliver (Austin [Texas] Police Department), Sergeant Mike Schaller (New Jersey State Police), and Deputy Superintendent Ellen Scrivner (Chicago [Illinois] Police Department). At the start of this project, PERF staff contacted a great many law enforcement agencies to learn from their experiences. Based on the results, PERF staff identified a smaller number of agencies that appeared to have significant success. Staff also conducted telephone interviews with more than 30 law enforcement agencies. We thank them immensely for their time and candor. A full listing of these agencies may be found in Appendix B. A team of PERF staff and expert consultants deserve special recognition for their hard work. Executive Director Chuck Wexler granted us this opportunity to study EIS and provided us with his valuable thoughts and critique on the final product. We thank Lorie Fridell for her incredible insight and overall support of this project, and Josh Ederheimer for all of his efforts to keep the project on time and on budget. We also thank Anna Berke for helping this project to run smoothly. She truly went above and beyond what was asked of her and did so with great professionalism. Thanks to Camille Preston and Alison Kendall for their assistance on site visits, and Jason Cheney for his superb management of the telephone interviews. We also thank Martha Plotkin for her assistance in helping to move this guide toward publication. Thank you as well to Nathan Ballard for his overall support and his never-ending enthusiasm to provide assistance on projects. Foreword Supervisors, especially first-line supervisors, occupy a critical position within law enforcement agencies. They are asked to fill many roles such as community problem solver, teacher, and leader; and they are asked to conduct themselves as role models for the officers whom they oversee. Despite these demands, perhaps the most difficult challenge facing supervisors is managing officers who engage in behavior that reflects poorly on their department and themselves. These officers might be small in number, but the repercussions of their actions can be considerable. Agencies have traditionally looked to their supervisors to identify these individuals and address any problematic behavior, usually through disciplinary means. Now, many agencies are adopting early intervention systems to provide support for their supervisors in identifying, addressing, and potentially preventing any harmful behavior from occurring. This report, supported by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services and prepared by the Police Executive Research Forum, is meant to be used as a resource by supervisors who use EIS. While EIS have been used in some agencies for more than 25 years, more recent advancements in such systems have reoriented agencies away from merely warning supervisors about problem officers. Instead, more and more EIS are designed to help officers. These systems rely heavily on enhanced supervision techniques and a variety of intervention options that address the underlying causes of such behavior. Indeed, the role of the supervisor and access to a broad array of resources for addressing the difficulties facing officers are the two most important elements of a successful early intervention system. The PERF study on which this guide is based has revealed that agencies that have refocused their efforts on helping instead of disciplining officers feel they can dramatically improve accountability, integrity, and the overall health of the officers and organization. Supervisors in particular believed this approach can also reduce onerous paperwork in the long term and improve job satisfaction. This guide details the elements the PERF study found to be the most critical in making an early intervention system successful: supervisors knowing the intricacies of their agencys EIS, supervisors being proactive in identifying potential problems, and supervisors following up with officers after an intervention. Recommendations are provided throughout to help summarize key points as they relate to these elements. Other recommendations address how supervisors can help make EIS successful, how they can support officers within the framework of their system, and how they can improve accountability and integrity within their agency. PERF and COPS have released a companion guide written specifically for chief executives. That document provides recommendations on the chief executives role within an early intervention system, as well as how they can plan for, develop, implement, and maintain such systems.* The COPS Office and PERF are pleased to bring you this guide to help enhance the health of this nations law enforcement agencies and the well- being of the officers who serve our communities. Image of signature of COPS Director Carl R. Peed Director, COPS Image of signature of PERF Executive Director Chuck Wexler Executive Director, PERF * The first guide, Supervision and Intervention within Early Intervention Systems: A Guide for Law Enforcement Chief Executives, is available on the PERF and COPS websites at www.policeforum.org and www.cops.usdoj.gov. INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION Within law enforcement agencies, supervisors, especially first-line supervisors, occupy a critical position asked to be community problem solvers, managers, counselors, teachers, and leaders all at once. Their ultimate responsibility, however, is to serve the public by ensuring that the actions of officers on the street are appropriate, ethical, and in accord with department policies and procedures. The vast majority of officers conduct themselves with the utmost professionalism and dedication to their job. Yet, there remains a small number of officers who engage in inappropriate conduct, which must be addressed at the earliest opportunity. In many cases it is the first-line supervisor who is in a position to first identify and address potentially problematic behaviors. These supervisors need the tools and support to effectively prevent and address such behaviors. Many law enforcement agencies of all sizes and types are adopting early intervention systems (EIS), which are a more formal tool to assist supervisors in identifying officers at risk of engaging in conduct that can be harmful to the officer, agency, or public. Depending upon the agency, however, the overall purpose of an early intervention system can differ significantly. For example, some agencies implement EIS to help identify officers who may be experiencing personal or professional problems that are manifesting themselves in unacceptable performance on the job. These agencies may use system information to help direct resources (e.g., training or counseling) to the specific needs of an officer. These types of systems generally focus on helping officers and providing intervention in a nonpunitive and nondisciplinary fashion. Other agencies adopt an early intervention system to help manage personnelusing the data for performance evaluations, assignment decisions, and improvements in accountability between officers and supervisors. These types of systems tend to focus on positive as well as negative behavior, providing a means to track commendations, awards and other merits, and to recognize the efforts of these officers appropriately (e.g., in positive evaluations or special assignments). Still other departments implement EIS for more proactive reasons, such as identifying officer performance problems early on to foster officer well-being and to avoid future inappropriate conduct, complaints, or even lawsuits. While there are differences in how agencies use their early intervention system, typically the systems are designed similarly. For example, while some agencies use paper files to track EIS usually take the form of an electronic database that collects specific pieces of information about officer behavior. However, some agencies find paper files just as effective. Also, many agencies collect the same kinds of data regarding officer behavior. Some of the more common data elements collected by EIS include an officers use of sick leave and the number and type of community complaints or use-of-force incidents involving the officer. Regardless of the types of data collected or the reasons for implementation, EIS can be powerful, multifaceted tools for law enforcement agencies. About This Guide The information presented here is based on a study of EIS conducted by the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) in partnership with University of NebraskaOmaha Professor Samuel Walker, and supported by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS Office). The study examined how law enforcement agencies that are leading the field in EIS handle the issues surrounding supervision and intervention, and how they innovatively tackle the challenges they face. Throughout the guide recommendations are provided that address the role of supervisors and the intervention process when an officer reaches a threshold.1 The primary audience for this guide is law enforcement supervisors, including first-line supervisorsprimarily sergeants in the fieldand commanders holding midlevel management positions who seek practical advice about EIS. It explains their special role in EIS and how that role differs from supervisors traditional responsibilities.2 1 The threshold is the point at which a sufficient number of incidents have occurred to warrant a formal inquiry into the behaviors of an officer. 2 A companion guide has been written for police leaders. Supervision and Intervention within Early Intervention Systems: A Guide for Law Enforcement Chief Executives highlights the chief executives role and responsibilities within an early intervention system. That guide also provides practical recommendations for the planning, development, and maintenance of EIS. It is available on the PERF website (www.policeforum.org) and on the COPS website (www.cops.usdoj.gov). Methodology Police professionals practical experience with EIS provides the basis for this guide. The PERF project team initially contacted approximately 50 small, medium, and large law enforcement agencies known to have well-functioning EIS and asked them to participate in telephone interviews about their systems.3 Through these interviews the team identified nine agencies to examine more closely for their approaches to supervision and/or intervention.4 These sites (see Table 1) include various types of agencies that have adopted successful EIS, including several small, medium, and large agencies; a sheriffs department; and agencies from different parts of the country. One of the reasons for choosing a relatively diverse group of sites was to explore how law enforcement agencies differed in their approaches to EIS depending on their size, jurisdiction, and geographic location. Project team members visited these sites and interviewed personnel from all ranks of the department, including the chief executive and a number of nonsworn personnel, to find out how first-line supervisors are incorporated into the early intervention system process, how agencies handle officers who have reached a threshold, and how agencies navigate the intervention process. 3 The project team chose individual agencies by reviewing relevant literature (both academic and practitioner-focused) and using a snowball sampling technique whereby practitioners and others with expertise in EIS identified agencies that they felt had exceptional systems. 4 The agencies chosen for site visits are examples of the different types of EIS adopted by law enforcement agencies. These examples are meant to characterize the range of systems in existence with a particular focus on strengthening supervision and/or intervention. Table 1: List of Agencies Participating in Site Visits Agency State Number Sworn Los Angeles Sheriffs Department California 8,500 Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Nevada 2,353 San Jose Police Department California 1,400 Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Pennsylvania 1,100 Tampa Police Department Florida 1,002 Prince William County Police Department Virginia 493 Clearwater Police Department Florida 264 Pocatello Police Department Idaho 86 West Jordan Police Utah 80 Finally, for this study the PERF team also convened a one-day panel composed of law enforcement practitioners with expertise in EIS and private-sector experts in leadership and supervision. The members of the expert panel discussed innovative ways to train, engage, support, and oversee law enforcement supervisors who work within the structure of EIS. The project team learned a great deal from the interviews, site visits, and expert panel, including a number of best practices that other agencies can adopt, as well as how agencies handled some initial obstacles and unexpected problems. One of the most important lessons learned from this study is the crucial element of leadership on the part of supervisors. Guiding Principles This guide reflects five basic principles. The first principle is that first-line supervisors are really the linchpin of EIS. In most cases, they are the first to observe potentially problematic behavior among their officers. Typically, they are involved in the intervention process once an officer has reached an early intervention system threshold. The second principle is that because supervisors fill such a vital role within EIS, they will be required to handle responsibilities that previously may not have been considered part of their job (i.e., analyzing early intervention system data, proactively engaging officers about potential personal and professional problems that may be affecting their work, and assessing and pairing intervention options with officers needs). The third principle is that for EIS to be effective, supervisors will need intervention options that vary to meet the wide range of officers needs. By providing some flexibility in the types of intervention options, an agency can increase the likelihood of improving officer performance. That is, targeted or specialized interventions are more likely to help the officer achieve needed improvements. It is also important to provide supervisors with the ability to commend officers for positive behaviors such as receiving complimentary letters from the community or by receiving an award for going above the call of duty. The fourth principle is that an early intervention system should be part of an agencys larger approach to supporting officers. In the past, EIS (previously referred to as EWS, or early warning systems) were associated with disciplinary systems, which made buy-in from law enforcement personnel and union representatives difficult. EIS, however, function most effectively when they are used to help identify and address problems before officers get into serious trouble that results in disciplinary action, formal complaints, or lawsuits. The key is to view and promote the system as nondisciplinary. In fact, EIS are most successful when the agency as a whole reinforces a culture that supports both the community and the officers who protect and serve the community. Again, focusing on positive as well as potentially problematic behaviors is an important component for the success of EIS. The fifth and final principle is that EIS are valuable administrative tools that can enhance accountability and integrity in a law enforcement agency. They can identify officer performance problems and provide the means for correcting them. EIS can also enhance the quality of routine supervision throughout the agency, which, in turn, may reduce incidents such as unnecessary officer- involved shootings, inappropriate use of less-lethal force, and other problems. EIS can reduce costs arising from civil litigation and improve relations with the community. And they can help improve the well-being of officers and their families. Organization of the Guide This guide is organized into four overarching sections. The first section outlines the importance of supervisors knowing well the intricacies of their agencys early intervention system. Once supervisors understand the system, it is important for them to help educate their officers and be able to answer the many questions officers may have about the system. The second section outlines the new role of the supervisor. Much responsibility is placed with the supervisor within an early intervention system. One of the new roles supervisors may be asked to adopt involves being proactive in their supervision dutieshelping to identify potential problems even before a threshold is reached within a system. A supervisor will also likely be asked to analyze system data and manage paperwork associated with the system. Finally, supervisors will also be asked to follow up with officers once an intervention has occurred. The third section outlines a number of elements surrounding interventions. For example, this guide highlights the importance of distinguishing between intervention and discipline. This section also provides guidance on how to identify and approach an officer who may need an intervention as well as how to choose an intervention to meet individual needs. A detailed list of promising programs is provided. The fourth and final section touches upon the role EIS play in enhancing officer integrity. EIS provide the means for supervisory oversight to identify officers who may be trying to avoid reaching a threshold within the system. This section also addresses the potential hostility and morale problems that may arise with a new early intervention system. KNOWING THE SYSTEM AND CONVEYING THE MESSAGE A number of law enforcement practitioners who participated in the study agreed that EIS can strengthen both organizational and officer behavior. While each agency tailors an early intervention system to meet its specific needs, the reality is that in most agencies first-line supervisors overwhelmingly assume responsibility in these systems because they spend so much of their time observing and interacting with officers on the street. And because of the nature of their work and the close contact they have with the community, officers on the street are generally the group that most frequently reaches thresholds within EIS.5 In order for an agencys early intervention system to be successful, supervisors must first become knowledgeable about the system and its intricacies. Then they must educate their officers. Knowing the System Having supervisors fully comprehend their agencys early intervention system will make them more efficient and effective in their own job and will enable them to answer the multitude of questions that officers are likely to ask. While this may seem obvious, the study found that one of the biggest mistakes departments make with their early intervention system is not fully informing their personnel (especially line personnel) about the system and its workings. In fact, whenever possible, agencies should involve supervisors and officers from the very beginning, including being involved in developing the system itself. This type of involvement can ensure that supervisors and officers will be more knowledgeable about their early intervention system. In cases where a system has existed for some time, it will be necessary to help educate supervisors and officers about the system. The PERF team found that when there was a lack of information it generally resulted from insufficient training in the systems functions. The PERF teams interviews also revealed that agency personnel desire additional resources for early intervention system- specific training. Some chiefs indicated that they are giving early intervention system updates at each roll call and have started to circulate department-wide memos on their systems to ensure that all personnel are informed and updated. 5 This may not always be the case, however. Other personnel in an agency may in fact reach thresholds more frequently than an officer on the street. For example, the Los Angeles Sheriffs Department found that officers who work in custody intake units or with inmates who have a history of assaulting law enforcement personnel reached thresholds within their EIS more frequently. In any case, supervisors will need answers to the following questions before they can implement an agencys early intervention system. What data are in the system? What performance indicators are included in the early intervention system? Why are these included? How are they to be used? (For example, many systems include use of sick leave time. Why is this included? How does it relate to an officers overall performance?) Who has access to early intervention system data? Who has access to the database? How secure is the system? Do individual officers have access to their own data? Can officers challenge data they believe are incorrect? Can officers challenge or correct data they believe are not correct?6 When and where can the data be accessed? What computers are available with access to the early intervention system? Is access convenient for supervisors? Are there obstacles that will make it difficult for supervisors or officers to use the system effectively (if officers are allowed to view their records)? Is there a formal protocol that outlines supervisors responsibilities within EIS? What are the formal responsibilities of supervisors at each rank under the early intervention system? Are they clearly spelled out in a protocol? What actions are expected of each rank? Does the department currently offer the resources that supervisors will need to perform their responsibilities under the early intervention system? Do a range of programs currently exist in this department? If not, is there a plan to develop them? 6 The PERF project team found several departments where they can. The people interviewed said this approach was important in allaying fears that the system was a mysterious big brother-type system. The departments observed in the PERF study offer diverse options and services that supervisors can access in response to an officer with performance problems. They are described in detail later in this report. Educating Officers about EIS Once supervisors have answers to these questions, they may want to discuss the early intervention system with their officers, explaining their supervisory responsibilities within the system and their expectations for their officers. During site visits, the project team found that some agencies experienced misunderstandings about the system, its purpose, and how it operates. Some rank and file officers and union representatives said the system had never been explained to them. One officer told us, I have been here 15 years and didnt know we had an [early intervention system] until recently. It was not made known unless you actually needed it. It seems to me that no one is allowed to talk about it. Another officer described his confusion when asked to report to his command staffs office for a problem with his behavior: My main issue with the process is that I wasnt told about it and what its purpose was. Because I didnt understand that there was this process, I didnt know why I was there. There isnt a protocol of how to explain it to us officers. EIS represent a change in the entire system of supervision and accountability. Supervisors responsibilities, especially as they relate to officer interactions, may change more dramatically in some departments than in others. For example, officers may begin to see supervisors out on calls for service more frequently; they may notice their supervisors holding regular conversations about officer performance (other than during formal evaluations); and officers may see increased attention paid to off-duty assignments, use of sick leave, or other variables that could be affecting the quality of an officers performance on the street. Whatever the extent to which supervisors roles and responsibilities change, it is imperative that supervisors inform officers about these changes and especially how they may impact future interactions between supervisor and officer. Agencies and supervisors need to communicate not only the nature of the system, but also what the agency expects of people, including officers at all ranks. I was so confused, one officer reported, I wondered if I was doing something wrong. I felt that I was doing my job, and I didnt understand why I had to meet with my supervisor. When supervisors explain their expectations of their officers, they reduce this type of confusion, show that they want to support their officers, and help prevent future problems. Supervisors should also clearly explain that the department expects the highest standards of professional service from everyone. An early intervention system is a tool to help achieve that goal. Simply explaining the system will go a long way toward preventing resistance to it. In one department, project team members were told that there was an initial fear of EIS when it was introduced, but that fear has been dissolved and most are comfortable with the system and its purpose. A commander in the internal affairs unit at one site commented, It was a struggle for acceptance in the early years, but I think we have worked out both respect and quality. These departments are proof that, over time, agencies can succeed in changing their culture. Twenty years ago, one officer recounted, there were strong walls built around individual officers. But now, with the implementation of an early intervention system, people are more willing to talk and be open. It is recommended that supervisors become familiar with their early intervention system structure and processes, including knowing the data that are captured in the system, how the data are used, their responsibilities within the system, and the spectrum of resources available to help officers. Supervisors should also have candid conversations with their officers about their supervisory responsibilities and what they expect from their officers. Supervisors may explain how these expectations are tied to the early intervention system. A Note on Supervisors Terminology It is important to get the terminology of EIS right. Supervisors must set the right tone from the beginning. When EIS first appeared about 25 years ago, they were usually called early warning systems. Many agencies still use that term, although it does not convey the right message. Warning has a punitive, negative tone, implying that it is a precursor to discipline. The PERF study revealed that the best EIS emphasize assisting officers, not punishing them. These systems typically include a range of programs designed to help officers recognize and deal with their performance problems because, time and again, it was discovered that performance problems are rooted in stress and personal and family problems. As a result, the more positive term early intervention system is preferred. The systems examined are known by such names as Early Intervention Program, Performance Assessment and Review System, and Performance Support Alert. Similarly, an early intervention system addresses officers with performance problems, not problem officers. The term problem officer implies that there is something inherently bad and unchangeable about that officer; officer with performance problems suggests a specific problem that, with proper attention, can be corrected. It is recommended that supervisors and agencies use terms such as intervention and performance problems instead of warning and problem officers. This will help convey the message that the system is meant to help officers, not punish them. THE NEW ROLE OF THE SUPERVISOR THE NEW ROLE OF THE SUPERVISOR During the site visits, the PERF project team heard a great deal about how supervisors roles changed as a result of their agencys early intervention system. For departments that did not have a strong system of accountability already in place, implementing the early intervention system was a challenge. Supervisors in some of these agencies perceived the early intervention system as a means for scrutinizing and monitoring them at all times. Others felt that they were now responsible for maintaining, interpreting, and analyzing large amounts of data collected by their system, which can be daunting and time consuming. In departments with a longer history of institutionalized accountability measures, however, the early intervention system appeared to be fully integrated into the culture of the department and its routine activities, including supervisory activities. Supervisors in these agencies noted only small changes in their role with the early intervention system. Overall, site visits revealed four broadly defined categories that capture the types of changes experienced by many supervisors as a result of implementing an early intervention system: proactive supervision, data analysis, paperwork, and intervention follow-up. These tasks required supervisors to acquire new skills and take a new approach to supervision. The project team found examples of supervisors resisting changes related to EIS. However, the study also revealed that in those agencies with strong EIS, supervisors and command staff believed that in the long run an early intervention system helps improve supervision. The latter believed that such a system gives supervisors the tools they need to help officers improve their performance. These tools promote better police service to the community and fewer citizen complaints and excessive force incidents. Eventually, these changes translate into fewer headaches for supervisors, fewer questionable incidents, fewer difficult investigations, and less paperwork. Proactive Supervision and Early-Early Intervention EIS databases can help supervisors identify patterns of behavior that raise questions about an officers well-being and performance. Often, however, these patterns are evident long before an officer reaches a threshold within an early intervention system or before there is a major incident. Findings from the study revealed that department personnel (of varying ranks) in many of the agencies visited felt that the keen eye of the supervisor can identify these patterns early on. Experienced commanders at several sites told project staff, It really shouldnt get to the early intervention system. You should spot those problems before they reach that point. In the Tampa Police Department, a commander told the project team, Good supervisors know what is happening to their officers without the [system.] In the Prince William County Police Department, supervisors said they know their officers and can prevent patterns of inappropriate conduct from developing in the first place. In general, supervisors explained, they really do not need a computer or a database; they can spot problems in the making. One chief said, If the officer gets to [the early intervention system], the department has failed to supervise the officer. This approach to supervision may be referred to as early-early intervention. Under this approach, departments view EIS essentially as a backup to responsible and effective ongoing supervision. One commander characterized his agencys system as a good checks and balances system. Directing officers under this intervention approach can be done formally or informally. For example, the Prince William County Police Departments general orders outline supervisory responsibility in terms of early, early intervention. The early intervention system does not alter the responsibility of supervisors as the primary source for monitoring performance and behavior of personnel on a daily basis. Supervisors shall continue to be alert to, and monitor, the strengths and weaknesses of members assigned to them and may detect a need for EIS in this way. The Pittsburgh Bureau of Police requires that supervisors meet with their officers quarterly, or more frequently if needed. In the Pocatello Police Departments system, supervisors are notified if an officer is approaching a threshold so that they may meet with that officer. Supervisors might even take some immediate steps to find out what is going on by asking for an impromptu, informal meeting with the officer when they notice inappropriate behavior. If supervisors are monitoring officer behavior closely, what exactly should they be looking for? The PERF project team asked many supervisors, What do you see? What do you look for that indicates an officer might be having problems? Although the departments were different in many ways, the answers were similar: An outgoing officer is suddenly quiet and withdrawn, or vice versa. The usual joking among officers suddenly has an edge, with a note of hostility just below the surface. The quality of an officers paperwork has declined. An officer begins avoiding responsibilities in small ways. An officer is going through a difficult divorce, or one of the officers children is having serious problems. The emphasis on early intervention has taken hold in some departments and has begun changing the way supervisors do their jobs. One supervisor in San Jose described how the implementation of an early intervention system has heightened standards and expectations: This has changed the way we do business. You hear something on the radio and you think, Hey, maybe I should go and be there with my officers because there is some potential for a problem there. Proactive supervision is similarly important in identifying officers who are exceeding expectations in their job performance. Just as supervisors should be identifying potential problems early on, they should also be noticing when officers under their command engage in positive behaviors that may warrant formal recognition such as a letter in an officers file or a department award. In all, proactive supervision is imperative to both the health of the organization and individual officers however, formal EIS are still necessary for accountability purposes and to document interactions and interventions with officers. It is recommended that supervisors attempt to identify and address performance problems before they reach a threshold within the early intervention system. This early awareness requires supervisors to observe their personnels attitudes and behaviors and check in with them about changes that are out of the ordinary. Supervisors as Data Analysts One of the biggest changes in the role of supervisors is that under an early intervention system they will become data analysts. Guided by predetermined thresholds, supervisors should understand how to look at and interpret the early intervention system data, how to look for patterns of behavior, and how to make decisions about what kinds of patterns require an intervention. When analyzing data, supervisors must consider the context for the officers behavior and determine the reason for the officers actions. To develop an accurate understanding of the situation, supervisors should assess system data daily, or at least regularly. The Pittsburgh Bureau of Police requires its supervisors to review early intervention system data daily. The data contained in an early intervention system can also help supervisors determine what type of intervention is needed for a particular officer. The PERF team learned that determining whether an intervention is necessary and what type of intervention is appropriate is a multistep process. As one commander in the West Jordan Police Department explained: It is our job to determine whether or not somebody needs minor intervention or if it is something bigger. When I begin to sense a problem with an officer I take that person in immediately to discuss the problem behavior. I [continually] monitor it. If [the problem] behavior is still observed, I sit down with them to set up a way to eliminate [the] behavior, and for the most part, that takes care of it. If not, I talk to other supervisors at our staff meetings and review the binder of the past evaluations. This allows us to evaluate each officer over that year so that we can start to see if there is a pattern developing. Then we can decide which direction to take. Another supervisor described the various levels involved in thoroughly reviewing an officers file to decide if intervention is necessary and, if so, to select the best intervention for the given situation. Most supervisors take this role very seriously and feel responsible for promoting healthy employees and keeping the organization ethically responsible to the community through review, analysis, and interpretation, as a supervisor from the Prince William County Police Department stated. In addition to analyzing and interpreting early intervention system data, supervisors also have a responsibility to provide accurate information to be entered into the system for record-keeping purposes. An early intervention system is only as good as the data it contains; therefore, it is essential to ensure the integrity of that data. This requires continuous monitoring of use-of-force reports, citizen complaint data, and other performance indicators used by EIS. Supervisors should closely monitor the quality of reports completed by officers under their command. Use-of-force and traffic stop reports, for example, need to be reviewed carefully to ensure that they are complete, accurate, and legible. An early intervention system does not replace traditional supervision. It reinforces the basic principles of good supervision and supplements them with new practices and tools. For example, traditional supervision has not involved analyzing a database, looking for patterns of behavior, and making critical decisions about what kind of patterns require intervention. Although some supervisors may feel uncomfortable with these new tasks, they are critical to the success of EIS and simultaneously help improve overall supervision in law enforcement agencies. One of the supervisors responsibilities within an early intervention system is to use the information in the database to assess potential problems. It is recommended that supervisors be very familiar with the data and know how to interpret them, how to look for patterns, and when to intervene. It is recommended that supervisors take great care in reviewing the quality and accuracy of information produced about their officers that will be included in the early intervention system database. These data eventually may be used to save an officers health or career, or save the department from a costly lawsuit. Managing Paperwork In many departments, an early intervention system will result in significant changes in supervisors day-to-day responsibilities. A study of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Polices consent decree, conducted by the Vera Institute of Justice in 2002, found that the introduction of an early intervention system and other accountability mechanisms resulted in a radical shift in how first- line supervisors spent their time.7 Specifically, supervisors began spending a lot more time at their desks and less time out in the field, in part because they were managing the increased amount of paperwork that resulted from the initial learning curve with their new early intervention system. As mentioned earlier, this kind of change will be more dramatic in some departments than in others, depending upon the degree to which an agency already has some accountability structures in place. For those agencies that incorporate positive behavior into their early intervention system, paperwork associated with commendations and awards could be just as time-consuming for supervisors. Again, the degree of change will be more dramatic in some agencies than in others, and will likely decrease as these efforts are more seamlessly incorporated into supervisors routine activities. Supervisors in some of the agencies visited were initially skeptical or even hostile to the prospect of an early intervention system because of a fear that the system would require burdensome paperwork. First-line supervisors in particular may think they will not be able to do any real supervision. This is an understandable fear, and although these systems do involve additional paperwork in the short term, the study found that an effective early intervention system means less paperwork in the long run. 7 Davis et al., 2002. Commanders at one of the sites visited were adamant on this point: If you do the extra paperwork demanded by an early intervention system now, you will have less work in the long run, stated one commander. As he explained, identifying performance problems and intervening early will result in fewer problematic incidents in the field later, and a lot of time saved that otherwise would have been spent investigating complaints. Educating supervisors about the benefits of EIS can go a long way toward allaying their fears and decreasing their resistance to this useful management tool. It is recommended that supervisors become acquainted with their new roles and responsibilities, as well as how their daily activities will change with the implementation of an early intervention system. This could be done in the course of routine training for supervisors on their early intervention system or during in-service training. Intervention Follow-Through A critical element in supporting officers is follow-up with those who have participated in an intervention, ensuring that relevant issues have been addressed. This is a key responsibility of supervisors within an early intervention system. As such, there should be a system of accountability to ensure that supervisors within an officers chain of command follow through. In Pittsburgh, for example, the chief and other command staff meet quarterly to thoroughly review the activity of the early intervention system. This department also requires supervisors to conduct an informal meeting with each officer identified by their early intervention system, giving the officers a chance to ask questions. The supervisors then report back to their commanders on when, where, and what was discussed at each meeting. The chief is kept informed about these meetings between supervisors and officers. Other departments require supervisors to maintain logs, notebooks, or journals on officer behavior, and these written records are reviewed regularly by immediate supervisors and, in the case of any issue of special concern, by command officers. The project team also visited departments where challenges remained concerning methods of follow-through. In one department the early intervention system unit tasked with generating reports about officers with performance issues noted that it would not hear back from supervisors about whether any action was taken. The department personnel reported having no way of knowing what sort of intervention the officer participated in, or what resources were made available to that officer. As it turns out, that system is entirely voluntary and does not mandate intervention or action. Another system the PERF team observed, also voluntary, did not track follow-up actions or outcomes. These types of systems may not reinforce the message that the agency truly wants to help its officers. In fact, these approaches may lead officers who are experiencing problems to feel isolated. Even worse, such approaches may help some officers circumvent the system altogether. The true impact of voluntary systems is not known because no records are kept on how many officers have taken advantage of interventions and have been helped. This approach is not as effective as it could be. If meaningful interventions and follow-up do not occur, the entire system is compromised. Follow-through is the essential ingredient of a successful early intervention system, in which officers with identified performance problems receive the help they need. During site visits, the PERF team talked with a number of officers about their personal experience with the system. One remarked, I wouldnt be here today if it hadnt been for the help I got. Meaningful interventions communicate the message that the department is serious about professional conduct and helping officers improve their performance. It is recommended that supervisors follow through with an officers interventionensuring that it was the appropriate option and that the officer gained sufficient help to address the performance problem. Supervisors should recommend a different intervention if the first was unsuccessful. INTERVENTIONS INTERVENTIONS Findings from site visits revealed that what makes EIS effective is supervisors access to programs and services that meet officers needs. Particularly important is the availability of a range of intervention alternatives. Officer performance issues stem from a wide variety of causes. Some officers are too aggressive, while others may be doing too little police work. Serious family issues affect some officers, while others have simply forgotten what they learned in training. In the West Jordan Police Department, a supervisor described his approach as one of customized interventionsidentifying the best course of action for a particular individual. Interventions are not really anything new in policing. Many supervisors have always conducted interventionsmonitoring officer performance and informally handling potential problems. But traditionally individual supervisors have acted on their own good judgment, or common sense, or from their own experience with a good supervisor. What is new under an early intervention system is that the department adopts a formal system of interventions as a department-wide approach to improving officer performance. Intervention versus Discipline As discussed earlier, successful EIS are a nondisciplinary approach to officer performance problems. Consequently, they are intended to be separate from the formal disciplinary system. Establishing an early intervention system, however, does not mean that a department is going to be soft on discipline. Officers will be punished for violations of law or department policy through the formal disciplinary system. Essentially, an early intervention system can be viewed as a complementary nondisciplinary component of an agencys personnel management toolbox. EIS can be viewed even more broadly and used to reward positive police behavior. For example, the chief at the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police found that his early intervention system could also be used to identify officers who are taking the most initiative. These officers are recognized for their hard work. The relationship between EIS and an agencys disciplinary system raises two key questions for supervisors. (1) Is it clear to everyone that the early intervention system is separate from the formal disciplinary system? (2) Is the distinction clearly spelled out in the early intervention system protocol? If the answer to either of these questions is no, then steps need to be taken to correct the problem. It is recommended that supervisors make sure their officers understand that the early intervention system is a separate entity from the disciplinary system and has the purpose of helping officers instead of punishing them. Engaging Officers in an Intervention Perhaps one of the most difficult adjustments supervisors will face when an early intervention system is introduced is learning how to engage officers about their performance problems, given that an EIS intervention is different from the traditional discipline-oriented supervision they know. With EIS interventions, supervisors no longer rely solely on the standard operating procedures manual. Instead, supervisors may draw primarily on the various resources available to them for assisting their officers, including referrals to the agencys on-site chaplain and/or psychologist, to a peer mentor or peer counselor, to the employee assistance program (EAP), or to training opportunities. Also, supervisors will be expected to engage officers proactively and use informal ways of assisting them to improve their performance. These might include going out on calls with officers, keeping a daily log, monitoring officers, and being flexible, available, informal, and consistent until officers are back on track. One supervisor at the San Jose Police Department commented, it is my job to do everything in my ability to make sure that my officers are okay. It is reasonable to expect, however, that when supervisors approach officers about conduct that needs improvement, they will uncover deeper personal or professional issues underlying the officers behavior. Although this would be an excellent opportunity for supervisors to ask some probing questions to help link an officer with an appropriate intervention, some supervisors may not be comfortable handling this type of interaction. Some supervisors may feel uneasy discussing personal problems on the job. It is also possible that supervisors (especially newly promoted supervisors) may not be ready to lose their peer status among officers. Some new supervisors interviewed during the study felt that friendships that had been formed when they were officers were placed at risk when they were promoted. As a result, many were reluctant to use the system for former peers. Departments should provide training on supervision and leadership, especially as these relate to supervisors new responsibilities within EIS. This training should address how to handle sensitive topics as well as general professional responsibilities with peers. It is recommended that supervisors be prepared to address officer performance problems in new and innovative ways that differ from the formal disciplinary system. It is also recommended that departments offer, and supervisors seek out, training to help make the transition to their new early intervention system responsibilities smooth, including how to handle sensitive personal issues on the job. Choosing Interventions The responsibility for choosing the right option is the supervisors, but it is often a good idea to consult with others while maintaining appropriate confidentiality. In one intervention system visited during the study, lieutenants regularly talked with captains about particular officers. And captains regularly talked with the chief. Again, the overall focus of these conversations entailed identifying appropriate interventions to help support the officer. Captains also talked with the psychological services provider about situations, asking how serious a situation sounded and what the psychological services provider thought the department should dofor example, act immediately or wait to see how things go. It is recommended that when choosing an intervention, supervisors consider discussing the performance problems and the available intervention options with others in the officers chain of command or the EAP. Interventions Based on a Problem-Solving Approach Interventions within an early intervention system can be implemented using a problem-oriented policing (POP) approach.8 An officers performance issues are just thata problem to be solved. POP employs the Scanning, Analysis, Response, and Assessment (SARA) model, which is widely used by police to solve community problems. In an early intervention system, the scanning and analysis coincide with the information-gathering stage. As a sergeant with the New Jersey State Police observed, when faced with an officer performance problem a supervisor should do what cops do best: investigate. This means getting more information about the exact nature of the problem. The early intervention system database can provide valuable information about which areas of performance are problematic. It can help identify specific patterns and performance issues that provide clues, such as the following: The officers citizen complaints mainly arise from traffic stops. The officers use-of-force incidents mainly involve young males. The officer has a suspiciously high number of complaints from women. The officers performance took a dramatic turn for the worse about eight months earlier. The officer has a pattern of use-of-force incidents and resisting arrest charges.9 The response phase could be considered the intervention itself, including an informal meeting with a supervisor, retraining, or referral to a counselor. The assessment phase is the follow-up that supervisors should conduct to ensure that the intervention addressed the proper issues. This is discussed in more detail below. When thinking about EIS, it is recommended that supervisors use a problem-oriented policing approach to help guide them in identifying the problem, addressing the problem, and ensuring that the intervention is successful. 8 More information about problem solving can be found at the POP Center website: (www.popcenter.org). In addition, the following titles may be helpful, Problem- Solving Tips: A Guide to Reducing Crime and Disorder through Problem- Solving Partnerships and Crime Analysis for Problem Solver in 60 Small Steps. Both can be found at (www.popcenter.org) or (www.cops.usdoj.gov). 9 There may also be legitimate reasons for an increase in use-of-force incidents and resisting arrest charges, such as special assignments. These data should still be examined routinely to ensure appropriate officer behavior. Intervention Programs and Services Throughout the study the project team identified a number of proactive programs that supplement formal EIS but also exist independent of them. These services are available and offered to officers even when they have not reached a threshold within their early intervention system. Proactive supervisors seeking to identify potential problems early on will have these in their arsenal to help meet officers needs. Successful intervention programs observed during the study are outlined below. Counseling by an Immediate Supervisor Counseling by an officers immediate supervisor is the most common intervention. These informal counseling sessions take many forms. Some occur long before anything has appeared in the early intervention system database. Usually, they are informal conversations, often occurring immediately after an encounter with a citizen where the supervisor observed a need for improvement. In one agency, these are sometimes referred to as trunk meetings, as in meet me by the trunk of your patrol car. The Tampa Police Department mandates that supervisors conduct informal meetings with an officer who reaches a trigger point. More formally, supervisors in the West Jordan Police Department meet with officers, and if a performance problem is identified, the officer signs a performance improvement contract that outlines a plan for improvement. The San Jose Police Department uses intervention counseling sessions to speak with officers who have reached a threshold as a result of their actions and to discuss how they could improve. The Prince William County Police Department uses a similar technique, called performance review, which precedes a formal intervention such as training or a referral to an EAP. In the latter two departments, higher-ranking officers also take part in the sessions. During the site visits, many supervisors and commanders agreed that some officers simply need a wake-up call. In these instances, they are good officers who, for some reason, have lost perspective on quality police work. Often they only need someone to tell them they are on the wrong track and are jeopardizing their career. Training Training is a common form of intervention. An officer may simply need refresher training on traffic stops or on the use of force. One of the most interesting findings from the site visits was the extent to which officers were vigorous advocates of continuing training. Again and again, officers expressed a demand for more training. In one department where budget cuts had reduced training opportunities, officers were very concerned about maintaining quality standards. In another department, self-initiated officer requests for retraining were common, reflecting a well-developed culture of accountability in the department. It means that the department holds its officers to high standards, that officers have internalized those expectations, and that the department makes the programs and services necessary for improving performance available to the officers. Professional Counseling on Personal or Family Problems Referral to professional counseling was an option in all EIS examined during the study, but there were important differences in how it worked. In several departments, officers expressed deep suspicion of their EAP. Some were not confident that their participation would remain confidential, while others apparently felt that going to the EAP was a sign of weakness or failure. In departments with strong peer officer support programs (see below), project staff did not observe the same distrust of EAP or other forms of professional counseling. It may be that the peer officer support program helps to create a culture in which it is acceptable to admit that an officer is having problems, either on the job or at home. Similarly, a chief executives commitment to EAP services can increase their use. In explaining his approach to EAP, one chief asked, Who hasnt been to a psychologist at one time or another? There are times when officers may want to see someone with spiritual authority. Distressed officers may find that a department chaplain can speak to the issues distracting them from their responsibilities to the department. Counseling from a member of the clergy can help officers get through the suicide of a close family member or fellow officer, for example, or through other difficult times. The effectiveness of professional counseling programs depends in part on the scope and cost of the services available. The West Jordan Police Department, for example, has a strong family orientation. Its chief was adamant that one cannot separate the employee from the home, and that what happens at work affects the family, and vice versa. Consequently, this department has made professional counseling services available to anyone dependent on the employees income. This includes spouses, children, and elderly parents who live with the employee. Peer Officer Support Program Several departments maintain a peer officer support program. This program designates a few officers in each precinct or unit as peer support officers and gives them specialized training. In some cases, the peer supporter comes from a neighboring agency, creating an environment of heightened confidentiality and comfort for the troubled officer. In most cases, peer supporters receive extensive hours of training. Peer support programs allow officers to talk frankly with individuals of the same rank who might have had similar experiences. During the site interviews it became apparent that because they were fellow officers, the peer support officers had immediate rapport and trust. Among agencies visited during the study, those that maintain peer officer support programs at this writing include the Los Angeles Sheriffs Department, the San Jose Police Department, the West Jordan Police Department, the Clearwater Police Department, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, and the Prince William County Police Department. During some of the site visits, the project team interviewed both officers who counsel in the peer support program and officers who had received assistance from their departments program. Officers who received assistance felt very positive about their programs and were grateful for being provided one-on-one support, a good listener, and compassion during a difficult time. Crisis Intervention Teams Many departments maintain a crisis intervention team (CIT) that responds to critical incidents such as officer-involved shootings or excessive use-of-force incidents. In some cases, CITs include officers from several area departments. The officer can talk in confidence with a CIT member who has been in a similar situation. The Los Angeles Sheriffs Department has worked out an arrangement with the homicide unit to allow a CIT member to sit with the involved officer while the officer is waiting to be interviewed about the incident. This provides officers the opportunity to share this stressful time with someone who has had a similar experience. The only stipulation is that neither party can discuss the underlying incident; the peer support officer may explain the process to the officer or discuss other issues as the officer desires. The San Jose and West Jordan Police Departments also have CITs. Project team members were impressed by how strongly officers who participate in these programs felt about the value of their programs. Virtually all felt that the programs conveyed a message of support and concern to officers who were involved in critical incidents. Reassignment and Relief from Duty Reassignment is another intervention option. The Los Angeles Sheriffs Department, for example, conceptualized this approach as an acknowledgment of the different stresses associated with particular assignments and an attempt to reduce the risk factors for certain officers. In other words, this kind of intervention recognizes that law enforcement assignments differpatrol duty is different from traffic enforcement, and both are very different from narcotics work. Some officers simply have problems coping with the special demands of certain assignments. The Los Angeles Sheriffs Department decided that, if intervention strategies do not succeed or are not available, it is in everyones interest to transfer an officer to an assignment where particular problem situations are less likely to occur. Importantly, monitoring and follow-up should continue in this new arrangement. Similarly, an intervention found useful during site visits involved temporary relief from duty. In the Los Angeles and West Jordan departments, sergeants have the authority to relieve an officer from duty for a short time, sending that officer home when it is clear that the officer is under stress and not fit for duty that day. In most cases, the officer in question is having some serious but temporary personal crisis. PERF project team members inquired about such a duty status change, and learned that the practice was not a formal personnel action or disciplinary action, nor was there any loss of pay for the officer. It is simply a way to provide supervisors with the flexibility to handle short-term personnel problems. This approach requires that a sergeant pay close attention to their officers, including their attitudes and behavior, and notice anything out of the ordinary. This type of intervention also reflects a supportive work environment, but it should be used only in rare instances, since there is potential for abuse (if, say, a supervisor gives friends time off with pay). Overall, study findings indicated that neither supervisors nor officers in the sites visited abused the duty status intervention option, and that the benefits outweighed potential problems. There are a wide variety of interventions from which to choose depending on the needs of an officer. It is recommended that supervisors be aware of and evaluate the various options available to them. Similarly, supervisors might look beyond the options available in their department as permitted. There may be other viable interventions depending on the departments available resources and commitment to choosing innovative, effective interventions. INTEGRITY AND OTHER BENEFITS OF EIS INTEGRITY AND OTHER BENEFITS OF EIS Another way to view EIS is as a valuable administrative tool for ensuring integrity in a law enforcement agency and helping supervisors oversee their officers. EIS provide supervisors with richly detailed information about what their officers are doing out on the street and how they are interacting with citizens. As one commander described it, the early intervention system gives a global picture of behavior. Providing Oversight Early intervention system data can reveal patterns of unacceptable behavior and provide indicators of potential problems that need correcting. This is one level of oversight aimed at improving both officer performance and the quality of supervision in an agency. Supervisors might also use early intervention system data to learn more about officers recently transferred to their unit. In some instances the PERF team identified officers who engaged in overt supervisor shoppingthat is, requesting transfers or shifts to work with a particular supervisor. Some officers were found to be jumping supervisorstransferring to a new supervisor who knows little if anything about their historyin the hopes of avoiding an early intervention system trigger or intervention. By using early intervention system data supervisors become more informed about their staff and are better equipped to help address future problematic behaviors. Finally, some departments and supervisors use EIS for overall performance evaluations of officers, including identifying top- performing officers. The biggest asset to our EIS, one chief explained, is finding the most productive officers . . . . In addition to rewarding officers for their excellent service, the chief, in part, uses system data to organize his staff. He tries to link officers with assignments that will be most effective and efficient for the department and the community. It is recommended that supervisors use their early intervention system to help provide a level of oversight. This includes monitoring data daily and addressing any potential problems early on; reviewing data on newly transferred officers; and using data, in part, to place officers in the assignments where they are most likely to succeed. Dealing with Hostility and Morale Problems An early intervention system can represent a departmental shift to a new culture of accountability, which may bring hostility or morale problems. Some commentators have reported de-policing in response to EIS or consent decrees that mandate changes in accountability systems. Research has not supported these assertions. The Vera Institute of Justice conducted two extensive evaluations of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police, which implemented an early intervention system as part of a consent decree.10,11 The evaluations found no evidence that officers reduced their activity level because of the system or any of the other changes. Nonetheless, there may be talk among rank-and-file officers about doing less police work because of the early intervention system. Supervisors will need to monitor this situation carefully, making it clear that deliberately avoiding work is unprofessional and will not be tolerated. In agencies where an early intervention system tracks positive performance, it may be a smoother process of transition and acceptance since there will be a focus on something other than just potential performance problems. If officers feel that the department is equally concerned about providing positive reinforcement, hostility and morale issues relating to the early intervention system will likely be less of an issue. Supervisors may witness hostility or low morale in response to initial implementation of an early intervention system. It is recommended that supervisors restate the purpose of the early intervention system and reassure officers that the system is not punitive and is there to help them. 10 Davis et al., 2002, 2005. 11 In this case, a consent decree is an agreement between the U.S. Department of Justice and the law enforcement agency that stipulates various reforms that must be undertaken by the law enforcement agency. Typically, a monitor is appointed to oversee the compliance of the department with the decree. CONCLUSION & REFERENCES CONCLUSION Supervisors are the linchpin of EIS. Their roles and responsibilities within such systems are significant and should be treated as such. In most cases, supervisors are the first to become aware of potentially problematic behaviors by officers, and they are the ones most frequently involved in identifying appropriate interventions. The success or failure of an early intervention system, therefore, hinges on the supervisor. It is imperative that supervisors know their early intervention system well and are able to convey the purpose and the mechanics of the system to their officers. Supervisors able to share their knowledge can garner much-needed officer support for the system. Perhaps the most significant change for supervisors involves working more closely with data, including being able to analyze and interpret the information in the early intervention system database. Other important changes may include supervisors becoming more sensitive to subtle cues from their officers in order to identify potential problems even before an officer reaches a threshold within their system, and supervisors encountering more paperwork initially. Study findings revealed that supervisors working in agencies with a successful early intervention system adapted to these new roles and responsibilities and found the benefits of the system to far outweigh any costs. Supervisors are better able to perform their duties under an early intervention system if they have the proper tools and resources to effect change. Having a wide array of intervention options produces a supportive environment for officers, but it also increases the chances that supervisors will be able to address the individual needs of an officer. The intervention phase of these systems is complex, and supervisors will likely have to approach their relationships with their officers differently, perhaps by finding new ways to ask officers about personal problems that may be affecting their job performance. The intervention process should be tied to a problem-solving approach to resolving officers issues. Furthermore, supervisors can help reinforce an agencys commitment to its officers by showing support for officers who are experiencing difficulty in their job and invoking a nondisciplinary process. True support of officers requires being aware of officers behavior, engaging officers in conversations about potential problems, connecting them with appropriate resources or services, and following up to ensure the services were effective. It is also important to acknowledge and reward positive behaviors. It is important to note that early intervention does not always provide the necessary solutions for supervisors and officers. If EIS is engaged and officers behaviors continue to decline, or officers illustrate a pattern of dangerous/harmful behavior, more serious disciplinary action may occur. However, in most cases and for many police departments, EIS can be an important and multifaceted administrative tool that improves officer performance, enhances supervision, assists in personnel management, and ensures accountability and integrity. REFERENCES Davis, Robert C., Christopher W. Ortiz, Nicole J. Henderson, Joel Miller, and Michelle K. Massie. 2002. Turning Necessity into Virtue: Pittsburghs Experience with a Federal Consent Decree. New York: The Vera Institute of Justice. Davis, Robert C., Nicole J. Henderson, and Christopher W. Ortiz. 2005. Can Federal Intervention Bring Lasting Improvement in Local Policing? The Pittsburgh Consent Decree. New York: The Vera Institute of Justice. Walker, Samuel. 2003. Early Intervention Systems for Law Enforcement Agencies: A Planning and Management Guide. Washington, D.C.: Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Walker, Samuel, Stacy Osnick Milligan with Anna Berke. 2005. Supervision And Intervention Within Early Intervention Systems: A Guide For Law Enforcement Chief Executives. Washington, D.C.: Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. APPENDICES APPENDICES Appendix AParticipating Agencies Site Visits Sheriff Leroy Baca Los Angeles Sheriffs Department 4700 Ramona Boulevard. Monterey Park, CA 91754 Contact: Dr. Audrey Honig Chief Robert Davis San Jose Police Department 201 West Mission Street San Jose, CA 95110 Contact: Lt. Dave Cavallaro Chief Charlie Deane Prince William Police Department 1 County Complex Court Prince William, VA 22192 Contact: Lt. Steve Hudson Chief Edward Guthrie Pocatello Police Department 911 North 7th Street Pocatello, ID 83206 Contact: Lt. Brad Hunt Chief Stephen Hogue Tampa Police Department 411 North Franklin Street One Police Center Tampa, FL 33602 Contact: Captain Joan Dias Chief Sidney Klein Clearwater Police Department 645 Pierce Street Clearwater, FL 33756 Contact: Lt. Ron Sudler Chief Ken McGuire West Jordan Police Department 8000 South Redwood Road West Jordan, UT 84088 Contact: Lt. Kyle Shepherd Chief Robert McNeilly Pittsburgh Bureau of Police 1203 Western Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15233 Contact: Commander Linda Barone Sheriff William Young Las Vegas Police Department 400 Stewart Avenue Las Vegas, NV 89101 Contact: Deputy Chief Mike Ault Note: Participants ranks and agency affiliations are listed as of the time of the project. Expert Panel Meeting Participants Commander Linda Barone Pittsburgh Bureau of Police 1203 Western Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15233 Lieutenant Tim Canas Arlington Police Department 6000 West Pioneer Parkway Arlington, TX 76013 Michael Cortrite UCLA EDD Program 1029 Moore Los Angeles, CA 90095 Captain Joan Dias Tampa Police Department 411 North Franklin Street One Police Center Tampa, FL 33602 Mollie Haines Vice President D.C. Chamber of Commerce 1213 K Street, NW Washington, DC 20005 Assistant Sheriff Rod Jett Las Vegas Metro Police Department 400 Stewart Avenue Las Vegas, NV 89101 Gail Kettlewell Director, Higher Education Program George Mason University College of Arts and Sciences 4400 University Drive MS 1B3 Fairfax, VA 22030 Lynn Leavitt Director, Center for Service and Leadership George Mason University 442 Enterprise Hall Fairfax, VA 22030 John Markovic Program Manager International Association of Chiefs of Police 515 North Washington Street Alexandria, VA 22314 Chief Ken McGuire West Jordan Police Department 8000 South Redwood Road West Jordan, UT 84088 Commander Catherine McNeilly Pittsburgh Bureau of Police 1203 Western Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15233 Chief Robert McNeilly Pittsburgh Bureau of Police 1203 Western Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15233 Chief Bill McSweeney Los Angleles Sheriffs Department 4700 Ramona Boulevard Monterey Park, CA 91754 Detective Toye Nash Phoenix Police Department 620 West Washington Street Phoenix, AZ 85003 Lieutenant Larry Oliver Austin Police Department P.O. Box 689001 Austin, TX 78768-9001 Sergeant Mike Schaller New Jersey State Police P.O. Box 7068 West Trenton, NJ 08628 Ellen Scrivner Deputy Superintendent Bureau of Administrative Services Chicago Police Department 3510 South Michigan Avenue Room 3073 NW Chicago, IL 60653 Appendix BTelephone Survey Participants Arlington (Texas) Police Department Austin Police Department Baltimore City Police Department Boston Police Department Chicago Police Department Clearwater Police Department D.C. Metropolitan Police Department Denver Police Department Knoxville Police Department Las Vegas Metro Police Department Los Angeles Sheriffs Department Miami-Dade Police Department Minneapolis Police Department Missouri City (Texas) Police Department New Jersey State Police New Orleans Police Department Oakland Police Department Omaha Police Department Philadelphia Police Department Phoenix Police Department Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Pocatello Police Department Prince William County (Virginia) Police Department Salt Lake City Police Department San Jose Police Department Seattle Police Department St. Paul Police Department Tampa Police Department West Jordan (Utah) Police Department Appendix CCOPS Office/PERF Staff COPS Office Staff 1100 Vermont Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20530 Phone: 800-421-6770 Fax: 202-616-2914 Website: www.cops.usdoj.gov Carl Peed Director Pam Cammarata Deputy Director Amy Schapiro Senior Social Science Analyst PERF Staff 1120 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 930 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: 202-466-7820 Fax: 202-466-7826 Website: www.policeforum.org Chuck Wexler Executive Director Anna Berke Project Manager Jason Cheney Project Assistant Jim Cronin Project Associate Joshua Ederheimer Director Center on Force and Accountability Martha Plotkin Communications Director ABOUT THE AUTHORS/ CONTRIBUTOR ABOUT THE AUTHORS/CONTRIBUTOR Samuel Walker retired in May 2005 after 31 years as a professor of criminal justice at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. He continues his research and consulting on police accountability, including citizen oversight of the police, early intervention systems for police officers, and the mediation of citizen complaints against police officers. He is the author of the report Early Intervention Systems for Law Enforcement Agencies: A Planning and Management Guide (2003), published by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. Walker has written 13 books on policing, criminal justice policy, and civil liberties, most recently The New World of Police Accountability (2005). He is also the author of The Police in America: An Introduction (5th ed. 2005), Police Accountability: The Role of Citizen Oversight (2001), and The Color of Justice: Race, Ethnicity, and Crime in America, with C. Spohn and M. DeLone (3rd ed. 2003). He served as the coordinator of the Police Professionalism Institute (PPI) at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. The PPI is engaged in a number of projects relating to police relations with the Hispanic/Latino community, early intervention systems, national standards for police auditor systems, and a comparative analysis of police accountability in the United States, Latin America, and Europe. PPI reports are available at www.policeaccountability.org. Walker has also served as a consultant to the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and to local governments and community groups in a number of cities across the country on police accountability issues. Stacy Osnick Milligan is a criminal justice consultant whose most recent work focuses on performance measurement and accountability within law enforcement agencies. Milligan is also coauthor of the companion guide to this publication, Supervision and Intervention within Early Intervention Systems: A Guide for Law Enforcement Supervisors (forthcoming), and coauthor of an upcoming National Institute of Justice report, Measuring What Matters: The PERF Law Enforcement Performance Measurement System. Milligans other research experience includes work on national program evaluations, homeland security, police use of force, drug enforcement, police department management, and strategic planning in a law enforcement agency. She received a masters degree in criminology from the University of Delaware and bachelors degrees in both administration of justice and sociology from Pennsylvania State University. Anna Berke joined PERF in July 2003 as a research assistant and conference coordinator. Berke is currently the project manager for the early intervention systems project. She has written portions of the EIS guides, as well as coordinated site visits to police departments throughout the country. She traveled to each department to conduct the interviews that formed the basis for this document. As PERFs conference coordinator, she has successfully managed many meetings and other forums throughout the United States, including the 2004 and 2005 PERF Annual Meetings, the 2003 Problem- Oriented Policing Conference, and the 2004 and 2005 PERF Use-of-Force and Mass Demonstration Conferences. Berke holds a bachelors degree from Colby College in both Spanish and womens studies and is pursuing a masters degree in public administration at American University. ABOUT THE POLICE EXECUTIVE RESEARCH FORUM ABOUT THE POLICE EXECUTIVE RESEARCH FORUM he Police Executive Research Forum (PERF) is a national organization of progressive law enforcement chief executives from city, county, and state agencies who collectively serve more than half of the countrys population. Established in 1976 by ten prominent police chiefs, PERF has evolved into one of the leading police think tanks. With membership from many of the larger police departments in the country and around the globe, PERF has pioneered studies in such fields as community and problem-oriented policing, racially biased policing, multijurisdictional investigations, domestic violence, the police response to people with mental illnesses, homeland security, management concerns, use of force and crime-reduction approaches. PERFs success is built on the active involvement of its members: police chiefs, superintendents, sheriffs and other law enforcement leaders. The organization also has types of membership that allow the organization to benefit from the diverse views of criminal justice researchers, law enforcement of all ranks and others committed to advancing policing services to all communities. As a nonprofit organization, PERF is committed to the application of research in policing and to promoting innovation that will enhance the quality of life in our communities. PERFs objective is to improve the delivery of police services and the effectiveness of crime control through the exercise of strong national leadership, the public debate of criminal justice issues, the development of a body of research about policing, and the provision of vital management services to all police agencies. In addition to PERFs cutting-edge police and criminal justice research, the organization provides a wide variety of management and technical assistance programs to police agencies throughout the world. The organization also continues to work toward increased professionalism and excellence in the field through its training, leadership and publications programs. For example, PERF sponsors the Senior Management Institute for Police executives, and publishes some of the leading literature in the law enforcement field that addresses the difficult issues that challenge todays police leaders. PERF publications are used for training, promotion exams and to inform police professionals about innovative approaches to community problems. The hallmark of the program is translating the latest research and thinking about a topic into police practices that can be tailored to the unique needs of a jurisdiction. To learn more about PERF visit www.policeforum.org. ABOUT THE PERF CENTER ON FORCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY ABOUT THE PERF CENTER ON FORCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY Created in April 2005, the PERF Center on Force and Accountability is designed to be a significant resource for PERF members and others in law enforcement, and to serve as the principal clearinghouse for ideas, strategies and data that will address problems related to police use of force and accountability. Ultimately, the Center provides law enforcement executives with information and strategies that will help them make more informed decisions as they serve their communities. The PERF Center on Force and Accountability has four primary objectives: Identify emerging trends and seek out effective new strategies Conduct groundbreaking research Provide high quality technical assistance to law enforcement agencies Create a central resource for information regarding use-of-force and police accountability issues To that end, the Center is continually developing competencies in areas that include the following. Use of Force: community outreach and accountability; equipment and weapons (including TASERS); investigations; police canines; policy development; review boards; tactics; technology; training; trends and promising approaches identification; statistics, tracking and analysis; vehicle pursuits; and violence against law enforcement officers. Police Accountability: community involvement; consent decrees/ memoranda of accountability; discipline and conduct review; early intervention systems and processes; equal employment opportunities; internal investigations; law enforcement ethics; misconduct statistics, tracking and analysis; policy development; technology; training; and trends and promising approaches identification. ABOUT THE COPS OFFICE ABOUT THE COPS OFFICE The Office of Community Oriented Policing Services was created in 1994 and has the unique mission to directly serve the needs of state and local law enforcement. The COPS Office has been the driving force in advancing the concept of community policing and is responsible for one of the greatest infusions of resources into state, local, and tribal law enforcement in our nations history. Since 1994, COPS has invested over $11.9 billion to add community policing officers to the nations streets, enhance crime fighting technology, support crime prevention initiatives, and provide training and technical assistance to help advance community policing. COPS funding has furthered the advancement of community policing through community policing innovation conferences, the development of best practices, pilot community policing programs, and applied research and evaluation initiatives. COPS has also positioned itself to respond directly to emerging law enforcement needs. Examples include working in partnership with departments to enhance police integrity, promoting safe schools, combating the methamphetamine drug problem, and supporting homeland security efforts. Through its grant programs, COPS is assisting and encouraging local, state, and tribal law enforcement agencies in enhancing their homeland security efforts using proven community policing strategies. Traditional COPS programs such as the Universal Hiring Program (UHP) gives priority consideration to those applicants that demonstrate a use of funds related to terrorism preparedness or response through community policing. The COPS in Schools (CIS) program has a mandatory training component that includes topics on terrorism prevention, emergency response, and the critical role schools can play in community response. Finally, COPS has implemented grant programs intended to develop interoperable voice and data communications networks among emergency response agencies that will assist in addressing local homeland security demands. The COPS Office has made substantial investments in law enforcement training. COPS created a national network of Regional Community Policing Institutes (RCPIs) that are available to state and local law enforcement, elected officials, and community leaders for training opportunities on a wide range of community policing topics. Recently the RCPIs have focused their efforts on developing and delivering homeland security training. COPS also supports the advancement of community policing strategies through the Community Policing Consortium. In addition, COPS has made a major investment in applied research, which makes possible the growing body of substantive knowledge covering all aspects of community policing. These substantial investments have produced a significant community policing infrastructure across the country as evidenced by the fact that at the present time, approximately 86 percent of the nations population is served by law enforcement agencies practicing community policing. The COPS Office continues to respond proactively by providing critical resources, training, and technical assistance to help state, local, and tribal law enforcement implement innovative and effective community policing strategies.
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/* ekfind.f -- translated by f2c (version 19980913). You must link the resulting object file with the libraries: -lf2c -lm (in that order) */ #include "f2c.h" /* Table of constant values */ static integer c__27869 = 27869; static integer c__100 = 100; static integer c__500 = 500; /* $Procedure EKFIND ( EK, find data ) */ /* Subroutine */ int ekfind_(char *query, integer *nmrows, logical *error, char *errmsg, ftnlen query_len, ftnlen errmsg_len) { extern /* Subroutine */ int zzekscan_(char *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, doublereal *, char *, integer *, integer *, logical *, char *, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen), zzeksemc_(char *, integer *, char *, logical *, char *, integer *, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen), zzekqini_(integer *, integer *, integer *, char *, doublereal *, ftnlen), zzekpars_( char *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, integer *, doublereal *, char *, integer *, integer *, integer *, char *, doublereal *, logical *, char *, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen), zzeknres_(char *, integer *, char *, logical *, char *, integer *, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen), zzektres_(char *, integer *, char *, doublereal *, logical *, char *, integer *, ftnlen, ftnlen, ftnlen), chkin_(char *, ftnlen); char eqryc[2000]; doublereal eqryd[100]; integer eqryi[27875], chbegs[500], chends[500]; char chrbuf[2000]; extern logical return_(void); doublereal numvls[100]; integer errptr, lxbegs[500], lxends[500], ntoken, tokens[500], values[500] ; extern /* Subroutine */ int chkout_(char *, ftnlen), eksrch_(integer *, char *, doublereal *, integer *, logical *, char *, ftnlen, ftnlen); /* $ Abstract */ /* Find E-kernel data that satisfy a set of constraints. */ /* $ Copyright */ /* Copyright (1995), California Institute of Technology. */ /* U.S. Government sponsorship acknowledged. */ /* $ Required_Reading */ /* EK */ /* $ Keywords */ /* EK */ /* PARSE */ /* SEARCH */ /* $ Declarations */ /* Include Section: EK Encoded Query Internal Parameters */ /* ekquery.inc Version 3 16-NOV-1995 (NJB) */ /* Updated to reflect increased value of MAXCON in */ /* ekqlimit.inc. */ /* ekquery.inc Version 2 03-AUG-1995 (NJB) */ /* Updated to support representation of the SELECT clause. */ /* ekquery.inc Version 1 12-JAN-1995 (NJB) */ /* An encoded EK query is an abstract data type implemented */ /* as an integer cell, along with a double precision cell and */ /* a character string. The d.p. cell and string contain numeric */ /* and string values from the query string represented by the */ /* encoded query. */ /* The parameters in this file are intended for use only by the */ /* EK encoded query access routines. Callers of EK routines should */ /* not use these parameters. */ /* The following parameters are indices of specified elements */ /* in the integer portion of the encoded query. */ /* Encoded query architecture type: */ /* `Name resolution' consists of: */ /* - Verifying existence of tables: any table names listed */ /* in the FROM clause of a query must be loaded. */ /* - Validating table aliases used to qualify column names. */ /* - Verifying existence of columns and obtaining data types */ /* for columns. */ /* - Setting data type codes for literal values in the encoded */ /* query. */ /* - Checking consistency of operators and operand data types. */ /* - Making sure unqualified column names are unambiguous. */ /* - For constraints, mapping the table names used to qualify */ /* column names to the ordinal position in the FROM clause */ /* of the corresponding table. */ /* Initialization status---this flag indicates whether the encoded */ /* query has been initialized. Values are ITRUE or IFALSE. See the */ /* include file ekbool.inc for parameter values. */ /* Parse status---this flag indicates whether the parsing operation */ /* that produced an encoded query has been completed. Values are */ /* ITRUE or IFALSE. */ /* Name resolution status---this flag indicates whether names */ /* have been resolved in an encoded query. Values are ITRUE or */ /* IFALSE. */ /* Time resolution status---this flag indicates whether time values */ /* have been resolved in an encoded query. Time resolution */ /* consists of converting strings representing time values to ET. */ /* Values of the status are ITRUE or IFALSE. */ /* Semantic check status---this flag indicates whether semantic */ /* checking of constraints has been performed. */ /* Number of tables specified in FROM clause: */ /* Number of constraints in query: */ /* A special value is used to indicate the `maximal' constraint--- */ /* one that logically cannot be satisfied. If the constraints */ /* are equivalent to the maximal constraint, the location EQNCNS */ /* is assigned the value EQMXML */ /* Number of constraint conjunctions: */ /* Number of order-by columns: */ /* Number of SELECT columns: */ /* Size of double precision buffer: */ /* `Free' pointer into double precision buffer: */ /* Size of character string buffer: */ /* `Free' pointer into character string buffer: */ /* The following four base pointers will be valid after a query */ /* has been parsed: */ /* Base pointer for SELECT column descriptors: */ /* Base pointer for constraint descriptors: */ /* Base pointer for conjunction sizes: */ /* Base pointer for order-by column descriptors: */ /* After the quantities named above, the integer array contains */ /* series of descriptors for tables, constraints, and order-by */ /* columns, as well as a list of `conjunction sizes'---that is, */ /* the sizes of the groups of constraints that form conjunctions, */ /* after the input query has been re-arranged as a disjunction of */ /* conjunctions of constraints. */ /* The offsets of specific elements within descriptors are */ /* parameterized. The base addresses of the descriptors themselves */ /* must be calculated using the counts and sizes of the items */ /* preceding them. */ /* A diagram of the structure of the variable-size portion of the */ /* integer array is shown below: */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Fixed-size portion of encoded query | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Encoded FROM clause | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Encoded constraint clause | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Conjunction sizes | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Encoded ORDER BY clause | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* | Encoded SELECT clause | */ /* +-------------------------------------+ */ /* Value Descriptors */ /* ---------------- */ /* In order to discuss the various descriptors below, we'll make use */ /* of sub-structures called `value descriptors'. These descriptors */ /* come in two flavors: character and double precision. For */ /* strings, a descriptor is a set of begin and end pointers that */ /* indicate the location of the string in the character portion of an */ /* encoded query, along with the begin and end pointers for the */ /* corresponding lexeme in the original query. The pointers are set */ /* to zero when they are not in use, for example if they refer to an */ /* optional lexeme that did not appear in the input query. */ /* All value descriptors start with a data type indicator; values */ /* are from ektype.inc. Integer and time values are referred to */ /* by double precision descriptors. */ /* Parameters for string value descriptor elements: */ /* Numeric value descriptors are similar to those for string values, */ /* the difference being that they have only one pointer to the value */ /* they represent. This pointer is the index of the value in the */ /* encoded query's numeric buffer. */ /* All value descriptors have the same size. In order to allow */ /* table descriptors to have the same size as value descriptors, */ /* we include an extra element in the descriptor. */ /* Column Descriptors */ /* ----------------- */ /* Each column descriptor consists of a character descriptor for the */ /* name of the column, followed by an index, which gives the ordinal */ /* position of the column in the logical table to which the column */ /* belongs. The index element is filled in during name resolution. */ /* Table Descriptors */ /* ----------------- */ /* Each table descriptor consists of a character descriptor for the */ /* name of the table, followed by an index, which gives the ordinal */ /* position of the table in the FROM clause in the original query. */ /* The index element is filled in during name resolution. Aliases */ /* and table names have identical descriptor structures. */ /* Constraint descriptors */ /* ------------------ */ /* Each constraint is characterized by: */ /* - A code indicating whether the constraint compares values */ /* in two columns or the value in a column and a literal */ /* value. The values of this element are EQCOL and EQVAL. */ /* - A descriptor for the table used to qualify the */ /* column name on the left side of the constraint. */ /* - A character value descriptor for the column name on the left */ /* side of the query. */ /* - An operator code indicating the relational operator used */ /* in the constraint. */ /* If the constraint compares values from two columns, the */ /* next items are table and column name descriptors that apply to */ /* the column named on the right side of the relational operator. */ /* If the constraint has a literal value on the right side, the */ /* operator code is followed by... */ /* - a value descriptor. */ /* - Size of a constraint descriptor: */ /* Conjunction sizes */ /* ----------------- */ /* The size of each conjunction of constraints occupies a single */ /* integer. */ /* Order-by Column Descriptors */ /* --------------------------- */ /* Each order-by column descriptor contains descriptors for */ /* the table containing the column and for the name of the column */ /* itself; one additional element is used to indicate the direction */ /* of the ordering (ascending vs descending). */ /* - The last integer in the descriptor indicates whether the */ /* order direction is ascending or descending. */ /* - Size of an order-by column descriptor: */ /* Codes indicating sense of ordering (ascending vs descending): */ /* SELECT Column Descriptors */ /* --------------------------- */ /* Each SELECT column descriptor contains descriptors for */ /* the table containing the column and for the name of the column */ /* itself. */ /* - Size of a SELECT column descriptor: */ /* Miscellaneous parameters: */ /* EQIMIN is the minimum size of the integer portion of */ /* an encoded query. EQIMIN depends on the parameters */ /* MAXTAB */ /* MAXCON */ /* MAXORD */ /* MAXSEL */ /* all of which are declared in the include file ekqlimit.inc. */ /* The functional definition of EQIMIN is: */ /* INTEGER EQIMIN */ /* PARAMETER ( EQIMIN = EQVBAS */ /* . + MAXTAB * EQVDSZ * 2 */ /* . + MAXCON * EQCDSZ */ /* . + MAXCON */ /* . + MAXORD * EQODSZ */ /* . + MAXSEL * EQSDSZ ) */ /* End Include Section: EK Encoded Query Internal Parameters */ /* Include Section: EK Query Limit Parameters */ /* ekqlimit.inc Version 3 16-NOV-1995 (NJB) */ /* Parameter MAXCON increased to 1000. */ /* ekqlimit.inc Version 2 01-AUG-1995 (NJB) */ /* Updated to support SELECT clause. */ /* ekqlimit.inc Version 1 07-FEB-1995 (NJB) */ /* These limits apply to character string queries input to the */ /* EK scanner. This limits are part of the EK system's user */ /* interface: the values should be advertised in the EK required */ /* reading document. */ /* Maximum length of an input query: MAXQRY. This value is */ /* currently set to twenty-five 80-character lines. */ /* Maximum number of columns that may be listed in the */ /* `order-by clause' of a query: MAXSEL. MAXSEL = 50. */ /* Maximum number of tables that may be listed in the `FROM */ /* clause' of a query: MAXTAB. */ /* Maximum number of relational expressions that may be listed */ /* in the `constraint clause' of a query: MAXCON. */ /* This limit applies to a query when it is represented in */ /* `normalized form': that is, the constraints have been */ /* expressed as a disjunction of conjunctions of relational */ /* expressions. The number of relational expressions in a query */ /* that has been expanded in this fashion may be greater than */ /* the number of relations in the query as orginally written. */ /* For example, the expression */ /* ( ( A LT 1 ) OR ( B GT 2 ) ) */ /* AND */ /* ( ( C NE 3 ) OR ( D EQ 4 ) ) */ /* which contains 4 relational expressions, expands to the */ /* equivalent normalized constraint */ /* ( ( A LT 1 ) AND ( C NE 3 ) ) */ /* OR */ /* ( ( A LT 1 ) AND ( D EQ 4 ) ) */ /* OR */ /* ( ( B GT 2 ) AND ( C NE 3 ) ) */ /* OR */ /* ( ( B GT 2 ) AND ( D EQ 4 ) ) */ /* which contains eight relational expressions. */ /* MXJOIN is the maximum number of tables that can be joined. */ /* MXJCON is the maximum number of join constraints allowed. */ /* Maximum number of order-by columns that may be used in the */ /* `order-by clause' of a query: MAXORD. MAXORD = 10. */ /* Maximum number of tokens in a query: 500. Tokens are reserved */ /* words, column names, parentheses, and values. Literal strings */ /* and time values count as single tokens. */ /* Maximum number of numeric tokens in a query: */ /* Maximum total length of character tokens in a query: */ /* Maximum length of literal string values allowed in queries: */ /* MAXSTR. */ /* End Include Section: EK Query Limit Parameters */ /* Include Section: EK Data Types */ /* ektype.inc Version 1 27-DEC-1994 (NJB) */ /* Within the EK system, data types of EK column contents are */ /* represented by integer codes. The codes and their meanings */ /* are listed below. */ /* Integer codes are also used within the DAS system to indicate */ /* data types; the EK system makes no assumptions about compatibility */ /* between the codes used here and those used in the DAS system. */ /* Character type: */ /* Double precision type: */ /* Integer type: */ /* `Time' type: */ /* Within the EK system, time values are represented as ephemeris */ /* seconds past J2000 (TDB), and double precision numbers are used */ /* to store these values. However, since time values require special */ /* treatment both on input and output, and since the `TIME' column */ /* has a special role in the EK specification and code, time values */ /* are identified as a type distinct from double precision numbers. */ /* End Include Section: EK Data Types */ /* Include Section: EK Operator Codes */ /* ekopcd.inc Version 1 30-DEC-1994 (NJB) */ /* Within the EK system, operators used in EK queries are */ /* represented by integer codes. The codes and their meanings are */ /* listed below. */ /* Relational expressions in EK queries have the form */ /* <column name> <operator> <value> */ /* For columns containing numeric values, the operators */ /* EQ, GE, GT, LE, LT, NE */ /* may be used; these operators have the same meanings as their */ /* Fortran counterparts. For columns containing character values, */ /* the list of allowed operators includes those in the above list, */ /* and in addition includes the operators */ /* LIKE, UNLIKE */ /* which are used to compare strings to a template. In the character */ /* case, the meanings of the parameters */ /* GE, GT, LE, LT */ /* match those of the Fortran lexical functions */ /* LGE, LGT, LLE, LLT */ /* The additional unary operators */ /* ISNULL, NOTNUL */ /* are used to test whether a value of any type is null. */ /* End Include Section: EK Operator Codes */ /* Include Section: EK Column Name Size */ /* ekcnamsz.inc Version 1 17-JAN-1995 (NJB) */ /* Size of column name, in characters. */ /* End Include Section: EK Column Name Size */ /* $ Brief_I/O */ /* Variable I/O Description */ /* -------- --- -------------------------------------------------- */ /* QUERY I Query specifying data to be found. */ /* NMROWS O Number of matching rows. */ /* ERROR O Flag indicating whether query parsed correctly. */ /* ERRMSG O Parse error description. */ /* $ Detailed_Input */ /* QUERY is a character string that specifies a set of EK */ /* data to select from those present in currently */ /* loaded EK files. The selected data will be */ /* retrievable via the EK fetch routines EKGC, EKGD, */ /* and EKGI. */ /* The query consists of four clauses, the third and */ /* fourth of which are optional. The general form */ /* of a query is */ /* SELECT <column list> */ /* FROM <table list> */ /* [WHERE <constraint list>] */ /* [ORDER BY <ORDER BY column list>] */ /* where brackets indicate optional items. The */ /* elements of the query shown above are called, */ /* respectively, the `SELECT clause', the */ /* `FROM clause', the `WHERE clause', and the */ /* `ORDER BY clause'. The result of a query may be */ /* thought of as a new table, whose columns are those */ /* specified in the SELECT clause, whose rows are */ /* those satisfying the constraints of the WHERE */ /* clause, and whose rows are ordered according to */ /* the ORDER BY clause. */ /* The SELECT clause specifies a list of columns */ /* from which data are to be selected. In a simple */ /* (non-join) query, these columns must belong to */ /* the single table specified in the FROM clause. */ /* The form of a SELECT clause is */ /* SELECT <column name> [ ,<column name>...] */ /* In queries having multiple tables in the FROM */ /* clause, column names are ambiguous if they occur */ /* in more than one table in the FROM clause. Such */ /* column names must be qualified with table */ /* identifiers. These identifiers may be the names of */ /* the tables to which the columns belong, or table */ /* `aliases', names (usually short ones) associated */ /* with tables in the FROM clause. Table aliases have */ /* duration limited to the execution of the query to */ /* which they belong. */ /* The form of a qualified column name is */ /* <table name>.<column name> */ /* or */ /* <table alias>.<column name> */ /* The FROM clause specifies the tables from which */ /* data are to be selected. In simple queries, only */ /* one table is listed. In this case the form of */ /* the FROM clause is */ /* FROM <table name> */ /* In queries involving multiple tables, the form of */ /* the FROM clause becomes */ /* FROM <table name> [<table alias>] */ /* [ , <table name> [<table alias>] ... ] */ /* The aliases associated with the table names must */ /* be distinct and must not be the actual names of */ /* loaded EK tables. */ /* Queries involving multiple tables are called */ /* `joins'. */ /* The meaning of a FROM clause containing multiple */ /* tables is that the output is to be a subset of */ /* the rows of the Cartesian product of the listed */ /* tables. Normally, WHERE clause constraints are */ /* supplied to reduce the selected rows to a set of */ /* interest. */ /* The most common example of a join is a query with */ /* two tables listed in the FROM clause, and a WHERE */ /* clause constraint enforcing equality of members */ /* of a column in the first table with members of */ /* column in the second table. Such a query is */ /* called an `equi-join'. A join in which columns */ /* of different tables are related by an inequality */ /* is called a `non-equi-join'. Any type of join */ /* other than an equi-join may be very slow to */ /* evaluate, due to the large number of elements that */ /* may be contained in the Cartesian */ /* product of the listed tables. */ /* The WHERE clause lists constraints that must */ /* be met by each row satisfying the query. The */ /* constraints are specified as a logical combination */ /* of relational expressions. The form of the */ /* constraint list is */ /* WHERE <constraint expression> */ /* where each <constraint expression> consists of one */ /* or more simple relational expressions of the form */ /* <column name> <operator> <RHS symbol> */ /* where */ /* <RHS symbol> */ /* is a column name, a literal value, or the special */ /* symbol */ /* NULL */ /* and */ /* <operator> */ /* is any of */ /* EQ, GE, GT, LE, LIKE, LT, NE, NOT LIKE, <, <=, */ /* =, >, >=, !=, <> */ /* For comparison with null values, the special */ /* syntaxes */ /* <column name> IS NULL */ /* <column name> IS NOT NULL */ /* are allowed, in addition to the standard */ /* comparison syntaxes using the equality or */ /* inequality operators. */ /* The LIKE operator allows comparison of a string */ /* value against a template. The template syntax */ /* is that allowed by the SPICELIB routine MATCHI. */ /* Templates may include literal characters, the */ /* wild string marker '*', and the wild character */ /* marker '%'. Case is significant in templates. */ /* Templates are bracketed by quote characters, just */ /* as are literal strings. */ /* The query language also supports the BETWEEN and */ /* NOT BETWEEN constructs */ /* <column> BETWEEN <symbol 1> AND <symbol 2> */ /* <column> NOT BETWEEN <symbol 1> AND <symbol 2> */ /* The tokens */ /* <symbol 1> */ /* <symbol 2> */ /* may be literal values or column names. */ /* The BETWEEN operator considers values that match */ /* the bounds to satisfy the condition: the BETWEEN */ /* operator tests for inclusion in the closed interval */ /* defined by the bounds. */ /* In the WHERE clause, simple relational expressions */ /* may be combined using the logical operators AND, */ /* OR, and NOT, as in the Fortran programming */ /* language. Parentheses may be used to enforce a */ /* desired order of evaluation of logical expressions. */ /* The expression syntax is NOT symmetric: literal */ /* values must not appear on the left hand side of the */ /* operators that apply to them. */ /* The columns named in a constraint clause must */ /* belong to the tables listed in the FROM clause. */ /* If the query is a join, qualifying table names or */ /* aliases are required wherever their omission would */ /* result in ambiguity. */ /* Data types of the columns or constants used on the */ /* right-hand-sides of operators must match the data */ /* types of the corresponding columns on the */ /* left-hand-sides, except that comparison of integer */ /* and double precision quantities is permitted. */ /* Literal strings used in constraints are always */ /* bracketed by quotes. Either single quotes (') */ /* or double quotes (") may be used, but the same */ /* quote character must be used to start and end any */ /* literal string. Within character string values, */ /* quote characters must be doubled in order to be */ /* recognized. Case is significant in character */ /* except in comparisions using the LIKE and NOT LIKE */ /* operators, which ignore case: the expression */ /* ANIMAL LIKE "*A*" */ /* would be considered true when ANIMAL takes the */ /* value */ /* "cat" */ /* Time values are considered to be strings and */ /* require bracketing quotes. Currently, the */ /* only time values allowed are UTC times in ISO */ /* format, UTC times represented in forms accepted by */ /* the SPICELIB routine TPARSE, and SCLK strings in */ /* NAIF format. */ /* The ORDER BY clause indicates which columns to */ /* use to order the output generated by the query. */ /* The columns in the ORDER BY clause define a */ /* dictionary ordering, with the first listed column */ /* acting as a primary key, the second column acting */ /* as a secondary key, and so on. */ /* For each ORDER BY column, the keywords ASC or DESC */ /* may be supplied to indicate whether the items in */ /* that column are to be listed in ascending or */ /* descending order. Ascending order is the default. */ /* The direction in which data items increase is */ /* referred to as the `order sense'. */ /* The ORDER BY clause, if present, must appear */ /* last in the query. */ /* The form of the ORDER BY clause is */ /* ORDER BY <column name> [<order sense>] */ /* [ ,<column name> [<order sense>]...] */ /* Rows satisfying the query constraints will be */ /* returned so that the entries of the first column */ /* specified in the ORDER BY clause will be appear in */ /* the order specified by the order sense keyword, */ /* which is assumed to be ASC if absent. When entries */ /* in the first through Nth ORDER BY column are equal, */ /* the entries in the (N+1)st ORDER BY column */ /* determine the order of the rows, and so on. */ /* As in the WHERE clause, column names must be */ /* qualified by table names or table aliases where */ /* they would otherwise be ambiguous. */ /* The query language is word-oriented, and some */ /* indicate whether the words are reserved. Reserved */ /* words must be separated from other words by white */ /* space. It is not necessary to use white space */ /* to separate words and punctuation characters. */ /* The list of reserved words is */ /* AND */ /* BETWEEN */ /* BY */ /* COLUMN */ /* EQ */ /* FROM */ /* GE */ /* GT */ /* IS */ /* LE */ /* LT */ /* LIKE */ /* NE */ /* NOT */ /* NULL */ /* OR */ /* ORDER */ /* SELECT */ /* WHERE */ /* The left and right parenthesis characters are also */ /* reserved; they may not be used in queries outside */ /* of quoted strings. */ /* Case is not significant in queries, except within */ /* literal strings. */ /* $ Detailed_Output */ /* NMROWS is the number of rows that match the query */ /* criteria. NMROWS is defined if and only if */ /* ERROR is returned .FALSE. */ /* ERROR is a logical flag indicating whether the query */ /* failed to parse correctly. */ /* ERRMSG is a character string that describes EKFIND's */ /* diagnosis of a parse error, should one occur. */ /* Otherwise, ERRMSG will be returned blank. */ /* $ Parameters */ /* See the include files. */ /* $ Exceptions */ /* 1) Most of the exceptions that can occur on a call to */ /* EKFIND are caused by errors in the input query. EKFIND */ /* attempts to diagnose these via the output error flag and */ /* error message, instead of signalling errors. The following */ /* classes of errors are detected: */ /* Scanning errors---these result from badly formed query */ /* in which EKFIND could not identify all of the tokens. */ /* When these errors occur, EKFIND may be too confused to */ /* give a helpful diagnostic message. */ /* Parsing errors---these result from a badly formed */ /* query that EKFIND was able to separate into tokens */ /* but that EKFIND determined to be syntactically invalid: */ /* Name resolution errors---these result from referencing */ /* invalid or ambiguous column or table names in a query. */ /* Time resolution errors---these result from use of time */ /* strings that cannot be parsed. */ /* Semantic errors---these result from a syntactically */ /* valid query that violates a limit or a restriction on */ /* values used in a query. */ /* Some problems with queries are not trapped by EKFIND but */ /* instead cause errors to be signalled. These are listed below. */ /* 2) If no E-kernels are loaded at the time this routine is called, */ /* an error will be signalled by routines called by this routine. */ /* 3) If a leapseconds kernel is is not loaded before this routine */ /* is called, UTC time values may not be used in queries. If */ /* they are, an error will be signalled by routines called by */ /* this routine. */ /* 4) If an SCLK kernel for the appropriate spacecraft clock */ /* has not been loaded before this routine is called, SCLK */ /* values for that clock may not be used in queries. If */ /* they are, an error will be signalled by routines called by */ /* this routine. */ /* $ Files */ /* None. */ /* $ Particulars */ /* This routine operates almost entirely by side effects: it */ /* prepares the EK fetch routines to return event data that */ /* satisfy the input query. See the header of the routine */ /* EKQMGR or the EK Required Reading for examples of use of this */ /* routine in conjunction with the EK fetch routines. */ /* $ Examples */ /* 1) Examples of strings containing syntactically valid queries: */ /* SELECT COL1 FROM TAB1 */ /* select col1 from tab1 where col1 gt 5 */ /* SELECT COL2 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL2 > 5.7D0 ORDER BY COL2 */ /* SELECT COL2 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL1 != 5 */ /* SELECT COL2 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL1 GE COL2 */ /* SELECT COL1, COL2, COL3 FROM TAB1 ORDER BY COL1 */ /* SELECT COL3 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL5 EQ "ABC" */ /* SELECT COL3 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL5 = 'ABC' */ /* SELECT COL3 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL5 LIKE 'A*' */ /* SELECT COL3 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL5 LIKE 'A%%' */ /* SELECT COL4 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL4 = '1995 JAN 1 12:38:09.7' */ /* SELECT COL4 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL4 = "1995 JAN 1 12:38:09.7" */ /* SELECT COL4 FROM TAB1 WHERE */ /* COL4 NE 'GLL SCLK 02724646:67:7:2' */ /* SELECT COL1 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL1 != NULL */ /* SELECT COL1 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL1 IS NULL */ /* SELECT COL1 FROM TAB1 WHERE COL1 IS NOT NULL */ /* SELECT COL1, COL2, COL3 FROM TAB1 */ /* WHERE (COL1 BETWEEN 4 AND 6) AND (COL3 NOT LIKE "A%%") */ /* ORDER BY COL1, COL3 */ /* SELECT COL4 FROM TAB1 */ /* WHERE COL4 BETWEEN "1995 JAN 1 12:38" AND */ /* "October 23, 1995" */ /* SELECT COL1, COL2 FROM TAB1 WHERE */ /* NOT ( ( ( COL1 < COL2 ) AND ( COL1 > 5 ) ) OR */ /* ( ( COL1 >= COL2 ) AND ( COL2 <= 10 ) ) ) */ /* SELECT T1.COL1, T1.COL2, T2.COL2, T2.COL3 */ /* FROM TABLE1 T1, TABLE2 T2 */ /* WHERE T1.COL1 = T2.COL1 */ /* AND T1.COL2 > 5 */ /* ORDER BY T1.COL1, T2.COL2 */ /* 2) Examples of syntactically invalid queries: */ /* SELECT TIME WHERE TIME */ /* LT 1991 JAN 1 {FROM clause is absent} */ /* select time from table1 where */ /* time lt 1991 jan 1 {time string is not */ /* quoted} */ /* select time from table1 */ /* where time .lt. '1991 jan 1' {operator should be lt} */ /* select cmd from table1 */ /* where "cmd,6tmchg" != cmd {value is on left side */ /* of operator} */ /* select event_type from table1 */ /* where event_type eq "" {quoted string is empty */ /* ---use " " to indicate */ /* a blank string} */ /* select event_type from table1 */ /* where event_type = "COMMENT" */ /* order TIME {ORDER BY phrase is */ /* lacking BY keyword} */ /* select COL1 from table where */ /* where COL1 eq MOC_EVENT {literal string on */ /* right-hand-side of */ /* operator is not quoted} */ /* In the following examples, we'll assume that the program */ /* calling EKFIND has loaded an EK containing two segments */ /* having columns having the following names and attributes: */ /* TABLE1: */ /* ========== */ /* Column name Data type Size Indexed? */ /* ----------- --------- ---- -------- */ /* EVENT_TYPE CHARACTER*32 1 YES */ /* EVENT_PARAMETERS CHARACTER*(*) 1 NO */ /* COMMENT CHARACTER*80 VARIABLE NO */ /* TABLE2: */ /* ========== */ /* Column name Data type Size Indexed? */ /* ----------- --------- ---- -------- */ /* EVENT_TYPE CHARACTER*32 1 YES */ /* EVENT_PARAMETERS CHARACTER*80 1 NO */ /* COMMENT CHARACTER*80 VARIABLE NO */ /* COMMAND CHARACTER*80 1 YES */ /* Then the following queries are semantically invalid: */ /* SELECT EVENT_PARAMETERS */ /* FROM TABLE1 */ /* WHERE EVENT_DURATION = 7.0 {No column called */ /* EVENT_DURATION */ /* is present in a loaded */ /* EK} */ /* SELECT COMMENT FROM TABLE2 */ /* WHERE COMMENT EQ "N/A" {The COMMENT column does */ /* not have size 1 and */ /* therefore cannot be */ /* referenced in a query} */ /* $ Restrictions */ /* 1) A leapseconds kernel must be loaded before this routine may */ /* be called, if UTC time values are used in input queries. */ /* 2) An appropriate SCLK kernel must be loaded before this routine */ /* may be called, if SCLK values are used in input queries. */ /* 3) Data found in response to a query become unavailable */ /* when a fast load is initiated via EKIFLD. Any desired */ /* fetches of the data must be performed before a fast */ /* load or any other operation that modifies the EK scratch */ /* area is initiated. */ /* $ Literature_References */ /* None. */ /* $ Author_and_Institution */ /* N.J. Bachman (JPL) */ /* $ Version */ /* - SPICELIB Version 1.0.3, 19-DEC-2001 (NJB) */ /* Restrictions section was updated. */ /* - SPICELIB Version 1.0.2, 14-JAN-1997 (NJB) */ /* Syntax descriptions for comparisons using null values have been */ /* added. The $Examples section was augmented with sample queries */ /* demonstrating use of the IS NULL and IS NOT NULL comparison */ /* operators. */ /* - SPICELIB Version 1.0.1, 16-AUG-1996 (NJB) */ /* C$ Exceptions section of header was updated to indicate that */ /* calling this routine while no E-kernels are loaded will cause */ /* an error to be signalled. Previous version line was changed */ /* from "Beta" to "SPICELIB," and the previous version was */ /* corrected to 1.0.0. */ /* - SPICELIB Version 1.0.0, 24-OCT-1995 (NJB) */ /* -& */ /* $ Index_Entries */ /* find EK data */ /* issue EK query */ /* -& */ /* SPICELIB functions */ /* Local parameters */ /* Storage limits: */ /* Local variables */ /* Standard SPICE error handling. */ if (return_()) { return 0; } else { chkin_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); } /* Initialize the encoded query each time, for safety. */ zzekqini_(&c__27869, &c__100, eqryi, eqryc, eqryd, (ftnlen)2000); /* Find the tokens in the input query. */ zzekscan_(query, &c__500, &c__100, &ntoken, tokens, lxbegs, lxends, values, numvls, chrbuf, chbegs, chends, error, errmsg, query_len, (ftnlen)2000, errmsg_len); if (*error) { chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* Now parse the query. */ zzekpars_(query, &ntoken, lxbegs, lxends, tokens, values, numvls, chrbuf, chbegs, chends, eqryi, eqryc, eqryd, error, errmsg, query_len, ( ftnlen)2000, (ftnlen)2000, errmsg_len); if (*error) { chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* Resolve names. */ zzeknres_(query, eqryi, eqryc, error, errmsg, &errptr, query_len, (ftnlen) 2000, errmsg_len); if (*error) { chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* Resolve time values, if necessary. */ zzektres_(query, eqryi, eqryc, eqryd, error, errmsg, &errptr, query_len, ( ftnlen)2000, errmsg_len); if (*error) { chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* Perform semantic checks. */ zzeksemc_(query, eqryi, eqryc, error, errmsg, &errptr, query_len, (ftnlen) 2000, errmsg_len); if (*error) { chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* If we arrived here, the encoded query is ready for execution. */ /* Find the data satisfying the constraints. */ eksrch_(eqryi, eqryc, eqryd, nmrows, error, errmsg, (ftnlen)2000, errmsg_len); chkout_("EKFIND", (ftnlen)6); return 0; } /* ekfind_ */
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202629
SCRIPT FOR DEEP WEB VIDEO -- January 2004 Narrator's voice: You're probably pretty good at surfing the Web. But you may only have been skimming the surface. That's right. The Web has two layers: The surface Web, and a vastly more complex layer called the deep Web. Most folks are familiar with the surface Web - information that can be found by clicking into popular search engines, such as Google, and Yahoo. But there are vast reservoirs of unexplored territory underneath the surface of the Web, which form the deep Web. Here you can find the results of billions of dollars worth of government-sponsored scientific research, stored inside information centers, or databases. A database named the Information Bridge holds Department of Energy scientific and technical reports. Journal articles in medicine are stored in PubMed, a database maintained by the National Library of Medicine. Once you've located the right database, quality information can be easily found. But how can you find the right database for the detailed information you seek, when there is no global search engine for the deep Web? And, even if you know of key databases, you still must search the old fashioned way - one database at a time. If you had at your fingertips a way to search multiple databases in the deep Web with a single query, you could take a deep dive, and quickly pull to your desktop the wealth of content in the deep Web. Lynn's voice (Lynn is seen onscreen): We have now developed a way to search multiple databases at the same time. It is a Deep Web search engine that sends your single query to dozens of databases simultaneously. The Deep Web search penetrates into the databases to search millions of records and retrieve results. Lynn's voice (Lynn continues unseen): Within seconds of typing in your search term, you can be reading information from the Deep Web, including solid science information, breakthrough discoveries, and research results from a variety of sources. Narrator's voice Searching the surface Web is entirely different from searching the deep Web. Well before you type in your search request, popular search engines such as Google and Yahoo are already crawling the surface Web, creating an index. Let's say the index sits on a computer in New Mexico. The crawler reaches out from Los Alamos to a remote computer, such as this one in Illinois, and captures words from its Web pages. The crawler adds those words to the index in New Mexico, then builds its index by repeating the process at remote computers around the world. Later a patron, say in Washington D.C., needs scientific information. This patron turns to a familiar search engine, such as Google. The patron's query is sent to the computer in New Mexico and information from the index is retrieved. But remember, the index is built from only the surface Web. Maybe our patron wants to go deeper than the surface, say, to DOE's Information Bridge, where 70,000 full-text technical reports are stored. A crawler typically will not allow that degree of exploration. What if our patron in D.C. could run a search using a Deep Web search engine, such as the one OSTI supplies to science.gov. A Deep Web search does not rely upon a stored index built in advance, but operates in real time, replicating the query and broadcasting it to multiple databases. So this time around the search request from our patron in Washington is sent to science.gov, which resides on a computer in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The Deep Web search engine immediately reaches out to relevant databases at various sites across the country, drilling down into these information centers all at once. Within a second or two, results are returned to the computer in Oak Ridge. They are organized for viewing, and presented to the patron in D.C. In partnership with the company Deep Web Technologies, OSTI applies the distributed Deep Web Search features to access, with just one query, vast quantities of research information.. Bruce: In my own work I use information from the OSTI site all the time, and I think it would be an invaluable tool for other researchers on the site as well. Narrator's voice: As a serious researcher or as a science-attentive citizen, you will find several benefits when using any of OSTI's Deep Web search engines. Huge databases can be searched - and you don't have to know ahead of time which one contains the information you need. With just a single query, multiple databases are searched. Users can perform deep Web searches as easily as surface Web searches - and with greater results. The most relevant sites are pre-selected, increasing search success rates. Full-text documents are searched, rather than just the title, or first paragraph. Information retrieved is current, up to the minute. It's free, it's fast, it's easy.
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450403
*Remarks to the Safe and Drug Free Schools and Communities Advisory Committee* *Mike Herrmann, Executive Director* *Office of School Health, Safety and Learning Support* *Tennessee Department of Education* *Monday, August 21, 2006* Mr. Chairman and members of the advisory committee; thank you for allowing me the opportunity to speak with you regarding the State Grants portion of the Safe and Drug-free Schools and Communities Program. Our time is limited so let me get right to the heart of what I would like to share with you. I've tried to align my comments with the questions that the Committee has been asked to address relative to the State Grants Program. [Strengths]{.underline} In terms of the strengths of the program: First, the State Grants program is the only source of funding for alcohol and drug education and violence prevention that reaches into virtually every school district in our state. Without the State Grants program in Tennessee, the overwhelming majority of our schools simply would not address these two extremely important issues in any systematic or ongoing way. Second, and equally important, the State Grants program provides an infrastructure, at both the state and local level, for school-based policy and practice in these vitally important areas. When Tennessee began a major methamphetamine initiative last year, this infrastructure enabled us to reach the education community and those that could make things happen quickly and efficiently. More recently the Governor's Office of Homeland Security wanted to enhance the security and preparedness of our schools. The training and strategies and the people were built upon the work and organization established by the State Grants program. Last November this infrastructure, including the relationships that have been built between our state department and the U.S. Department of Education, were particularly important when one of our students shot three administrators, killing one. As a result of the relationships and resources already in place, we were able to move quickly to support the district in restoring a shattered learning environment. The State Grants program is the only universal funding stream that addresses some of our most significant barriers to learning. The ability of students to learn and teachers to teach is directly related to the safety and order of our schools and the health and well-being of our students. When administered with vigor and strong leadership, this program is as much a school improvement strategy as it is a drug and violence prevention program. [Challenges]{.underline} The State Grants program certainly has its share of challenges. Most notorious of which is undoubtedly the difficulty we have in demonstrating effectiveness. Because each local program is different, it's almost impossible to develop a universal set of outcome indicators. Most of our local managers are educators -- not evaluators. The small amount of funding most districts receive is frequently cited as being too little to implement research-proven programs. I would submit that there are many very effective strategies and/or activities that actually cost very little to implement. The real challenge with small amounts of funding is that the program manager at the local level probably doesn't have the time or training to carry out some of the more complex tasks deemed necessary to document effectiveness. Another challenge is one of perception. Is this a school safety or an alcohol and drug program? And too often in education or government circles, we perceive importance and funding to be one and the same. As a result, state and local program managers must be particularly strong if they're going to be heard. [Effectiveness]{.underline} So, is the States Grants Program effective in promoting safe and drug-free schools? In our state I certainly think so. Our most recent Youth Risk Behavior Survey data indicates consistent and significant declines in almost every category of drug usage. The number of guns found in our schools has declined every year for the past 7 years. By using our discretionary funds to cover out-of-pocket expenses associated with the implementation of important programs, over 1,200 of our schools have implemented Life Skills, Second Step or Olweus programs. 3 of our 4 urban school districts have long-running student assistance programs that have been able to use State Grants funds to leverage strong fiscal support from their communities. A lot of work has gone into developing the specific indicators that will be a part of the Uniform Management Information System. The adoption of those measures will be invaluable in allowing us to compare apples to apples across districts and states, and to draw attention to the extent of our challenge. However, I'm afraid that they will be of limited value in demonstrating effectiveness. It would be nice to be able to document reductions in 30-day drug use or positive changes in school climate at the building level; however, with funding that hovers in the \$5/student range that is simply not a realistic expectation and probably not a very good use of limited staffing at the local level. A more practical and productive option would be to identify specific strategies that we know from research and experience are tied to the outcomes we desire. To a certain extent many of those elements are already built into the legislation. We can support and document the adoption of research-proven practices, particularly when federal and state resources are directed toward developing those skill sets in local program managers. I think one of the most important items this committee can look at is how to transfer what is learned from research and more fully-funded national programs to the manager at the system and building level. So much of what is needed is not dependent upon funding, but rather upon changes in policy and practice. Action is more important than programs. [Program structure]{.underline} In terms of the structure of the State Grants Program, I think it's important to make funding [available]{.underline} to every school district as it is now, but across the board we need to be more prescriptive and firm about how the program is administered. This might mean that some districts or states would choose not to participate. At the same time, we must provide a strong network of training and support to all schools, including those who choose not to pursue funding. This could entail both federal and state-level resources. This will require additional flexibility for states in awarding funds including the ability to set aside a larger proportion of funding for statewide initiatives. [Emergency management issues]{.underline} Our schools have been significantly impacted by events like the terrorist attacks of September 11 and Hurricane Katrina. Much of the basic planning and response procedures that were followed in these events had previously been developed as a result of the series of school shootings that began ten years ago. One important change is that we now realize the important role that schools can and should play in the overall community response process. Public information, emergency sheltering, feeding and transportation are tasks that schools are uniquely prepared to provide. In order for the education community to be a full player in these processes it is important that we build an infrastructure that includes federal, state and local participation. The State Grants Program can and should be an important building block for that infrastructure. In Tennessee, I serve as one of two Department of Education Emergency Services Coordinators who can be activated by the Governor to serve at the State's Emergency Operations Center in the event of a major disaster. Over the past several years, SDFS State Grants funds have been combined with Homeland Security funding to provide emergency management training to hundreds of schools and first responder teams. [Closing]{.underline} To a large extent, I think many of the questions that will be raised today come down to a question of will. Do we have the will -- particularly at the federal and state level -- to make this program work? I know that everyone sitting on this panel can provide you with examples of districts that are doing outstanding work with very limited funding. We can hold everyone to those higher standards if we simultaneously provide leadership and support. The last several years have been difficult for the State Grants program. No Child Left Behind, major budget cuts and an ongoing threat of elimination have been difficult to weather. But despite it all we still have an experienced and committed cadre of folks out there ready to do what needs to be done. They deserve a long-term commitment. I encourage you to recognize the important role that the State Grants program must play if we are serious in our commitment to safe and drug-free schools and communities.
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# Presentation: 378914 ## A2BE Carbon Capture LLC - Chief Technology Officer **A2BE Carbon Capture** LLC - _[www.algaeatwork.com](http://www.algaeatwork.com/)__ _ **Algae’s Potential for Driving a ** **Carbon Capture and Recycle Industry** - NREL Seminar Series - October 11, 2007 ## Industrial CO2 Rebalancing - Humans - Transportation - Bacteria & yeast - Coal & Gas Fired Power plants - Fertilizer and Chemical manufacture - CO2 Consuming Examples (energy storage) - Domestic Crops - Forests and grasslands - Ocean plankton - **C**arbon **C**apture **&** **R**ecycle plants **Industrial CO2 Rebalancing** **Industrial intensity** **Industrial intensity** ## Industrial Intensity CO2 Recycle - Coal to Liquids (CTL) - IGCC Power Plants - Ethanol Plants - Conventional Coal - Gas Fired Plants - Refineries & Reformers - Concentrated CO2 Emissions - Biofuels - Methane - Feed Protein - Fertilizer - Pure Oxygen - Bio-Plastics ## Photosynthetic Industrialization Harnessing the Power of Nature **Photosynthetic Industrialization *****Harnessing the Power of Nature*** ## Enabling Technology **Enabling Technology** - A2BE Machine - 1 Gallon Incubator - 100 Gallon Incubator - 5000 Gallon Experiment - 130,000 Gallon ## A2BE Machine Characteristics **A2BE Machine Characteristics** - (Red) Bio-harvester I & Gas, Liquid, and Product piping - (Green) Twin 400’ x 20’ x 10” clear plastic closed bioreactor algae growing tubes - (White) 2’ diameter x 20’ long rollers re-suspend algae, push it through tubes and clean inner surfaces - (Gray) Bio-harvester II, CO2/Flue gas input, and Pure Oxygen output - Assembled modules, formed in-place concrete, barrier over graded earth - 1⁄2 acre footprint with 75% = 1500 m2 photosynthetic capture area - Passive temperature stabilization via conduction + long-wave radiation switch - Photo-modulation via internal helical currents + refractive surface structure - All biological surfaces are recyclable, inexpensive, and never need sterilization **Core Claims: Productivity = 55 gms/m2/day yearly average. Infrastructure cost = $27/m2 photosynthetic** ## Industrial Photosynthesis - Operable with indigenous, non-GMO algae species - Bio-Secure design resists invasive organisms - Adapts to global weather and weather shifts - Need not compete with farm land or food - Profit without air and water pollution - High tech agrarian jobs - Near zero water use. - Carbon neutral?...Yes, even if you burn the fuel... ## Carbon to Product Mass Balance **Carbon to Product Mass Balance** ## Economic Value Engine **Value Summary** **(based on 1 Metric Ton CO2)** **Revenue: ** **Oil **** **** $30** **Protein**** **** $80** **Methane **** **** $27** **Fertilizer**** **** $28** **CO2 Credit $25** **Cost:** **Nutrients **** **** $20** **CBW**** **** $5** **Net Income: $163** ## Example Legislative Driver **Lieberman - Warner** **Legislative Framework** - 1. 2012 cap will be set at the aggregate CO2 emissions level of 2005 - 2. 2020 cap 10% below 2005 - 3. 2030 cap 30% below 2005 - 4. 2040 cap 50% below 2005 - 5. 2050 cap 70% below 2005 ** ****Algae Farms with 18 million A2BE Machines, 9 million acres** ** ****$720 billion infrastructure build-out revenue** ** ****$163 billion/year co-product revenue** ** ****625,000 direct jobs ** **1 Billion Ton Example** ## Ray Nixon Power Plant Example ** ****200 MW, 1.8 million tons CO****2****/year** ** ****16,000 bioreactors provide 50% CO2 capture** ** ****Algae Farm size: 12 Miles****2****, 8,000 acres** ** ****Construction revenue: **_**$640 million**_ ** ****Algae Products gross: **_**$150 million/year**_ ** ****Local Employment: **_**600 High Tech Jobs**_ **Bio-Prospecting Watershed Map** **Plant Drainage Assay** **Power Plant Satellite Photo** **3 x 4 miles Farm Area** ***Copyright Solar Democracy 2007*** **State of Colorado** **- Hypothetical Assay -** ## Worst Coal Fired Electric Plants - 13.3 - 14.1 - 19.7 - 16.3 - 18.8 - 14.9 - CO2 Emissions in Million Tons - 18.9 - 16.8 - July Rainfall average ## Carbon Negative via Offsets **Potential Carbon Negative Power Generation through CO2 Offsets**** ** ## Coal/Methane to Liquids Example **Coal/Methane to Liquids Example** - Fischer Tropsch: JP-8, Diesel, Gas, Fertilizer, & Plastics - Near term national security need for fossil oil replacement - Only problem: High CO2 emissions - CO2 100% pure and ideal for algae CC&R process - Bio-converting CO2 makes overall process carbon-neutral **Fischer Tropsch** **Coal & Gas to Liquids? ** **With CC&R FT can be *****Carbon Neutral or Negative*** ## Commercialization Components - Objective **Consortium ** **Team Approach** **Commercialization Components** ## The Wedge Challenge - **Pacala & Socolow** introduced “stabilization wedges” in 2004 as a way to confront the problem of taking technologies to scale - 15 technology options identified, each capable of mitigating one gigaton of carbon by 2050. (equiv. to 3.66 gigaton of CO2) - Three of the 15 options pertain to CO2 Capture and Storage (CCS), a relatively novel technology that public push-back could conceivably make CCS as hard to implement as radioactive waste disposal - Achieving approximately 7 wedges will avoid the most dangerous climate change and requires an unprecedented peacetime mobilization of resources **The Wedge Challenge** ## A Carbon Capture & Recycle Wedge **1 GT Carbon** **A Carbon Capture & Recycle Wedge** **Making a $600Bil/yr Carbon Capture & Recycle Wedge** - 800,000 acres/year - $66 Billion building/year - 57,000 new jobs/year - $15 Billion revenue growth **Yearly** **40 years** **Total for 1 Wedge** - 33 Million CC&R acres - $2.6 Trillion build-out - 2.3 Million direct jobs - $600 Billion revenue/year - 1 GT Carbon = Carbon in 3.66 Billion tons of CO2 ## Commercialization Timeline - **Finalize** Collaborative and obtain initial financing ** ****1st Qtr 2008** Lab and Personnel Infrastructure - **2008** 1/3 Scale experimental bioreactor - **2009** Full Scale experimental Bioreactor & pilot - **2010 **Full scale Bioreactor optimization - **2011** Commercial design refinement - **2012** Commercial scale A2BE plant construction ## Summary - A Carbon Capture & Recycle strategy shifts the CO2 emissions debate from a problem of cost to an Opportunity to Prosper. - A2BE’s proposed Photosynthetic Recycle Industry is globally scaleable, technically feasible, environmentally sound, and financially lucrative. **C****arbon ****C****apture ****&**** ****R****ecycle** as a global reality. - will induce - (legislative cap & trade or carbon tax) - A carbon price signal
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081448
# Presentation: 081448 ## US Atlas, Grid Computing, and the DCs - Jennifer Schopf - Argonne National Lab - Northwestern University - Atlas SW Week - CERN - Dec 4, 2001 ## US Grid Projects - GriPhyN: NSF funded, 4 physics exps., strong CS research component - PPDG: DOE funded, 5-7 physics exps., deployment oriented - iVDGL: NSF funded, GriPhyN part 2, testbed focused - Essential to have a coordinated plan between these efforts and the ATLAS data challenges - J. Schopf, ANL ## Overlapping Objectives - Testbed deployment, packaging, basic sequential services - Data management - replicas, reliable file transfers, catalogs - Resource management - job submission, scheduling, fault tolerance - Globus is underlying framework - J. Schopf, ANL ## Globus ToolkitTM - Core protocols and services - Grid Security Infrastructure - Grid Resource Access & Management - MDS information service & monitoring - GridFTP data access & transfer - Data Grid technologies - Replica catalog, replica mgmt. service - Reliable file transfer - Defacto-standard for Grid projects: - GriPhyN, PPDG, NEES, EU DataGrid, ESG, iVDGL, Fusion Collaboratory, DISCOM, NASA IPG, NSF TeraGrid, DOE Science Grid, UK Grid Center, U.S. GRIDS Center, Access Grid, GridPort, MPICH-G2, Condor-G, GrADS, and others - J. Schopf, ANL ## Globus Status - GlobusToolkit 2.0 release - Beta Release 11/14/01 - New packaging: enables modular binary and source distributions - GRAM 1.5 (job submission): enhanced robustness - MDS-2.1 (information service): security, better perf - GridFTP- secure large file transfer - Replica Mgt- Data mgmt, catalogs for replicas - Continuing work - Community Authorization Services - Reliable file transfer - Java, other “Commodity Grid” toolkits - J. Schopf, ANL ## Outline - Project overview - PPDG, GriPhyN, iVDGL - Tool overview - Magda - Grappa - PacMan - Monitoring - Focus on DC work - J. Schopf, ANL ## ATLAS PPDG - Existing Particle Physics Data Grid program newly funded (July 01) for 3 years at ~$3M/yr - ATLAS support: 1.5 FTE BNL-Software, .5FTE BNL-Tier 1, 1FTE ANL (0.8 with ANL cost structure) - Support at this level for three years - T. Wenaus is the ATLAS lead, J. Schopf is the CS liaison for ATLAS - Proposal emphasizes delivering useful capability to experiments (ATLAS, CMS, BaBar, D0, STAR, JLab) through close collaboration between experiments and CS - Develop and deploy grid tools in vertically integrated services within the experiments - J. Schopf, ANL ## ATLAS GriPhyN/iVDGL - GriPhyN funded Fall 2000, $11.9M/5 years - iVDGL funded Fall 2001, $13.65M/5 year - Both involve ATLAS, CMS, Ligo and SDSS - ATLAS support: 2.5 FTE IU, 1.5 FTE BU, $331K/5yr IU HW - ATLAS lead R. Gardener, CS liaison J. Schopf - GriPhyN proposal emphasizes virtual data requirements, collaboration between experiments - iVDGL proposal emphasizes testbed and infrastructure issues across experiment - J. Schopf, ANL ## Tools - Magda: MAnager for Grid-based Data - GRAPPA: Grid Access Portal for Physics Applications - PacMan: PACkage MANager - Monitoring - GridView, etc. - J. Schopf, ANL ## USAtlas Tool Development - GRAPPA/ - Gardner, - Bramley - Monitoring/ - De, Schopf, - Taylor, Yu, etc - Condor (G) - GRAM - GSI - MDS/ - GIIS/GRIS - GridFTP - Replica Cat - Replica Mgr - PacMan/ - Youssef - Packaging - Magda/ - Wenaus - J. Schopf, ANL ## MAnager for Grid-based DAta Focused on the principal PPDG year 1 deliverable of a production distributed data manager Designed for rapid development of components to support users quickly, with components later replaced by Grid Toolkit elements Deploy as an evolving production tool and as a testing ground for Grid Toolkits Under development at BNL Info: http://www.usatlas.bnl.gov/magda/info The system: http://www.usatlas.bnl.gov/magda/dyShowMain.pl - Focused on the principal PPDG year 1 deliverable of a production distributed data manager - Designed for rapid development of components to support users quickly, with components later replaced by Grid Toolkit elements - Deploy as an evolving production tool and as a testing ground for Grid Toolkits - Under development at BNL **Info: http://www.usatlas.bnl.gov/magda/info** **The system: http://www.usatlas.bnl.gov/magda/dyShowMain.pl** - Magda - J. Schopf, ANL ## Architecture Diagram - Location - Location - Location - Site - Host 2 - Location - Location - Cache - Disk Site - Location - Location - Location - Mass StoreSite - Source to cache - stagein - Source to dest - transfer - MySQL - Synch via DB - Host 1 - Collection of logical - files to replicate - Spider - Spider - scp, gsiftp - Register replicas - Catalog updates - J. Schopf, ANL ## Distributed Catalog and Metadata - Based on MySQL database - Catalog of ATLAS data at CERN, BNL (also ANL, LBNL) - Supported data stores: CERN Castor, CERN stage, BNL HPSS (rftp service), disk, code repositories, ... - Current content: physics TDR data, test beam data, ntuples, ... - About 150k files currently cataloged representing >2TB data - Has run without problems with ~1.5M files cataloged - Globus replica catalog to be integrated and evaluated - Integrate with Grenoble catalog for appl. metadata - Beginning: Integration as metadata layer into ‘hybrid’ (ROOT+RDBMS) implementation of ATLAS DB arch. - To come: Data signature (‘object histories’), object cataloging - J. Schopf, ANL ## File Replication - Supports multiple replication tools as needed and available - Automated CERN-BNL replication - CERN stage  cache  **scp**  cache  BNL HPSS *stagein*, *transfer*, *archive* scripts coordinated via db - Replication in USATLAS testbed using Globus gsiftp - Currently supported testbed sites are ANL, LBNL, BU - BNL HPSS  cache  **gsiftp ** testbed disk **gsiftp **not usable to CERN; no grid link until CA issues resolved - GDMP (flat file version) will be integrated soon - GDMP being developed by CMS, PPDG and EDG - J. Schopf, ANL ## Data Access and Production Support - Command line tools usable in production jobs to access data - getfile, releasefile, putfile - Adaptation to support ATLAS Data Challenge production environment in progress - Drawing on STAR production experience - Near term focus -- application in DC0, DC1 - Accepted as the file cat. and replication tool for DC0 - Objective is to integrate it with GDMP for ATLAS-wide use in DC1 also - Callable APIs for cat. usage and update to come - Collaboration with David Malon on Athena integration - J. Schopf, ANL ## Slide 16 - J. Schopf, ANL ## Slide 17 - J. Schopf, ANL ## Magda in DC0 Update - ‘putfile’ for use in production scripts ready - Archives data in Castor or HPSS and registers archived copies in catalog - Ready for try-out; will work with Pavel to integrate - Command line access ‘catfind’ improved - ‘LFN://atlas/filename’ syntax supported (Still have to change atlas to atlas.org) - ‘Add site’ procedure tested by Fred Luehring (thanks), and doc improved - Details will be posted shortly - J. Schopf, ANL ## Magda putfile, catfind **$ putfile** **Usage: putfile <filename> <location> [path] [--host=<hostname>]** ** ****[--logical=<lfn>] [--keys=<keys>]** **Parameters:** ** ****<filename> Name of physical file to archive. Used as logical** ** ****filename unless --logical option is used.** ** ****<location> Magda location where the file should be archived,** ** ****in format site:location** ** ****<path> Full pathname of directory where file should be** ** ****archived, if the pathname is different from (ie a** ** ****deeper directory level than) the location name.** ** ****If <path> is not present, file will be put in** ** ****the directory specified by the location.** ** ****--host=<hostname> Local hostname to use (overrides DBYA_HOST)** ** ****--logical=<lfn> Logical filename if different from physical name** ** ****--keys=<keys> User-defined key strings in form "key1,key2,key3"** **$ catfind rd13_run214699.dat** **LFN://atlas/rd13_run214699.dat site=cerncastor path=/castor/cern.ch/atlas/testbeam/emebh6/2001 size=3564000** **LFN://atlas/rd13_run214699.dat site=usatlasrftp path=/home/wenaus/lardata size=3564000** **$ catfind LFN://atlas/Y00034.6** **LFN://atlas/Y00034.6 site=usatlasrftp path=/home/wenaus/tdrdata size=170942400 ** ** ****keys=tape,CalorimJetProd_Eta=0.3_E0=1000_GeV,dijet_1000_030_2** - J. Schopf, ANL ## GRAPPA: Grid Access Portal for Physics Applications - Provide a point of access to ATLAS grid resources - IU (Physics, CS), Northwestern (ECE), ANL (CS), BU (Physics), - Provide a simple interface for physicists to submit and monitor jobs on the Grid - Web-based as well as script-based - Ability to “replay” - Compatible with both ATLSim and Athena architecture - Adaptable and/or “extensible” to new developments in Grid software, Athena, etc - J. Schopf, ANL ## GRAPPA Components - User Interface - Job submission - Monitoring - Bookkeeping - Resource selection - J. Schopf, ANL ## Use of IU Active Notebook project - Tool to help design and manage grid experiments - Five pieces: - The Java Tomcat web server - A "database" of notebooks - web pages, appl. configuration, and launch scripts. - A Script Execution Engine (GridJPython) - interfaces to GSISSH, GSIFTP, COGKit, etc - A performance monitoring utility - A SOAP-based Grid Event publish and subscription service - J. Schopf, ANL ## Slide 23 - J. Schopf, ANL ## Current GRAPPA - Uses Globus GRAM, GSI, etc - Executes ATLSim jobs - Provides bookkeeping - Prototype running at IU - Available for general beta-testing early September. - J. Schopf, ANL ## In this example, a parameter file is generated and saved on the host where execution will occur. - J. Schopf, ANL ## Then the job is executed with user supplied command line parameters. For remote execution GRAM is used - J. Schopf, ANL ## Parameters are automatically stored under the job name for future use - J. Schopf, ANL ## Current Status - Simple prototype that allows users to submit an Athena job from a web interface to the Condor pool on the Atlas IU cluster (via Globus) - Next steps - Adding more Athena functionality to the interface (e.g., user's defined libraries) - Experiment with other job launch mechanisms - Condor-G and DAGMAN description language - Web Services Flow Language as a more general workflow description - Explore interfaces for multiple metadata and replica catalog systems. - http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/~griphyn/grappa/ - J. Schopf, ANL ## Next Steps - Run with ATLFast/Athena jobs - Incorporate existing tools for resource discovery - _Store user annotations with job metadata_ - Display redirected stdout and stderr - Stage input files with GSIftp - Integrate Condor - Interface with Athena Python scripting - Interface with PPDG Job description language - J. Schopf, ANL ## Web Links - Main GRAPPA page - _[http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/~griphyn/grappa/](http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/~griphyn/grappa/)_ - Active Notebook page - _[http://www.extreme.indiana.edu/an/index.html](http://www.extreme.indiana.edu/an/index.html)_ - List of goals and objectives - _[http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/griphyn/grappa/GRAPPA_Project_PhaseI_Updated.html](http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/griphyn/grappa/GRAPPA_Project_PhaseI_Updated.html)__ _ - Draft GRAPPA architecture - _[www.cs.indiana.edu/hyplan/bramley/arch.html](http://www.cs.indiana.edu/hyplan/bramley/arch.html)__ _ - Rob’s GRAPPA talk from Atlas telecon 7/01 - _[lexus.physics.indiana.edu/~griphyn/grappa/grappa-status-7-01.ppt](http://lexus.physics.indiana.edu/~griphyn/grappa/grappa-status-7-01.ppt)__ _ - J. Schopf, ANL ## pacman - Package manager for the grid in development by Saul Youssef (Boston U, GriPhyN/iVDGL) - Single tool to easily manage installation and environment setup for the *long* list of ATLAS, grid and other software components needed to ‘Grid-enable’ a site - fetch, install, configure, add to login environment, update - Sits over top of (and is compatible with) the many software packaging approaches (rpm, tar.gz, etc.) - Uses dependency hierarchy, so one command can drive the installation of a complete environment of many packages - J. Schopf, ANL ## Details addressed by pacman - Where do I get the software? - Which version is right for my system? - Should I take the latest release or a more stable release? - Are there dependent packages that I have to install first? - Do I have to be root to do the installation? - What is the exact procedure for building the installation? - How do I setup whatever environment variables, paths, etc. once the software is installed? - How can I set up the same environment on multiple machines? - How can I find out when a new version comes out and when should I upgrade? - J. Schopf, ANL ## pacman is distributed - Packages organized into *caches* hosted at various sites, where responsible persons manage the local cache and individual *packages* hosted by that cache - Support responsibility is distributed among sites according to where the maintainers are - Many people share the pain - Includes a web interface (for each cache) as well as command line tools - J. Schopf, ANL - J. Schopf, ANL ## Monitoring - Joint working group set up between PPDG and GriPhyN to investigate monitoring issues - Led by J. Schopf and D. Yu - Monitoring currently defined very broadly: - Is this router configured correctly? - Has the application finished using that file yet? - What information do I need to determine where to run my application? - J. Schopf, ANL ## GridView (Kaushik De) - Tool to show the status of the 8 test bed machines on the web - Uses Globus GRAM to query sites every 30 mins - Hostname, Uptime, Idletime, # users, and Load average - Next steps include - Integration with Globus information service (MDS) - Visualization as part of cross PPDG/GriPhyN monitoring work - J. Schopf, ANL ## Slide 37 - J. Schopf, ANL ## Application Level Monitoring (Taylor) - Initial testbed to incorporate GRID monitoring capabilities into Athena - Collaboration with Valerie Taylor, David Quarrie, and others - Very long ramp-up due to difficulty of “outsiders” running an Athena application - Working on developing an Auditor for Athena - http://www.ece.nwu.edu/EXTERNAL/vtaylorlab/prophesy.html - J. Schopf, ANL ## Current Status - Mailing list has been set up - [email protected] - Defining usage cases - Sensors - Predictors - Archiving - Will gather requirements and look at extending Globus MDS as a common framework to meet these requirements - J. Schopf, ANL ## Tool Use Toward DC - J. Schopf, ANL ## ATLAS PPDG Program - Principal ATLAS Particle Physics Data Grid deliverables: **Year 1: Production distributed data service deployed to users.** Between CERN, BNL, and US grid testbed sites **Year 2:** Production distributed **job management service** **Year 3:** Create **‘transparent’ distributed processing** capability integrating distributed services into ATLAS software - J. Schopf, ANL ## Year 1 Plan - Year 1 plan draws on grid middleware development while delivering immediately useful capability to ATLAS - Data management has received little attention in ATLAS up to now - This is changing with the onset of Data Challenges, and the PPDG program is designed to help the DCs - J. Schopf, ANL ## ATLAS PPDG Activity in Year 1 - Principal Project Activity: Production distributed data management (Magda/Globus) - Other efforts: - US ATLAS grid testbed -- Ed May et al - Monitoring -- J. Schopf, D. Yu, co-chair WG - Distributed job management -- preparatory to year 2 focus - Data signature - J. Schopf, ANL ## GriPhyN - Principal ATLAS GriPhyN/iVDGL deliverables: - 2001: Testbed with GriPhyN VDT 1.0, packaged with PacMan - 2002: Serving DC1 data, simple job submission - 2003: Dataset re-creation/Data signature - Additional efforts: - Monitoring: joint with PPDG - J. Schopf, ANL ## GriPhyN Testbed Issues - GriPhyN is defining VDT 1.0 - SW install for GriPhyN/PPDG (compatible with EDG as well) - Globus 2.0 beta - GSI, GridFTP, MDS, repl. cat stuff, etc (Gram 1.5) - GDMP 2.0 (supports flat files) - Condor 6.3.1 (also Condor-G, Dagman) - Extra tools for ATLAS - Objectivity 6.1 - Magda - Still need to resolve CA issue between EDG and US test sites - being worked on by PPDG/ESNet/EDG - J. Schopf, ANL ## GriPhyN ATLAS Goal 1 Serving DC1 Data (July-Dec 2002) - Limited reconstruction analysis job using grid job submission interface - Serving the data results form DC1 - As part of DC1, data must be tagged with meta data for ease of access - Minimal keywords would be sufficient - Magda already implements portions of this - Job submission with minimal smarts - Extend GRAPPA work - Move compute resources to data sites - J. Schopf, ANL ## GriPhyN ATLAS Goal 2 Dataset Re-creation (Jan-Sept 2003) - Goal: be able to re-create a data file - Need to evaluate what parameters need to be kept track of - Need to evaluate data needed for full data signature - Need to develop a metric for evaluating success - what is good enough? - J. Schopf, ANL ## Joint Time Table - Now-June02 PG1 Data management using MAGDA, Tier Tier1, Tier2 - Dec02 GG0.1 VDT 1.0 deployed (basic infrastructure) - Jan 02 GG0.2 Integration of CERN testbed node into US Atlas testbed - Jan02-Jul02 DC1 Data creation, use of MAGDA, Tier 0-2 - Jul02-Jun03 PG2 Basic job management, grid job submission - July02-Dec02 GG1 Serving data from DC1 to universities, simple grid job sub. - Dec02-Sep03 DC2 Grid resource mgmt, data usage, smarter scheduling - Dec02-Sep03 GG2 Dataset re-creation, metadata, advanced data grid tools - Jul03-Jun04 PG3 Smart job submission, resource usage - PG - PPDG Goal; GG - GriPhyN/iVDGL goal; DC - ATLAS Data Challenge - J. Schopf, ANL ## Joint Time Table - Now-June02 PG1 Data management using MAGDA, Tier Tier1, Tier2 - Dec02 GG0.1 VDT 1.0 deployed (basic infrastructure) - Jan 02 GG0.2 Integration of CERN testbed node into US Atlas testbed - Jan02-Jul02 DC1 Data creation, use of MAGDA, Tier 0-2 - Jul02-Jun03 PG2 Basic job management, grid job submission - July02-Dec02 GG1 Serving data from DC1 to universities, simple grid job sub. - Dec02-Sep03 DC2 Grid resource mgmt, data usage, smarter scheduling - Dec02-Sep03 GG2 Dataset re-creation, metadata, advanced data grid tools - Jul03-Jun04 PG3 Smart job submission, resource usage - Basic testbed/deployment Data-centric goals Job/Scheduling-centric goals - J. Schopf, ANL ## Combined Planning - PG - PPDG Goal; GG - GriPhyN/iVDGL goal; DC - ATLAS Data Challenge - J. Schopf, ANL
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# Presentation: 375428 ## WILDLAND FIRE/ ENERGY INDUSTRY SAFETY SUMMIT - WILDFIRE - SCENARIO ## WILDFIRE STARTS - At 1430 on June 28 a Dry Thunderstorm West of Parachute Starts a Fire from Lightning. - Fire is on the North End of High Mesa in the Dry Creek Drainage. - The Fire is Almost Immediately Reported By Passing Motorists on I-70. - Garfield County Dispatch Pages out Grand Valley Fire to the Smoke. ## Conditions for June 28th - Scattered Dry Thunderstorms in Afternoon - Temperature 90-96 degrees - Winds West 8-12 mph Gusts to15 mph - Minimum Relative Humidity 8-12% - Fuels- Fire is Burning in Thick Mature Pinion Juniper in Dry Creek Drainage - Areas of Grass and Sage Brush in the Flats on Top of High Mesa - Google slide 1 ## First on Scene at 14:37 - Grand Valley Fire Brush 14 arrive North of Fire on County Road 300. - Fire is now 1⁄4-1⁄2 acre in Size with Black Smoke Column 1⁄2 mile South of Road Inaccessible by Vehicle. - Notifies Garfield County Dispatch the Fire is on BLM Land and Sizes Up Fire. - HIGH POTENTIAL TO BECOME LARGE FIRE BASED ON WEATHER AND LOCATION. ## First Role Player - Grand Valley Incident Commander - _Question_ - Based on fire location, weather and current behavior what resources would be ordered and what are your concerns at this point? ## 14:50-Additional Resources Arrive - Rifle Helicopter Arrives and Begins Bucket Work - Air tankers Arrive Dropping on East Flank. - Incident Command Post (ICP) and Staging Area Established North of Fire in Field Next to House along County Road 300. - Google Slide 2 ## Values at Risk in Area - Major Power Line 1⁄2 North of the Fire - Oil and Gas Infrastructure on top of High Mesa - Including and active Drill Rig 1 Mile West of Fire - Scattered Homes North of Fire - Community of Battlement Mesa 11⁄2 mile Northwest of Fire ## Unified Command Established Federal/ Grand Valley FPD - Unified Command established due to potential for fire to move onto private land. - Law Enforcement has Been Activated to Try to Evacuate Anyone on High Mesa and Set Road Blocks. - Power line, Oil/Gas and Pipeline Liaisons have been requested to Incident Command Post. ## Role Players Added - Federal Incident Commander Helitack Foreman - Oil and Gas Liaison-Encana ## Questions? - What Will the Incident Commander Want to Know from the Oil and Gas Liaison? - -Is there Personnel that Need Evacuated? - -Where are the Personnel & Do You have Communications with them? - -How Soon can Drill Rig be Shut Down? - -What Hazards Exist? - Example-Above Ground Pipeline - -What is the Most Important Infrastructure that is being Threatened by the Fire? ## Fire at 1540 has Spread to 40 Acres in Size ## 1540 Fire Status - Fire has Spread up Both Sides of the Dry Creek Drainage. - Main Fire Spread is to the East Driven By the Wind. - Now Fire is 1⁄2 mile from the Drill Rig. - The Fire is also Advancing to the South Up the Dry Creek Drainage. - Google Slide 3 ## Suppression Response - **Resources on Scene** - -Air Resources-Helicopter, 2 SEATS, 2 Heavy Air Tankers, and Air Attack. - -Ground Resources- 3 UCR Engines, 4 Grand Valley Engines, Initial Attack Squad. More Resources on Order. - -Firefighters Began Direct Hand Line Construction at the Heal of the Fire to Establish an Anchor Point with Helicopter Support. ## At 1600 Air Attack Reports Dozer Working West Side - -A Local Rancher has used his Dozer to begin Constructing Fuel Break on Top of High Mesa on the Ridge West of Dry Creek. - -The Dozer is Rolling Rocks into the Dry Creek Drainage in the Area of the Crews Working the on Handline. ## The Dozer Constructing Fuel Break Would Cause What Issues? - Safety of Crews working in Dry Creek Drainage Downhill of Dozer and Safety of Dozer Operator. - Need to Divert Firefighting Resources to make Contact with Dozer Operator. - If Dozer line is constructed on BLM land it needs approved by Field Office manager and coordinated by Resource Advisor. **One fatality** **SAFETY ISSUE** ## 1640 Fire Status - The Fire is Now 150 Acres it is Actively Burning Spreading East with the Wind Along the Top of High Mesa. - The Fire has Reached Drill Rig Burning around the Well Pad. - Google Slide 4 ## 1640 Firefighters Driving West Side of High Mesa Report Water Tender Blocking Road - Private Water Tender in area decide to “Self-Dispatch” itself to the Fire to Help Out. - In the Excitement of Driving to the Fire the Driver put a Tire off the Main Road going up the West side of High Mesa. - The Rear Axle is High Centered and the Water Tender is blocking the Road ## Question - What are Issues Associated with Water Tender Blocking the Road? - Ingress and Egress of Firefighters and Evacuees. - How are we Going to get Water Tender out of the Road? - Are Road Blocks that are in Place Adequate? ## 1740 Fire status - Thunderstorm moved over the fire area causing significant rainfall. - Size of fire is 1150 acres. - Even though rain has caused the fire to stop spreading it will take several days to control all hot spots on the fire. - Google - Slide 5 ## Conclusion - The Fire Burned 1150 acres, One Drill Rig, Five Well pads were Impacted by the Fire - Luckily the Rain came, The Fire had Potential to Burn Several Thousand Acres and Impact Large Amounts of Oil and Gas Infrastructure. Could have Easily Burned into the Community of Battlement Mesa. ## Questions? - Contact Info - Lathan Johnson, UCR Central Zone AFMO, - 970-625-2872 [email protected]
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558731
# Presentation: 558731 ## Experimental studies of nanoscale energy localization in periodic condensed matter systems A. J. Sievers, LASSP, Cornell University, DMR-0301035 - Bright and dark envelope solitons are a characteristic signature of continuous nonlinear systems. Both bright and dark traveling, locked, intrinsic localized modes (ILMs) have now been generated in a discrete system, i.e., in the acoustic spectrum of a small nonlinear micromechanical cantilever array. - Placing the uniform driver frequency above the plane wave spectrum of this array produces a stationary ILM while placing it in the finite gaps between the plane wave modes generates ILMs that have a well defined round trip time. These same dynamical properties may be expected to occur in other small nonlinear systems such as NEMS arrays or the vibrations of quantum dots. - Experimental observations of two kinds of nonlinear - localized excitations for a MEMS array displayed as cantilever site vs time. Dark regions correspond to highly excited cantilevers. (a) Stationary ILM. White horizontal lines are images of stationary cantilevers. (b) A traveling ILM that is reflected at the boundaries. **Notes:** It has been known for some time that nonlinearity and discreteness play important roles in many branches of condensed matter physics as evidenced by the appearance of domain walls, kinks and solitons. A recent discovery is that localized dynamical energy in a perfect nonlinear lattice can be stabilized by the lattice discreteness. Intrinsic localized modes (ILMs) are the resulting signature. Their energy profiles resemble those of localized modes at defects in a harmonic lattice but, like solitons, they can move. These localized excitations act like particles and interact strongly at short distances, unlike traditional solitons which simply pass through each other. ILMs have been observed in macroscopic arrays as diverse as coupled Josephson junctions, optical waveguides, two-dimensional nonlinear photonic crystals and micromechanical cantilevers. Such dynamically driven localized modes are providing a new window into the underlying simplicity of nonequilibrium dynamics. Because of the ease of sample fabrication with silicon technology and the intuitive optical visualization techniques we have developed, our experimental studies are able to demonstrate the general nature and properties of dynamical energy localization while at the same time providing new information on ILM generation, locking, pinning, and interaction with impurities. Our experimental investigation of the dynamics of a small micromechanical cantilever array in the presence of a continuous, locking driver has produced surprising results. With sufficient driving amplitude, and with its frequency strategically located in the plane wave acoustic spectrum either bright or dark running ILMs can be generated. We find that the running, locked ILM is a property of a small array since a sufficient frequency interval between the plane wave modes is required to stabilize its very precise round trip time; however, simulations show that if the array has an insufficient number of elements such smoothly running excitations are suppressed. Since the appearance of locked running ILMs depends on discreteness, nonlinearity, the mode density, and the balancing of nonlinearity against the dispersion, the same dynamical properties may be expected to occur in other small discrete nonlinearly coupled systems such as for NEMS arrays, BEC in optical lattices, and the vibrations of quantum dots. ## Experimental studies of nanoscale energy localization in periodic condensed matter systems A. J. Sievers, LASSP, Cornell University, DMR-0301035 - Two undergraduates (Michael Gerrity, Hovig Charchaflian), two graduate students (Bruce Hubbard, Jonathan Wrubel), one postdoc (M. Sato) and one research associate (N. Agladze) contributed to this research. - Experimental studies of nanoscale energy localization in periodic condensed matter systemsA. J. Sievers, LASSP, Cornell University, DMR-0301035 **Broader impact:** - The localization of energy observed for our nonlinear periodic cantilevers should also be relevant to some modern engineering problems, such as the vibration-induced fatigue failure of jet engine rotor blades. The large and localized vibrational blade amplitudes under forced response that are observed to appear at some rotational speeds are not predicted for a tuned linear system and have been described in terms of variations in blade geometry. From our work it is clear that even a bladed disk containing homogeneous blades of exactly the same geometry can give rise to large amplitude localized vibrations simply because each perfect nonlinear blade is coupled to its neighbors. - REU student learning how to use our ZEMAX EE ray tracing program **Notes:** The localization of energy observed for our nonlinear periodic cantilevers should also be relevant to some modern engineering problems. The vibration-induced fatigue failure of jet engine rotor blades is such a case. This complex system problem can be traced back to the observed fluttering of bladed disks as a function of revolution speed, a fundamental vibrational problem that has been studied intensely for 35 years. The large and localized vibrational blade amplitudes under forced response that are observed to appear at some speeds are not predicted for a tuned linear system. These observations have been described repeatedly in terms of variations in blade geometry and/or blade homogeneity and the task of controlling and predicting the vibrational amplitudes of mistuned bladed disks remains an active engineering research area. From our work it is clear that even a bladed disk containing homogeneous blades of exactly the same geometry and composition can, given the right conditions, undergo a modulational instability at certain rotational speeds that would give rise to large amplitude localized vibrations simply because each perfect nonlinear blade is coupled to its neighbors.
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515526
# Presentation: 515526 ## Incarceration and Child Support: - Working with Incarcerated and Released Parents: Lessons from OCSE Grants and State Programs - Jessica Pearson, Ph.D. - Center for Policy Research - Denver, Colorado 80218 - www.centerforpolicyresearch.org. - Presented at 16th National CSE Training Conference Workshop: Better Ways of Working with Incarcerated & Released Parents - Research funded by Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement through Task Order 38 and demonstration and evaluation grants to numerous states including Colorado, Illinois, Massachusetts and Texas ## OCSE Projects Dealing with Child Support and Incarceration - California: (2003-2004) Employment after release (42) - Colorado** **(1999-2001): Identify inmates, modify orders(898) - Colorado (1999-2002)Create one-stop for reentry help (350 - Illinois (2002-2004): Modify orders in pre-release(190) - Mass (2002-2003): Work w/ DOC, modify orders (1200+) - Minnesota (2001-2003) Reduce inmate arrears (102) - Missouri (2001-2003) Parenting skills to inmates (400+) - Texas **(**2002-2004): Child support and reintegration in prison settings (317) - Wash DC-Strive (2001-2002) Employment after release (82) - Wash (2001-2003) Modify inmate orders (1,472) ## The Problem - No communication/agreements with DOC and other criminal justice agencies to identify, reach and treat inmates - Courts/CSE treat incarceration as “voluntary unemployment” and not a change of circumstances - Limited CSE outreach to incarcerated NCPs - Incarcerated NCPs are uninformed about their child support situation and don’t request a modification - Review and adjustment procedures are difficult and long - Arrears & interest charges build during prison - Ex-offenders face limited employment/earnings options - Wage attachments & enforcement actions are stiff - Opportunities for debt leveraging/flexibility are limited - Child support agencies are burdened with uncollectible debt ## Child Support Arrears Rise During Incarceration - Without intervention, child support arrears increase about 60% during prison - With penalties and interest, the increase may be even higher - Mass Colorado - (n=530) (n=245) - Average child support arrears at prison entry $10,543 $10,249 - Percent of arrears owed to the state 52% 71% - Average monthly support obligations $220 $171 - Average arrears owed by parolees $16,430 $16,651 - Percent increase in arrears during incarceration 56% 63% - Range in arrears due $0-306,641 $168-111,622 - Average amount of interest due $3,932 $0 - Average amount of penalty due $1,966 $0 - Average total due $19,371 $16,651 ## Common Myths The inmate says, “I don’t have to pay child support because...” - My child support stops when incarceration starts. - I didn’t know I had a child support order. - I never signed the birth certificate. - My family buys diapers for the baby. - She spends the money on herself. - She’s on public assistance. - She won’t let me see my kid. - Child support won’t be able to find me. ## Partnerships and Collaborations - Criminal Justice Agencies - Matching automated databases between DOC and CSE (CO, MA, TX) - Placing CSE personnel in criminal justice facilities (MA) - Regular CSE presentations to inmates and parolees (CO, IL, MA, TX, WA) - CSE brochures, and videos given to DOC personnel (CO, IL, TX, WA) - Genetic testing in prisons and jails (IL, MA, TX) - CSE holds one-on-one meetings with inmates (IL, MA, MN, TX, WA) - CSE trains DOC and parole staff on child support (CO, IL, MA, WA) - Courts - Court personnel serve on project advisory board (IL) - Judges and masters explain child support to inmates in facilities (TX) - CSE presents information on inmate child support at judges meeting (TX) - CSE designs affidavits as substitutes for personal appearance (MA, MN) - CSE designs simplified modification forms for inmate requests (WI) ## Identifying Inmates/Parolees with CSE Issues - Electronic Match of DOC-CSE Caseloads: - Colorado: % Inmates known to CSE 26% - % Parolees known to CSE 28% - Mass: % Inmates known to CSE 26% - Texas % Inmates in State Jails 13% - (excluding those needing paternity or order establishment) - Data matches often miss inmates in county jail, community corrections, etc. - Problems with aliases, false SSNs, DOBs, dated info on facility or release date - Key data items: Name, DOB, SSN, Inmate ID, Current Facility, Date Current Incarceration Began, Earliest Projected Release Date ## How to Communicate Child Support Information to Inmates - Printed brochures and Q/A sheets (TX, WA) - Videos (WA, MN, TX) - Columns in inmate newsletter (TX) - Printed handbook in prison libraries (CO) - Collect telephone calls/video conference to CSE agencies (MN) - Live presentations by CSE staff at reception centers, pre-release, pull-out programs (CO, IL, MA, TX, WA) - Train facility staff but be prepared to address their CSE issues and overcome some resistance - Use multiple approaches and follow through with actions! ## Expediting Modification Requests - _If_ granted, modifications take 3.1-7.2 months - Simplify forms/Use SASE/No notary (Milwaukee, WI) - “Passive” consent procedures (Los Angeles) - “Fast-track” inmate requests (IL) - Accept collect calls to special CSE staff (Minneapolis) - Affidavit instead of inmate appearance at court (MA) - Treat incarceration as a change of circumstance - “$0” orders (reserve orders) for inmates with monthly income of $200 or less with return to pre-incarceration order 60 days after release (Oregon, Milwaukee) - Modify to standard, minimum order $50-$80 (MA, CO) ## Promoting Family Relationships - In 2 Houston jails: - 209 inmates attended 313 group sessions on reintegration The average inmate attended 8.3 sessions - Sessions dealt with: Personal responsibility, Avoiding destructive behavior, Breaking patterns of abuse and neglect - Case managers made 2,000 calls to families & agencies for inmates to re-establish communication and obtain services - Following release: % reporting no contact with children dropped from 28 to 10%, 87% said they saw their children as frequently or more often than before going to jail - In 2 Missouri prisons - 323 attended Proud Parent (fatherhood) sessions - 147 began Long Distance Dads classes (12 sessions) with 78 completing - 335 attended Parents’ Fair Share sessions in workforce readiness - 327 inmates attended group sessions on child development & parenting - 20 couples attended Relationship Enrichment Skills Training (3-hour class) - 57 inmates & 5 couples attended mediation sessions - Volunteer drivers transported families to prisons for visits ## Employment and Earnings For Ex-Offenders Extremely Limited - Texas: Only 34% of 253 released jail inmates had any employer-reported earnings 7.5 months following release with mean and median earnings at $695 and $1,482 per quarter - Illinois: Only 78 of 167 offenders in release programs found jobs earning mean and median salary of $1,102 and $960 per month - Colorado: Only 1⁄2 of 350 ex-offenders at WFC were employed full time earning an average salary of $9/hour - Employment programs for inmates and ex-offenders are often unavailable and ineffective. ## Working with Paroled/Released Offenders - One-Stop model - Assistance with employment, child support, housing, transportation etc. - Occupational skills training, placement help, strong employer outreach - Child support modification, paternity testing, driver’s license reinstatement - Higher earnings, better child support payments, reduced rates of return to prison - 133 Clients of the Denver Work and Family Center (WFC) - Seen within 90 days of release and potentially out for 12 months - 6 mos 6 mos 12 mos - pre WFC post WFC post WFC - Percent employed 43% 77% 71% - Average earnings _per quarter_ for employed $3,007 $3,122 $4,110 - Average support paid in 6 and 12 months $308 $681 $1,247 - Support paid as a percent of support due 17% 39% 38% - Percent making no payments 60% 25% 26% - Percent back in prison 29% - (Colorado DOC reported one - year recidivism of 40% in 1999) - Re-entry Center, Baltimore City, MD., 100 released offenders per day, Multiple partners and funding sources, Co-location, Multiple services, Advocacy on individual and societal levels ## Addressing Child Support Arrears - Some flexibility in dealing with “hard-to-serve” populations - Informal procedures to hear complaints and requests re arrears (WA “Conference Boards”) - Statute in 2001 allowing retroactive modification of arrears accumulated during incarceration for offense other than nonpayment and NCP lacked ability to pay(MN Repeal 1/1/07) - Regulation (2004) granting CSE flexibility to adjust or settle uncollectible arrears owed to state by incarcerated NCPs. Terms of settlement might include regular payment of support or participation in job search, fatherhood (MA) - Legislation allowing CSE to reduce arrearages by 50% after 12 months of payments and 100% after 24 (MD HB 1264, Passed House 138 to 0, Unfavorable in Senate) - Other examples of flexibility in standard practice for newly released NCPs: Protected Inmate Bank Accounts (OR), Rapid License Reinstatements (MD), Minimum Orders & Self-Support Reserves based on FPL (CO, Wash DC) ## Summary of Helpful Policies and Programs - Collaborate with DOC and Judiciary - Involve county/state-level personnel at upper levels - Develop MOUs on methods of identification and treatment of inmates and access to them - Educate judiciary on growth of inmate arrears, review and adjust needs and treatment - Identify prisoners/parolees with child support issues. - Automated data matches - DOC and CSE and/or CSE and Parolee Boards - Screen for CSE status at Prison Intake - Inform prisoner about child support and review & adjustment. - Specialized CSE staff - CSE video, handbook, inmate newspapers - Inmate reception centers and prisons - Train prison staff - Develop simple processes for review and adjustment. - Simplify request and response requirements - Assist inmates in filing request and affidavit - Use affidavit as testimony & avoid court - Special worker to handle prisoner requests - Accept collect phone calls - Make passivity work - Respond to prisoner requests for review and adjustment. - Treat incarceration as change in circumstances - Set orders to $0 or minimum per month - Deal with paroled/released offenders. - Create one-stop reentry programs with CSE - Modify orders to fit new wage levels - Reduce arrears/interest accrued in prison - Use effective employment programs - Cultivate employer - Promote family connections
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103387
AMERICAN November 22, 1993 REHABILITATION CENTERS Attn: John Wodatch American Disability Act Civil Rights Division United States Department of Justice P.O. Box 66738 Washington D.C. 20035-9998 Dear Sir: Accept this letter as an expression of concern, placing of a formal complaint and the need for me to receive further direction regarding my obligations and responsibilities, if any are applicable. I am a Physical Therapist and owner of a company providing rehabilitation services by physician referral. My company is located in the State of Missouri and the company employs approximately 30 individuals, one of whom is deaf. My therapist who is deaf had requested to travel out of state to an educational seminar--in fact on two occasions. The first occasion was a total disaster and the company sponsoring the seminar did not produce an interpreter. The second seminar, again, was a disaster and frankly embarrassing to both me and my employee. We requested an interpreter in August, 1993 for a seminar to be held in October, 1993. The company failed to provide the interpreter and failed to notify us of this until the evening before. Travel had already been scheduled and my employee was on her way. Obviously, she did not actually "go in" into the seminar as she could not read lips for 16 hours and aspects of the seminar were with slides and in a dark room. She requested the written material so she may at least read it and was denied. It was not until a formal letter of complaint was made that the written material was submitted. The company sponsoring the seminar did refund the registration fee, but no other expenses. My point of concern is now focused for future rather than the past. My questions are: 1. who is responsible for the interpreter when out of state seminars are scheduled? 2. what can be done to assure that my employee is not faced with another situation such as these? 3. what responsibilities do I have as the employer to assure that out of state functions such as seminars are handled properly for my staff? Currently, on premises any formal meetings will have an interpreter for my employee and a TDD on premises for my employee's use. 01-03023 Page Two November 122, 1993 The two companies that have sponsored seminars and not produced availability of interpreter services for my staff are listed: XX (b)(6) XX Should you need further information from me, do not hesitate to call on me directly. I may be reached at the following address and phone number: Elena Wahbeh-Foster, PT MS President American Rehabilitation Centers, Inc. 6724 Troost Suite 310 Kansas City, Missouri 64131 (816) 361-3135 Thank you for your time and attention to this matter. I look forward to a response soon and if I may expedite the process for you in any way, do not hesitate to contact me. Sincerely, Elena Wahbeh-Foster, PT, MS President 01-03024
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INFRARED AIRCRAFT SCANNER ORDER (Revised March 2004) **Incident/Project#: FireCode#: A#** <table> <colgroup> <col style="width: 18%" /> <col style="width: 5%" /> <col style="width: 3%" /> <col style="width: 5%" /> <col style="width: 10%" /> <col style="width: 5%" /> <col style="width: 8%" /> <col style="width: 3%" /> <col style="width: 3%" /> <col style="width: 10%" /> <col style="width: 26%" /> </colgroup> <tbody> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="2">Incident Name:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="4">Date/Time:</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="2">Ordering Unit:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="2">Local Dispatch:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="2">GACC:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="2">National IR Coord:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td>(208) 387-5381</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="2"></td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">FAX #</td> <td></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="2"></td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Cell #</td> <td>(208) 859-4475</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="2">Regional IR Coord:</td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td>( )</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="2"></td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">FAX #:</td> <td>( )</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="2"></td> <td colspan="5"></td> <td colspan="3">Cell #</td> <td>( )</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="3">IR Interpreter Ordered:</td> <td colspan="2"> YES</td> <td colspan="2">NO</td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #</td> <td>( )</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="3">IR Interpreter Assigned:</td> <td colspan="4"></td> <td colspan="3" rowspan="3"><p>Cell #</p> <p>Motel #</p> <p>FAX #</p></td> <td rowspan="3"><p>( )</p> <p>( )</p> <p>( )</p></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="3">Location: Motel</td> <td colspan="4"></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="3">Office or ICP</td> <td colspan="4"></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="7">SITL Name and Location:</td> <td colspan="3">Telephone #:</td> <td>( )</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="4">Incident Elevation (AVG):</td> <td colspan="4">Feet MSL</td> <td colspan="3">Approximate Size: Acres</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="4">Weather Over The Incident:</td> <td colspan="7"></td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td>Delivery Point:</td> <td colspan="6"><h2 id="section"></h2></td> <td colspan="4">Alt. Delivery Pt:</td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="3">Delivery type:</td> <td colspan="3"> Land Aircraft</td> <td colspan="3"> Air Drop</td> <td colspan="2"> Scanned file (give email address or ftp site in box below)</td> </tr> <tr class="even"> <td colspan="3">Delivery time:</td> <td colspan="8"></td> </tr> <tr class="odd"> <td colspan="3">Delivery point weather:</td> <td colspan="8"></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> Radio Frequencies ----------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- ----------- Local admin. Unit Tx: Mhz Tone: Rx: Mhz Tone: Alternative Freq Tx: Mhz Tone: Rx: Mhz Tone: Air Tactical Group Tx: Mhz Tone: Rx: Mhz Tone: Supervisor ----------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- ----------- **Incident Location from 2 VORs: (Degrees) (nautical miles)** ---------- ---------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- ------------- **VOR:** **Azimuth:** **Distance:** **VOR:** []{.mark} **Azimuth:** []{.mark} **Distance:** ---------- ---------------- -------------- -------------- --------------- ------------- [**Mission Objective and Description**:]{.underline} ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- LATITUDE/LONGITUDE INFORMATION NEEDED FOR EACH MISSION ----------- ----- ----- --------- -- ------- ---------- ------ ----------------------------------------- **Mapping Block** NORTH north ![](media/image1.png){width="1.34375in" height="0.8333333333333334in"} SOUTH west east EAST WEST south ----------- ----- ----- --------- -- ------- ---------- ------ -----------------------------------------
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Package build of libcap started. (Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:58:29 EDT) /bin/ls: /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/SRPMS/../: No such file or directory Resetting chroot jail, please wait. Executing(%prep): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.84093 + umask 022 + cd /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD + LANG=C + export LANG + unset DISPLAY + cd /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD + rm -rf libcap-1.10 + /usr/bin/bzip2 -dc /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/SOURCES/libcap-1.10.tar.bz2 + tar -xf - + STATUS=0 + '[' 0 -ne 0 ']' + cd libcap-1.10 + echo 'Patch #0 (libcap-1.10-ia64.patch):' Patch #0 (libcap-1.10-ia64.patch): + patch -p1 -b --suffix .ia64 -s + echo 'Patch #1 (libcap-1.10-userland.patch):' Patch #1 (libcap-1.10-userland.patch): + patch -p1 -b --suffix .userland -s + echo 'Patch #2 (libcap-1.10-shared.patch):' Patch #2 (libcap-1.10-shared.patch): + patch -p1 -b --suffix .shared -s + exit 0 Executing(%build): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.57599 + umask 022 + cd /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD + cd libcap-1.10 + LANG=C + export LANG + unset DISPLAY + make PREFIX=/usr LIBDIR=/usr/lib64 make -C libcap CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/usr/lib64' INCDIR='/usr/include' SBINDIR='/sbin' MANDIR='/usr/man' all make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap' => making cap_names.c from <linux/capability.h> gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -s _makenames.c -o _makenames _makenames.c: In function `main': _makenames.c:30: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions _makenames.c:48: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation _makenames.c:60: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation ./_makenames > cap_names.h gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_alloc.c -o cap_alloc.o In file included from cap_alloc.c:12: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # cap_alloc.c: In function `cap_init': cap_alloc.c:19: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_alloc.c: In function `_libcap_strdup': cap_alloc.c:46: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_alloc.c: In function `cap_dup': cap_alloc.c:73: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_alloc.c: In function `cap_free': cap_alloc.c:99: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_proc.c -o cap_proc.o In file included from cap_proc.c:11: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # cap_proc.c: In function `cap_get_proc': cap_proc.c:14: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_proc.c: In function `cap_set_proc': cap_proc.c:32: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_proc.c: In function `capgetp': cap_proc.c:52: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_proc.c: In function `capsetp': cap_proc.c:73: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_extint.c -o cap_extint.o In file included from cap_extint.c:12: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # cap_extint.c: In function `cap_size': cap_extint.c:35: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_extint.c: In function `cap_copy_ext': cap_extint.c:46: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_extint.c: In function `cap_copy_int': cap_extint.c:89: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_flag.c -o cap_flag.o In file included from cap_flag.c:12: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # cap_flag.c: In function `cap_get_flag': cap_flag.c:22: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_flag.c: In function `cap_set_flag': cap_flag.c:52: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_flag.c: In function `cap_clear': cap_flag.c:93: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_text.c -o cap_text.o In file included from cap_text.c:14: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # cap_text.c: In function `_setbits': cap_text.c:33: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c: In function `_clrbits': cap_text.c:41: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c: In function `namcmp': cap_text.c:48: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c: In function `lookupname': cap_text.c:59: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c:62: warning: cast discards qualifiers from pointer target type cap_text.c: In function `cap_from_text': cap_text.c:80: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c:100: warning: traditional C rejects automatic aggregate initialization cap_text.c: In function `getstateflags': cap_text.c:224: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c: In function `cap_to_text': cap_text.c:240: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions cap_text.c:243: warning: traditional C rejects automatic aggregate initialization gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -fpic -c cap_sys.c -o cap_sys.o In file included from cap_sys.c:10: libcap.h:57:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # libcap.h:58:3: warning: suggest hiding #error from traditional C with an indented # gcc -Wl,-soname,libcap.so.1 -Wl,-x -shared -o libcap.so.1.10 cap_alloc.o cap_proc.o cap_extint.o cap_flag.o cap_text.o cap_sys.o ln -sf libcap.so.1.10 libcap.so.1 ln -sf libcap.so.1 libcap.so make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap' make -C progs CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/usr/lib64' INCDIR='/usr/include' SBINDIR='/sbin' MANDIR='/usr/man' all make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/progs' gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -c getpcaps.c -o getpcaps.o getpcaps.c: In function `usage': getpcaps.c:18: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions getpcaps.c:24: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation getpcaps.c: In function `main': getpcaps.c:29: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions getpcaps.c:43: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation getpcaps.c:51: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation gcc -s -o getpcaps getpcaps.o -L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -c setpcaps.c -o setpcaps.o setpcaps.c: In function `usage': setpcaps.c:19: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions setpcaps.c:28: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation setpcaps.c: In function `read_caps': setpcaps.c:35: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions setpcaps.c: In function `main': setpcaps.c:67: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -s -o setpcaps setpcaps.o -L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -c execcap.c -o execcap.o execcap.c: In function `usage': execcap.c:18: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions execcap.c:26: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation execcap.c:28: warning: implicit declaration of function `exit' execcap.c:28: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' execcap.c: At top level: execcap.c:32: warning: return type of 'main' is not `int' execcap.c: In function `main': execcap.c:32: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions gcc -s -o execcap execcap.o -L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap gcc -Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include -c sucap.c -o sucap.o sucap.c: In function `usage': sucap.c:25: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions sucap.c:33: warning: traditional C rejects string constant concatenation sucap.c:35: warning: implicit declaration of function `exit' sucap.c:35: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c: In function `wait_on_fd': sucap.c:41: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions sucap.c: At top level: sucap.c:52: warning: return type of 'main' is not `int' sucap.c: In function `main': sucap.c:52: warning: traditional C rejects ISO C style function definitions sucap.c:74: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:84: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:92: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:97: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:105: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:119: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:134: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' sucap.c:161: warning: nested extern declaration of `exit' gcc -s -o sucap sucap.o -L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/progs' make -C doc CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/usr/lib64' INCDIR='/usr/include' SBINDIR='/sbin' MANDIR='/usr/man' all make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/doc' make[1]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/doc' + exit 0 Executing(%install): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.97469 + umask 022 + cd /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD + cd libcap-1.10 + LANG=C + export LANG + unset DISPLAY + rm -rf /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886 + make install FAKEROOT=/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886 LIBDIR=/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64 SBINDIR=/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin INCDIR=/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include MANDIR=/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man/ COPTFLAG=-O2 make -C libcap CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -O2 -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64' INCDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include' SBINDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin' MANDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man/' install make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap' mkdir -p -m 0755 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include/sys install -m 0644 include/sys/capability.h /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include/sys mkdir -p -m 0755 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64 install -m 0644 libcap.so.1.10 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64/libcap.so.1.10 ln -sf libcap.so.1.10 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64/libcap.so.1 ln -sf libcap.so.1 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64/libcap.so /sbin/ldconfig make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap' make -C progs CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -O2 -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64' INCDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include' SBINDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin' MANDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man/' install make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/progs' mkdir -p -m 0755 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin for p in getpcaps setpcaps execcap sucap ; do \ install -s -m 0755 $p /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin ; \ done make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/progs' make -C doc CC='gcc' CFLAGS='-Dlinux -D_POSIX_SOURCE -Wall -Wwrite-strings -Wpointer-arith -Wcast-qual -Wcast-align -Wtraditional -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wnested-externs -Winline -Wshadow -g -O2 -I/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap/include' LD='ld' LIBS='-L/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/libcap -lcap' LDFLAGS='-s ' VERSION='1' MINOR='10' LIBDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64' INCDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/include' SBINDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/sbin' MANDIR='/var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man/' install make[1]: Entering directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/doc' mkdir -p -m 755 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man//man2 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man//man3 for man in \ /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man//man2 capget.2 capset.2 \ /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886//usr/share/man//man3 cap_init.3 cap_free.3 cap_dup.3 cap_clear.3 cap_get_flag.3 cap_set_flag.3 cap_get_proc.3 cap_set_proc.3 cap_copy_ext.3 cap_size.3 cap_copy_int.3 cap_from_text.3 cap_to_text.3 _cap_names.3 capsetp.3 capgetp.3 \ ; \ do \ case $man in \ /*) sub=$man ; continue ;; \ esac; \ install -m 644 $man $sub ; \ done make[1]: Leaving directory `/usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD/libcap-1.10/doc' + chmod +x /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64/libcap.so.1 /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886/lib64/libcap.so.1.10 + /usr/lib/rpm/caos/brp-compress + /usr/lib/rpm/caos/brp-strip /usr/bin/strip + /usr/lib/rpm/caos/brp-strip-static-archive /usr/bin/strip + /usr/lib/rpm/caos/brp-strip-comment-note /usr/bin/strip /usr/bin/objdump Processing files: libcap-1.10-20 Provides: libcap.so.1()(64bit) Requires(interp): /sbin/ldconfig /sbin/ldconfig Requires(rpmlib): rpmlib(CompressedFileNames) <= 3.0.4-1 rpmlib(PayloadFilesHavePrefix) <= 4.0-1 Requires(post): /sbin/ldconfig Requires(postun): /sbin/ldconfig Processing files: libcap-devel-1.10-20 Requires(rpmlib): rpmlib(CompressedFileNames) <= 3.0.4-1 rpmlib(PayloadFilesHavePrefix) <= 4.0-1 Checking for unpackaged file(s): /usr/lib/rpm/check-files /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886 warning: Could not canonicalize hostname: x86_64-build.caosity.org Wrote: /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/SRPMS/libcap-1.10-20.src.rpm Wrote: /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/RPMS/x86_64/libcap-1.10-20.x86_64.rpm Wrote: /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/RPMS/x86_64/libcap-devel-1.10-20.x86_64.rpm Executing(%clean): /bin/sh -e /var/tmp/rpm-tmp.97469 + umask 022 + cd /usr/src/autobuild.mezz/x86_64/00_LOGS/syslib/libcap/BUILD + cd libcap-1.10 + rm -rf /var/tmp/mezzanine-buildroot.16197/libcap.11886 + exit 0 Package build for libcap completed successfully. (Tuesday, 11 October 2005 00:58:31 EDT)
en
all-txt-docs
374629
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, PETITIONER V. CENTENNIAL SAVINGS BANK FSB (RESOLUTION TRUST CORPORATION, RECEIVER) No. 89-1926 In The Supreme Court Of The United States October Term, 1990 On Writ Of Certiorari To The United States Court Of Appeals For The Fifth Circuit Reply Brief For The United States 1. The purpose of the longstanding "materially different" requirement in the Treasury Regulations is to prevent the realization of gain or loss on economically meaningless exchanges that do not change the taxpayer's economic position. The swap of mortgage pools that respondent engaged in was precisely tailored to ensure that it would "not change the economic position of the association after it engaged in the swap." J.A. 58 (Bank Board memorandum). Respondent satisfied (through a computer match) the criteria of Memorandum R-49, and thus did "not change (its) economic position." Respondent then turned around and tried to deduct a $2.8 million loss on the ground that the "substantially identical" mortgage pools (J.A. 55) were actually "materially different." Respondent's position thus rests on an "inherent contradiction" (Portland Golf Club v. Commissioner, 110 S. Ct. 2780, 2789 (1990)); it should not be permitted "to have its cake and to eat it too." Thor Power Tool Co. v. Commissioner, 439 U.S. 522, 546 (1979). The only way in which respondent can at once satisfy the "substantially identical" test of Memorandum R-49 and the "materially different" requirement of Treas. Reg. Section 1.1001-1(a) is to read the word "materially" out of the Regulation. Under respondent's test, the Regulation is satisfied whenever "an interest in property (is) exchanged for a different interest in property." Resp. Br. 20. /1/ The problem with this proposed definition is obvious. In essence, respondent contends that property is materially different if it is different. In the absence of a materially different requirement, however, economically meaningless exchanges of property -- such as 1000 bushels of Kansas wheat for a "different" 1000 bushels of Kansas wheat -- would constitute realization events and produce tax consequences. The end result, as we explain in our Cottage brief (at 14), would be effective nullification of the realization requirement for losses. /2/ Indeed, in our view, respondent all but gives up the game when it acknowledges that there should be "flexibility for finding nonrealization" in the case of an exchange of an old certificate for a new one with a "minor modification," and that a contrary rule would be "an obviously undesirable and impractical result." Br. 20 n.12. We agree; the whole purpose of the "materially different" requirement in the Regulation is to determine when a modification is "minor," and the flexibility respondent finds desirable is the Commissioner's in promulgating and applying his Regulation. /3/ 2. Respondent relies on several of this Court's decisions from the early 1920s for the proposition that any exchange of property for different property is a realization event. Br. 12-16. The cases do not establish that proposition, and, in any event, did not purport to establish the parameters for realization in all contexts. In both Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189 (1920) and Weiss v. Stearn, 265 U.S. 242 (1924), the taxpayers ended up with something different from what they had before: additional shares of stock in Macomber and shares in a new corporation in Weiss. Because the differences "add(ed) nothing to (the property) of the shareholder" in Macomber (252 U.S. at 212) and did not "give() the stockholder a thing really different from what he theretofore had" in Weiss (265 U.S. at 254), however, this Court held that there was no realization. In contrast, in Marr v. United States, 268 U.S. 536 (1925), the Court held that a taxpayer who received stock in a new corporation in exchange for stock in the old realized a gain on the exchange, because the old and new corporations were "essentially different." Id. at 541 (emphasis added). See Gov't Cottage Br. 22-23 (discussing Marr). Indeed, the discussion in Marr of Weiss highlights this point. In Marr, the Court recognized that the old and new corporations involved in the Weiss exchange were different: "Technically there was a new entity; but the corporate identity was deemed to have been substantially maintained because the new corporation was organized under the laws of the same State, with presumably the same powers as the old." Marr, 268 U.S. at 541. Since the corporate identity was substantially maintained, the old and new corporations in Weiss were different, but not essentially different. See Gov't Cottage Br. 22 (discussing Weiss). These cases thus establish that a mere difference is not enough to establish realization from an exchange; the properties transferred must instead be "really different" or "essentially different." This teaching is of course entirely consistent with the Commissioner's promulgation of the "materially different" requirement in the Regulations. /4/ At the same time, the fact that there was no realization on the facts of Macomber and Weiss hardly means that there will always be realization unless the facts presented parallel the facts of those two cases. In any event, respondent is wrong to view those 1920s cases as the beginning and end of the inquiry. The question is not, as respondent would have it, whether the differences in the swapped mortgage pools were sufficient "to cause gain or loss to be realized under the Eisner line of cases." Br. 17. Rather, the question is whether the differences satisfied the "materially different" requirement in the Regulation. By focusing exclusively on the cases, respondent seeks to read out of this case the deference this Court has held is due the Commissioner in promulgating Treasury Regulations, see, e.g., Thor Power Tool, 439 U.S. at 533 n.11 ("it is well established, of course, that (Treasury Regulations) 'must be sustained unless unreasonable and plainly inconsistent with the revenue statutes' and 'should not be overruled except for weighty reasons'") and in interpreting those Regulations, see, e.g., Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council, 109 S. Ct. 1835, 1850 (1989) (agency interpretation of own regulation is "controlling" unless it is "plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation"). Macomber, Weiss, and Marr arose, in part, from taxpayers' constitutional objections that certain transactions did not produce "income" within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment. /5/ Even if the Commissioner's interpretation of the "materially different" requirement in the Regulation establishes a more rigorous test for realization than the constitutional test in the 1920s cases (a proposition we dispute), nothing in those decisions precludes a more rigorous test. Indeed, far from claiming that the Commissioner's interpretation somehow implicates Sixteenth Amendment concerns in this case, respondent repeatedly objects that the Commissioner's interpretation will allow income of other taxpayers to escape taxation (Br. 7, 16, 22) -- precisely the opposite of the taxpayers' claims in the early cases. Those cases clearly did not permanently tie the Commissioner's hands and prevent him from refining and clarifying the materially different requirement through promulgating and applying a Treasury Regulation; that is why we have such regulations in the first place. Thus, even if respondent's premise were correct (that the Commissioner's interpretation goes beyond the 1920s cases), respondent's corollary (that the Commissioner has no discretion to do so) is incorrect. /6/ 3. Respondent also maintains that its proposed definition is compelled by the nonrecognition provisions of Sections 1031 and 1091. That respondent's mortgage swap transactions did not fall within the specific nonrecognition provisions of Section 1031 (which governs "like kind" exchanges) and Section 1091 (which governs "wash sales" of stock or securities) does not mean that a loss was realized on the transactions. Contrary to respondent's argument, the Commissioner's interpretation of the "materially different" requirement for realization on exchanges in no way renders Sections 1031 and 1091 superfluous, since property of "like kind" is a much broader concept than property that is not materially different, and the "wash sale" rule applies regardless of whether the transaction can be characterized as an exchange. Like the petitioner in Cottage, respondent confuses the entirely distinct principles of realization and recognition. The fact that Congress elected to provide for nonrecognition in the situations covered by these Sections in no way suggests a determination that there must be realization in all other situations. See Gov't Cottage Br. 24-28. /7/ 4. Respondent also claims that the Commissioner's interpretation is "incapable of effective administration" (Br. 20) and that its proposed test is more desirable "(f)rom a tax administration point of view" and "(f)rom a revenue point of view" (id. at 16). The Commissioner -- charged by law with interpreting and administering the Internal Revenue Code, and entrusted with administrative discretion to discharge that responsibility -- disagrees. See National Muffler Dealers Ass'n v. United States, 440 U.S. 472, 476-477 (1979); United States v. Correll, 389 U.S. 299, 305-307 (1967). Indeed, the real threat to proper administration of the Internal Revenue Code would come from respondent's test, which would attribute tax consequences to meaningless exchanges, such as in the bushels of wheat example. Contrary to respondent's contention, the Regulation's "materially different" test is not too high a hurdle. The lengths to which respondent and its trading partner went in matching their swapped loans, see J.A. 55-56 (10 criteria for match), provide a good example of what it takes to fail the test. /8/ 5. We demonstrate in our opening brief (at 17-26) that the available evidence from (1) the conduct and intent of the parties, (2) the evaluation of the pertinent market (the secondary mortgage market), and (3) the determination of the agency charged with regulating federal savings and loan associations (the Bank Board), confirms that such differences as there were in the mortgage pools exchanged here were not material. Rejecting all of these sources of evidence, respondent instead would look to "the nature of each property." Resp. Br. 29. Such an inquiry, however, is really nothing more than a conclusion derived from consideration of the very factors respondent eschews. Two shares of stock of the same class in the same corporation are different in that they have different serial numbers, but that difference is not material. Why not? Because parties dealing in stock, and the market for stock, simply do not care what the serial numbers happen to be. If the parties and the market did care -- for example, if the stock at issue consisted of antique shares whose value derived from the certificate itself and not the ownership interest it represented -- then the different serial numbers would constitute a material difference. Nothing about "the nature" of serial numbers on stock answers the question whether the differences are material -- you need to know, inter alia, how the parties and the market regard such differences. That is not a "subjective" test; it simply recognizes that pertinent evidence, rather than preconceived notions about the abstract "nature" of property, needs to be considered before arriving at an objective conclusion. /9/ In the alternative, respondent also contends (at 30) that it had :sufficient information about the loans received" and "knew that the different characteristics of the loans assured that different economic consequences would ultimately result." Respondent ignores the fact that the district court specifically considered respondent's claimed awareness of general differences in the loan packages and determined that those claimed general differences were immaterial. See Pet. App. 39a, 52a; Gov't Br. 20 n.17. With regard to the evaluation of the pertinent market, respondent does not dispute the factual findings that the differences in the mortgage pools were immaterial to the secondary mortgage market. See Pet. App. 52a-53a; see also Gov't Br. 21-22. Instead, respondent maintains that the evaluation of the pertinent market is irrelevant because a "market-based inquiry is relevant only to determine values, not which factors are responsible for those values." Resp. Br. 31. As we have explained (Br. 22-23; Cottage Br. 32), there is a fundamental difference between the concept of equivalent value and the concept of material difference, and the evaluation of the pertinent market can be quite helpful in considering whether the differences are material even if the market (and the parties) assign the properties equivalent value. Respondent's suggestion that the market perspective is incapable of determination, moreover, ignores the fact that the issue was vigorously litigated in this very case, and the district court simply resolved the issue against respondent. Pet. App. 52a-53a. As the district court's findings confirm, the issue is fully capable of resolution, and the market perspective provides probative evidence of the nature of the exchange. Respondent successfully demolishes a series of straw men of its own creation. It argues that the Commissioner's position would lead to a finding of no realization on "the exchange of securities in one automobile company for securities in another automobile company, or stock of one oil company for stock of another oil company," or one AAA-rated corporate bond for an AAA-rated bond of a different corporation. Resp. Br. 27, 31 n.25. Of course not. Certainly the "materially different" requirement demands the drawing of lines, but that is true throughout the Internal Revenue Code and law in general. Saying that there is no material difference between computer-matched pools of mortgages of the same type, secured by single-family residences, in the same state, with the same interest rate, same stated terms to maturity, and similar remaining terms to maturity, principal amounts, fair market values, and loan-to-value ratios, swapped without recourse (see J.A. 55-56), is not the same as saying there is no material difference between Ford and GM stock, Mobil and Exxon stock, or Union Pacific and Southern Pacific bonds. The parties and the market tell the tale: an investor giving up his GM stock would care to know whether he was getting Ford or Chrysler stock in return; here, once the pools of mortgages were matched according to the rigorous R-49 criteria, respondent did not care whether John Doe or Tom Roe was the original borrower on one of the loans; indeed, respondent did not even obtain files showing who the borrowers were until six years after the swap, and the information was not even available at the time of the swap. Pet. App. 36a n.5. /10/ Respondent likewise rejects the Bank Board's evaluation of the mortgage pools at issue as "wholly irrelevant for tax purposes." Br. 33. According to respondent, the Bank Board's determination should be disregarded because it represents a "depart(ure) from traditional regulatory accounting." Id. at 34. As we explain in our opening brief (at 25-26), it is not the Bank Board's conclusion that no loss on an R-49 transaction need be reported for regulatory accounting purposes that is significant here; rather, it is the Bank Board's expert conclusion that loans meeting the R-49 criteria are substantially identical" (J.A. 55) and that a swap of such loans would "not change the economic position of the association after it engaged in the swap" (J.A. 58). Together with the conduct and intent of the parties and the evaluation of the market, the Bank Board's evaluation establishes that the differences in the loan pools were not material. /11/ Having rejected the relevance of the conduct and intent of the parties, the market perspective, and the expert agency's conclusion, respondent, like petitioner in Cottage, seeks to rely on differences in borrowers and collateral, the fact that the exchange was for 90% participation interests, and the fact that the loans eventually revealed different performances. Resp. Br. 17-18. As we have previously pointed out (Br. 26; Cottage Br. 33), an across-the-board rule based on the first two factors (such as that fashioned by the court of appeals) is far too sweeping and fails to take into account differences in contexts and transactions. The exchange of 90% participation interests, moreover, did not create a material difference in the properties exchanged, since 90% participation interests were swapped for substantially indentical 90% participation interests. See Gov't Cottage Br. 33. /12/ The reliance on eventual different performances is unavailing because the question of material difference turns on the significance of differences known at the time of the exchange, not on a post hoc evaluation of subsequent performance. The Internal Revenue Code could not properly be administered if we had to wait and see how property interests actually performed years down the road before determining whether or not they were materially different under the Regulation. Respondent's claim that its swap of mortgage pools produced a deductible loss is thus premised both on a crabbed construction of the "materially different" requirement and on an application of the requirement that ignores the perspective of the parties, the market, and the expert agency, and substitutes reliance on factors that were either unknown or insignificant at the time of the transactions. The Commissioner's reasonable construction of the Code and of his Regulation should be upheld, and the undisputed facts in the record establish that the claimed differences in the mortgage pools were not material. 6. The second issue presented is whether income received by respondent from its depositors as penalties for early withdrawal of their funds is excludable from gross income because it is income "by reason of the discharge * * * of indebtedness," within the meaning of Section 108 of the Internal Revenue Code. As we explain in our opening brief, not every debt that is cancelled or discharged results in income "by reason of the discharge" of the debt. I.R.C. Section 108(a)(1) (emphasis added). If the cancellation of a debt is simply the method by which a creditor makes a payment to a debtor, the debtor does not have income "by reason of" a debt discharge; he has income "by reason of" receiving a payment, and that income does not qualify for the Section 108 exclusion. Respondent agrees with this general principle. Br. 38-40. /13/ Our brief further explains (at 33-35) that application of this principle requires the conclusion that respondent's receipt of early withdrawal penalties (through an offset of the amount returned to depositors) represents payment of a separate obligation, rather than income "by reason of" the discharge of indebtedness. Respondent disagrees (at 35-38, 40-46) with this conclusion, but its objections are not well founded. a. As an initial matter, respondent ignores the fact that its offset of the amount due depositors simply reflects its choice of the method for receiving early withdrawal penalties. We explain in our opening brief (at 33) that, if the depositors making premature withdrawals had paid the penalty due respondent in cash, and, in turn, received from respondent the entire amount due on their accounts, then respondent would clearly have had income from the payment of a penalty, not from the discharge of indebtedness. Respondent does not address, much less dispute, this point. The result should not be different simply because respondent chose a different method of receiving the penalty -- namely, by an offset against the amount turned over to the depositor. /14/ b. That the early withdrawal penalty represents a separate obligation, rather than the discharge of indebtedness, is clear from the nature and purpose of the penalty: it is imposed not by the parties to the debtor/creditor relationship themselves but by federal regulations, and its purpose, even aside from the federal regulations, is to serve as a form of liquidated damages to compensate a financial institution for additional expenses. See Gov't Br. 34-35; Colonial Savings Ass'n v. Commissioner, 854 F.2d 1001, 1007 (7th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1090 (1989). Respondent suggests that the early withdrawal payment should not be viewed as a "penalty"; it emphasizes that the 1981 version of the applicable regulation uses the term "forfeit," and suggests that the use of the term "penalty" in earlier versions of the regulation (which are also applicable in this case, see Gov't Br. 32 n.28) was a "misnomer." Resp. Br. 44-45 n.34. Respondent's effort is unavailing. First, to the extent that it matters, the word "penalty" remains in the very title of the 1981 regulation. See 12 C.F.R. 1204.103 (1981) ("Penalty for early withdrawals"). Second, Section 62(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. (1988)), which governs the treatment of the depositor, similarly refers to "amounts forfeited * * * as a penalty for premature withdrawal of funds" (emphasis added). Third, respondent's own certificates of deposit set forth the amount of the penalty in a "Penalty Clause Section." J.A. 27-29. Respondent's effort now to recharacterize the obligation -- by stating that "the penalty characterization was a misnomer and that, in substance, the regulation was effecting a reduction of indebtedness" (at 45 n.34) -- is unsupportable. /15/ c. Respondent repeatedly maintains that its receipt of early withdrawal penalties (through an offset) was income "by reason of" the discharge of indebtedness because the income would not have arisen "but for" the discharge of indebtedness for less than its full amount. See, e.g., Resp. Br. 11, 39, 46. Recognition that the penalty is a separate obligation, however, highlights the fallacy of this contention. The depositor was obligated -- by federal regulations and by what the Seventh Circuit aptly termed a "liquidated damages" provision (Colonial Savings, 854 F.2d at 1007) -- to pay a penalty, and respondent's income arose "by reason of" that penalty. The income would not have arisen "but for" the discharge of indebtedness only because respondent chose an offset against the indebtedness as the method of payment for that obligation. Respondent's argument is essentially a tautology: because it chose an offset method for receiving its income, its income would not have occurred "but for" the offset. /16/ In the classic case covered by Section 108, A lends B $1,000 payable in two months. After six weeks, A and B agree to call it quits if B pays $800. B has received $200 in income by reason of the discharge of his indebtedness to A. In the classic case not covered by Section 108, A lends B $1,000 payable in two months, provided that B need only pay back $100 if he paints A's house. If B paints A's house and pays back the $100, he has received $900 not by reason of the discharge of his debt to A, but because he painted A's house. Respondent's proposed test for applying Section 108, however, would find income by reason of discharge of indebtedness in the second example. The $900 in income would not have arisen "but for" the discharge of indebtedness -- A did not contract to pay B for painting his house, apart from the income B would realize from the agreed-upon discharge of indebtedness. As noted, the "but for" test thus proves too much, since it is satisfied whenever an offset against the amount owed is specified as the method of payment. In terms of the statutory language, "but for" is not the same as "by reason of." The statutory phrase "by reason of" looks to the source of the income -- the "reason" for it. In the first example above, the source is the forgiveness of the debt; in the second, the source is the painting of the house. Here the source is the federal regulation which requires payment of a penalty, not any forgiveness by the depositor of what the institution owes him. /17/ d. Since the penalty is a separate obligation owed by the depositor, respondent's reliance (Br. 41-42) on Reliable Incubator & Brooder Co. v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 919 (1946), is misplaced. In Reliable Incubator, unlike the instant case, the creditor had no separate obligation to the debtor. Respondent's reliance (Br. 43) on Columbia Gas System, Inc. v. United States, 473 F.2d 1244 (2d Cir. 1973), is misplaced for a similar reason. In that case, the taxpayer converted its bonds into stock and did not pay the bondholders the accrued interest on the debt. The bondholders had no separate obligation to the taxpayer. /18/ e. We explain in our opening brief (at 35-37) that the conclusion that early withdrawal penalties represent a separate obligation from the debt owed to depositors is further buttressed by the Commissioner's analysis of the tax consequences for the depositor in a Revenue Ruling (Rev. Rul. 73-511, 1973-2 C.B. 402), and by Congress's reaction to that analysis. Respondent concedes, as it must, that "(t)he ruling treats the forfeiture as a transaction separate from the payment or crediting of interest." Br. 47. Inasmuch as Congress explicitly relied on the analysis in this ruling in crafting a deduction for depositors' penalties (see Gov't Br. 36-37), this concession powerfully supports the Commissioner's position that the penalty is a separate obligation from the debt and that the use of an offset is a method of payment, rather than a discharge of indebtedness. But respondent finds an entirely different distinction lurking in the Revenue Ruling. In respondent's rendition, the ruling "held that a premature withdrawal forfeiture was not a discharge of the interest, but was a discharge of the principal." Br. 47. Nothing in the Revenue Ruling supports this attempted distinction between interest and principal; indeed, the ruling explicitly states thatt the penalty was paid by "the forfeiture of a portion of the interest previously paid." 1973-2 C.B. at 403 (emphasis added). The ruling is equally clear that the distinction it is drawing is not between principal and interest, but between the payment of interest and the early withdrawal penalty: "the interest paid or credited and the forfeiture incurred represent two separate transactions and are taxable as such." Ibid. /19/ Respondent further contends that the Revenue Ruling's conclusion that the depositor can deduct the amount of the penalty as a "loss" under Section 165 of the Code (1973-2 C.B. at 403) establishes that the premature withdrawal payment is not a separate obligation or penalty. Br. 48. Respondent's suggestion that the payment of "obligations" can never be a "loss" for purposes of Section 165, however, is clearly wrong. See, e.g., Stephens v. Commissioner, 905 F.2d 667 (2d Cir. 1990) (restitution payment deductible as loss under Section 165); Rev. Rul. 67-48, 1967-1 C.B. 50 (amount paid by taxpayer to former employer as liquidated damages for breach of employment contract deductible as loss under Section 165). /20/ f. Finally, respondent also suggests that the sole purpose of Section 108 is to alleviate the hardship of taxing income from the discharge of indebtedness because the discharge does not generate cash with which to pay the tax, and emphasizes that it received no cash from the transaction. Br. 36-37. As we point out in our opening brief (at 38-39), the statutory purpose of Section 108 and its predecessor was also to provide an incentive for liquidation of indebtedness -- a purpose wholly inapplicable to the completely creditor-controlled early withdrawals here. In emphasizing the lack of cash to pay taxes on the income resulting from the early withdrawals, respondent also fails to point out that, pursuant to Section 591 of the Code, a savings institution also receives full deductions for the interest paid to depositors, including any interest sacrificed by depositors as penalties for early withdrawals. See Colonial Savings Ass'n v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 855, 864 n.15 (1985), aff'd, 854 F.2d 1001 (7th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1090 (1989); Treas. Reg. Section 1.591-1(b). /21/ * * * * * For these reasons and those set forth in our opening brief, the judgment of the court of appeals should be reversed. Respectfully submitted. JOHN G. ROBERTS, JR. Acting Solicitor General /22/ JANUARY 1991 /1/ See also Resp. Br. 18 ("(T)he threshold for realization * * * is crossed whenever an interest in property is exchanged for an interest in other legally distinct property."). /2/ Many of respondent's arguments were also raised by the petitioner in Cottage, and are addressed in our Cottage brief. A copy of that brief has been supplied to respondent's counsel. /3/ Respondent's amici take varying approaches to the "materially different" requirement. Amicus Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) contends (Br. 10) that the requirement is satisfied if "the exchanged assets represent different property rights." Like respondent's argument, this contention strips the concept of materiality of any meaning. Amicus U.S. League of Savings Institutions acknowledges that the materially different requirement "has become the touchstone for identifying a realization of gain or loss" (Br. 7), but asserts that the requirement is "a relic of earlier times" (id. at 11) that has "outlived its usefulness" (id. at 24). Amici Main Line Federal Savings Bank, et al., similarly contend (Br. 5 n.4), as one of their arguments, that the regulation should be invalidated. As we explain in our Cottage brief (at 14-15), there is no basis for invalidating the materially different aspect of the realization requirement. Notably, at various points, respondent's amici acknowledge that exchanged properties must differ in some respect before an exchange can be a realization event. See, e.g., U.S. League Br. 3 (realization occurs "unless the properties exchanged are so similar that they represent the identical property rights") (emphasis added); Main Line, et al. Br. 3 ("The proper test (under the regulation) * * * is whether (properties) are inherently different from each other.") (emphasis added); FNMA Br. 7 (no realization if exchange is "so devoid of a change in substance that no disposition of property * * * has really occurred") (emphasis added). Yet once it is recognized that there is some requirement that the exchanged properties differ, the precise definition of that requirement should be left to the Commissioner. /4/ Respondent also relies (Br. 13-16) on three other early tax decisions in which this Court held, as it did in Marr, that a shareholder realized income upon the receipt of shares in a corporate reorganization. Cullinan v. Walker, 262 U.S. 134 (1923); United States v. Phellis, 257 U.S. 156 (1921); Rockefeller v. United States, 257 U.S. 176 (1921). In those three cases, the shareholders were taxed "on the ground that they received securities in an essentially different corporation having essentially different characteristics." 3 M. Weinstein, Mertens Law of Federal Income Taxation Section 20.02, at 20 (rev. 1990). Accordingly, the Fifth Circuit correctly held in San Antonio Savings Ass'n v. Commissioner, 887 F.2d 577, 585 (1989), petition for cert. pending, No. 89-1928, that "Phellis, Rockefeller, and Cullinan do not establish that an exchange of items which differ from each other only formally nevertheless constitutes a realization event." /5/ See, e.g., Marr, 268 U.S. at 539-540; Weiss, 265 U.S. at 253-254; Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. at 199. See generally 1 B. Bittker & L. Lokken. Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts Paragraph 5.1 (2d ed. 1990). /6/ Respondent's statement (at 9, 19) that we conceded that the Treasury Regulation merely codifies earlier cases is incorrect. See Gov't Br. 15 n.10. Although, as we have noted (Br. 13 n.9), the enactment of the predecessor to Section 1001 was not intended to change the law, nothing in that Act or its successors precludes the usual discretion accorded an agency charged with interpreting and administering a statutory regime. In fact, the Code has always conferred on the Secretary of the Treasury the authority to issue regulations needful for the enforcement of the Code. See I.R.C. Section 7805. /7/ Respondent also relies (Br. 20-21) on Treas. Reg. Section 1.1002-1(c), which states that certain nonrecognition provisions of the Code apply to exchanges in which "differences (in the exchanged properties) are more formal than substantial." Respondent's contention that this statement in the Regulation establishes a general rule that "'formal' differences in exchanged properties are sufficient to cause realization" (Br. 21) is plainly incorrect. The Regulation is referring specifically to the nonrecognition provisions, not to the realization requirement, and the differences between the scope of the nonrecognition provisions and the realization requirement are readily apparent. See Gov't Cottage Br. 25-26. /8/ Notably, in contrast to respondent's repeated statement that it is "astonishing" that the realization effect of its exchange might be questioned (Br. 7, 22), the exchanges were apparently structured and initially defended as reciprocal sales in an effort to avoid the materially different inquiry for exchanges altogether. See Pet. App. 3a, 44a-47a; San Antonio Savings Ass'n v. Commissioner, 887 F.2d 577, 581 (5th Cir. 1989), petition for cert. pending, No. 89-1928. /9/ Indeed, amicus FNMA concedes that "whether the differences mattered to the parties to the transaction may be of some relevance in determining whether they matter in general." Br. 21. FNMA also advances the novel suggestion that this case be decided on the record in a different case, rather than the recod in the case before the Court. Br. 12. The facts regarding the swap transactions in this case, of course, were fully considered and addressed by the district court. The court of appeals viewed most of the facts as legally irrelevant, but that erroneous legal conclusion does not require borrowing the record and facts from a different case. We strongly disagree with FNMA's suggestion that the record in its case establishes a material difference, but those contentions can be addressed in the context of that case. Far from being representative, moreover, FNMA is unlike other financial institutions in many respects, including the fact that it was not even subject to Bank Board regulation. See Federal National Mortgage Ass'n v. Commissioner, 896 F.2d 580, 582 (D.C. Cir. 1990), petition for cert. pending, No. 89-1987. /10/ Thus, respondent is plainly wrong in asserting that it "did no more" than investors who dispose of devalued stocks and reinvest the proceeds in similar stocks of different issuers. Br. 3, 27. /11/ In its effort to minimize the significance of the Bank Board's determination, respondent seeks to recharacterize the Bank Board's analysis. According to respondent, "the purpose of Memorandum R-49's 'substantially identical' requirement" was simply "to maximize the probability that the potential for different performances would be modest." Resp. Br. 33. That is not how the Bank Board put it. According to that agency, its objective was to structure a transaction that "would * * * not change the economic position of the association after it engaged in the swap" (J.A. 58), "assur(e) that risk does not transfer" (J.A. 59), and "maintain the association's position with respect to the three types of risks in a loan portfolio" (J.A. 58). /12/ Indeed, the fact that 90% participation interests were exchanged, rather than 100% interests, actually reinforces the conclusion that there was no change in the taxpayer's economic position. The R-49 exchanges typically involved 90% interests so that the transferor would continue to service the entire loan and retain its relationship with the original borrower. Not even those incidents of mortgage ownership changed with the swap. As the district court noted, "the actual mortgages never changed hands, and borrowers were not aware that the transaction had taken place." Pet. App. 37a. Since no change of substance was contemplated by the swaps, it is not surprising that in the one case before this Court that did involve an exchange of 100% interests, the parties entered into a "Whole Loan Sale and Servicing Agreement," under which "the servicing of the loans would stay with the assignor institution." United States v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n, 694 F. Supp. 230, 235 (W.D. Tex. 1988), aff'd, 887 F.2d 593 (5th Cir. 1989), petition for cert. pending, No. 89-1927. /13/ Respondent's statement that the "spread" between the debt and the payment is the rule for discharge-of-indebtedness (Br. 36-37) thus must be read in light of the method-of-payment principle, with which respondent agrees (Br. 38-40). /14/ Although failing to address the tax treatment of a cash payment of the penalty, respondent states that any discharge of indebtedness can be "recharacterized" as a two-step transaction. Br. 45. Unlike genuine income-by-reason-of-discharge-of-indebtedness transactions, however, each step of the transactions in this case has its own independent basis, purpose, and significance. The fact that the steps are related does not undermine the independent significance of each step, and the separateness of the obligations. See Gov't Br. 35 n.31. /15/ Respondent claims (Br. 45 n.35) that we construe "forgiveness" of debt to mean discharge of debt without any consideration. Once again, respondent attacks a straw man; we do not contend that forgiveness necessarily means an absence of consideration. Our point, rather, is that respondent's offset did not result from forgiveness of a debt at all; it resulted from the separate obligation of the premature withdrawal penalty and the choice of the offset as the method of paying the penalty. /16/ Respondent points out (Br. 44 & n.34) that some of its certificates provided a penalty greater than the minimum amount required by the regulations. J.A. 27-29. Other certificates provided a penalty in the amount set forth in the regulations. PX 26. That some depositors may have paid penalties to respondent in amounts greater than the required minimum amount does not mean that the penalty obligation was not imposed by the regulations. The regulations required the depositor to pay a penalty, and merely allowed the institution to increase the amount of the penalty. /17/ To cite another example, suppose federal law required payment of a $10 fee to a bank whenever a depositor withdraws funds. If respondent provided for payment of the fee by an offset against amounts withdrawn, its theory would lead to the conclusion that the fee was income "by reason of the discharge of indebtedness," even though there had been no premature withdrawal, because the income would not have arisen "but for" the withdrawal. Here the fact that the federal law obligation applies in a situation that might otherwise be characterized by negotiation between the parties leading to forgiveness of debt -- as the price of premature discharge -- should not obscure the fact that the payment arises "by reason of" a penalty imposed by federal law, and not any forgiveness or discharge. /18/ Respondent also contends that our "entire argument" rests on the fact that the penalty and method of payment were established in advance of the transactions; respondent then cites Columbia Gas System as the coup de grace knocking out this "entire argument." Resp. Br. 43-44. In fact, however, our position does not depend on the fact that the penalties were arranged in advance; rather, it rests on the fact that the penalty represents an independent obligation and the offset is a method of paying it. As our brief points out (at 35 n.31), the fact that the separate obligation was recognized by the parties from the outset serves to corroborate the conclusion that its payment did not constitute forgiveness or revision of the debt. /19/ The legislative history of the resulting congressional provision (Section 62(a)(9)) also reveals the congressional understanding that early withdrawal penalties ordinarily are paid out of previously credited interest rather than out of principal. See H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 1405, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1974) (upon early withdrawal, depositor "is required to forfeit part of the interest previously earned"; new law permits nonitemizers "to obtain the benefit of a deduction for interest forfeited"); 120 Cong. Rec. 28,117 (1974) (Sen. Church) (effect of early withdrawal penalty is that interest is paid or credited and depositor is "required to return part of it to the financial institution as a penalty"). /20/ See also Rev. Rul. 83-60, 1983-1 C.B. 39, 41 (noting that the prior determination that a depositor is allowed a deduction under Section 165 "does not require a conclusion that a forfeiture suffered upon a premature withdrawal of a certificate may not be characterized as 'payment' of a penalty to the (savings institution)"). /21/ Respondent states (Br. 7) that the forfeitures were from principal. Although it makes no difference to the proper legal analysis, the extent to which the penalties were paid from interest or principal, or both, in this case has not been established. Cf. Rev. Rul. 83-60, 1983-1 C.B. at 39-40 (explaining that penalties may be from interest or from principal). Respondent also mischaracterizes our position as requiring a "solvency" inquiry. Resp. Br. 36 n.30. This contention is incorrect. See Gov't Br. 38 n.36. /22/ The Solicitor General is disqualified in this case.
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/*----------------------------------------------------------------------*\ | DBFrename: Rename fields in a DBF file. | | | | ArcView is able to read and display a shapefile whose corresponding | | dbf has two fields with the same name. However ArcExplorer is not, | | and ArcIMS cannot create a map service using a shapefile whose DBF | | field names are not unique. Consequently a method to change field | | names in a dbf is needed. | | | | This program reads the dbf named on the command line, and attempts | | to change the field names. If an old and new name are specified on | | the command line following the DBF file name, it replaces the old | | field name with the new one. If these names are not specified, it | | prints all of the field names and attributes, and allows the user to | | change the names of any of the fields, within the constraints of the | | DBF format. | | | | If the old name specified is a number, it will be interpreted as the | | index of the field whose name should be replaced by new_name. | | | | Peter N. Schweitzer (U.S. Geological Survey, Reston VA 20192) | \*----------------------------------------------------------------------*/ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #define version_id "1.2" #define version_date "5-Oct-2005" #define version_author "Peter N. Schweitzer" #ifdef _WIN32 #define mode "rb+" #else #define mode "r+" #endif static int no_space (char *s) { while (*s) if (isspace(*s)) return (0); else s++; return (1); } static int no_punct (char *s) { /* But allow underscore */ while (*s) if (ispunct(*s) && *s != '_') return (0); else s++; return (1); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { char *input_file = NULL; char *old_name = NULL; char *new_name = NULL; FILE *fp; unsigned char header[32]; int i,j,n,fc; unsigned char *buffer; unsigned char name[16], *s; char *e; unsigned char **field_name; unsigned char string[16]; int which,done,changed; if (argc > 1) { input_file = argv[1]; if (fp = fopen (input_file,mode)) { fread (header,32,1,fp); n = header[8] + 256*header[9]; fc = (n - 32)/32; printf ("DBFrename %s %s %s\n",version_id,version_date,version_author); printf ("Number of fields: %d\n",fc); if (field_name = (unsigned char **) malloc (fc * sizeof (char *))) { if (buffer = (unsigned char *) malloc (n-32)) { fread (buffer,n-32,1,fp); for (i=0; i < fc; i++) { s = buffer + i * 32; field_name[i] = s; memcpy (name,s,10); name[10] = 0; printf ("%d: %10s",i,name); printf (" %c",s[11]); printf (" %4d",s[12] + 256*(s[13] + 256*(s[14] + 256*s[15]))); printf (" %2d",s[16]); printf (" %2d",s[17]); printf ("\n"); } /*--------------------------------------------------*\ | Non-interactive mode: just try to make the change | dbfrename input_file old_name new name \*--------------------------------------------------*/ if (argc > 3) { old_name = argv[2]; new_name = argv[3]; changed = 0; if (isdigit (*old_name)) which = atoi (old_name); else for (which=0; which < fc; which++) if (stricmp (old_name,field_name[which]) == 0) break; if (which != fc) /* Name doesn't exist? */ if (strlen (new_name) < 11) /* Name too long? */ if (no_space (new_name)) /* Name contains whitespace? */ if (no_punct (new_name)) { /* Name contains punctuation? */ for (j=0; j < fc; j++) if (j != which) if (stricmp (new_name,field_name[j]) == 0) break; if (j == fc) { /* Name same as another field? */ strcpy (field_name[which],new_name); printf ("Ok, new name for field %d is %s\n",which,new_name); changed = 1; } else printf ("Error: new name matches an existing field %d.\n",j); } else printf ("Error: field names cannot contain punctuation.\n"); else printf ("Error: field names cannot contain whitespace.\n"); else printf ("Error: field names must be 10 characters or less.\n"); else printf ("Error: %s contains no field named %s.\n",input_file,old_name); if (changed) { fseek (fp,0L,SEEK_SET); fwrite (header,1,32,fp); fwrite (buffer,1,n-32,fp); fflush (fp); } exit (changed == 0); } /*--------------------------------------------------*\ | Ask user \*--------------------------------------------------*/ changed = 0; done = 0; while (!done) { printf ("Enter a field number, blank when done.\n"); printf ("Rename which field?: "); fgets (string,16,stdin); which = (int) strtol (string,&e,0); if (e != (char *) string) { printf ("Old name is %s; Enter new name: ",field_name[which]); fgets (string,16,stdin); /* Trim leading and trailing spaces */ s = string + strlen (string) - 1; if (*s == '\n') *s-- = 0; if (*s == '\r') *s-- = 0; while (s >= string && isspace(*s)) *s-- = 0; for (s=string; *s && isspace(*s); s++); strcpy (name,s); /* Check for problems */ if (*name) /* Name empty? */ if (strlen (name) < 11) /* Name too long? */ if (no_space (name)) /* Name contains whitespace? */ if (no_punct (name)) { /* Name contains punctuation? */ for (j=0; j < fc; j++) if (j != which) if (stricmp (name,field_name[j]) == 0) break; if (j == fc) { /* Name same as another field? */ strcpy (field_name[which],name); printf ("Ok, new name for field %d is %s\n",which,name); changed = 1; } else printf ("Sorry, that name matches field %d. Name not changed.\n",j); } else printf ("Sorry, field names cannot contain punctuation. Name not changed.\n"); else printf ("Sorry, field name cannot contain whitespace. Name not changed.\n"); else printf ("Sorry, new name must be 10 characters or less. Name not changed.\n"); else printf ("Sorry, no new name given. Name not changed.\n"); } else done = 1; } /* If changes were made, show user and confirm save. */ if (changed) { printf ("Field names as modified:\n"); for (i=0; i < fc; i++) printf ("%d: %10s\n",i,field_name[i]); printf ("Save these in the file? [y/N]: "); fgets (string,16,stdin); if (toupper(*string) == 'Y') { fseek (fp,0L,SEEK_SET); fwrite (header,1,32,fp); fwrite (buffer,1,n-32,fp); fflush (fp); } } free (buffer); } else { fprintf (stderr,"Error: could not allocate space for field header info (%d bytes)\n",n-32); fclose (fp); exit (1); } free (field_name); } else { fprintf (stderr,"Error: could not allocate space for field name pointers (%d bytes)\n",fc*sizeof(char *)); fclose (fp); exit (1); } fclose (fp); } else { printf ("Error: could not open input file %s\n",input_file); exit (1); } } else { printf ("DBFrename %s %s %s\n",version_id,version_date,version_author); printf (" Rename fields in a DBF file. Useful for fixing identical field names.\n"); printf ("Usage: %s input_file.dbf [old_name|index new_name]\n",argv[0]); printf (" If old and new names are not specified, this program carries out a dialog\n"); printf (" with the user at the command line.\n"); } exit (0); } /*----------------------------------------------------------------------*\ \*----------------------------------------------------------------------*/
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APPENDIX B SUPPLEMENTAL INSPECTION PROGRAM A. OBJECTIVES AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE SUPPLEMENTAL INSPECTION PROGRAM The supplemental inspection program is designed to support the NRC=s goals of maintaining safety, enhancing openness, improving the effectiveness, efficiency and realism of the regulatory process, and reducing unnecessary regulatory burden. While the baseline inspection program and performance indicators should provide sufficient information to allow the NRC to meet the goal of assuring licensee=s are maintaining safety at facilities with an absence of risk significant performance issues, additional supplemental inspections are required[^1] to provide enhanced information regarding safety at facilities where risk significant performance issues have been identified. These performance issues may be identified either by inspection findings evaluated using the significance determination process (SDP) or when performance indicator thresholds are exceeded. The breadth and depth of the supplemental inspections increase in proportion to the relative risk significance of the identified performance issues and will be based upon the guidance provided in the NRC=s assessment AAction Matrix@ and the Supplemental Inspection Selection Table. B. APPLICABILITY The supplemental inspections contained in this Appendix apply to all strategic performance areas and associated cornerstones of safety. The inspection report written for the supplemental inspections should contain the NRC=s assessment for each inspection requirement. These inspection requirements are independent of whether the performance issues were the result of performance indicators or inspection findings. The resource estimates provided in each supplemental inspection procedure are estimates only, and may vary considerably due to the complexity of the issue(s) and the thoroughness of the licensee=s own evaluations and proposed corrective actions. C. DESCRIPTION OF SUPPLEMENTAL INSPECTION PROGRAM The supplemental inspection program contains three procedures which become deeper and broader as the safety significance of the performance issues increases. For one or two white inputs in a strategic performance area (different cornerstones), supplemental inspection is limited to a thorough oversight of the licensee=s evaluation. **[SUPPLEMENTAL INSPECTION SELECTION TABLE]{.underline}** ---------------- ------------------ ----------------------- ------------------- **One or two white **One degraded **Repetitive inputs (in cornerstone (two white degraded different inputs or one yellow cornerstone, cornerstones) in a input) or any three multiple degraded strategic white inputs in a cornerstones, performance area** strategic performance multiple yellow area** inputs, or any one red input** **Supplemental Inspection Inspection Procedure Inspection Inspection Procedure 95001 95002 consisting of Procedure 95003 Procedure and consisting of review of the consisting of a Scope** review of the licensee=s evaluation large licensee=s of root cause and multi-disciplined evaluation of root extent of condition, NRC team cause and extent plus review of proposed inspection(s). of condition; plus corrective actions for Inspection focused review of proposed both individual and on all key corrective collective issues. attributes actions. Follow-up Independent NRC associated with NRC inspection to inspection to assess effected strategic determine validity of licensee=s performance areas. effectiveness of extent of condition. corrective Follow-up NRC actions. inspection to evaluate Inspection limited adequacy of licensee to specific corrective actions. issue(s) or performance area of concern. **Assessment of Significant Significant weaknesses Results of this Supplemental weaknesses in the in licensee evaluation supplemental Inspection licensee=s may result in expansion inspection will be Findings** evaluation may of the inspection to assessed to result in independently acquire determine if expansion of the the information additional agency inspection to necessary to satisfy actions are independently the inspection warranted and acquire the requirements. The whether the information original issue may also facility should be necessary to not be removed from the ordered to shut satisfy the action matrix until the down and be placed inspection weaknesses in the under Inspection requirements. The evaluation are Manual Chapter original issue may addressed. 0350. also not be removed from the action matrix until the weaknesses in the evaluation are addressed. ---------------- ------------------ ----------------------- ------------------- For one degraded cornerstone or any three white inputs in a strategic performance area, the supplemental inspection will also review the licensee=s collective evaluation for multiple issues. In addition, the portions of the licensee=s evaluation concerning extent of condition will be assessed independently by the NRC. This independent assessment will be conducted using inspection procedures selected from tables that list the procedures by cornerstone and key attribute provided in Attachment 1 to this Appendix. The objective of this inspection will be to ensure that the licensee has properly identified the scope (extent) of the issues and that the proposed corrective actions are sufficiently comprehensive. The inspection procedures listed in the Attachment 1 tables include: baseline inspection procedures (portions of which can be repeated with additional samples); procedures that were part of the core, regional initiative, and temporary instruction portions of the old inspection program; and new inspection procedures written solely for the purpose of performing supplemental inspection. A combination of procedures or portions of procedures can also be used as appropriate. Inspection hours utilized in fulfilling this inspection requirement should be charged to inspection procedure 95002, regardless of the specific procedure(s) chosen for implementation. D. ASSESSING INSPECTION FINDINGS If during implementation of Inspection Procedures 95001 or 95002, significant weaknesses are identified in the licensee=s evaluation of the performance issue, the inspection may be expanded as necessary to independently acquire the information necessary to satisfy the inspection requirements. Also, the original performance issue will remain open and will not be removed from the action matrix until the weaknesses in the evaluation are addressed and corrected. Programmatic weaknesses associated with the licensee=s evaluation of the performance issue will also be documented in the inspection report and additional focus will be given to those areas during the next annual problem identification and resolution baseline inspection. Should new or additional examples of performance issues (non-programmatic) be identified during supplemental inspections, the new issues will be categorized using the SDP, and if indicated, the corresponding supplemental inspection procedure will be performed. Supplemental inspections will also be performed if additional examples of performance issues are reported via PIs that result in crossing a new PI threshold. Additional supplemental inspections will generally not be performed if the new or additional examples of performance issues reported via PIs do not result in crossing a new PI threshold. Significant weaknesses identified during performance of Inspection Procedure 95003 will be assessed to determine if additional agency actions are warranted and whether the facility should be ordered to be shut down. In such cases, the facility will be placed under Inspection Manual Chapter 0350. END ATTACHMENT 1 **[INSPECTION PROCEDURES TO BE USED FOR]{.underline}** **[ASSESSING EXTENT OF CONDITION]{.underline}** [INITIATING EVENTS]{.underline} +----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------+-------------+ | Pr | Human | Procedure | Equipment | Design | Co | | otection | | Quality | Pe | | nfiguration | | Against | Pe | | rformance | | Control | | External | rformance | | | | | | Events | | | | | | +----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------+-------------+ | 71111.01 | 41500 | 42700 | 50002 | 50002 | 62709 | | | | | | | | | 71111.05 | 71707 | 72701 | 55050 | 52001 | 71111.04 | | | | | | | | | 71111.06 | 71715 | | 55100 | 52002 | 71111.13 | | | | | | | | | | 71841 | | 56700 | 93803 | 71111.20 | | | | | | | | | | | | 61726 | 93807 | 71707 | | | | | | | | | | | | 62700 | 93811 | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62706 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62709 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.07 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.08 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.12 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.13 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93805 | | | +----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+--------+-------------+ +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | General Procedures | | | | 90700 | | | | 90712 | | | | 92700 | | | | 93801 | | | | 93802 | | | | 93806 | | | | 93808 | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ [MITIGATING SYSTEMS]{.underline} +---------+----------+------------+------------+----------+-----------+ | Design | Pr | Con | Equipment | P | Human | | | otection | figuration | P | rocedure | Pe | | | Against | Control | erformance | Quality | rformance | | | External | | | | | | | Events | | | | | +---------+----------+------------+------------+----------+-----------+ | 52001 | 71111.01 | 62709 | 38703 | 42001 | 41500 | | | | | | | | | 52002 | 71111.05 | 71111.04 | 49001 | 42700 | 71111.11 | | | | | | | | | 56700 | 71111.06 | 71111.13 | 55050 | 72701 | 71707 | | | | | | | | | 62710 | | 71111.20 | 55100 | 73052 | 71715 | | | | | | | | | 7 | | 71707 | 56700 | | 71841 | | 1111.02 | | | | | | | | | | 57050 | | | | 7 | | | | | | | 1111.17 | | | 57060 | | | | | | | | | | | 7 | | | 57070 | | | | 1111.21 | | | | | | | | | | 57080 | | | | 7 | | | | | | | 1111.23 | | | 57090 | | | | | | | | | | | 93803 | | | 61726 | | | | | | | | | | | 93807 | | | 62002 | | | | | | | | | | | 93810 | | | 62700 | | | | | | | | | | | 93811 | | | 62706 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62708 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62709 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62710 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 70370 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.07 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.12 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.13 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.15 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.17 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.19 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.21 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.22 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71111.23 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 73756 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93805 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93810 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93811 | | | +---------+----------+------------+------------+----------+-----------+ | General | | | | | | | Pro | | | | | | | cedures | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 90700 | | | | | | | 90712 | | | | | | | 92700 | | | | | | | 93801 | | | | | | | 93802 | | | | | | | 93803 | | | | | | | 93804 | | | | | | | 93806 | | | | | | | 93808 | | | | | | +---------+----------+------------+------------+----------+-----------+ | | | | | | | +---------+----------+------------+------------+----------+-----------+ [BARRIER INTEGRITY]{.underline} +----------+--------+----------+----------+--------+--------+----------+ | Fuel | RCS | Con | Human | Pro | Design | Confi | | Cladding | Equip. | tainment | Per | cedure | C | guration | | Per | & | SSC & | formance | Q | ontrol | | | formance | B | Barrier | | uality | | Control | | | arrier | Perf. | | | | | | | Perf. | | | | | | +----------+--------+----------+----------+--------+--------+----------+ | 61702 | 55050 | 38703 | 41500 | 42700 | 50002 | 62709 | | | | | | | | | | 61705 | 55100 | 49001 | 71111.11 | 70307 | 71 | 71111.04 | | | | | | | 111.02 | | | 61706 | 56700 | 50002 | 71707 | 72701 | | 71111.13 | | | | | | | 71 | | | 61707 | 57050 | 55050 | 71715 | 73052 | 111.17 | 71111.20 | | | | | | | | | | 61708 | 57060 | 55100 | 71841 | | 71 | 71707 | | | | | | | 111.23 | | | 61709 | 57070 | 56700 | | | | | | | | | | | 93803 | | | 61710 | 57080 | 57050 | | | | | | | | | | | 93811 | | | | 57090 | 57060 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 61728 | 57070 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62700 | 57080 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62706 | 57090 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 62709 | 61715 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71 | 61720 | | | | | | | 111.08 | | | | | | | | | 62002 | | | | | | | 71 | | | | | | | | 111.12 | 62003 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71 | 62700 | | | | | | | 111.13 | | | | | | | | | 62706 | | | | | | | 71 | | | | | | | | 111.17 | 62709 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 71 | 70313 | | | | | | | 111.22 | | | | | | | | | 70323 | | | | | | | 71 | | | | | | | | 111.23 | 70370 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 73051 | 71111.12 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 73753 | 71111.13 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 73755 | 71111.22 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 73756 | 71111.17 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93805 | 71111.23 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93805 | | | | | +----------+--------+----------+----------+--------+--------+----------+ | General | | | | | | | | Pr | | | | | | | | ocedures | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 90700 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 90712 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 92700 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93801 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 93808 | | | | | | | +----------+--------+----------+----------+--------+--------+----------+ [EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS]{.underline} +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | ERO | Facilities | Procedure | ERO | Offsite EP | | Readiness | and | Quality | Performance | | | | Equipment | | | | +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ | 71114 | 71114 | 71114 | 82001 | No NRC | | | | | | inspection | | 82001 | 82001 | 82001 | | of this key | | | | | | a | | 82201 | 82201 | 82201 | | ttribute. - | | | | | | Evaluation | | 82202 | 82202 | 82202 | | performed | | | | | | by FEMA | +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+ [PUBLIC RADIATION SAFETY]{.underline} +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ | Facilities/Equipment | Program/Process | Human Performance | +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ | 83502 | 83502 | 41500 | | | | | | 83502.01 | 83502.01 | 71841 | | | | | | 83502.02 | 83502.02 | 83502 | | | | | | | 83502.03 | 83502.01 | | | | | | | 86730 | 83502.02 | | | | | | | | 83502.03 | +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ [OCCUPATIONAL RADIATION SAFETY]{.underline} +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ | Facilities and | Program/Process | Human Performance | | Equipment | | | +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ | 83724 | 79702 | 41500 | | | | | | 83725 | 83724 | 71841 | | | | | | | 83725 | 83723 | | | | | | | 83728 | | +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ | General Procedures | | | | | | | | 83501 | | | +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+ ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- [PHYSICAL PROTECTION]{.underline} +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | Physical | Access | Access Control | Response to | | Protection | Authorization | System | Contingency | | System | System | | Events | +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ | 81018 | 81018 | 81018 | 81018 | | | | | | | 81020 | 81020 | 81020 | 81020 | | | | | | | 81034 | 81034 | 81034 | 81022 | | | | | | | 81038 | 81038 | 81038 | 81034 | | | | | | | 81042 | 81502 | 81042 | 81038 | | | | | | | 81046 | 81700 | 81046 | 81042 | | | | | | | 81052 | | 81054 | 81052 | | | | | | | 81058 | | 81058 | 81054 | | | | | | | 81062 | | 81064 | 81058 | | | | | | | 81064 | | 81070 | 81062 | | | | | | | 81066 | | 81072 | 81064 | | | | | | | 81078 | | 81074 | 81066 | | | | | | | 81084 | | 81080 | 81078 | | | | | | | 81810 | | | 81080 | | | | | | | | | | 81084 | | | | | | | | | | 81088 | | | | | | | | | | 81110 | | | | | | | | | | 81501 | | | | | | | | | | 81601 | | | | | | | | | | 81700 | +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+ END ATTACHMENT 2 [PROCEDURES LISTED IN ATTACHMENT 1]{.underline} +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | [Inspe | [Inspection Procedure Title]{.underline} | | ction]{.u | | | nderline} | | | | | | [ | | | Procedure | | | No.]{.u | | | nderline} | | +===========+==========================================================+ | 38703 | Commercial Grade Procurement Inspection | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 41500 | Training and Qualification Effectiveness | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 42001 | Emergency Operating Procedures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 42700 | Plant Procedures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 49001 | Inspection of Erosion/Corrosion Monitoring Programs | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 50002 | Steam Generators | | | | | 52001 | Digital Retrofits Receiving Prior Approval | | | | | 52002 | Digital Retrofits Not Receiving Prior Approval | | | | | 55050 | Nuclear Welding General Inspection Procedure | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 55100 | Structural Welding General Inspection Procedure | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 56700 | Calibration | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 57050 | Nondestructive Examination Procedure Visual | | | | | | Examination Procedure Review/Work Observation/ | | | | | | Record Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 57060 | Nondestructive Examination Procedure Liquid | | | | | | Penetrant Examination Procedure Review/Work | | | | | | Observation/Record Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 57070 | Nondestructive Examination Procedure Magnetic | | | | | | Particle Examination Procedure Review/Work | | | | | | Observation/Record Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 57080 | Nondestructive Examination Procedure Ultrasonic | | | | | | Examination Procedure Review/Work Observation | | | | | | Record Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 57090 | Nondestructive Examination Procedure Radiographic | | | | | | Examination Procedure Review/Work Observation/ | | | | | | Record Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61702 | Surveillance of Core Power Distribution Limits | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61705 | Calibration of Nuclear Instrumentation Systems | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61706 | Core Thermal Power Evaluation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61707 | Determination of Reactor Shutdown Margin | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61708 | Isothermal and Moderator Temperature Coefficient | | | Determinations | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61709 | Total Power Coefficient of Reactivity at Pressurized | | | Water Reactors | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61710 | Control Rod Worth Measurement | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61715 | Verification of Containment Integrity | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61720 | Containment Local Leak Rate Testing | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61726 | Surveillance Observations | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 61728 | Independent Measurement of RCS Leak Rates for a PWR | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62002 | Inspection of Structures, Passive Components, and Civil | | | Engineering Features at Nuclear Power Plants | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62003 | Inspection of Steel and Concrete Containment Structures | | | | | | at Nuclear Power Plants | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62700 | Maintenance Program Implementation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62706 | Maintenance Rule Inspection Procedure | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62708 | Motor-Operated Valve Capability | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62709 | Configuration Risk Assessment and Risk Management | | | Process | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 62710 | Power-Operated Gate Valve Pressure Locking and Thermal | | | Binding | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 70307 | Containment Integrated Leak Rate Test ‑ Procedure Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 70313 | Containment Integrated Leak Rate Test | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 70323 | Containment Leak Rate Test Results Evaluation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 70370 | Testing Piping Support and Restraint Systems | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 71707 | Plant Operations | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 71715 | Sustained Control Room and Plant Observation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 71841 | Supplemental Inspection for Human Performance | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 72701 | Modification Testing | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 73051 | Inservice Inspection ‑ Review of Program | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 73052 | Inservice Inspection ‑ Review of Procedures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 73753 | Inservice Inspection | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 73755 | Inservice Inspection ‑ Data Review and Evaluation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 73756 | Inservice Testing of Pumps and Valves | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 79702 | Control and Monitoring of Radiological Source Term | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81018 | Security Plan and Implementing Procedures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81020 | Management Effectiveness - Security Program | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81022 | Security Organization | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81034 | Security Program Audit | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81038 | Records and Reports | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81042 | Testing and Maintenance | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81046 | Locks, Keys, and Combinations | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81052 | Physical Barriers‑Protected Areas | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81054 | Physical Barriers‑Vital Areas, Material Access | | | | | | Areas and Controlled Access Areas | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81058 | Security System Power Supply | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81062 | Lighting | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81064 | Compensatory Measures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81066 | Assessment Aids | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81070 | Access Control ‑ Personnel | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81072 | Access Control (Power Reactor) ‑ Packages | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81074 | Access Control ‑ Vehicles | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81078 | Detection Aids ‑ Protected Areas | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81080 | Detection Aids ‑ VA, MAA, CAA | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81084 | Alarm Stations | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81088 | Communications | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81110 | Operational Safeguards Response Evaluation (OSRE) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81501 | Personnel Training and Qualifications ‑ General | | | | | | Requirements | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81502 | Fitness for Duty Program | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81601 | Safeguards Contingency Plan Implementation Review | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 81810 | Protection of Safeguards Information | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 82001 | Evaluation of Emergency Preparedness | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 82201 | Emergency Detection and Classification | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 82202 | Protective Action Decision Making | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83501 | Significant Uncontrolled Exposures | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83502 | Evaluation of Public Radiation Safety | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83502.01 | Radioactive Gaseous and Liquid Trreatment and Monitoring | | | Systems | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83502.02 | Radioactive Material Process and Transportation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83502.03 | Radiological Environmental Monitoring Program and | | | Radioactive Material Control Program | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83723 | Training and Qualifications: General Employee | | | | | | Training, Radiation Safety, Plant Chemistry, | | | | | | Radwaste, and Transportation | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83724 | External Occupational Exposure Control and | | | | | | Personal Dosimetry | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83725 | Internal Exposure Control and Assessment | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 83728 | Maintaining Occupational Exposures ALARA | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 86730 | Transportation of Radioactive Materials (49CFR Parts | | | 100-179 & 10 CFR Part 71) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 90700 | Feedback of Operational Experience Information at | | | Operating Power Reactors | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 90712 | In-Office Review of Written Reports of Nonroutine Events | | | at Power Reactor Facilities | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 92700 | Onsite Follow-up of Written Reports of Nonroutine Events | | | at Power Reactor Facilities | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93801 | Safety System Functional Inspection (SSFI) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93802 | Operational Safety Team Inspection (OSTI) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93803 | Safety Systems Outage Modifications Inspection | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93804 | Risk‑Based Operational Safety and Performance Inspection | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93805 | Maintenance Program | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93806 | Operational Readiness Assessment Team Inspections | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93807 | Systems Based Instrumentation and Control Inspection | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93810 | Service Water System Operational Performance Inspection | | | (SWSOPI) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ | 93811 | Electrical Distribution System Functional Inspection | | | (EDSFI) | +-----------+----------------------------------------------------------+ END Attachment 3 Revision History Sheet for IMC 2515 Appendix B +--------+-------+----------------------------+------+-------+---------+ | Comm | Issue | Description of Change | Trai | Tra | Comment | | itment | Date | | ning | ining | Res | | Tr | | | Ne | Compl | olution | | acking | | | eded | etion | Ac | | Number | | | | Date | cession | | | | | | | Number | +--------+-------+----------------------------+------+-------+---------+ | N/A | 1/17 | Revised to include new | N/A | N/A | N/A | | | /2002 | inspection procedure | | | | | | | 62710, APower-Operated | | | | | | | Gate Valve Pressure | | | | | | | Locking and Thermal | | | | | | | Binding.@ | | | | +--------+-------+----------------------------+------+-------+---------+ | N/A | 3/23 | Revised to add Inspection | N/A | N/A | N/A | | | /2005 | Procedures 56700, 82201, | | | | | | | 82202, and 90700 to | | | | | | | Attachment 1. | | | | +--------+-------+----------------------------+------+-------+---------+ | N/A | 01/ | Added IP 61726, | N/A | N/A | ML06 | | | 26/07 | ASurveillance | | | 3460228 | | | | Observations@ to list of | | | | | | CN | IPs to be used for | | | | | | 0 | assessing extent of | | | | | | 7-004 | condition (FF | | | | | | | IMC2515B-919). Completed 4 | | | | | | | year historical change | | | | | | | notice search. | | | | +--------+-------+----------------------------+------+-------+---------+ [^1]: Note that the assessment process allows the option of not performing a supplemental inspection for a white issue identified as part of a licensee self assessment activity. This is not considered a deviation from the action matrix.
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![](media/image1.png){width="1.8729166666666666in" height="0.6465277777777778in"} 2098 11^th^ Avenue E North St. Paul, MN 55125 651-779-5651 Congresswoman Betty McCollum Minnesota Families Panel, January 30, 2006 Patricia Brady, Director Employment and Training Ramsey County's Workforce Solutions # Impact of Administration's State of the Union on Small Businesses I recently went to my local gym to enroll in a special exercise course they were advertising. As it turned out, the class was being conducted at 11:00 in the morning. I was extremely disappointed, and of course surprised. I spoke with the personal trainer directly to register my dismay and to lobby for an evening course. She explained to me that the best time, economically speaking, for the class *[was]{.underline}* in the morning. She went on to say that there was so much interest for a class at that hour that they were starting another class to keep up with the demand. "Don't these people work?" I asked, mostly kidding and expecting a laugh. "They do," she said, they are mostly middle-aged people who are self-employed - consultants." That's when I remembered reading an article in the fall of 2005 in *USA Today* that focused on research that indicated 5.6 million workers age 50 and older are now self-employed, **a 23% jump from 1990**.  As a result of corporate downsizing and mergers, tens of thousands of workers over 50 have faced loss of employment in recent years. After exhausting their unemployment benefits and failing to find work, these individuals had turned their misfortune into small businesses. When President Bush makes his State of the Union address to Congress this week, he is expected to ask lawmakers to support a decrease in funds that would support another vital segment of the nation's economy that is too often taken for granted: America's 25 million small businesses. Small businesses are the fast lanes to economic growth for the United States and for Minnesota. There are 25 million small businesses in the United States, 456, 000 of them right here in Minnesota. Small businesses are employers of 53 percent of the Nation\'s private workforce and the source of about half the country\'s private gross domestic product. More recent studies indicate that small business will likely **lead** medium to large businesses in future employment growth, especially in technology-intensive industries. So, I had two concerns when I read that the President will be requesting a 2.8 percent decline in funding for the Small Business Administration for 2006. I am concerned for Patricia Brady, Director Employment and Training Ramsey County's Workforce Solutions # Impact of Administration's State of the Union on Small Businesses small business survival and growth, and concern for current and potential workers who depend on economic development of these businesses for their very livelihood. These two concerns are inextricably tied. We cannot expect to stimulate job growth if we do not assist small businesses that are struggling to survive and grow. Since many large corporations continue to downsize, and there is no end in sight for corporate mergers, we need the federal government to allocate resources in a way that will help insure we can increase the number of job opportunities for those being laid off and for the emerging workforce. Our economy will look to small businesses for new job creation just as we have for the last decade or more. The question is, will there be enough new small businesses being formed, and existing small businesses expanding to generate the nearly 160,000 new jobs we need every month simply to provide jobs for new workers seeking to enter the workforce?  These small businesses, new and mature, will need a well-trained workforce or they will not survive. This means that we need to become skills-focused with our current and potential workers. Research has shown that we are going into a future that will not be plagued with a shortage of workers, as much as a shortage of skilled workers. Moreover, many new jobs will require more technical skills and a greater understanding of math and science---subjects in which American students fail to show a suitable level of competence. Tuition at public institutions rose by 10.5% last year and 400,000 low and moderate-income, qualified, high school graduates will not pursue a full-time, four-year degree, because of an inability to pay. But it's not just low and moderate-income students that face a difficult time paying for college. The non-partisan National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education concluded that a four-year college education is getting priced out of the reach of most American families. So when I hear that the president may freeze funding for work-study, supplemental educational opportunity grants and eliminating funding for the LEAP program, which matches state financial aid targeted toward low-income students, I become concerned about small businesses that need skilled workers, and our ability to educate and train jobseekers for the future. Where will our small businesses find the qualified workers they need to grow their businesses and how will our economy grow with skilled workers. I am already concerned about the number of jobs loss to offshore concerns. Businesses are not just relocating for lower wage earners, but also for more skilled workers. We can decrease this trend by assuring that we meet the needs at home for skilled workers. A highly skilled, workforce will assist small business as they expand and continue to stimulate economic development. Patricia Brady, Director Employment and Training Ramsey County's Workforce Solutions # Impact of Administration's State of the Union on Small Businesses I am also concerned about health insurance premiums that are rising faster than inflation. The number of employers offering health coverage is declining and the numbers of the uninsured are growing. These developments explain why health care is near the top of many small businesses' list of worries. The president may be undertaking a campaign to transfer much of the cost of health care to the consumer, which discourages people \-- particularly the poor \-- from seeking the care they need. Focusing on providing tax advantages to individuals for health spending draws the healthiest and wealthiest out of traditional employer-based insurance. Left behind, are less well off in a system that is increasingly expensive and thus eventually less available. On the surface it may appear that the small business owner is relieved. In the end, this may make good jobs less attractive to skilled workers. This new policy will not really solve the problem for small businesses, only shift the problem to workers who may have to choose between their own care and other more pressing issues. This will weaken small businesses. Finally, I am encouraged that small businesses may have the opportunity to collaborate with other small businesses in providing healthcare benefits. I would offer that this must be done in a way that does not just benefit insurance companies, but small businesses and consumers as well. Administratively, this could further raise the cost of premiums if not very well done, or may require small businesses to expend more from their own administration budget to make the processes workable. Thank you for the opportunity to participate in this conversation about the State of the Union, Minnesota families.
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******************************************************** NOTICE ******************************************************** This document was converted from WordPerfect to ASCII Text format. Content from the original version of the document such as headers, footers, footnotes, endnotes, graphics, and page numbers will not show up in this text version. All text attributes such as bold, italic, underlining, etc. from the original document will not show up in this text version. Features of the original document layout such as columns, tables, line and letter spacing, pagination, and margins will not be preserved in the text version. If you need the complete document, download the WordPerfect version or Adobe Acrobat version, if available. ***************************************************************** Before theFEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) Florida Public Service Commission ) Request for Interpretation of the ) AAD 95-77 Applicability of the Limit on Change in ) Interstate Allocation, Section 36.154(f) ) of the Commission's Rules ) ORDER Adopted: March 11, 1997 Released: March 12, 1997 By the Commission: I. INTRODUCTION 1. In a March 22, 1996 Order, the Accounting and Audits Division clarified the application of the subscriber plant factor (SPF) transition rules set forth in section 36.154 of the Commission's rules. These rules govern the allocation of loop costs between the state and interstate jurisdictions. The transition was designed to change a carrier's loop allocation from the traffic sensitive subscriber plant factor (SPF) to a flat rate 25 percent interstate allocation factor. 2. The Order's interpretation rejected the guidance provided and enforced by the National Exchange Carrier Association (NECA) for reporting of pool settlement data. In response to the Order, NECA issued two letters stating that, to comply with the Order's interpretation, certain carriers must adjust monthly settlement data for the period from April 1994 to the present. On April 22, 1996, GVNW Inc./Management (GVNW), on behalf of itself and its clients, filed a Motion for Partial Stay of the retroactive application of the Order. That Motion was granted on May 22, 1996. 3. On April 22, 1996, the Commission also received the following submissions in response to the Order: Applications for Review from GVNW, the National Telephone Cooperative Association (NTCA), and Tri-County Telephone Association, Inc., (TCTA) jointly with TCT West, Inc. (TCTW); a Request for Clarification from the Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies (OPASTCO); Requests for Clarification or Reconsideration from NECA and John Staurulakis Inc., (JSI); and a Petition for Reconsideration from TCA Inc., (TCA). 4. On May 2, 1996, MCI Communications Corporation (MCI) submitted an Opposition to the above pleadings. Also on May 2, the Sprint Local Telephone Companies (SPRINT) submitted an Opposition in part to NTCA's application. On May 6, 1996, the Commission issued a Public Notice soliciting comments from interested parties. We received comments from 39 parties and reply comments from 7 parties. 5. The petitions and comments raise three issues: whether the Order's interpretation of the five percent limit is correct; whether the Order must be applied retroactively; and how study area changes affect the operation of the SPF transition rules. II. LIMIT ON CHANGE IN INTERSTATE ALLOCATION A. Background 6. The procedures for allocating loop costs between the state and interstate jurisdictions are set forth in sections 36.154(a) through (f) of our rules. Prior to 1982, these costs were allocated using a traffic sensitive interstate allocation factor known as the subscriber plant factor (SPF). By the early 1980's, increases in relative interstate usage caused carriers' SPFs to escalate rapidly, reaching 85 percent for some carriers. As a result, the Commission decided to re-evaluate its allocation procedures. 7. In a series of proceedings, the Commission instituted a flat-rate 25 percent interstate allocation factor that would be phased in during an eight-year period, 1986 to 1993, subject to the limitation that a carrier's transitional interstate allocation factor would not decrease more than five percent each year (SPF transition). Concurrent with the institution of the SPF transition, the Commission established the universal service fund (USF) that allows incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs) with high local loop costs to allocate a portion of those costs to the interstate jurisdiction. The USF was phased in during the same eight-year transition period as the SPF transition. The SPF transition's five percent limit on the change in interstate allocation measured the combined impact of both the SPF transition and USF transition. Carriers with very high SPFs were directed to extend their transition, subject to the five percent limitation, until the 25 percent allocation was reached. 8. In a letter dated May 12, 1995, the Florida PSC requested an interpretation of the applicability of the five percent limit on the change in interstate allocations after 1993 and after a study area's interstate allocation factor has reached a level of 25 percent pursuant to the SPF transition. The Florida PSC stated that, in its view, the purpose of section 36.154(f) was to mitigate potentially large intrastate cost shifts and thereby to help stabilize a carrier's earnings and rates. According to the Florida PSC, that purpose remained valid after 1993. 9. Essentially, the Florida PSC sought to confirm that the interpretation set forth by NECA, in its February 1991 Cost Issue 5.3, was correct. NECA there stated that the five percent limit found in section 36.154(f) was to be applied on a year-to-year basis until the rule was eliminated. Based on NECA's interpretation, carriers that had completed the transition to a 25 percent allocation nevertheless increased their interstate allocations to offset the impact of study area changes and reductions in USF payments. The Order, however, clarified that the overriding purpose of the transition was to establish a 25 percent interstate allocation factor and that, once a carrier had reached a 25 percent allocation, nothing in the rules would permit it to change. B. Positions of Parties 10. GVNW, NTCA and TCTA/TCTW contend that the Order's interpretation of section 36.154(f) conflicts with the language of the rule, the policy behind it, and previous reliable interpretations. They state that the overall purpose of reaching a 25 percent interstate allocation factor cannot be discerned from the language of section 36.154(f). Instead, they argue that the rule is intended to smooth ongoing fluctuations in interstate allocations resulting from reductions in USF support. 11. NECA, JSI and others maintain that NECA's former interpretation was reasonably supported by the rule language and prior Commission decisions. In fact, the Florida PSC observes that the Order does not cite any provision prohibiting the applicability of the five percent limit after 1993 and after a study area has reached the 25 percent interstate allocation factor. It claims the test may still be used to limit fluctuations in interstate allocations. Other commenters assert that NECA's interpretation better reflects the purposes of the rule -- to promote and develop a more competitive market and foster universal service goals. Many of GVNW's clients individually submitted financial impact data to support GVNW's application. These small ILECs warn that they may "review future construction plans to avoid significant revenue shortfalls which will occur" as a result of the Order's interpretation and the "inherent lag" in USF support. 12. Sprint, MCI, ALLTEL and AT&T support the Order's interpretation. They base their support on the language of the rule and observe that the method for determining whether the interstate allocation has decreased is based on the transitional allocations set forth in section 36.154(d). They note that, because the transitional allocations expired in 1992, it is impossible to calculate the five percent limit using the method required by section 36.154(f). In addition, AT&T and ALLTEL argue that previous Commission decisions support the Order's interpretation. C. Discussion 13. Section 36.154 sets forth the apportionment procedures for Exchange Line Cable and Wire Facilities - Category One. Sections 36.154(c) through (f) pertain to Subcategory 1.3: "subscriber or common lines that are jointly used for local exchange service and exchange access for state and interstate interexchange services." Section 36.154(c) provides that "except as provided in  36.154(d) through (f), effective January 1, 1986, 25 percent of the costs assigned to subcategory 1.3 shall be allocated to the interstate jurisdiction." Subsection (e) describes how to calculate the SPF and subsection (d) supplies the mathematical formula to apply during the transition from the SPF to the 25 percent interstate allocation factor. 14. Section 36.154(f) is the source of petitioners' dispute. Captioned "Limit on Change in Interstate Allocation," subsection (f)(1) provides that: No study area's percentage interstate allocation for Subcategory 1.3 Exchange Line C&WF and COE, Exchange Line Circuit Equipment Excluding Wideband - Category 4.13 investment as well as associated maintenance and depreciation shall decrease by a total of more than five percentage points from one calendar year to the next as a result of the combined operations of  36.154(d) and 36.641(a) and (b). The Order explains that section 36.154(f) was adopted for the limited purpose of mitigating the year- to-year impact of the transition from SPF to the 25 percent interstate allocation factor. The Order states that "no provision in the Commission's rules. . . would allow a carrier's interstate allocation factor to change, once it has reached 25 percent." 15. Opposition to the Order's interpretation stems in large part from dissatisfaction with the operation of the USF mechanism. NECA's interpretation directed carriers to use the five percent limitation to moderate the impact on intrastate rates resulting from reductions in USF payments. Petitioners contend that the reference to section 36.641(a), which provides that the USF expense adjustment "for 1993 and subsequent years shall be the amount computed in accordance with section 36.631," means that section 36.154(f) remains in effect until a rule change is enacted. They cite the general caption of the subsection, "Limit on Change in Interstate Allocation" to support their view of the rule's purpose. 16. We disagree. Petitioners' interpretation of section 36.154(f) is contrary to both the language of the rule and the intent of the Commission. Section 36.154(f) is a transitional provision created only to mitigate the impact of the SPF transition while the USF support mechanism was being phased-in. Significantly, the application of section 36.154(f) is not conditioned on the ongoing interstate allocation factor and USF expense adjustment provisions, sections 36.154(c) and 36.631 respectively. Instead, section 36.154(f) refers to the transitional SPF and USF provisions, sections 36.154(d) and 36.641(a) and (b) respectively, which reinforces our conclusion that the limitation was not intended to apply beyond the period of the SPF transition. 17. Unlike the SPF transition, in which carriers generally reduced their interstate allocations, under the USF transition, carriers could allocate an increasing portion of their costs to the interstate jurisdiction. At the time the SPF and USF transition rules were drafted, it was not contemplated that USF support would decline, but rather that the phase-in of the USF would offset the reduction of the interstate allocation stemming from the replacement of SPF with the 25 percent interstate allocation factor. The five percent limitation found in section 36.154(f) provided additional protection by limiting the change in interstate allocations in those situations where, taking into account the USF expense adjustment, the overall decrease in a carrier's interstate allocation factor would nevertheless be greater than five percent from the previous year. Therefore, section 36.154(f) provides that a carrier's allocation shall not decrease more than five percentage points as a result of the "combined operations" of the SPF transition and the USF transition. 18. Further support for this interpretation can be found in a Memorandum Opinion and Order released April 4, 1991. In that matter, USTA had claimed that the current procedures created significant unanticipated hardships for certain small carriers and proposed eliminating the USF offset to alleviate the problem. The Commission denied USTA's petition, stating that: When the Commission adopted the current rules, it believed that an annual limitation of five percentage points for the decrease in interstate [non-traffic sensitive] costs, taking into consideration the USF adjustment, would provide for an orderly transition to the 25 percent allocator without placing an undue burden on the local rates of any company. 19. Nothing in the administrative history of the SPF transition rules supports the view that section 36.154(f) was intended to mitigate year-to-year fluctuations in interstate allocations resulting from changes in USF support alone. In fact, because reductions in USF payments signify that carriers' local loop costs declined relative to the national average, mitigating their impact would undermine the operation of the USF support mechanism. Accordingly, we conclude that the Order's interpretation is supported by the language, context, and history of the SPF transition rules and therefore we affirm the Order's interpretation. Once a carrier's transition to a 25 percent interstate allocation factor has been achieved, the limitation on the change in interstate allocation found in section 36.154(f) is no longer operative. III. CORRECTIVE ACTION A. Background 20. Our rules require ILECS, on a monthly basis, to report to NECA their revenue, expense and investment data. NECA uses these data to compute each ILEC's monthly pool shares. Because ILECs do not have complete data available when they first report to NECA, the ILECs initially report estimated data. In the following months, the ILECs are required to reconcile their estimates with actual results. To ensure the accuracy of the reconciliation process, NECA's procedures allow the ILECs twenty-four months from the date their data are first reported to the pools to reconcile and correct previously submitted data. Because the Order represents an interpretation of an existing rule, NECA informed certain carriers that they would be required to adjust all settlement data filed within the 24-month period to comply with the Order's interpretation. 21. Our rules also require NECA and those ILECs not subject to price cap regulation to file one-page rate-of-return reports that show total revenues, total expenses and taxes, operating income, rate base and rate of return for each tariff pool and study area. These reports enable the Commission to monitor the pool's and carriers' actual performance on an access element-by-element basis and to determine whether maximum rates of return were exceeded. Under section 208 of the Act, any person injured by unlawful rates may file a complaint for damages with the Commission. B. Positions of Parties 22. All seven petitioners urge the Commission not to apply the Order retroactively. They argue that the Order represents an abrupt departure from NECA's interpretation that was reasonable and upon which they relied. Retroactive application of the Order's interpretation would result in millions of dollars of revenues being taken back from small, rural ILECs. GVNW estimates the total impact to its client companies as $11 million. JSI estimates that the collective impact on its clients would be $4.7 million. Because their states do not allow retroactive ratemaking, petitioners contend, these losses could not be recovered. The petitioners assert that these losses are likely to impact network improvements, new technologies and service enhancements. 23. The overwhelming majority of commenters support the petitioners' arguments. GVNW's clients argue against retroactive application because "[c]ost recovery must be predictable, so that auditors, lenders and ILECs can have confidence in NECA's interpretation and implementation of the Commission's rules." JSI's clients similarly cite the magnitude of losses that will occur as a result of the retroactive application of the Order. MTA estimates losses of approximately $3 million for its members. 24. AT&T, ALLTEL and MCI dismiss petitioners' and commenters' arguments for applying the Order only prospectively. AT&T states that it is "inappropriate. . . for these carriers to insist that the Commission interpret a rule in a manner it did not intend." AT&T and ALLTEL point out that mandating prospective application means carriers who complied with the rule would be forced to file a waiver to continue to do so. C. Discussion 25. As a general rule, declaratory rulings that interpret, but do not change, obligations under existing Commission rules have the effective date of the rule. Petitioners' arguments against retroactivity are rooted in the perception that the Order represents a new policy. We disagree. The Order corrects a misinterpretation put forth by NECA but does not change the purpose or operation of the underlying rules. Similarly, petitioners' claims that the Order's interpretation was unexpected are unpersuasive. This proceeding does not involve an unforeseen application of a rule, but rather the exact fact situation the rules were designed to address: the implementation of a flat 25 percent interstate allocation factor for loop costs for all carriers through a gradual transition. Petitioners ask us to substitute NECA's rule for our own because they relied on it. Their reliance was misplaced. Although parties such as TCA may have presumed that NECA had "informal communication with the FCC" prior to issuing Cost Issue 5.3, nothing in the record supports that claim. Because it interprets but does not change section 36.154 of our rules, the Order has the effective date of the rules. 26. NECA's interpretation of section 36.154(f) is so entirely in conflict with the literal meaning and clear intent of our rules that it gives us cause for concern that NECA may not be fulfilling its responsibilities to the Commission. NECA was established at the direction of the Commission to administer important Commission programs, including the common line and traffic sensitive pools, the universal service fund, the lifeline assistance program and the long term support program. We remind NECA that it must administer these pools in accordance with our requirements and has no authority to implement its own policy. As with any other parties, NECA may file a request that the Commission resolve any uncertainty about the operation of a rule. When NECA provides its own guidance in the absence of a Commission directive, it does so at the risk that its interpretation is incorrect and is subject to appropriate enforcement actions. 27. To the extent that its pool members overallocated costs to the interstate jurisdiction, NECA's quarterly and annual rate-of-return reports -- Form 492 -- contained incorrect data. Without corrected data, neither the Commission nor affected interexchange carriers can determine whether the Carrier Common Line pool exceeded the maximum allowable rate of return. In order to assess possible violations of our rate-of-return prescription, we require that NECA file in this docket corrected Form 492s for each of the years in which NECA required pooling companies to be in conformance with its misinterpretation of section 36.154(f), thereby causing incorrect settlement data for the Carrier Common Line pool to be reported. 28. Even if the incorrect interstate allocations did not give rise to violations of our rate-of- return prescription, the overassignment means that some members of the NECA pool received greater interstate returns than the rules would allow at the expense of many members who suffered somewhat lower interstate rates of return. We decline to address whether intrapool adjustments should be required because no NECA pool members have sought redress for the damage. IV. EFFECT OF STUDY AREA CHANGES A. Background 29. The SPF transition rules incorporate the definition of study area contained in Part 36 Appendix-Glossary of the Commission's rules which state that boundaries of a study area shall be frozen as they were on November 15, 1984. When the Commission decided to freeze study area boundaries, it sought to discourage carriers from establishing their high cost exchanges as separate study areas in order to maximize high cost support and at the same time to remove the disincentive for purchasing high cost carriers or expanding into high cost areas. 30. Under the approach adopted by the Commission, a holding company may either treat a newly purchased or newly created service territory separately or fold it into one of its existing study areas. The Commission expected that carriers would merge study areas "when the benefits of consolidated operations exceed the reduction in high cost support." To form a new study area or change existing study area boundaries, carriers are required to seek a waiver of that provision freezing study area boundaries. The March 22, 1996 Order acknowledges that "because the transition rules were designed for use for the study areas in existence during the transition, it is not clear that the transition rules would apply to study areas that have undergone significant changes." B. Positions of Parties 31. NECA and JSI seek clarification of the effect of study area changes on the application of the SPF transition rules. JSI argues that the uncertainty "violates the 'predictable' and 'sufficient' mandate of the 1996 Telecommunications Act. USTA agrees that the Order is not clear and "urges the Commission to release clarifying language." C. Discussion 32. The SPF transition rules were designed to mitigate the impact of the change to a 25 percent interstate allocation factor for existing carriers that had high frozen SPFs when the transition began. Newly established and newly purchased service territories that were separately incorporated were not eligible for the transition rules but instead were subject to the 25 percent interstate allocation factor set forth in section 36.154(c). 33. In the past, the Commission granted carriers' petitions to recalculate their transitional SPFs in conjunction with study area waivers in order to prevent study area changes from disrupting the gradual transition contemplated by the rules. At this point, the benefit of a gradual transition has been achieved. Most carriers completed the transition to a 25 percent interstate allocation by 1993. Because no study area had a frozen SPF higher than 85 percent when the transition began, most remaining carriers will reach 25 percent by 1997. We conclude that the rationale supporting the transition no longer applies to carriers whose existing study areas undergo changes because the potential for disruption no longer exists. As a result, these carriers will be subject to the 25 percent interstate allocation factor set forth in section 36.154(c). V. ORDERING CLAUSES 34. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED, pursuant to sections 4(i), 5(c)(5), 218 and 220 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  154(i), 155(c)(5), 218 and 220, and section 1.115 of the Commission's Rules, 47 C.F.R.  1.115, that the Applications for Review filed April 22, 1996 by GVNW Inc./Management, the National Telephone Cooperative Association, and Tri- County Telephone Association Inc. and TCT West, Inc.; the Request for Clarification filed April 22, 1996 by the Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies, and the Petition for Reconsideration filed April 22, 1996 by TCA Inc., ARE DENIED. 35. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, pursuant to sections 4(i), 218 and 220 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  154(i), 218 and 220, and section 1.429 of the Commission's Rules, 47 C.F.R.  1.429, that the Requests for Clarification or Reconsideration filed by the National Exchange Carrier Association and John Staurulakis Inc., are GRANTED IN PART, as discussed in paragraphs 28 through 32, and otherwise DENIED. 36. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, pursuant to sections 4(i), 218 and 220 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  154(i), 218 and 220, and section 1.429 of the Commission's Rules, 47 C.F.R.  1.429, that NECA file corrected Form 492s in accordance with paragraph 26 of this Order. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION William F. Caton Acting Secretary APPENDIX A Ayrshire Farmers Mutual Telephone Co. Clear Lake Independent Telephone Company Dell Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Dubois Telephone Exchange, Inc. Ketchikan Public Utilities Midvale Telephone Exchange, Inc. Midway Telephone Company Montana Independent Telecommunications Systems Nehalem Telephone & Telegraph Company New Florence Telephone Company, Inc. Ontonagon County Telephone Company OTZ Telephone Cooperative Pine Telephone System, Inc. Roosevelt County Rural Telephone Cooperative Table Top Telephone Company, Inc. Yukon Telephone Company, Inc. APPENDIX B BEK Communications Cooperative Carr Telephone Company Central Texas Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Coastal Utilities Inc. Germantown Telephone Company Hargray Telephone Company, Inc. Hill Country Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Middleburgh Telephone Company Nicholville Telephone Company, Inc. Ogden Telephone Company APPENDIX C Blackfoot Telephone Cooperative Bristol Bay Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Canby Telephone Association Cascade Utilities Central Montana Communications, Inc. Clark Fork Telecommunications, Inc. Clear Creek Mutual Telephone Company Colton Telephone Company Cordova Telephone Cooperative Cowiche Telephone Company Crossville Telephone Company Custer Telephone Coop., Inc. Egyptian Telephone Cooperative Association Ellensburg Telephone Company Farmers Telephone Company, Inc. Gervais Telephone Company Kalona Cooperative Telephone Company Leaf River Telephone Company Lincoln Telephone Company Manti Telephone Company Mark Twain Rural Telephone Company Matanuska Telephone Association, Inc. Moultrie Independent Telephone Company North-State Telephone Company Oregon Farmers Mutual Telephone Company Oregon Telephone Corporation Pioneer Telephone Cooperative Price County Telephone Company Range Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Rib Lake Telephone Company Rico Telephone Company RT Communications S & A Telephone Company Southern Montana Telephone Company Trans-Cascades Telephone Company Triangle Telephone Cooperative Association, Inc. Wabash Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Yelm Telephone Company
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Written Testimony of George Ivie Executive Director and CEO The Media Rating Council, Inc. Before the Subcommittee on Communications Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation U.S. Senate Hearing on Implementation of the Nielsen Local People Meter (LPM) Television System July 15, 2004 # Introduction to the MRC I am George Ivie, Executive Director and CEO of the Media Rating Council (MRC), and I am grateful for the opportunity to present our views on Nielsen's implementation of the local people meter (LPM) measurement methodology in general-market media research. I would like to begin by thanking Chairman Burns and Ranking Member Hollings for your leadership in focusing congressional attention on this technical and important subject. The MRC is a non-profit organization that reviews and accredits audience-rating services through the use of rigorous audits. An MRC audit includes an independent, detailed, and objective examination of each aspect of the operations of a rating service (including methodological protocols) through data provided to it by participating rating services. The central mission of the MRC is to secure for the media industry, audience measurement services that are valid, reliable, and effective through an independent evaluation process, without regard to outcome. The MRC is independent of, and external to, any rating service and guards its independence zealously. ## History and Mission of the MRC During 1963 and 1964, regulation of the TV and Radio industries including the purpose and accuracy of audience research were the subjects of extensive public hearings. This process culminated with a progress report issued to the 89^th^ Congress of the United States (House Report No. 1212)[^1] in January 1966. These hearings were held by a Special Subcommittee on Investigations of the House of Representatives Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce and are commonly referred to as the "Harris Committee Hearings on Broadcast Ratings." After an extensive investigation and three days of testimony, the Committee determined that Industry self-regulation, including independent audits of rating services (such as Nielsen Media Research, Arbitron or MRI) was preferable to government intervention. In its report, the Committee concluded as follows: "The enactment, at this time, of legislation providing for government regulation of broadcast audience measurement activities is not advisable. The administration of a statute providing for such regulation would place an unnecessary burden on the Federal Government, and it is doubtful that more would be accomplished than can be accomplished by effective industry regulation."[^2] The Harris Committee hearings resulted in the formation of an Industry-funded organization to review and accredit audience-rating services called the Broadcast Rating Council (now referred to as the MRC). At that time, the Broadcast Rating Council's proposed Industry self-regulation procedures were reviewed by the U.S. Justice Department and were found not to be in violation of the antitrust laws.[^3] Aligned with the actions deemed necessary by the Committee, the activities of the MRC include, but are not limited to the following: - The establishment and administration of Minimum Standards for rating operations; - The accreditation of rating services on the basis of information submitted by such services; and - Auditing, through independent CPA firms, of the activities of the rating services. The MRC's mission as stated in its By-laws is: "to secure for the media industry and related users audience measurement services that are valid, reliable and effective; to evolve and determine minimum disclosure and ethical criteria for media audience measurement services; and to provide and administer an audit system designed to inform users as to whether such audience measurements are conducted in conformance with the criteria and procedures developed."[^4] This mission was established with the support and guidance of the House Committee. ## Standards Consistent with the By-laws of the BRC and its mission, it developed minimum standards by which media research is to be measured, which became effective on March 31, 1964 and have been maintained and updated by the MRC Board of Directors.[^5] The Standards relate to: (a) ethics and operations, and (b) disclosures. Ethical and Operational Standards govern the quality and integrity of the entire process by which ratings are produced. Disclosure Standards specify the detailed information about a rating service's methodology and each specific survey, which must be made available to users, the MRC and its CPA firm, as well as the form in which the information should be made available. ## MRC Accreditation Process The MRC accreditation process is completely [voluntary]{.underline} and there is no legal or compulsory requirement that a rating service submit to an MRC audit. MRC is often compared to similar private industry self-regulatory organizations such as the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JACHO), which is an organization that audits and accredits participating hospitals for institutional fitness and high quality patient services. Similarly, the MRC lends its "seal of approval" to rating services that demonstrate compliance with MRC's standards of media rating research and that make complete methodological and survey-performance disclosures to their customers after completing an extensive audit. [Over thirty-five rating service products were submitted to the MRC accreditation process last year]{.underline}. Of these thirty-five products, many represented media-types other than television. Accreditation is granted by the MRC Board of Directors if a rating service complies with the MRC's Minimum Standards for Media Rating Research and makes materially complete methodological and survey-performance disclosures to their customers. The MRC has used several nationally known CPA firms throughout the years to perform these audits. At present, the audits are conducted by Ernst & Young, under contract to the MRC. Each rating service agrees to pay MRC assessments to cover their audit cost; the MRC collects no funds from rating services other than the direct cost of the Ernst & Young audits. [To be clear, the MRC derives no benefit, financially or otherwise, from the rating service. MRC's revenue is solely derived from the dues paid to it by its members]{.underline}. In addition, unlike most CPA firms, Ernst & Young maintains a specialized group of personnel who have responsibility for auditing rating service operations and assessing compliance with the MRC's unique Standards. This Ernst & Young team only works on media rating service audits. The central element in the monitoring activity of the MRC is its system of annual external audits of rating service operations. MRC audits serve these important functions: - They determine whether a rating service merits accreditation (or continued accreditation); the audit report and related insight provided by the CPA firm is the primary input into the accreditation decision, - They provide the MRC with the results of detailed examinations by CPA auditors which become the basis for quality improvements in the service, either by voluntary action or mandated by MRC as a condition for accreditation, and - They provide a highly beneficial psychological effect on rating service performance. Knowledge that CPA auditors may review their work is a powerful spur for quality work by all field and home-office personnel of the rating service. The specific methodological approach of the rating service and the MRC Minimum Standards for Media Rating Research are the primary drivers of the audit scope for each participating rating service to be executed by the CPA firm, on behalf of the MRC. Audits are required to be conducted at least annually. The MRC establishes an audit committee made up of member organizations that use research of that media-type to evaluate audit results and recommend a position on "accreditation" to the Executive Director of the MRC, who then submits such recommendation to the MRC Board of Directors. Provision is also made for the suspension or withdrawal of accreditation and a documented, formal hearing procedure applies in such instances. The MRC's audit includes an [independent, detailed and objective]{.underline} examination of each significant aspect of the operations of a rating service. In the event that a rating service uses outside professional vendors (for example, for sampling procedures or for editing and tabulation of data) these sources are also audited and reported upon. Resulting audit reports are very detailed (typically 150-300 pages); containing many methodological and proprietary details of the rating service and illumination of the primary strengths and weaknesses of its operations. The reports are confidential among the MRC members, who all sign non-disclosure agreements, Ernst & Young and the rating service**.** Audit reports include detailed testing and findings for: - Sample design, selection, and recruitment - Sample composition by demographic group - Data collection and fieldwork - Metering, diary or interviewing accuracy - Editing and tabulation procedures - Data processing - Ratings calculations - Assessment of rating service disclosures of methodology and survey performance Pursuant to the last bullet above, the MRC mandates that rating services disclose many methodology and performance measures, which would be otherwise unknown, for example: - Source of sample frame - Selection method - Respondents by demographic group versus population - Response rates - Existence of special survey treatments for difficult to recruit respondent groups such as young or ethnic persons - Editing procedures - Minimum reporting requirements for media - Ascription and data adjustment procedures employed - Errors noted in published reports - Data reissue standards and reissue instances As a result of the disclosures that a rating service must make in complying with the MRC accreditation process, specific audit findings are [not]{.underline} disseminated to the public or the press unless waived by the service, the MRC, and the CPA firm that conducts the audit. Public disclosure of proprietary techniques can be detrimental to a rating service's core business, for example endangering patented information, and the MRC takes very seriously its obligation to keep proprietary information confidential as well as the audit reports. Recently a controversy erupted between the MRC and Nielsen Media Research regarding the apparent leak of information related to the audit of Nielsen's Los Angeles LPM service to the Los Angeles Times. MRC in no way endorsed or condones that behavior as it goes directly against its code of confidentiality. As a result of this incident, the MRC, in conjunction with its members, have implemented new rules for the viewing and discussion of draft and final audit reports among its membership. What should be made clear, however, is that the MRC can only publicly comment on its decision to grant, deny, suspend or withdraw accreditation without the consent of the rating service and the independent CPA auditing firm. Rating services that are awarded MRC Accreditation are given permission to display the MRC's logo on the audited research product indicating compliance with our Standards. MRC Standards are publicly available; more importantly, the extensive methodological and survey performance disclosures mandated by the MRC are required to be available to all rating service customers. # MRC Membership, Membership Participation and "Due Process" ## Membership Membership in the MRC is completely voluntary and members pay annual dues of \$10,500 (for reference, MRC dues were \$7,500 per year in 1964). The dues are universal in the sense that each member pays the same amount regardless of the overall size of its organization and are set at a level that allows participation by organizations of all sizes. The Board of Directors of the MRC is comprised of one appointed representative, generally a top media research executive, for each member organization. Currently there are approximately 80 Board members in total representing television and radio broadcasting, cable, print, Internet and advertising agency organizations as well as advertisers and other trade associations.[^6] As indicated by our membership list, MRC represents a very broad and diverse amalgamation of the media industry as well as the largest clients of rating services. Additionally, we have a provision for formal liaison relationships with the American Association of Advertising Agencies, the Advertising Research Foundation and the Association of National Advertisers. Membership is open to any media organization that relies on, or uses media research and presently includes both general-market media (e.g., the ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC networks) and ethnic media organizations (e.g., Black Entertainment and Television and Univision). Conversely, organizations such as Nielsen or Arbitron that produce media ratings data are not allowed to be members of the MRC. ## Membership Participation MRC members play a critical role in the accreditation process and provide valuable insight. MRC's "Television Audit Committee" comprised of individual representatives from various member organizations that have an interest in the accuracy and quality of the rating service's research. The individuals that sit on this committee are often the top media researchers of their organizations and generally do not include television executives or representatives of an organizations' marketing division. [It is in this committee, along with the oversight of the MRC Staff, that true industry oversight of the quality and accuracy of television audience measurement services is performed]{.underline}. As discussed earlier, it is through the MRC accreditation process and the use of rigorous and independent audits, that a rating service gains MRC accreditation. However, before accreditation can be achieved, the Audit Committee has the task of reviewing a draft of the rating service audit and discussing the results in detail with the auditor (Ernst & Young) and the staff of the MRC. Additionally, the rating service has the opportunity to provide its comments, verbatim, in the audit report or in a separate letter supplied to the audit committee. This is a confidential process and strict guidelines and procedures are followed during this review because of the transparency requirement that a rating service must meet in order to gain MRC accreditation. Once a full review of the audit has been completed, the MRC presents a "staff recommendation" to the full committee on whether in its opinion taking all the available data in front of it; the rating service should be accredited. This recommendation is prepared to help guide the committee as it weighs its decision on accreditation. The audit committee will then vote on accreditation, which in turn serves as a recommendation for the MRC Executive Director to take to the full MRC board of directors for final approval. At this point the Executive Director will present the recommendation of the audit committee to the full Board of Directors along with his assessment. The full Board then has the responsibility and [ultimate authority to vote to grant or deny accreditation]{.underline}. ## "Due Process" One very important aspect of the voting and approval process is the controls and safe guards that are in place to assure that a vote of the audit committee is fair and impartial. The MRC has a formal policy for membership voting on MRC accreditation issues that provides stringent controls and eliminates the potential for outside influence, during and subsequent to the voting procedure. The policy is not intended to stifle in any way the thoughtful discussion that takes place in preparation of the proposals. The policy is designed to insure a more proper accounting of ballots and to further maintain the confidentiality of meeting proceedings. Specifically, it: - Verifies that all votes are accounted for - Reduces the likelihood of miscounting votes - Limits the influence of any one member organization, or collective segments of the Industry - Minimizes the information that can potentially be divulged to Non-Members, in violation of the signed confidentiality agreement. - Maintains a physical record of the vote - Provides a means for verification Voting within the MRC can occur at various levels and follows a pre-established hierarchy. Below is an outline of the levels at which voting may take place including a summary of the MRC members that are entitled to participate, and the responsibility of each group. - *Sub-committee(s)* -- Subcommittees are comprised of a sub-set of individuals from the MRC Committee(s) responsible for oversight of the measurement service. Any committee member claiming to have a business or professional interest in the matter at hand can elect to participate in a sub-committee. The MRC Staff will work to ensure that the various segments of the industry are represented in the sub-committee. The sub-committee is responsible for undertaking a detailed review of the issue. Multiple sub-committee meetings may be held depending on the complexity of the issue. The sub-committee vote is designed to make a recommendation to the Committee(s). A tie vote will necessitate a detailed review by a larger sub-committee group or the committee. - *Committees* -- MRC Committees are comprised of MRC members who have a business or professional interest in the medium for which the committee has oversight. These committees may be asked to undertake a detailed review based on the complexity of the issue. The committee votes whether to accept the recommendation of the sub-committee and the committee vote is structured to make a recommendation and provide guidance to the Executive Director. A quorum is required on all voting matters and a tie vote will necessitate a detailed review by the Board of Directors. - *Board of Directors* The Board of Directors represents all active members of the MRC and vote on the recommendation submitted by the Executive Director. In addition, the Board is responsible for the final vote on all accreditation issues and a quorum is required on all voting matters. - *Executive Director* The Executive Director is responsible for making a recommendation to the Board of Directors and considers the recommendation of the committee(s), though he is not required to recommend the committee(s) position to the Board. However, the Executive Director must convene a board meeting to discuss in detail any recommendation whereby the executive director\'s position differs from that submitted by the Committee. The Executive Director may take any issue directly to the Board of Directors for a vote. - *Voting Guidelines* All active Board Members are entitled to a vote in the accreditation process. A member company designates the representative(s) to attend meetings and vote. The MRC recommends the voting representative be a senior ranking individual with knowledge of the subject matter. When a detailed review of the subject matter is called for, the voting representative must be in attendance for the majority of the review meeting. Anyone not in attendance for the full meeting will be allowed to vote at the discretion of MRC Executive Director. A member company representative may participate in-person, via phone or video-conference and is allowed to represent a maximum of two votes, for multi-vote organizations. In addition, this representative is required to submit vote(s) in writing with the exception of those participating via phone or conference call. Individuals participating via electronic means (e.g. phone, etc.) have the option to cast votes via personal call to MRC Staff, fax, or e-mail. Verbal votes require follow-up written (e.g. fax, e-mail, etc) confirmation. - *Special Circumstances* Special circumstances occur when an MRC member whose company has a vested interest in the matter being considered. When this occurs, that member may participate in the review meeting but will not be allowed to vote. Situations of this nature will be disclosed prior to the start of the meeting. Any un-anticipated voting conflicts are to be resolved by the MRC Executive Director - *Voting Results* When a vote takes place the rating service will be advised of the final outcome as soon as possible and summary-voting results may be divulged to the Rating Service when deemed appropriate by the Executive Director. Individual Member votes will not be divulged by the MRC and members are free to state their voting intention prior to the official vote. However, members may divulge their individual vote outside of the meeting subject to the policy of the signed Non-Disclosure Agreement on record at the MRC. # Status of LPM Audits -- Boston, New York, and Los Angeles Nielsen's primary products cover national programs, local programs, syndication, cable, satellite, as well as dedicated research for Hispanics and by implication the advertisements for all of these vehicles. Nielsen also provides several electronic tools and applications used to deliver ratings to their customers. The MRC accredits several, but not all, of Nielsen's products.[^7] Nielsen's National Service based on a people-meter methodology has been MRC-accredited since the late 1980s; Nielsen's meter-diary based Local Service was originally accredited in the 1960s; Nielsen's National Hispanic Service (NHTI) has been accredited since 2000. We believe these services materially comply with our Standards, although the MRC does maintain a separate ongoing dialogue with Nielsen regarding quality issues noted in the audit process in an effort to improve the quality of research. Other Services such as Nielsen's Hispanic Station Index (NHSI), and certain other Black and Hispanic Audience Reports are not currently Accredited or audited. ## Boston Nielsen Media Research first "rolled out" its local people meter (LPM) in Boston in 2001. This was Nielsen's first experience with the LPM in a general-media local market environment. It is our understanding that Boston was chosen as the first market by Nielsen because of several factors, including its more homogenous population and smaller size. While one can argue about this characterization of the Boston media market, it became clear that Nielsen's assumptions about easily measuring the market proved to be inaccurate. During calendar years 2001 and 2002, the MRC audited Nielsen's LPM rollout in Boston. The audit of the service was extensive and subsequently the MRC denied its accreditation to the Boston LPM based on strong concerns with Nielsen's implementation of the service. However, despite the concerns raised by the MRC audit and denial of accreditation, Nielsen continued a commercial implementation of the Boston LPM. At the same time, most local broadcasters in Boston did not utilize Nielsen's LPM services. However, during the ensuing year, Nielsen took extensive actions to cure the issues raised by MRC's audit. Upon Nielsen making the recommended changes, MRC gave its accreditation to the Boston LPM in the Fall of 2002 approximately nine months after its initial audit. After its Boston experience, the MRC Television Committee took the unusual step of recommending to Nielsen that future LPM implementations only be commercialized after Accreditation is achieved and that new LPM sample households not be integrated into Nielsen's National panel prior to achieving Accreditation. ## New York Earlier this year the MRC began its audit process of the New York LPM (NYLPM). The New York market is arguably the most difficult market to measure particularly in obtaining the cooperation of households. The market is highly diverse and represents unique challenges in compiling accurate and reliable data. Fieldwork began in this market in April of this year and the MRC utilized its full audit scope and procedures for assessing the service. Ernst & Young conducted the audit using its standard Nielsen auditing team, which included bi-lingual personnel. There were many problems identified in the audit, including race and origin classification errors, excessive and excessively disproportionate faulting and metering issues. The market's performance was further complicated by an on-going media campaign in the New York market, which could have potentially influenced household participation. Concurrent with the introduction of the LPM, the MRC closely monitored the existing meter/diary service in New York and found that this service had degraded. Subsequently on May 27^th^, the MRC audit committee met to discuss the audit and the MRC staff recommendation. The audit committee voted to withhold accreditation of the NYLPM at that time based on a number of problems identified in the Ernst and Young audit as well as issues identified by the MRC staff and the audit committee members. On June 4, 2004 the MRC sent a letter to Nielsen that communicated detail areas of concern and deficiencies with the NYLPM as identified by the audit process and suggested actions that Nielsen should take to improve the service and gain accreditation. Nielsen was given an opportunity to address the audit/TV committee once the outstanding issues surrounding the NYLPM audit are addressed. At that time the committee will then re-consider accreditation of the service in New York. To date Nielsen has begun the process of addressing the concerns with NYLPM and the MRC looks forward to reassessing the service. ## Los Angeles The Los Angeles LPM Service is currently under review. The MRC is in the process of evaluating the data from the Los Angeles audit though the final audit committee meeting has not yet been scheduled pending Nielsen's response to the original audit report. Despite the current open status of the LALPM Service, Nielsen has gone "live" with the service. It has become clear through our experiences in Boston and New York that Nielsen is not yet implementing LPM services in a manner that is fully compliant with the MRC's standards. The broadcast television industry members of the MRC, as well as cable operators and the advertising industry have all voiced their support for the MRC process in this matter. Central among the organizations expressing this support are the National Association of Broadcasters, the Cabletelevision Advertising Bureau and the American Association of Advertising Agencies.[^8] # Conclusion Once again, the MRC would like to thank the Committee for holding this important hearing on Nielsen Media Research's Local People Meter implementation and for allowing the MRC to provide testimony. As the Committee continues to consider the complex issues surrounding the continued roll-out of Nielsen's LPM rating services, we urge that the independence of the MRC be preserved so as to avoid unnecessary politicization of the auditing process. I continue to believe that Congress was right in finding that industry self-regulation is preferable to direct governmental intervention \-- provided that the independence and integrity of such an auditing process can be preserved. I believe that all of the stakeholders involved in this issue would agree that the accuracy and quality of the research as it relates to the LPM methodology is of critical importance and that the MRC should play a central role in assessing the accuracy and quality of the new service. [^1]: House Rpt. No. 1212, 89^th^ Congress (1966). (Exhibit A) [^2]: *Id.* at p. 21. [^3]: Letter from William Orrick, Jr. Assistant Attorney General, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice to Douglas A. Anello, General Counsel, National Association of Broadcasters (July 16, 1964) (Exhibit B). [^4]: MRC By-Laws. -- Board of Directors, Media Rating Council, Effective March 1964, Updated (Exhibit C) [^5]: See Minimum Standards for Media Rating Research, Media Rating Council, Inc. (last updated = 10/97)(Exhibit D) [^6]: Full membership list is attached (Exhibit F). [^7]: See Exhibit G (Complete List of MRC Accredited Services) [^8]: See Exhibit H (Press releases and Organizational statements on the LPM)
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# Presentation: 717830 ## GENERAL REQUIREMENTS ## Reference - Part 390 Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations - _[http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rulesregs/fmcsr/regs/390.htm](http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rulesregs/fmcsr/regs/390.htm)_ **Notes:** To view the specific FMCSA regulations, please click on the link on the above slide. ## This presentation is intended to educate all personnel of motor carrier companies on the FMCSA general safety regulations. - This presentation is intended to educate all personnel of motor carrier companies on the FMCSA general safety regulations. ** **Purpose **Notes:** The following presentation is a brief overview of the FMCSA general safety regulations. ## Applicability ** **Applicability - The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) apply to all employers, employees and commercial motor vehicles transporting property or passengers in interstate commerce. ## Exceptions to General Applicability - Transportation provided by Federal, state and local governments - Occasional transportation of personal property by individuals for non-commercial purposes - School bus operations - Transportation of human corpses or sick and injured people **Notes:** FMCSA guidelines apply to commercial motor vehicle drivers, employers and motor carriers. Transportation provided by the government, occasional transportation of personal property for non-commercial purposes, school bus operations and the transportation of human corpses or sick/injured people are considered exceptions to general applicability. ## Exceptions to General Applicability - CMVs carrying between 9 and 15 passengers not for direct compensation or not beyond a 75 air-mile radius from the driver’s normal work reporting location are subject to the following requirements: - 1.must file Motor Carrier Identification Report - 2. must maintain an accident register - 3. must mark vehicle with the motor carrier identification number **Notes:** Commercial motor vehicles carrying between nine and fifteen passengers for compensation are also exempt from most of the FMCSRs. They must still file a Motor Carrier Identification Report, maintain an accident register, and mark vehicle with the motor carrier identification number. ## What is a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV)? - Any self-propelled or towed motor vehicle used on a highway in interstate commerce to transport passengers or property that meets at least one of the following criteria: **Notes:** The definition of a commercial motor vehicle is any self-propelled or towed motor vehicle used on a highway in interstate commerce to transport passengers or property that meets at least one of the following criteria off of the next two slides. ## What is a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV)? - Has a gross vehicle rating, gross combination weight rating, gross vehicle weight or gross combination weight of 4,536 kg (10,001 lbs.) or more - Is designed or used to transport more than 8 passengers for compensation ## What is a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV)? - Is designed or used to transport more than 15 passengers without compensation - or - Is used in transporting hazardous material ## Motor Carrier Responsibility - Whenever a duty is prescribed for a driver or a prohibition is imposed on a driver, it is the duty of the motor carrier to ensure compliance with that duty or prohibition. **Notes:** A motor carrier is responsible for any and all actions of the drivers that it employs. ## Motor Carrier Identification Report - Each motor carrier that conducts operations in interstate commerce must file a Motor Carrier Identification Report (Form MCS-150) at the following times: - before it begins operations - every 24 months **Notes:** A Motor Carrier Identification Report must be filed before it begins operations and every 24 months. ## Type of Accident Required to be Reported by Motor Carrier - Type of Accident Required to be Reported by Motor Carrier** ** - An occurrence involving a CMV operating on a public road that results in at least one of the following: - a fatality - bodily injury to a person - disabling damage to one or more motor vehicles **Notes:** It is important for a motor carrier to report all accidents resulting in a fatality, bodily injury or disabling damage to at least one of the vehicles. ## Accident Register - For one year after an accident, motor carriers are required to maintain an accident register containing: - date and location of accident - driver’s name - number of injuries and fatalities - hazardous materials (other than fuel) released - other information as required **Notes:** Motor carriers are required to keep a register for one year after an accident. This register must contain the date and location of the accident, the driver’s name, the number of injuries and/or fatalities, hazardous materials released, and other information as required. ## Assistance in Investigations - A motor carrier shall: - make all records and information pertaining to an accident available to an authorized representative of the FMCSA upon request; - give an authorized representative of the FMCSA all reasonable assistance in the investigation of any accident including providing a full, true and correct answer to any question of the inquiry. **Notes:** It is very important that employees and employers assist in any official investigations. A motor carrier shall make all records and information regarding an accident available to an authorized FMCSA representative. ## Vehicle Identification - Every CMV operated by a motor carrier in - interstate commerce must be marked on - BOTH sides with the following: - motor carrier’s name or trade name - city and state of its principal place of business - motor carrier’s identification number preceded by “US DOT” **Notes:** It is every motor carrier’s responsibility to ensure that all vehicles under it’s operation are properly marked. Both sides of the vehicle must be marked with the motor carrier’s name, the city and state of its principal place of business and the motor carrier’s identification number preceded by “US DOT.” ## Emergencies - Relief from Parts 390-399 of the FMCSRs may be granted during declared emergencies to any motor carrier who provides emergency assistance. ## Aiding and Abetting Violations - No person shall aid, abet, encourage or require a motor carrier or its employees to violate the FMCSA rules. **Notes:** Serious consequences can occur if someone is aiding, abetting or encouraging a motor carrier or any of its employees to violate FMCSA regulations. ## Violation and Penalty - Any person who violates FMCSA regulations may be subject to civil or criminal penalties. | Created by: http://www.scpr.com/ | | --- |
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# Presentation: 682273 ## Feasibility of STD Control for HIV Prevention: Findings from Three Southern Cities NEW ORLEANS: Thomas Farley & Deborah Cohen BALTIMORE: Anne Rompalo, David Rose, & Emmanuel Nwokolo RALEIGH: Peter Leone, William Miller, Kimberley Fox, & Evelyn Foust CDC: Kathleen Irwin, Mary Kamb, Rheta Barnes, & Maysoun Freij **Notes:** Good afternoon. My name’s Rheta Barnes and I’ll be moderating the symposium. The topic of this symposium is formative research on the feasibility of STD control for HIV prevention that has been conducted in 3 Southern cities. What we’re going to do this afternoon is to give you an overview of the projects as a whole and present findings for each of the individual sites. Dr. Farley on New Orleans, Dr. Rompalo on Baltimore, and Dr. Leone on Raleigh. First we’d like to acknowledge some of the other folks who have worked on this project. The investigators in each of the 3 cities who are not presenting today – Debbie Cohen in New Orleans; David Rose, & Emmanuel Nwokolo in Baltimore; and Bill Miller, Kim Fox, and Evelyn Foust in Raleigh, the CDC project officers – Katy Irwin and Mary Kamb, and my predecessor as CDC project manager Maysoun Freij. So first, I’ll give you some background on the projects. ## BACKGROUND **Clinical and laboratory data indicate that STDs increase HIV transmission efficiency by:** **Increasing susceptibility of HIV-uninfected persons** **Increasing infectivity of HIV-infected persons** **Community intervention trial in Mwanza, Tanzania found: ** **42% reduction in HIV incidence over 2 years in intervention communities that implemented enhanced STD diagnosis and treatment** **Notes:** Impetus for studying the feasibility of STD control for HIV prevention comes from clinical and lab data indicating that STDs increase HIV transmission efficiency in 2 ways - STDs increase the susceptibility of HIV-uninfected persons and - STDs increase the infectivity of HIV- infected persons Another impetus for these demonstration projects was the community intervention trial in Mwanza, Tanzania that showed a 42% reduction in HIV incidence over 2 years in intervention communities that implemented enhanced STD diagnosis and treatment ## BACKGROUND **Are STD control strategies feasible for preventing HIV transmission in the US?** **Different population demographics, mobility, and health care status** **Better STD and HIV health care access and services** **Lower STD and HIV prevalence and incidence** **Notes:** The question remains - are STD control strategies feasible for preventing HIV transmission in the U.S. where, compared with Tanzania there are important differences - in population demographics, mobility, and healthcare status - where there is better STD and HIV access to care and services and - where there is lower STD and HIV prevalence and incidence ## To Assess Effectiveness & Feasibility of STD Control to Prevent HIV Acquisition & Transmission: **In what settings does STD/HIV co-infection occur?** **Are STD control strategies feasible in these settings?** **What are the gaps in STD diagnosis and treatment services?** **Notes:** In 1998 CDC began a formative research study to assess: -the effectiveness of STD control to prevent HIV acquisition and transmission and -the feasibility of improving access to and quality of STD services as an HIV prevention strategy We hoped to answer 3 main questions: First, in what settings does STD/HIV co-infection - that is concurrent infection with STD and HIV - occur? if we were able to find populations where STD and HIV infection currently merged, those subgroups would be the highest priorities for prevention efforts now. Second, are STD control strategies feasible in these settings? And finally, what are the gaps in STD diagnosis and treatment services in these settings. If we were able to find out why STDs weren’t being diagnosed and/or treated, we could target our interventions to address those needs. ## CRITERIA FOR ELIGIBILITY **1996 gonorrhea case rate >200 per 100,000** ** **** **** **** ****OR** **1996 P & S syphilis case rate > 9 per 100,000** ** **** **** **** ****AND** **Continuing high incidence of gonorrhea or syphilis** **Restricted to 65 project areas with federal STD prevention funds** **Notes:** Areas that were eligible to apply for the RFA were those with a 1996 gonorrhea case rate greater than 200 per 100,000 or a 1996 primary and secondary syphilis case rate greater than 9 per 100,000 and a continuing high incidence of gonorrhea or syphilis In addition to these criteria, eligibility was restricted to the 65 project areas receiving federal STD prevention funds ## Gonorrhea - - population - 140.4 **Gonorrhea - ** **Rates by state: US,1996** - 123.5 - 89.5 - 114.4 - 275.1 - (n=27) - (n=13) - 79.7 - 149.4 - 77.2 - > 200 - (n=10) - 158.2 - 134.0 **Notes:** This map gives you an idea of which states were eligible. Gonorrhea rates greater than 200 per 100,000 are shown in red. Almost all the states with high gonorrhea rates are clustered in the southeastern US. ## Primary and secondary syphilis - - 0.1 - 1.2 - 2.6 - 12.4 - 16.2 - 14.6 - 4.0 - 5.2 - 1.9 - 3.4 - 4.2 - 12.3 - 1.3 - 0.4 - 0.0 - 0.0 - 0.3 - 0.4 - 0.8 - 0.0 - 0.3 - 0.4 - 0.2 - 0.2 - 0.7 - 0.0 - 0.3 - 30.4 - 1.4 - 2.4 - 1.6 - 5.9 - 0.3 - 0.2 **Primary and secondary syphilis -** **Rates by state: US, 1996** - 5.5 - 4.8 - 1.1 - 3.6 - 4.2 - 9.6 - 10.5 - 10.9 **Notes:** This map gives you an idea of which states were eligible based on relatively high rates of syphilis in 1996. The states shown in red had P&S syphilis prevalence rates greater than 9 per 100,000. As with gonorrhea, the states with high rates of syphilis are located in the southeastern US ## 3 sites in areas with high prevalence **Health Districts with HIV seroprevalence **_**>**_** per 1000 women who bore children** ** ****Counties with P&S syphilis rates >10 per 100,000** **States with gonorrhea rates > 225 per 100,000** **3 sites in areas with high prevalence ** **of HIV, gonorrhea, & syphilis** **Notes:** This map shows several things: Our 3 study sites - Baltimore, Raleigh, and New Orleans - noted by the blue stars are all in the southeastern United States, where STDs and HIV are highly concentrated. Also on the map are areas with high prevalence of syphilis - shown in yellow. Areas with high gonorrhea prevalence - in red. And areas with high prevalence of heterosexual HIV- shown in light green. ## Methods **Three research questions** **In what settings does STD/HIV co-infection occur?** **Are STD control strategies feasible in these settings?** **What are the gaps in STD diagnosis and treatment services?** **No common study protocol** **Notes:** Sites were asked to assess the 3 research questions. Since these were demonstration projects designed to examine the feasibility of STD control for HIV prevention, we did not develop a common study protocol. Instead each site developed its own protocols based on assessment of the needs of their individual communities. ## Methods Where Does STD/HIV Co-Infection Occur? **To identify high STD & HIV prevalence settings:** - analysis of STD and HIV surveillance data - geographic mapping - collaboration with community-based organizations **Screening was performed for:** - chlamydia, gonorrhea (urine-based nucleic acid amplification tests) - herpes (dot blot assay) Raleigh - syphilis (rapid plasma reagin) Raleigh - trichomonas (urine or vaginal cultures) Raleigh & Baltimore - HIV (blood, urine, or oral fluid antibody tests) - primary HIV infection (heat-dissociated p24 antigen) Raleigh **Notes:** To answer our first question: In what settings does STD/HIV co-infection occur, the sites used several methods to identify settings with high STD and/or HIV prevalence -analysis of existing STD & HIV surveillance data to pinpoint specific high risk groups -geographic mapping to pinpoint specific areas with high STD prevalence - and working with non-governmental organizations in the community to identify high risk groups and settings where members of high risk groups were likely to go for health care Sites performed STD and HIV screening using the tests listed here: not all of the sites tested for all the STDs listed Herpes and syphilis testing were not performed in the New Orleans and Baltimore sites mainly because blood draws weren’t feasible at the venues where they screened - sites also analyzed existing STD and HIV prevalence data from STD and HIV clinics ## Methods Where STD & HIV Prevalence Was Assessed **Notes:** These methods led the sites to assess prevalence of STD & HIV in 2 main types of settings - those that do not usually screen for STD or HIV - called special screening settings and those that usually offer some STD or HIV screening - called routine screening settings This slide shows the special screening sites and routine screening sites where screening was performed for each site. Looking at the special screening sites: - All of the sites screened in public emergency departments - New Orleans & Baltimore screened in private emergency departments - New Orleans screened in a public dental clinic, a community-based organization (CBOs) for homeless youth, and several educational facilities serving young, low-income students -Baltimore screened in two CBOs serving high-risk populations Medical settings, such as emergency departments and a dental clinic Looking at the routine screening sites: -All the sites screened in HIV care clinics -Raleigh screened at HIV Testing and Counseling sites -And -Baltimore and Raleigh analyzed existing surveillance data from their STD clinics ## Methods Are STD control strategies feasible in these settings? **Notes:** One of the ways we assessed the feasibility of offering STD/HIV screening in specific settings where screening isn’t usually offered, was by looking at how many persons were screened and how many of those screened tested positive for STDs or HIV [reference to Tom & Peter’s presentations of feasibility assessments] This slide categorizes each setting by the relative number of persons screened – high volume settings and low volume settings. The overall STD prevalence and HIV prevalence are given for each setting. STDs were found in all settings regardless of the volume of persons screened in the setting. We don’t have data yet for the ED screening in Raleigh. Looking just at the high volume settings, HIV was found in 3 of these settings -the public and private emergency departments in New Orleans and the public ED in Baltimore. No HIV was found in the other two high volume settings, the dental clinic and the college in New Orleans. Looking just at the low volume settings, HIV was found in 2 of these settings. The CBO serving IDUs, where it is likely that some of the HIV infection was not sexually acquired. And the private ED in Baltimore where only 17 persons were screened. To assess feasibility, we also looked at how many persons returned for treatment. The rate of return was similar for all sites and ranged from 50-60%. ## Methods **Symptom Recognition** **Care Seeking for Symptoms** **Access to Appropriate Care** **Effective Treatment Prescribed** **Ecology of Infection** **Behavior Leads to Exposure** **Exposure** **Infection** **Infection** **Symptoms** **Seeks Care** **Access Appropriate Care** **STD Diagnosis Considered** **STD Diagnosis Considered** **Diagnosis Correct** **Correct Diagnosis** **Effective Treatment Prescribed** **Comply With Treatment, Cured** **Patient Cured** **Exposed Partner(s) Treated** **Symptoms** **Methods ** **What are the gaps in STD services?** **Piot-Fransen Model of STD Management** **Notes:** Our last research question was “What are the gaps in STD diagnosis and treatment services?” To guide our assessment of gaps in STD services we used the model developed by Piot & Fransen to conceptualize the steps required to detect, treat, and prevent STD. Each bar on the histogram (point) represents a potential point for intervention through STD care management and other public health interventions, to reduce acquisition of STDs and to detect and treat asymptomatic and symptomatic infections. The progressively shorter bars represent the decreasing number of persons with STD who get into STD care at each step. So each bar shows where gaps in STD management may occur. The first bar (point) represents all of the people who through their behavior are exposed to an STD, the second bar (point) represents the smaller proportion of exposed people who become infected. Some of the persons infected will develop symptoms (point). Of those who develop symptoms, a proportion will recognize their symptoms (point) and some of those people who recognize their symptoms will seek care (point). And so on until the last bar, - the number of people who are cured and have exposed partners who are treated. According to the Piot-Fransen model, only a small fraction of all the persons who become infected with STD (point), will actually be cured and have exposed partners who receive treatment. ## Methods **Behavior Leads to Exposure** **Infection** **Symptoms** **Exposed Partner(s) Treated** **Symptoms Recognized** **Seek Care** **Effective Treatment Prescribed** **STD Diagnosis Considered** **Diagnosis Correct** **Comply With Treatment, Cured** **Methods** **Potential Gaps in STD Diagnosis & Treatment Examined** **Access Appropriate Care** **Notes:** In terms of the Piot-Fransen model we examined STD management gaps corresponding to the intervention points highlighted in green Why are persons with untreated STDs not treated? Is it because they have no symptoms or because their symptoms are not recognized Is it because they do not seek care or because they do not access appropriate care Is it because an STD diagnosis is not considered or because a correct diagnosis is not made Or is it because effective treatment is not prescribed ## Methods Potential Gaps in STD Diagnosis & Treatment **Notes:** This slide compares the 6 STD diagnosis and treatment services gaps assessed - these gaps are listed in the 1st column (point) for each site and the venues or population groups in which each gap was assessed in each site. As part of their STD/HIV screening in community and medical venues New Orleans and Baltimore conducted a survey to assess awareness of asymptomatic infection, symptom recognition, STD care seeking behavior and accessibility or availability of STD services (point) . [Reference to Tom’s New Orleans also abstracted a proportion of the medical charts of persons who indicated on the survey that they had been diagnosed with an STD during the past year to assess gaps related to STD diagnosis and treatment (point) Raleigh took a different approach. They conducted focus groups with adolescents and young adults to assess awareness of asymptomatic infection, symptom recognition, STD care seeking behavior and accessibility or availability of STD services (point). In addition to using focus groups to assess accessibility or availability of STD services, they also surveyed insurance companies and HMOs to assess their coverage of STD services (point) To assess gaps related to STD diagnosis and treatment, they surveyed insurance companies and HMOs and providers at both the individual and the group practice level concerning policies, protocols, diagnostic and treatment practices for STDs (point) That gives you background on the study and an idea of the general methods the sites used to answer the research questions. Now Dr Tom Farley is going to talk about.... ## Slide 16
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**Deviatoric Stress, a Nuisance or a Gold Mine?** **William A. Bassett** **Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences** **Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853** **Both synchrotron radiation and deviatoric stress were once considered to be nuisances. Now synchrotron radiation is one of the most important tools available to scientists of all disciplines and deviatoric stress is one of the most useful aspects of X-ray diffraction at extreme conditions. Samples in high-pressure devices are under true hydrostatic pressure only when surrounded by a fluid thus limiting true hydrostatic pressure studies at ambient temperatures to pressures below about 14 GPa. Elevated temperature is able to extend this limit but has rarely been used for that purpose. Instead, noble gases have been used as pressure media as their solids are especially soft. Deviatoric stress and resultant anisotropic elastic strain in solid samples and solid media have led to many subtle errors in determinations of elastic properties and crystal structures, especially in the days before it was realized that they could be measured and were potentially a valuable source of information. In recent years measuring anisotropic elastic strain by X-ray diffraction has provided new insights into materials strength, elastic properties, crystal structures, mechanisms of phase transitions, and, of course, ways to make corrections when deviatoric stress is indeed a nuisance.** **Radial X-Ray Diffraction in Diamond Anvil Cell** **Ho-kwang Mao** **Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington** **5251 Broad Branch Rd. NW, Washington, DC 20015-1305** **With radial x-ray diffraction in DAC, the uniaxial strain inevitable in high-pressure experiment has become a blessing; it provides rich information on the development of preferred orientation under stress, the yield strength, the single-crystal elasticity, and even the hydrostatic P-V equation of state. Remaining technical challenges include the followings: How to optimize the DAC and x-ray probe? How to eliminate the gasket diffraction while maximize the support? How to study time-dependent rheology? How to conduct simultaneous high *P-T* experiment? How to determine stress independently?** **Radial diffraction in the DAC: Practical and theoretical considerations** **S. Merkel** **Dept. Earth and Planetary Science, U.C. Berkeley** **In the last few years, radial diffraction has evolved considerably from a technique designed to study elasticity and stress towards a more general approach to investigate rheology at very high pressure where more conventional apparatus can not be used. The technology has also seen major advances with the introduction of angle dispersive diffraction, amorphous or composite confining gaskets, and more appropriate data reduction. However, there are limitations of the radial diffraction techniques for the study of stress, elasticity, lattice preferred orientations, or more generally rheology measurements. The latest experimental developments will be presented, along with important details to keep mind when designing an experiment. We will also discuss the current state of the art in data processing, such as the analysis of stress and texture that do not assume cylindrical symmetry and point out future directions. Finally, we will try to present a review on the results obtained from radial diffraction and their applicability to Earth science.** ![](media/image1.png){width="5.995833333333334in" height="4.021527777777778in"} **Recent approach in application of rotational diamond anvil cell** **Yanzhang Ma** **Texas Tech University, Department of Mechanical Engineering** **Lubbock, Texas 79409** **We have recently performed synchrotron x-ray diffraction in a rotational diamond anvil cell to study the properties of a material under high pressure and shear stress and strain. By controlling the pressure distribution in the sample chamber, including generating a quasi-homogenous pressure distribution, we explored the shear induced disorder and their effects on phase transformations. The shear induced stacking fault, the phase transition induced plasticity, and the shear resulted formation of bonding with diamond of hexagonal boron nitride has been studied. The high pressure transformation of iron and zirconium has also been investigated.** **Current status and future plan for radial XRD with in-situ laser heating** **Yue Meng^1,2^, Guoyin Shen^1,2^, Ho-kwang Mao^2,1^** **^1^HPCAT, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory** **^2^Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington** **After more than 30 years since the invention of the laser heating in diamond anvil cell, the technique has been developing into a powerful and routine tool for synchrotron x-ray diffraction research under simultaneous high PT conditions. One of the key challenges of integrating the laser heating of diamond anvil cell with in-situ synchrotron x-ray diffraction is the system stability including both mechanical and optical aspects. At HPCAT, we have established the capability of double-side laser heating with in-situ x-ray diffraction with considerable efforts on system's stability. Our laser heating system has been used for x-ray diffraction studies of a wide range of materials to over 150 GPa and above 3000 K.** **High-pressure radial x-ray diffraction has been used for rheology and elasticity studies, it is also a useful method to study the samples that develop strong preferred orientation or evolve into a single crystal form at high pressure. This type of research under simultaneous high PT conditions is not feasible due to the conflicting geometries of the radial diffraction and the available heating optics. To overcome the technical difficulty, we have developed an initial design of a rotating laser heating system. With this system, laser heating can be conducted at any angle relative to the x-ray direction, allowing for radial diffraction studies carried out at high pressures with in-situ laser heating. The design concept will be discussed.** **Rheological Studies in the Diamond Anvil Cell: Opportunities and Difficulties** **Harry W. Green, II** **University of California, Riverside** **The project to develop the ability to perform controlled deformation experiments in the Diamond Anvil Cell (DAC) is an exciting one with many potentially important implications for understanding the rheology of Earth's deep mantle and inner core, as well as for understanding the interior of the giant planets. Among the exciting applications of such work will be an ability to probe more effectively the complexities of the D'' layer at the bottom of the mantle and to develop a true rheological model for convection in the entire mantle. The very high pressures, very high temperatures and very small sample sizes involved in this endeavor create formidable barriers that must be overcome in order to collect meaningful data that can be applied to flow in Earth.** **Technical considerations involve developing ways to establish an underformed specimen composed of the stable mineral (or assemblage of minerals) before deformation begins and the ability to measure stress accurately (in the sense of the conventional macroscopic stress that can be used in continuum calculations) at reasonably homogeneous temperatures in excess of 0.5 of the melting temperature. Most importantly, significant permanent strains (\>10% minimum) will need to be achieved over at least 3 orders of magnitude in strain rate. Such strains may only be possible via rotation of one of the diamonds.** **Ideally, specimen materials should eventually be polycrystalline, polyphase aggregates but until much larger diamonds are available, the grain size of polycrystalline material will be limited to those under which only diffusion creep is attainable and one will need to guard against crystal sizes so small that nanocrystalline behavior sets in (material heavily dominated by grain boundaries) that will radically change many physical properties and greatly complicate extrapolation to nature. To achieve dislocation creep, oriented single crystals can be employed but careful attention to avoidance of end effects will be necessary, with subsequent calculation of polycrystalline behavior (although uncertainties still exist in such calculations). For phases that cannot be quenched to room T and P, the problem of generating single crystals *in situ* at very high pressure in the DAC will be challenging.** **To determine deformation mechanisms, interrogation of specimens that can be quenched to room conditions can be accomplished in the same ways as currently done for lower-pressure experiments (SEM with EBSD, TEM with associated tilting and diffraction techniques). Decompression artifacts (cracks, dislocations, twinning, inversion to metastable phases, vitrification, etc.) will be complications but can be overcome. Materials that cannot be quenched will require *in situ* techniques such as X-ray measurement of pole figures to measure lattice preferred orientation (LPO), but significant strains will be necessary to develop such LPOs and interpretation of flow mechanisms from LPOs is not necessarily unique.** **A stroke of good luck is that MgO is stable under all conditions in Earth's mantle, hence it becomes an ideal material with which to begin and to develop appropriate techniques. However, the rheology of MgO is particularly sensitive to specimen preparation procedures (especially surface preparation), hence reproducibility may initially be a problem. The good news in that is that once such problems are solved for MgO, they will be easier to address in other phases. Also, comparison of DAC experiments with germanate, titanate, or other silicate analogues deformed in the multianvil will be helpful. Collaboration with members of the deformation community who already have or are currently experiencing similar problems at lower pressures can avoid many blind alleys.** Texture information from radial DAC experiments and relevance for deep earth geophysics, illustrated with examples **H.-R. Wenk** **Dept. Earth and Planetary Science, U.C. Berkeley** **With diamond anvil cells in radial geometry diffraction images reveal immediately elastic and plastic deformation of polycrystalline samples. The plastic deformation may result in texture development if the material deforms by slip or mechanical twinning or if grains have a non-equiaxed shape. Texture is revealed by intensity differences on Debye rings between parallel and perpendicular to the compression direction. Images (CCD or image plate) can be used to extract quantitative texture information. Currently the most elegent and powerful method is a modified Rietveld method as implemented in the software package MAUD. From texture data one can evaluate the homogeneity of strain in a diamond anvil cell, the strain magnitude and deformation mechanisms, the latter by comparing observed textures with results from polycrystal plasticity simulations. Some examples such as olivine, MgSiO~3~ perovskite and ε-iron will be discussed.** **Mechanical properties of tantalum under high pressure** > **Agnès Dewaele and Paul Loubeyre** > > **DIF/DPTA, Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique** > > **91680 Bruyères-le-Châtel, France** **We present here an approach that allows to measure the mechanical properties under pressure in a diamond anvil cell. It is based on the x-ray diffraction measurement of the stress state of a single crystal and on the interferometric measurement of its plastic strain. It is almost the exact transposition in the diamond anvil cell of the geometry of the mechanical experiments that are usually performed at ambient pressure. The confrontation of single crystal yield strength measurements at very high pressure with theoretical predictions has thus been achieved. The intrinsic effect of pressure on the yield stress is less dramatic than what has been published before. In fact, the Steinberg-Cochran-Guinan model is valid with two parameters that fall within their various experimental determination at ambient pressure. A better understanding of coupled pressure and plastic strain effects should be possible by carrying out similar measurements in different pressure-plastic strain domains.** **Strength of Hydrous Phase at High Pressures** **Sean R. Shieh** **Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario, Ontario, N6A 5B7** **Thomas S. Duffy** **Department of Geosciences, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544** **Eiji Ohtani** **Institute of Mineralogy, Petrology, and Economic Geology, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan** **Boris Kiefer** **Department of Physics, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003** **High-pressure strength study of hydrous phase will be helpful for understanding the convection of Earth's interior but, however, limited data are available. Two hydrous materials, phase D and brucite, were individually examined using radial x-ray diffraction method, together with lattice strain theory in a diamond anvil cell. Phase D can be thermodynamically stable at lower mantle conditions, and brucite serves as a proto-type of magnesium-bearing hydrous phase. Phase D was compressed to 58 GPa at room temperature. The ratios of differential stress to shear modulus are 0.006(5)-0.034(23) for phase D at pressure from 9 to 58 GPa. Brucite was compressed to 62 GPa at room temperature. The ratios of differential stress to shear modulus are 0.017(4)-0.053(17) for brucite at pressure from 14 to 62 GPa. Our results show that brucite has slightly higher ratios of differential stress to shear modulus values than those of phase D but are still similar to other six-coordinated silicates such as silica and CaSiO~3~ perovskite. The yield strength for phase D is 0.7(7)-6.3(4.4) GPa in the pressure of 9-58 GPa and for brucite is 1.3(3)-8.2(2.7) in the pressure of 14-62 GPa. Our yield strength results suggest that brucite is slightly stronger than phase D at pressures to 62 GPa.** **Future development for DAC radial diffraction studies** **Haozhe Liu** **HPCAT, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Bldg. 434E, APS, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL 60439** **Understanding the deep earth is dependant on our knowledge of the crystalline structures and properties of minerals at pressures and temperatures consistent with the environments of lower mantle and core. High pressure powder diffraction using diamond anvil cell (DAC) techniques is a unique way to approach these conditions. The current state-of-the-art DAC techniques combined with synchrotron x-ray diffraction (XRD) make powder diffraction studies under high pressure one of most active, burgeoning fields in the COMPRES community. By taking advantage of the feature of deviatoric stress in DAC, radial diffraction measurements add a possibility to simulate the deformation behavior of minerals during the Earth's long history. We are just beginning to explore this field where major discoveries are yet to be made. The elastic anisotropy, strain and stress, yield strength, preferred orientation etc. information could be obtained by using radial diffraction techniques in DAC. The future development within one year frame, mainly from technology point of view, will be focused in this talk. These will include the motor driven revised panoramic DAC development, gasket technology continually optimization, development rotational laser heating system at HPCAT for DAC radial diffraction studies. Other technical developments include of rotational DAC and dynamic DAC techniques combined with the *in situ* laser heating under high pressure, data analysis software improvement will be also discussed. These future developments will further push the technological frontier of rheology and elasticity studies in DAC, further broaden COMPRES community access to the DAC radial diffraction studies.** **Radial X-ray diffraction in the DAC and Drickamer cell** # # Takehiko Yagi ## Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo **Radial X-ray diffraction provides unique information which is difficult to obtain with a conventional diffraction. In the DAC, it is possible to observe the full circle of the Debye ring and using proper analysis, we can get various information on the elastic and plastic property of materials. Recent improvements of the X-ray transparent gasket made it possible to obtain very high quality data, and the fine structures of the deviation form hydrostatic compression are now clearly observed. Radial diffraction is also a powerful tool to study the high-pressure behavior of highly anisotropic material. An example of the graphite-diamond transition at room temperature will be presented. For the high-temperature experiments, Drickamer-type apparatus has the advantage because we can heat the sample stably and uniformly using resistance heater embedded in the sample chamber. Various examples of this kind of study will be presented.** **Deformation experiments using RDA under the transition zone conditions and the challenges in rheological experiments under deep Earth conditions** **Shun-ichiro Karato** **Department of Geology & Geophsyics, Yale University\ ** **One of the important differences between rheological properties and other static properties such as elastic constants is that there is no such a thing as "the plastic strength" of a material at a given P-T conditions. Rheological properties are controlled (usually) by thermally activated motion of crystalline defects and consequently even at a given P-T condition, one can see a wide range of rheological properties depending on (i) the rate of deformation (or stress level), (ii) chemical environment (i.e., water fugacity), and (iii) microstructures (i.e., grain-size). This applies both to the measurements of creep strength (viscosity) and the study of deformation microstructures such as lattice-preferred orientation (LPO). In addition, in the study of deformation microstructures such as lattice-preferred orientation, we need an apparatus by which large strain deformation experiments can be conducted.** **An apparatus has been designed and developed in our group to study both creep strength and lattice-preferred orientation under deep mantle conditions. This is a RDA (rotational Drickamer apparatus) that has a rotational actuator attached to a Drickamer-type high-pressure apparatus. We chose this type of apparatus for two reasons: (i) the support for anvils in this design is identical between static and dynamic experiments and there is a good support for anvils due to the geometry of anvils and gasket, and hence one can go to higher pressure than other designs, and (ii) because of the geometry of deformation (torsion tests), large strains can be achieved that is critical to the study of "steady-state" creep strength as well as the study of lattice-preferred orientation.** **The RDA has been operated at synchrotron facility at NSLS (Brookhaven) to obtain the stress-strain curves for mantle minerals such as olivine and wadsleyite. I will report some of these results and discuss challenges in the quantitative rheological experiments.** **Do Reuss and Voigt bounds really bound in rheology experiments?** **Jiuhua Chen, Li Li, Tony Yu, Hongbo Long, Donald Weidner** **Mineral Physics Institute, Stony Brook University** **X-ray diffraction has become the most powerful tool to assess the stress experienced by a bulk sample at ultrahigh pressures. However, x-ray diffraction actually measures lattice strains of individual crystallographic orientations. To derive the stress externally applied to the bulk sample, one needs to model the stress/strain propagation through the grain-to-grain contact in the bulk sample. Most popular method of the modeling is to use Reuss and Voigt bounds. Reuss bound describes an extreme condition (iso-stress) under which all the grains in the bulk sample experience identical stress when forces are applied to the sample, while Voigt bound describes another extreme (iso-strain) that all the grains experience the same strain when the bulk sample is deformed under stress. An intermediate condition is described then expressed by combining the bounds with a weight parameter k (0\<k\<1, k=1 and k=0 being the Reuss and Voigt conditions respectively). High pressure rheology experiments in a multi-anvil press demonstrate that once plastic deformation occurs in the sample, the Reuss and Voigt boundary conditions are no longer valid. Data on fayalite sample indicate that if this model is used to assess that sample stress the weight parameter k can go beyond the 0\<k\<1 range. A better model needs to be developed for ultrahigh pressure rheology experiments.** **Can we determine flow laws under ultrahigh pressures?** **Yanbin Wang, Norimasa Nishiyama, Takeyuki Uchida, and Mark Rivers** **Center for Advanced Radiation Sources, the University of Chicago** **5640 S. Ellis Ave., Chicago, IL 60637** **Rheology, the science of the deformation and flow of matter, is concerned with macroscopic strain (ε) and stress (σ) relations of materials at various conditions of chemical environment (e.g., oxygen fugacity, f~O2\ ,~ and water content, f~H2~), pressure (P), temperature (T), and strain rate. In order to establish a flow law, all of the aforementioned quantities, as well as sample attributes (e.g., composition, x, and grain size, d), must be carefully controlled and accurately measured. A particular challenge in conducting rheological studies at high P and T has been the difficulty in controlling and measuring these parameters. Recently developed deformation DIA (D-DIA) offers an opportunity to push the P-T envelope of rehological studies to conditions corresponding to the mantle transition zone. In this presentation, we will use a few examples to illustrate some recent advances in the D-DIA towards quantitative rheology at high P and T. Remaining challenges will also be discussed. A possible combination of LVP and DAC techniques for ultrahigh pressure deformation studies is proposed.** ## *Poster session* ## ## Nonhydrostatic compression of gold powder to 60 GPa in a diamond anvil cell: Estimation of compressive strength from x-ray diffraction data ## A. K. Singh^1^[^1], H. P. Liermann^2^, S. K. Saxena^2^, H. K. Mao^3^ and S. Usha Devi^1^ # ^1^ Materials Science Division, National Aerospace Laboratories, Bangalore 560 017, India. # ^2^ Center for Study of Matter at Extreme Conditions (CeSMEC), Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA. # ^3^ Geophysical Laboratory and Center for High Pressure Research, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington DC 20015, USA. **Gold powder was compressed without any pressure-transmitting medium in a diamond anvil cell and the pressure increased in steps of ≈5 GPa. X-ray diffraction patterns were recorded at each pressure. The difference between the axial and radial stress components *t* was estimated from the shifts of the diffraction lines. The grain size (crystallite size) and maximum micro-stress in the crystallites *2p~max~* were obtained from the analysis of the line-width data. The results indicated that *t=2p~max~*~.~ The grain size decreased whereas *t* and *2p~max~* increased with increasing pressure. The grain size decrease was much larger than what is expected purely from the compressibility effect and arises due to the deformation during nonhydrostatic compression. In many earlier studies, *t* has been taken as a measure of the compressive strength. However, a comparison of *t* with the strength derived from an independent method has not been attempted in the past. In this work we compare *t* with the compressive strength derived from the hardness versus grain size data at ambient pressure. This comparison shows that *t* is a good measure of compressive strength. The grain size dependence of strength is well known in case of the ambient pressure measurements but has been largely ignored in the high-pressure studies. The changes in grain size during nonhydrostatic compression should be taken in to account while interpreting the strength-pressure data.** **Synchrotron diffraction study of the pressure-induced transitions in PbTe- and PbSe- ternary compounds** [Sergey V. Ovsyannikov]{.underline}^\*^, Andrey Y. Manakov^1^, Alexey I. Ancharov^2^, Anna Y. Likhacheva^1^, M. A. Sheromov^3^, Ivan F. Berger, Vladimir V. Shchennikov, Yuri S. Ponosov *High Pressure Group, Institute of Metal Physics of Russian Academy of Sciences, Urals Division, GSP-170, 18 S. Kovalevskaya Str., Yekaterinburg 620041, Russia, <[email protected]>, ^1^ A.V. Nikolaev Institute of Inorganic Chemistry of Russian Academy of Sciences, Siberian Division, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia, ^2^ Institution for Solid State and Mechanical Chemistry of Russian Academy of Sciences, Siberian Division, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia, ^3^ Institute for Nuclear Physics of Russian Academy of Sciences, Siberian Division, Novosibirsk 630090, Russia* The structural phase transformations have been investigated both in ternary Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Te (*x*=0.29), Pb~1-x~Mn~x~Te (*x*=0.05), Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Se (x=0.125), and in non-stoichiometric compounds Pb~0.45~Te~0.55~, Pb~0.55~Te~0.45~, at pressures up to 13 GPa with assistance of short-wave (*λ*=0.3675 Å) synchrotron radiation of the VEPP-3 accelerator (INP SB RAS, Novosibirsk). The diffraction patterns were registered by the Image-plate detector MAR-345. A diamond anvils cell (DAC) with a culet of \~ 1 mm was used for pressure generation in a liquid medium (ethanol + methanol). A value of pressure was estimated by the ruby luminescence pressure scale \[1\] as well as by a shift of Ag diffraction peaks. In the comparative high-pressure Raman measurements the transition in Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Se (x=0.125) was observed also. ---------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ![](media/image2.jpeg){width="3.216666666666667in" The crystals taken (Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Te height="2.91875in"} (*x*=0.29), Pb~1-x~Mn~x~Te (*x*=0.05)) exhibited a difference in high-pressure thermoelectric power properties measured in the synthetic DAC \[2-3\] (Fig. 1) that was a motivation for the present study. In the Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Te (*x*=0.29), Pb~1-x~Mn~x~Te (*x*=0.05) compounds the phase transformation was observed from NaCl to distorted NaCl lattice (orthorhombic Pnma structure) \[4\] above \~ 6 GPa. The lattice parameters of both the initial and the high-pressure phases were estimated by fitting of full profile of diffraction spectra. Preliminary analysis of a transient high-pressure phase in the Pb~1-x~Sn~x~Se (x=0.125) did not confirm a Pnma lattice, but revealed a similarity with GeS one. At present the patterns for non-stoichiometric compounds are deciphered. ---------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- The work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (Gr. No. 04-02-16178) and by the INTAS (Nr. 03-55-629). 1. M.I. Eremets. High Pressure Experimental Methods, Oxford-New York-Tokyo, Oxford University Press, 1996. 2. S.V. Ovsyannikov, V.V. Shchennikov, Y.S. Ponosov, et al -- *J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys.* **37** (2004) 1151. 3. S.V. Ovsyannikov, V.V. Shchennikov. -- *physica status solidi (b)* **241** (2004) 3231. 4. G. Rousse, S. Klotz, A.M. Saitta, J. Rodriguez-Carvajal, M.I. McMahon, B. Couzinet, M. Mezouar. -- *Phys. Rev. B* **71** (2005) 224116-6. **High pressure behaviour of brucite and serpentine** **Mainak Mookherjee and Lars Stixrude** **Department of Geological Sciences,** **University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109** [**[email protected]**](mailto:[email protected]) **We explore the structure and physical properties of brucite and serpentine over a wide range of pressures with density functional theory using the variable cell shape plane wave pseudopotential method in the local density (LDA) and generalized gradient (GGA) approximations. We use brucite as a starting model for MgO-SiO~2~-H~2~O ternary system. We are now extending our study to structurally more complex serpentine, which is extremely important in subduction zone environments.** **In brucite, we probe the energetics underlying the structure and dynamics of the proton sub-lattice by performing a series of constrained and unconstrained static calculations based on an energetically stable** $\sqrt{3} \times \sqrt{3} \times 1$ **super-cell wherein proton locations are related to the *6i* Wyckoff sites as opposed to the ideal *2d* site. The displacement of the hydrogen from the 3‑fold axis increases with increasing pressure. This means that even in the absence of thermal energy, the protons are frustrated and would be expected to exhibit long-range disorder akin to a spin glass. In order to shed light on the dynamic nature of the proton hopping between the *6i*-like sites, we have determined the activation energy barrier for such jumps. We find that the energy barrier increases with compression, possibly indicating a transition from dynamic proton disorder at lower pressures to static disorder at higher pressure. We have also investigated the possibility of proton jumps across the interlayer, by determining the potential energy well along the O...O vector. We infer that proton jumps across the interlayer are either severely limited or highly cooperative since we do not find any evidence of a double well along the O...O vector. The absence of a double well along the O...O vector, the evolution of O-H...O distances with compression and the gradual transition to a symmetric O-H...O configuration, all argue for weak hydrogen bond.** **Application of Radial X-ray Diffraction to Determine\ the Hydrostatic Equation of State and Strength\ of TiB~2~ up to 60 GPa** **George M. Amulele, Murli H. Manghnani\ ** \ **Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 96822, U. S. A.\ **\ **Maddury Somayazulu, Haozhe Liu\ \ Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago IL 60637, U. S. A.** **Room temperature investigations of the shear strength of hexagonal TiB~2~ have been performed in order to determine the hydrostatic equation of state of the material up to 60 GPa using radial x-ray diffraction in a diamond anvil cell. We have analyzed the deformation mechanisms under pressure by analyzing the (001) and (100) peaks in the powder diffraction data, and we have deduced the hydrostatic equation of state of TiB~2~. The uniaxial stresses in the (100), (001) and (101) diffraction planes show large pressure dependence indicating a significantly large anisotropy in the material. The stress in the (001) plane shows the largest increase with pressure and reaches a maximum value before the other planes, indicating an initial activation of slip in the (001) plane at the onset of plastic deformation. Compared to gold, the averaged uniaxial stress component in TiB~2~ is almost 27 times as large at the maximum loading pressure, 60 GPa, achieved in the experiment.** [^1]: ^^ **Corresponding author:** A.K. Singh, E-mail address: <[email protected]>
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**Partial 224** Fact Sheet **What is the Partial 224 (P224)?** The Partial 224 Statement of Transactions is a system used by Federal Program Agencies to report their monthly accounting activity to Treasury, Financial Management Service (FMS).  The Partial 224 monthly reports transmitted to Treasury serve as a basis of Treasury's publications to Congress and the public regarding federal revenues and expenditures. Partial 224 Statement of Transactions consists of three main sections:   Section 1 Classification and reclassification by Treasury Account Symbol (TAS) Section 2 Payments and IPAC Section 3 Collections. ## What Does It Do? > The Partial 224 application will provide Federal Program Agencies > (FPAs) that utilize FMS Regional Finance Centers for their disbursing > activity the capability to submit their monthly statement of > transactions to the Financial Management Service (FMS). The Partial > 224 application will send its data to CAFÉ (Central Accounting Front > End) and CAFÉ will then send the data to STAR (Central Accounting > System). ## Specifically, the Partial 224 Online application is comprised of four sections (tabs): Section 1: Reclassifications, Section 2: Payments, Section 3: Collections, and Balance. ## The Preparer is able to enter data into Sections 1, 2 and 3 based on their GWA Reporter Participation ID. The Participation ID will dictate which sections/lines of the Partial 224 application are enabled or disabled. These Agency attributes are defined and maintained in the Access Group module. The Balance section is informational only. ## Other functions performed within the Partial 224 application include: the ability to submit supplemental reports if authorized, system calculated totals and sub-totals, scales that display balance conditions, reduction of on-line entry by copying repetitive data fields, interactive edits, three months of historical data available on-line, and the ability to process transactions on-line interactively. All Partial 224 users also have the option to submit their FMS-224 via bulk transfer. Users can submit their data using a properly formatted text file. ## How is it different from SF224? > An **Agency Location Code** (ALC) may report one of two ways as either > a GWA Non-Reporter or a GWA Reporter.  A **GWA Non-Reporter** is > identified by ALC and source system (e.g. IPAC, SPS, CA\$HLINKII) and > indicates which organizations are not authorized to provide TAS > information on incoming daily transmissions to GWA.  If they are a GWA > Non-Reporter, an ALC reports through GOALS II CITRIX.  A **GWA > Reporter** is identified by ALC and source system and indicates which > organizations are authorized to provide TAS information on incoming > daily transmissions to GWA.  If they are a GWA Reporter, they report > through the Partial FMS 224.  GWA will collect and maintain > information to create the appropriate 224 entries.  The collected > information will be processed through STAR.  The GWA Reporter > Categories are as follows: - Intragovernmental Only, - Collections Only, - Payments Only, - Intragovernmental and Collections, - Intragovernmental and Payments, - Payments and Collections, -  Intragovernmental, Collections, and Payments. ## What is the Bulk File Process? **All Partial 224 users have the option to submit their Partial 224 via bulk transfer. Users can submit their data using a properly formatted text file. Bulk file formats can be found at (**[partial-224-bulk-fommat03-21-07.pdf](../partial-224-bulk-fommat03-21-07.pdf)). **What are the system requirements?** Microsoft Internet Explorer (Version 6.0 or above) Netscape (Version 4.7 or above) **How Do I Enroll?** > Users may request access to P224 by visiting the GWA Website > [[(http://www.fms.treas.gov/gwa)]{.underline}](http://www.fms.treas.gov/gwa/) > and clicking on **Enrollment** or clicking on \"enroll\" located on > the GWA system logon page > [[(https://www.gwa.gov/)]{.underline}](https://www.gwa.gov/). GWA > System users will be required to select the enrollment option and have > their request routed to their supervisor for approval. Please note > that employees will not be able to enroll or make modifications to > their access unless their supervisor is already enrolled. ## Where can I get further information? > Governmentwide Accounting and Reporting Modernization Project\ > (202) 874-3230\ > (202) 874-8889 (fax)\ > [email protected] > > Agency Liaison - Michael Norman\ > (202) 874-8788\ > [[email protected]](http://fms.treas.gov/gwa/[email protected])
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----------------------------------------------------------------------- Philander Smith College's Administration of Title IV Student Financial Assistance Programs Needs Improvement ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ## FINAL AUDIT REPORT ![](media/image1.wmf) **ED-OIG/A06F0018** **November 2, 2006** +-------------------------+----------------------+---------------------+ | Our mission is to | ! | U.S Department of | | promote the efficiency, | [](media/image2.bmp) | Education | | effectiveness, and | | | | integrity of the | | Office of Inspector | | Department\'s programs | | General | | and operations. | | | | | | Dallas, Texas | +-------------------------+----------------------+---------------------+ NOTICE > Statements that managerial practices need improvements, as well as > other conclusions and recommendations in this report represent the > opinions of the Office of Inspector General. Determinations of > corrective action to be taken will be made by the appropriate > Department of Education officials. > > In accordance with Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. § 552), > reports issued by the Office of Inspector General are available to > members of the press and general public to the extent information > contained therein is not subject to exemptions in the Act. November 2, 2006 Dr. Walter Kimbrough, President Philander Smith College One Trudie Kibbe Reed Drive Little Rock, Arkansas 72202 Dear Dr. Kimbrough: Enclosed is our final audit report, Control Number ED-OIG/A06F0018, entitled *Philander Smith College's Administration of Title IV Student Financial Assistance Programs Needs Improvement*. This report incorporates the comments you provided in response to the draft report. If you have any additional comments or information that you believe may have a bearing on the resolution of this audit, you should send them directly to the following Education Department official, who will consider them before taking final Departmental action on this audit: > Theresa S. Shaw > > Chief Operating Officer, Federal Student Aid > > U.S. Department of Education > > Union Center Plaza > > 830 First Street NE, Room 112F1 > > Washington, DC 20202 It is the policy of the U. S. Department of Education to expedite the resolution of audits by initiating timely action on the findings and recommendations contained therein. Therefore, receipt of your comments within 30 days would be appreciated. In accordance with the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. §552), reports issued by the Office of Inspector General are available to members of the press and general public to the extent information contained therein is not subject to exemptions in the Act. Sincerely, /s/ > Sherri L. Demmel Regional Inspector General for Audit Enclosures TABLE OF CONTENTS ####### ####### Page [**EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1**](#__RefHeading___Toc146701054) [BACKGROUND 3](#__RefHeading___Toc146701055) [AUDIT RESULTS 4](#__RefHeading___Toc146701056) [FINDING NO. 1 -- PSC Did Not Maintain Proper Accounting for Perkins Loan Funds 4](#__RefHeading___Toc146701057) [FINDING NO. 2 -- Title IV Aid Was Disbursed to Ineligible Students 6](#__RefHeading___Toc146701058) [FINDING NO. 3 -- Returns of Unearned Title IV Funds Were Not Administered 8](#__RefHeading___Toc146701059) [FINDING NO. 4 -- Verification Was Not Completed For All Selected Students 9](#__RefHeading___Toc146701060) [FINDING NO. 5 -- Credit Balances Were Not Properly Administered 10](#__RefHeading___Toc146701061) [FINDING NO. 6 -- PSC Did Not Properly Administer the Direct Loan Program 12](#__RefHeading___Toc146701062) [FINDING NO. 7 -- Changes in Student Status Were Not Reported to NSLDS 13](#__RefHeading___Toc146701063) [FINDING NO. 8 -- PSC Did Not Meet Administrative Capability Standards for Title IV Programs 14](#__RefHeading___Toc146701064) [OBJECTIVE, SCOPE, AND METHODOLOGY 16](#__RefHeading___Toc146701065) [Enclosure 1: Questioned Costs 18](#__RefHeading___Toc146701066) [Enclosure 2: PSC's Response to the Draft Report 1](#__RefHeading___Toc146701067)9 []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701054 .anchor}EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of the audit was to determine whether Philander Smith College (PSC) complied with the Title IV program requirements for student eligibility, verification, return of Title IV funds, and accounting for the Federal Perkins Loan program (Perkins) and the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan program (Direct Loans). Our review covered PSC's fiscal year July 1, 2003, through June 30, 2004. Federal funds disbursed in the 2003-2004-award year for Pell and Direct Loans were \$2,028,609 and \$4,574,054, respectively. We determined that PSC often did not comply with the Title IV program requirements, and as a result did not meet the administrative capability standards for Title IV programs. Based on the significance of these findings, we concluded that the entire \$11.4 million in Department of Education (Department) funds that PSC expended during 2003-2004 might be at risk for similar misuse. We found that PSC--- - Did not account for or properly administer the Perkins Loan Funds; - Disbursed \$26,548 in Title IV funds to 5 ineligible students from a sample of 20; - Did not return unearned Title IV funds; - Failed to monitor the verification process and ensure that all required verifications were completed; - Did not properly handle credit balances for the 8 files we reviewed; - Did not properly disburse or reconcile Direct Loan Program funds; - Did not report student status changes to the National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS); and, - Did not meet administrative capability standards for Title IV Programs. To correct these deficiencies, we recommend that the Chief Operating Officer for Federal Student Aid (FSA) require PSC to--- - Reconcile the Perkins Loan and Direct Loan Programs; - Return funds to the Department for disbursements made to ineligible students; - Develop and implement adequate policies, procedures, and management controls; ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` - Refund outstanding credit balances; - Calculate and pay imputed interest costs to the Federal Government for excess cash retained in fiscal year 2003-2004; - Ensure personnel are trained in the requirements of the Title IV Programs; and - Contract with a consultant, acceptable to the Department, to perform a 100 percent file review for years 2003-2004, 2004-2005, and 2005-2006 to determine if additional Title IV funds were improperly disbursed. We also recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA--- - Continue PSC on provisional certification; - Place PSC on the reimbursement payment method; - Initiate appropriate action under 34 C.F.R. Part 668, Subpart G, to fine, limit, suspend, or terminate PSC's participation in the Title IV programs; - Provide technical assistance to PSC to develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls as discussed in Recommendations 1.1, 3.1, 4.1, and 5.1; - Conduct follow up site visits to ensure that PSC follows it policies and procedures to properly administer the Title IV programs. In its response, PSC stated it is committed to bringing its Title IV program into compliance with Federal laws and regulations. PSC agreed with our findings and accepted financial responsibility for \$430,078 of our recommendations to return total funds of \$477,029. PSC did not agree with Recommendations 2.2, 3.2 (partially), 4.2, 5.2, 6.2, 8.3, and 8.8. PSC did not comment on Recommendations 1.1, 8.1, and 8.7. Based on PSC's response and their commitment to bring their Title IV program into compliance, we have added recommendations that FSA provide the assistance necessary. Based on additional documentation provided by PSC, we removed Recommendation 2.2, modified 3.2 and 5.2, but kept all others unchanged. The response, excluding the referenced appendices, which contains student information, is included as Enclosure 2. The appendices are available upon request. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701055 .anchor}BACKGROUND PSC, a historically black college founded in 1877, is Arkansas's oldest, private, not-for-profit, four-year, liberal arts college. The college, accredited by The Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, offers the following degrees: Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Business Administration, and Bachelor of Social Work. PSC has participated in the Title IV programs under provisional certification since 1999. Federal funds disbursed in the 2003-2004-award year for Pell and Direct Loans were \$2,028,609 and \$4,574,054, respectively. During our audit period, PSC used a servicer, Campus Partners, to handle accounting functions and Debtcom, Incorporated to perform collections for its Perkins program. Debtcom discontinued operations in July 2004. PSC hired a consultant in 2002 to close out the Direct Loan and the Perkins programs. The consultant agreed to reconcile and close out the Direct Loans and to perform due diligence and assign outstanding Perkins loans to the Department. PSC's 2003 A-133 Single Audit Report had the following reportable conditions: - Reconciliation of bank accounts--the College did not reconcile bank accounts and adjust the books for reconciling differences on a monthly basis. - Cash Management--PSC did not disburse Title IV funds to students or parents by the end of the third day following the date the institution received those funds from the Secretary. - Returning Title IV Funds--PSC did not return Title IV funds to the Department of Education (ED) within 30 days of determining that students receiving Title IV awards withdrew. - Submission of Reports--PSC did not properly monitor, oversee, and report Federal Pell Grants. In 2004, the A-133 Single Audit Report had the following reportable conditions: - Financial statements--the College did not provide complete and accurate monthly financial statements to management on a timely basis. - Reconciliation of bank accounts--the College did not reconcile and adjust bank accounts on a monthly basis. As a result, adjustments were made to cash after the year ended. - Federal revenue and expenditures--the College could not readily identify all Federal revenue and expenditures, and revenue was not recorded in the appropriate account on a consistent basis. - Payments disbursed not reconciled--the College credited Direct Loans and Pell awards to student accounts receivable for which the College did not receive reimbursement. The students were either not eligible for these awards, or the College did not submit the necessary documentation to receive reimbursement. PSC has experienced frequent turnover in administrators and staff. The current President, Chief Financial Officer, and Financial Aid Administrator began their tenures in late 2004 and early 2005. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701056 .anchor}AUDIT RESULTS We determined that PSC often did not comply with the Higher Education Act (HEA) of 1965, as amended, and regulations for administering the Title IV programs, and as a result, did not meet the administrative capability standards for program participation. Specifically, PSC did not--- - Account for or properly administer the Perkins Loan Funds; - Disburse Title IV aid to only eligible students; - Return unearned Title IV funds; - Complete verification for all selected students; - Return credit balances; - Reconcile the Direct Loan Program; and, - Report changes in student status to National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS). []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701057 .anchor}FINDING NO. 1 -- PSC Did Not Maintain Proper Accounting for Perkins Loan Funds PSC did not maintain proper accounting for Perkins loans. PSC's Perkins data in NSLDS was not updated. For the period ended on June 30, 2005, NSLDS showed a cumulative, disbursed amount of \$180,103 compared to the servicer's records of \$1,621,697. We reviewed the servicer's accounting report dated September 30, 2005, which indicated an outstanding loan amount of \$506,687, with no loan payments since September 2003. Occasionally students made payments at PSC's business office, but PSC did not always notify the servicer of those payments. As a result, during our audit period we determined that borrowers were not credited for payments of \$1,741 made on their Perkins loans. Since PSC did not keep detailed records of which students made payments, the number of borrowers affected is unknown. The servicer's records indicate 180 borrowers have credit balances totaling \$27,426 that have not been refunded by PSC. In addition, PSC did not safeguard the Perkins promissory notes that were stored in cardboard boxes in an unsecured basement rather than in a locked, fireproof container. PSC's Financial Aid consultant stated in her interview on July 15, 2005, that almost 1,200 Perkins loans had been assigned to the Department to date for the purpose of closing the Perkins program*.* When loans are assigned to the Department all rights, authorities, and privileges associated with a loan are transferred to the United States Government. As of April 2006, the Department's records show no Perkins loan assignments since the mid-1990s. Federal regulations address the requirements for records, reporting, and storage of promissory notes as follows: 34 C.F.R. § 674.19   Fiscal Procedures and Records. > \(d\) *Records and reporting.* (1) An institution shall establish and > maintain program and fiscal records that are reconciled at least > monthly. > > \(2\) Each year an institution shall submit a Fiscal Operations Report > plus other information the Secretary requires. The institution shall > insure that the information reported is accurate and shall submit it > on the form and at the time specified by the Secretary. > > \(e\) *Retention of records*---(1) *Records.* An institution shall > follow the record retention and examination provisions in this part > and in 34 CFR 668.24. > > \(2\) *Loan records.* (i) An institution shall maintain a repayment > history for each borrower. This repayment history must show the date > and amount of each repayment over the life of the loan. It must also > indicate the amount of each repayment credited to principal, interest, > collection costs, and either penalty or late charges. > > \(ii\) The history must also show the date, nature, and result of each > contact with the borrower in the collection of an overdue loan. The > institution shall include in the repayment history copies of all > correspondence to or from the borrower, except bills, routine overdue > notices, and routine form letters. > > \(3\) *Period of retention of repayment records.* An institution shall > retain repayment records, including cancellation and deferment > requests, for at least three years from the date on which a loan is > assigned to the Department of Education, canceled, or repaid. > > \(4\) *Manner of retention of promissory notes and repayment > schedules.* An institution shall keep the original promissory notes > and repayment schedules until the loans are satisfied. If required to > release original documents in order to enforce the loan, the > institution must retain certified true copies of those documents. > > \(i\) An institution shall keep the original paper promissory note or > original paper Master Promissory Note (MPN) and repayment schedules in > a locked, fireproof container. > > \(v\) Only authorized personnel may have access to the loan documents. > > PSC's failure to account for and properly administer the Perkins Loan > Program occurred due to a lack of management controls and inadequate > supervision. As a result, PSC's default rate climbed to 63.6 percent > in 2003; students who overpaid their loan balances have not been > refunded; some students were not credited with payments they made; and > PSC's accounting records have not been reconciled with the > Department's. **Recommendations** We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA--- 1. Require PSC to reconcile all the Perkins Loan accounts, apply all payments to the applicable borrower loan balance, update the borrowers' status, and refund the credit balances. 2. Initiate appropriate action under 34 C.F.R. Part 668, Subpart G, to terminate PSC's participation in the Perkins Loan Program. ## {#section-1 .RptSubcaption} **PSC Comments** -- PSC stated that it has assigned \$291,706.37 in Federal Perkins loans to the Department of Education and anticipates full closure of the program on or before December 31, 2006. ## {#section-2 .RptSubcaption} ## OIG Response -- The Department's Dispute Resolution Group stated that as of September 26, 2006, \$142,780.40 in outstanding Perkins Loans have been accepted for assignment back. The Department and PSC should work together to reconcile the difference of \$148,925. PSC did not comment on Recommendation 1.1. The corrective action steps listed in Recommendation 1.1 should be completed before closure of the program. PSC did not provide additional information to change our finding and recommendations. {#oig-response-the-departments-dispute-resolution-group-stated-that-as-of-september-26-2006-142780.40-in-outstanding-perkins-loans-have-been-accepted-for-assignment-back.-the-department-and-psc-should-work-together-to-reconcile-the-difference-of-148925.-psc-did-not-comment-on-recommendation-1.1.-the-corrective-action-steps-listed-in-recommendation-1.1-should-be-completed-before-closure-of-the-program.-psc-did-not-provide-additional-information-to-change-our-finding-and-recommendations. .RptSubcaption} []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701058 .anchor}FINDING NO. 2 -- Title IV Aid Was Disbursed to Ineligible Students PSC disbursed aid to ineligible students. We reviewed the files for 20 randomly selected students who received Title IV aid to verify their eligibility and determine if disbursements were properly made. We determined that 5 of 20 students (25%) were ineligible to receive \$26,548 in Title IV funds. These five students did not maintain satisfactory academic progress prior to the semesters within our audit. Based on the above, we requested PSC to provide a list of students who earned zero credit hours in a semester during our audit period. We reviewed files for 163 students PSC identified as earning zero credit hours in a semester and found that 134 students received Title IV aid. When zero credit hours are earned in a semester, PSC's satisfactory academic progress standards cannot be met in the subsequent semester. We determined that PSC disregarded this policy and disbursed \$263,313 in Title IV aid in a subsequent semester to 59 of these 134 students who should have been on financial aid suspension. Satisfactory academic progress is one of several factors to be considered when determining student eligibility. According to 34 C.F.R. § 668.32 (f), a student is eligible to receive Title IV program assistance if the student maintains satisfactory progress in his or her course of study according to the institution\'s published standards of satisfactory progress. At 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(e)(1), the Secretary ". . . considers an institution's standards to be reasonable if the standards\-- (1) Are the same as or stricter than the institution's standards for a student enrolled in the same educational program who is not receiving assistance under a Title IV, HEA program." PSC defines its standards for satisfactory academic progress in the 2003-2004 Office of Student Financial Aid Policies and Procedures Manual, as, "For any semester or term in which a student withdraws or completes zero hours, they will automatically be placed on Financial Aid Suspension for their next semester or term of attendance." It further states, "Students are eligible for federal aid while on academic probation, unless they are also on financial aid suspension. Students on academic suspension will not be eligible to receive Title IV financial aid." For any semester that zero hours were earned, we questioned the Title IV aid received in the next semester that fell within our audit period based on lack of satisfactory academic progress. According to the 2003-2005 PSC Catalog, the student\'s academic progress will be evaluated at the end of each regular academic semester. A student who fails to maintain a prescribed, minimum cumulative grade-point average (GPA) will be placed on academic probation for one semester. If the student has not attained the minimum cumulative GPA after the probationary period ends, he or she will be placed on academic suspension for one semester. Based on this policy, if two semesters of low GPAs occurred (a GPA below the minimum of 1.5 at the end of 30 semester hours, 1.75 after 60 semester hours, 2.0 after 75 semester hours), the third semester's Title IV aid was unallowable due to the lack of satisfactory academic progress. These disbursements occurred because PSC did not follow its policies and procedures for ensuring students first met the academic requirements to be eligible to receive Title IV aid. As a result, \$289,861 (\$263,313 + \$26,548) in financial aid was disbursed to 64 students who were ineligible because they did not make satisfactory academic progress. ## Recommendation {#recommendation .RptSubcaption} We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Return \$ 289,861 to the Department for 64 students who did not meet satisfactory academic progress. **PSC Comments** -- With one exception, PSC concurred with our findings and recommendations. The exception was the incarcerated student discussed in the draft report for which PSC provided additional documentation. ## {#section-3 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response** -- Based on the additional documentation provided, we removed information concerning the incarcerated student from our finding and deleted Recommendation 2.2 concerning this student. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701059 .anchor}FINDING NO. 3 -- Returns of Unearned Title IV Funds Were Not Administered ## {#section-4 .RptSubcaption} ## Returns of Title IV Funds for Students Who Officially Withdrew Were Not Processed {#returns-of-title-iv-funds-for-students-who-officially-withdrew-were-not-processed .RptSubcaption} PSC did not always perform Return of Title IV calculations for students who officially withdrew. During our audit period, there were 13 official withdrawals. We reviewed documentation for all 13 and noted that the withdrawal documents did not include the student's signature. We determined that 2 of the 13 students did not receive Title IV aid, and one student's Return of Title IV was properly calculated and returned. However, PSC did not return \$19,090 in Title IV funds for the remaining 10 students. According to 34 C.F.R. § 668.22(a)(1), "When a recipient of Title IV grant or loan assistance withdraws from an institution during a payment period or period of enrollment in which the recipient began attendance, the institution must determine the amount of Title IV grant or loan assistance . . . that the student earned as of the student's withdrawal date . . . ." In a December 15, 2002, memo to PSC's President, the Executive Director for Student Fiscal Service advised that the Federally mandated requirement to complete a Return of Title IV calculation had not been implemented. In a later memo dated July 14, 2003, the Dean of Enrollment Management discussed the ongoing issue with processing the Return of Title IV aid. However, the documentation did not reflect the reason the funds were not returned as required. ## Unofficial Withdrawals Were Not Identified {#unofficial-withdrawals-were-not-identified .RptSubcaption} PSC did not have a system in place to identify students who unofficially withdrew. Consequently, PSC did not complete a Return of Title IV calculation for students who failed to follow the school's official withdrawal procedures. The regulation at 34 C.F.R. § 668.22(j)(2) directs an institution to determine the withdrawal date for a student who withdraws without providing notification to the institution. The 2003-2004 Federal Student Aid (FSA) Handbook, Volume 2, Institutional and Program Eligibility, Chapter 6, Return of Title IV Funds and PSC's 2003-2004 Office of Student Financial Aid Policies and Procedures Manual address the need for a Return of Title IV calculation if a student fails to earn a passing grade in at least one class in which the student was enrolled. Both state that in this situation the institution may not make the presumption that the student completed the course requirements, may not consider the student to have completed the period, and must complete a Return of Title IV Funds calculation. Based on the FSA Handbook and PSC's policies and procedures, students who earned zero hours were unofficial withdrawals. As discussed in Finding 2, we identified 134 students who earned zero credit hours in at least one semester during our audit period and received Title IV funds during the same semester in which zero credit hours were earned. Eighty-eight of the 134 (66%) students required a calculation of Return to Title IV. In accordance with 34 C.F.R. § 668.22 (c)(1)(iii), we performed the required calculations and used the midpoint of the payment period as the withdrawal date because PSC was not required to take attendance. We determined that \$127,265 in Title IV funds were not returned to the Department during our audit period. PSC did not implement procedures to identify students who withdrew unofficially and did not follow its policies and procedures for returning unearned funds to the Title IV program. To determine why this occurred, we interviewed the only remaining, financial aid staff member from our audit period. She stated that since joining PSC in 2002, five directors have led the Financial Aid Office, there was a lack of adequate staffing, and the Financial Aid Office and Business Office did not communicate well during our audit period. High staff turnover, inadequate staffing, and faulty communication between the Financial Aid Office and Business Office resulted in \$127,265 of Title IV funds not being returned to the Department during our audit period. ##### Recommendations We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure that--- ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` a. Students who withdraw or drop out are identified, and refunds are accurately calculated and returned to the Department; b. Students who withdraw officially sign and date the withdrawal document. 1. Return \$19,090 to the Department for 10 students who officially withdrew. 2. Return \$127,265 to the Department for unearned Title IV funds disbursed to 88 students who withdrew unofficially*.* \[\$862 of the \$127,265 is also included in Recommendation 4.2.\] **PSC Comments** -- PSC concurred with our finding and recommendations with one exception. PSC stated that it is only responsible for returning \$12,892.34, which represents their calculations for the 10 students. PSC stated it has implemented policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure that the withdrawal process, including Return of Title IV funds, is properly administered. ## {#section-5 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response** -- We reviewed the documentation that PSC submitted and have revised our recommendation for 10 of the 13 students who withdrew officially**.** For the two students that PSC did not address, we did not change our recommendation. The one remaining student has already been properly refunded. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701060 .anchor}FINDING NO. 4 -- Verification Was Not Completed For All Selected Students PSC did not complete the verification process for 5 of 20 (25%) students. We randomly selected and reviewed 20 student files from the universe of students selected by the Central Processing System (CPS) for verification to determine if verification was completed correctly. Four students' files contained evidence that PSC requested verification information from students, but PSC failed to forward the information to the CPS for re-evaluation. One student's file had no indication that verification was attempted. The CPS selects certain Title IV applicants to verify five major data elements (34 C.F.R. § 668.56). These elements are adjusted gross income, income tax paid, household size, number enrolled in college, and certain untaxed income/benefits. Verification ensures that information on a student's application and the resulting eligibility determinations and expected family contribution (EFC) are correct. If students chosen for verification do not provide the requested documents, based on 34 C.F.R. § 668.60(b)(1)(i) and § 668.60(c)(2)(i), they forfeit their Federal Pell Grant for the award year, and the institution must not disburse Federal Direct Subsidized Loans to the students. PSC's 2003-2004 Financial Aid Policies and Procedures Manual states that all applicants selected for verification by the United States Department of Education are verified before an award is made. However, PSC failed to monitor the verification process and ensure that all required verifications were completed. As a result, \$35,222 in Title IV aid was disbursed to five students for whom verification was not performed. **Recommendations** We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure that the verification process is completed. 2. Return \$35,222 to the Department for five students for whom verification was not performed. \[\$862 of the \$35,222 is also included in Recommendation 3.3 for unofficial withdrawals.\] **PSC Comments** -- PSC concurred with our finding and stated they have implemented management controls and a new software system to ensure that verification is completed. PSC did not concur with our recommendation to return \$35,222 to the Department stating that we did not provide sufficient evidence to support this recommendation. ## {#section-6 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response** -- PSC did not provide additional information to change our finding and recommendations. We provided PSC with a sample verification list of 20 names in July 2005 and a list of the five students with verification errors in September 2005. Subsequent to PSC's response to our draft, we again provided our worksheet analysis. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701061 .anchor}FINDING NO. 5 -- Credit Balances Were Not Properly Administered PSC maintained credit balances on student accounts and did not always remit Title IV credit balances to students. The regulations at 34 C.F.R. § 668.164(e) require an institution to pay credit balances within 14 days. PSC did not ensure policies and procedures were in place to monitor and manage credit balances. Also, the People Oriented Information Systems for Education (POISE) accounting system used by the institution was not configured to display a cumulative balance with each transaction. Instead, PSC rolled the ending balance forward at the end of each fiscal year. As an alternative to determining whether PSC handled credit balances properly following each transaction, we reviewed 8 of 72 student files with credit balances carried forward as of June 30, 2004. PSC had a 100% error rate in handling these balances. We found--- a. Three students were awarded scholarships totaling \$7,625. However, the student ledgers currently carry credit balances equal to the scholarship amounts. We questioned \$7,625 in Title IV funds because the scholarship funds were not deducted from the amount of Title IV aid awarded when determining financial need. Therefore, the students inappropriately received \$7,625 in Title IV aid; b. Three students were credited with Title IV funds not disbursed according to NSLDS; c. One student who did not make satisfactory academic progress was ineligible to receive Title IV funds. The funds should have been returned to the Title IV program, and were questioned in the group of unofficial withdrawals in Finding 3; and, d. One student had a credit balance carried forward from June 2000; however, we did not question it because the source could not be determined. PSC's 2003-2004 Financial Aid Policies and Procedures Manual states--- > The Executive Director and Director/Counselor, in determining need and > making an award, have the responsibility of including all resources > available to the student when funds are awarded from these programs. > These resources include . . . School and other scholarship and grants > . . . . PSC's records were not maintained properly to determine credit balances or their source. Failure to follow Federal regulations and institutional policies resulted in students not having use of funds to which they were entitled, and the institution holding funds to which it was not entitled. **Recommendations** We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure that credit balances are handled properly within 14 days. 2. Refund the \$5,591 in credit balances resulting from scholarship awards to the Title IV Program or students, as applicable. Review all student accounts with credit balances and determine if the credit balances resulted from Title IV aid; and, if so, return the credit balance funds to the Department or students, as applicable. **PSC Comments** -- PSC stated that it has revised its withdrawal policy outlined in the catalog and will strengthen its policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure compliance with regulatory requirements. PSC reviewed credit balances occurring as of August 1, 2005, and stated that credit balances as a result of Title IV aid will be returned to the appropriate program or student by December 31, 2006. PSC submitted documentation that showed reversing entries to three student ledgers for scholarship awards. In addition, a cancelled check copy was submitted for one student substantiating that funds were returned to the Title IV program. ## {#section-7 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response** -- Based on the documentation that PSC submitted, we changed our recommendation to refund monies from \$7,625 for three students to \$5,591 for two students. The documentation PSC provided for the two remaining students demonstrated reversing entries for those two students' ledgers, but no source documents were provided to substantiate that monies were refunded or an explanation to justify not making the refund. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701062 .anchor}FINDING NO. 6 -- PSC Did Not Properly Administer the Direct Loan Program ## {#section-8 .RptSubcaption} ## Direct Loan Monthly Reconciliations Were Not Completed {#direct-loan-monthly-reconciliations-were-not-completed .RptSubcaption} PSC did not reconcile its Direct Loan records with the Department\'s records on a monthly basis because its system of internal controls did not have adequate checks and balances. PSC operates under School origination option 2. According to 34 C.F.R. § 685.102(b)(3)--- School origination option 2: In general, under this option the school performs the following functions: creates a loan origination record, transmits the record to the Servicer, prepares the promissory note, obtains a completed and signed promissory note from a borrower, transmits the promissory note to the Servicer, determines funding needs, initiates the drawdown of funds, receives the funds electronically, disburses a loan to a borrower, creates a disbursement record, transmits the disbursement record to the Servicer, and reconciles on a monthly basis. ## Because records from the school and Department do not match, the Department cannot accurately account for the Direct Loan funds or identify potential problems with timely disbursements or excess cash. {#because-records-from-the-school-and-department-do-not-match-the-department-cannot-accurately-account-for-the-direct-loan-funds-or-identify-potential-problems-with-timely-disbursements-or-excess-cash. .RptSubcaption} ## PSC Did Not Timely Disburse Direct Loan Drawdowns or Timely Return Excess Cash {#psc-did-not-timely-disburse-direct-loan-drawdowns-or-timely-return-excess-cash .RptSubcaption} ## {#section-9 .RptSubcaption} PSC did not timely disburse Direct Loan drawdowns to students. Excess cash was created because PSC did not disburse those funds to the intended students or to other students within the required time period. Specifically, 19 of 20 (95%) student files reviewed showed that disbursements were made to the intended student from 6 to 59 days after funds were drawn down. The regulations at 34 C.F.R. § 668.166(a)(1) state--- > The Secretary considers excess cash to be any amount of Title IV, HEA > program funds, . . . that an institution does not disburse to students > or parents by the end of the third business day following the date the > institution received those funds from the Secretary. Except as > provided in paragraph (b) of this section \[for excess cash > tolerances\], an institution must return promptly to the Secretary any > amount of excess cash in its account or accounts. Because PSC participates under School origination option 2, it can initiate its own funding requests. According to the Department's *The Blue Book* (June 2001), if a school determines that a student has become ineligible for a portion or all of his Direct Loan disbursement, the school must return those funds to the Direct Loan Program. The school must adjust the actual disbursement downward and initiate a return of funds. The amount that is canceled or adjusted is returned to the school's federal bank account where it immediately must be disbursed to other eligible borrowers (within three business days) or returned to ED as excess cash. *The Blue Book* further instructs, \" . . . \[T\]o maintain a written record of funds distributed, Option 2 schools should retain copies of Direct Loan drawdown requests.\" PSC was not able to provide this list of drawdown requests. Because a list was not available to match drawdowns with students, we used the same 20 student files that were randomly selected for eligibility (discussed in Finding 2) to evaluate timely disbursements and excess cash. We reviewed the dates that NSLDS/Common Origination Disbursement (COD) data show the funds were disbursed to the institution and compared those dates to dates the institution posted those funds to the students' accounts. We found PSC often posted the disbursements late and did not change the anticipated date of disbursement to the later, actual date of disbursement. When this occurs, students incur additional loan interest costs for unsubsidized loans. Likewise, the Department incurs additional interest expense for subsidized loans when funds are held longer than the three days allowed. ## Recommendation {#recommendation-1 .RptSubcaption} We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Calculate and pay imputed interest costs for excess cash retained in fiscal year 2003-2004. **PSC Comments** -- PSC submitted a letter from FSA dated April 20, 2006, which stated that PSC successfully closed out the 2003-2004 Direct Loan Program Year. PSC did not concur with our recommendation to pay imputed interest costs for excess cash retained in fiscal year 2003-2004. ## {#section-10 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response** -- We removed our recommendation to PSC to complete the process to close the Direct Loan program. PSC did not provide additional information to change our recommendation to pay imputed interest costs for excess cash retained. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701063 .anchor}FINDING NO. 7 -- Changes in Student Status Were Not Reported to NSLDS PSC did not report student enrollment changes to NSLDS. NSLDS reported that PSC usually sent back Student Status Confirmation Reports (SSCRs) or roster files without making corrections or updating the status of students. The SSCR is used to determine if the student is eligible for an in-school deferment or must be moved into repayment. Because SSCRs were not reported accurately, unofficial withdrawals went unreported. Failure to update a student's status delays the date a student should enter repayment status for loans and the Department incurs additional interest costs for subsidized loans that should be paid by the student. According to 34 C.F.R. § 685.309, the SSCRs should be completed by the school and returned to the Secretary within 30 days. **Recommendation** We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 1. Develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls to ensure that SSCRs are completed accurately and returned timely. **PSC Comments** -- PSC stated it has implemented management controls and a new software system which will enable SSCR reports to be submitted timely six times per year. **OIG Response** -- We have added a recommendation in Finding 8 below to have FSA ensure that PSC follows through with properly administering the Title IV programs, to include accurate reporting of student enrollment changes to NSLDS. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701064 .anchor}FINDING NO. 8 -- PSC Did Not Meet Administrative Capability Standards for Title IV Programs PSC did not administer the Title IV programs in accordance with the HEA and regulatory requirements. Specifically, PSC did not: (1) properly account for and administer the Perkins Loan program, (2) disburse aid to only eligible students, (3) identify students who withdrew unofficially and return unearned Title IV aid to the Department, (4) complete verification for all selected students, (5) return credit balances, (6) properly administer the Direct Loan program, and (7) report changes in student status to NSLDS. Under 34 C.F.R. § 668.16, to continue participation in a Title IV program, an institution must demonstrate that it "is capable of adequately administering that program under each of the standards established in this section." An institution is considered administratively capable if it--- - "Administers the Title IV, HEA program in accordance with all statutory provisions of or applicable to Title IV of the HEA, \[and\] all applicable regulatory provisions prescribed under that statutory authority . . . " 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(a). - "Designates a capable individual to be responsible for administering all the Title IV, HEA programs in which it participates . . . " 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(b)(1). - "Communicates to the individual designated to be responsible for administering Title IV, HEA programs, all the information received by any institutional office that bears on a student's eligibility for Title IV, HEA program assistance . . . " 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(b)(3). - "Has written procedures for or written information indicating the responsibilities of the various offices with respect to the approval, disbursement, and delivery of Title IV, HEA program assistance and the preparation and submission of reports to the Secretary . . . " 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(b)(4). - "Administers Title IV, HEA programs with adequate checks and balances in its system of internal controls" 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(c)(1). - "Establishes and maintains records required under this part and the individual Title IV, HEA program regulations" 34 C.F.R. § 668.16(d). - "Shows no evidence of significant problems that affect, as determined by the Secretary, the institution\'s ability to administer a Title IV, HEA program and that are identified in---1) Reviews of the institution conducted by the Secretary . . ." 34 C.F.R. §668.16(j)(1). According to 34 C.F.R. § 668.82(c)(1)--- > The failure of a participating institution or any of the > institution\'s third-party servicers to administer a Title IV, HEA > program, or to account for the funds that the institution or servicer > receives under that program, in accordance with the highest standard > of care and diligence required of a fiduciary, constitutes grounds > for--(1) An emergency action against the institution, a fine on the > institution, or the limitation, suspension, or termination of the > institution\'s participation in that program. We attributed this failure to meet administrative capability standards to (1) frequent staff turnover, (2) a lack of adequate policies, procedures, and internal controls, and (3) unresolved findings from the 2003 A-133 Single Audit Report in the areas of bank statement reconciliation, cash management, Return of Title IV funds, and Pell grants not properly reported. We concluded that the lack of capability to administer Title IV programs was so significant that the \$11.4 million in Department of Education funds received for Title IV and other programs during 2003-2004 may be at risk of misuse. ## Recommendations {#recommendations-1 .RptSubcaption} We recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA--- 1. Continue PSC on provisional certification. 2. Place PSC on the reimbursement payment method. 3. Take appropriate action under 34 C.F.R. Part 668, Subpart G, to fine, limit, suspend or terminate PSC's participation in the Title IV programs. 4. Provide technical assistance to PSC to develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls for Recommendations 1.1, 3.1, 4.1, 5.1 and 7.1 5. Conduct follow-up site visits as necessary to ensure that PSC continues to follow through with properly administering the Title IV programs. We also recommend that the Chief Operating Officer of FSA require PSC to--- 6. Ensure personnel are trained in the requirements of the Title IV Program. 7. Contract with a consultant, acceptable to the Department, to perform a 100 percent file review for years 2003-2004, 2004-2005, and 2005-2006 to determine if additional Title IV funds were improperly disbursed, and reimburse the Department accordingly. 8. Reimburse the Department \$477,029 as shown in Enclosure 1. This figure is the total amount questioned in all previous recommendations. **PSC Comments** -- PSC stated that with assistance from its new administration and the Department, it would become compliant with all Title IV regulations. PSC further stated it has already made great strides in becoming compliant. PSC feels it would be unfair to the new administration to place PSC on reimbursement and severely detrimental to the student body to terminate PSC's participation in the Title IV program. PSC accepts financial responsibility for \$430,078 as shown in Recommendations 2.1, 3.2 (with modification), and 3.3 and requests a payment plan acceptable to all parties to return these funds to the Department. ## {#section-11 .RptSubcaption} **OIG Response --** PSC's administration appears committed to bringing its Title IV program into compliance with federal laws and regulations. We added Recommendations 8.4 and 8.5 that FSA provide technical assistance to PSC to develop and implement policies, procedures, and management controls and to monitor PSC's continued improvements. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701065 .anchor}OBJECTIVE, SCOPE, AND METHODOLOGY The purpose of the audit was to determine whether PSC complied with the Title IV program requirements for student eligibility, verification, Return of Title IV funds, Perkins requirements, and Direct Loan requirements. Our review covered PSC's fiscal year July 1, 2003, through June 30, 2004. To accomplish these objectives, we reviewed--- - The HEA, regulations, and policies applicable to the Title IV programs; - PSC's policies, procedures, and practices for managing the Title IV programs; - Data obtained from PSC's Financial Aid, Business, and Registrar's offices and its Perkins Loan servicer, Campus Partners; - Transaction-level extracts of data from COD and NSLDS; - PSC's A-133 Single Audit Reports for the years ended June 30, 2003, and 2004; - Fiscal reports provided by PSC and the Department; and, - PSC's bank statements from our audit period. We interviewed PSC's consultant, officials from the Financial Aid, Business, and Registrar offices, and FSA's Case Management and Oversight. We randomly selected 20 student files from a population of 891 Title IV recipients during our audit period and reviewed them to determine if eligibility and disbursement requirements were met. We also reviewed an additional 20 randomly selected students from a population of 421 Title IV recipients who had been flagged for verification to determine if the verification process was completed. We obtained a list of 163 students who earned zero credit hours for at least one semester and reviewed those files to determine if Title IV aid was received and if the Return to Title IV calculations were done. We performed a Return of Title IV calculation for 88 of the 134 students who required the calculation. To test PSC's cash management, we requested a list of student disbursements from PSC to match a Direct Loan drawdown request, but PSC was not able to comply with our request. Instead, we used the same 20 student files that were randomly selected for eligibility. We compared the dates of disbursement shown in NSLDS/COD to the dates the institution disbursed the funds to the students to determine if funds were held longer than three days. To determine if PSC properly administered credit balances within 14 days, we requested a list of students who had credit balances at the end of the fiscal year. We judgmentally reviewed 8 of 72 student accounts that had the higher credit balances. To achieve the audit objectives, we relied in part on computer-processed data contained in PSC's POISE accounting system. We performed limited testing of the POISE disbursement data by comparing it to the NSLDS/COD data. We relied on the Department's disbursement data. For student transcript data, we relied on PSC's data. We did not rely on PSC's internal controls because of the significance of the findings. We conducted onsite work at PSC's offices in Little Rock, Arkansas, from July 11 through July 22, 2005, and August 22 through September 2, 2005. Our audit was performed in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards appropriate to the scope of the review described above. []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701066 .anchor}Enclosure 1: Questioned Costs []{#__RefHeading___Toc146701067 .anchor}Enclosure 2: PSC's Response to the Draft Report ![](media/image5.png) September 10, 2006 Sherri L. Demmel Regional Inspector General for Audit United States Department of Education Office of Inspector General 1999 Bryan Street Harwood Center, Suite 1440 Dallas, TX 75201-6817 Dear Ms. Demmel: In response to your letter dated August 11, 2006, please find enclosed Philander Smith College's reply to your findings and recommendations. We have answered those findings and recommendations with emphasis showing that our management of the Title IV programs has been strengthened to properly administer such funds. We are certain that our responses have adequately addressed the concerns of the report. If you need further assistance, please do not hesitate to contact me. Sincerely, ![](media/image6.jpeg){width="1.9479166666666667in" height="0.7131944444444445in"} Walter M. Kimbrough, Ph.D. President **Finding NO. 1 -- PSC Did Not Maintain Proper Accounting for Perkins Loan Funds** **RESPONSE:** Philander Smith College is currently in a contractual agreement with Education Management Consultants to liquidate the Federal Perkins Loan. Due to the complexity of the liquidation process, it has taken PSC longer than anticipated to end this program. As of August 31, 2006, Education Management Consultants has assigned \$291,706.37 in Federal Perkins funds back to the Department of Education. Philander Smith College has already terminated its participation in the Federal Perkins Loan program. We anticipate full closure of this program on or before December 31, 2006. **Finding NO. 2 -- Title IV Aid Was Disbursed to Ineligible Students** **RESPONSE:** 1. Philander Smith College concurs with this finding. In June of 2005, upon the arrival of the new Director of Financial Aid a Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy (SAP) was approved and implemented. The new policy includes all required components. To remain in compliance, the Director will monitor SAP at the end of each Spring term and students will be notified in writing as to their status. Philander Smith College has strengthened its policies, procedures and management controls to ensure that the SAP policy will be implemented. ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` 2. Philander Smith College does not concur with this recommendation as further information negates the original documentation in the student's folder that suggests the student was incarcerated. Philander Smith College, through its General Counsel (See Appendix A) has received information that the student was not incarcerated in the Arkansas Department of Correction at any time in 2003 and 2004. Furthermore, the documentation used by the Office of Inspector General personnel during their site visit was fraudulent and was not on official letterhead from the Arkansas Department of Correction. In addition, there is evidence to support that the student endorsed refund checks during his alleged incarceration. Therefore, it is our belief that the student was enrolled at Philander Smith College and entitled to the Title IV aid available to him at that time. Please find attached communication from PSC General Counsel regarding student. **Finding NO. 3 -- Returns of Unearned Title IV Funds Were Not Administered** **RESPONSE:** 3.1 Effective Fall 2005, student withdrawals are handled at minimum monthly, but typically at the time the student withdraws, particularly if the student has withdrawn prior to the 60% point of the semester. > The Director of Financial Aid along with the Business Office will > determine the student's responsibility and properly notify him/her of > funds (if any) that are going to be returned to whom and when. > Documentation is given to the Business Office and a manual check is > issued back to the proper program. Copies of the checks are attached > to the documentation supporting the just cause for the return of the > Title IV funds and are placed in the student's financial aid folder. > The Business Office is responsible for returning proceeds within 30 > days. > > At the close of "enrollment verification", Philander Smith College > considers all students enrolled with said hours. Students can be > withdrawn from the class by the professor for non-attendance. > Philander Smith College performs a second check of students at the > midterm point in the semester. Faculty reports those students to the > Registrar's office and all others are considered still in class. > Therefore, the grade earned at the end of the semester is the > student's grade. > > At the close of each semester, the Registrar's office conducts a > review to determine if students actually earned zero hours or walked > away. In line with the College's policy, if the student is still > participating in class at the midterm, the grade issued at the end is > the grade earned. > > For the 04-05 school year, Title IV return calculations were performed > and funds returned to the proper programs. > > After reviewing the OIG Audit, Philander Smith College revised its > withdrawal policy outlined in the catalogue. The new policy is below. ***Withdrawal From the College*** > *Students withdrawing from PSC are required to file a Notice of > Withdrawal From College Form. This form may be obtained from the > Office of the Registrar and must be properly signed by all parties > listed on the withdrawal form. The date the student initiates the > withdrawal process will be the official withdrawal date, not the date > the completed form is returned to the Registrar's Office.* > > *If a student withdraws from PSC during the first five weeks of > classes (the refund period), all courses will be dropped from the > student's record and the student may receive tuition and fees refund > in accordance with the refund schedule. (Please consult the Tuition > Refund Policy in this catalogue for additional information.) The last > day to officially withdraw from the College without a grade penalty is > listed in the "Academic Calendar" and can be obtained in the > Registrar's Office. Students who fail to officially withdraw by the > published date will be reported as having failed the course work for > the semester and grades of F will appear on their official > transcripts. Furthermore, at the close of the Enrollment Verification > period it is the assumption of the College that the student is* > > *present and that the grades submitted by the faculty member are the > result of the coursework completed by the student for that class. > Students who have questions about withdrawing should contact the > Registrar's Office and the Financial Aid Office to determine the > effect on their Title IV eligibility.* > > *If, at the end of a semester, a student's transcript indicates he has > earned zero hours, Philander Smith College will determine if the > student actually completed the course. The Registrar will maintain for > its files a statement from the student and the teacher that documents > that the student completed the entire semester and the grades reported > are the grades earned.* > > *Catalogue Amendment (p9), Fall 2005.* > > *Effective August 15, 2005* > > PSC has strengthened its policies, procedures, and management controls > between offices to ensure that withdrawn students are identified and > that Title IV refunds are calculated accurately and returned to the > Department. 2. Philander Smith College does not concur with this finding. Please find attached documentation for the 10 students that shows PSC is only responsible for returning \$12,892.34 which represents the R2T4 calculations for those 10 students. (See Appendix D) 3.3 The Philander Smith College catalogue for 2003-2005 states, "a student who enrolls and fails to officially withdraw will be liable for all changes incurred for the semester." The catalogue further states, "if excessive absences occur during the first nine weeks of the semester, the instructor shall withdraw the student from the class and shall record a grade of "WP" or "WF" as determined by the student's progress at the time. After nine weeks, the instructor shall record a grade of "F." It is the belief of Philander Smith College that the grades submitted at the end of the semester are the grades earned by all students. The student who failed to withdraw from the college is responsible both financially and academically for that semester. With that said, Philander Smith College did not have a procedure in place to determine whether or not the grades reported were earned or not, therefore, Philander Smith College concurs with this finding. **Finding NO. 4 -- Verification Was Not Completed For All Selected Students** **RESPONSE:** 4.1 Effective Fall 2005, the school began utilizing a new FAMS software. This software has a mechanism in place that prevents an aid administrator from disbursing aid to a student who is selected for verification unless all required documents are on file. While it is an automated process, it still requires human interaction and requires the aid officer to populate two different sections of the software prior to the disbursing of aid for a "selected" student. A current copy of the revised Policy and Procedural Manual can be provided to the Department of Education that outlines the procedures in place that ensures the office remains in compliance with verification. Philander Smith College has strengthened its policies, procedures and management controls to ensure that verification is completed on selected students by the Central Processing System. 2. Philander Smith College does not concur with this recommendation as there is not sufficient evidence to support the \$35,222 in question. The worksheets provided by the OIG staff do not indicate the students in question or their findings as to the \$35,222. **Finding NO. 5 -- Credit Balances Were Not Properly Administered** **RESPONSE:** 1. After reviewing the OIG Audit, Philander Smith College revised its withdrawal policy outlined in the catalogue. The new policy is below: > ***Student Excess Aid Refund Policy*** > > *Philander Smith College uses student accounts to assess charges and > apply payments against those charges. If a student\'s account balance > is a credit, it is the policy of the College to refund the credit to > the student in a timely manner (under most circumstances). Credit > balances caused by financial aid are refunded only after a > [careful]{.underline} review of the student\'s account and eligibility > for aid. If a credit balance refund is due the student, the refund is > made to the student within the time frame required by federal > regulations. The refund will be issued in the form of a check made > payable to the student and issued by the Business Office. If a credit > balance refund is due as the result of a PLUS Loan, the refund will be > issued in the form of a check made payable to the borrower.\ > \ > A student who receives a refund based wholly or partly on financial > aid, and later changes enrollment status, may be required to repay all > or part of the aid received to the College or to the appropriate > federal or state aid programs. Students receiving federal aid other > than Federal Work-Study funds who withdraw or change enrollment status > (increase or decrease semester hours taken) will have federal aid > adjusted in accordance with formulas prescribed by the Federal Title > IV Program, or College policy, whichever is applicable.\ > * > > *A student may choose to have a credit balance applied to future > semesters by submitting a letter in writing to the Business Office.* > > ***\ > *IMPORTANT NOTE:** *Credit balance refunds due students are processed > after enrollment verification each semester (consult the semester > schedule of classes for this date). Eligibility for a refund depends > on several factors and will be determined by the Office of Financial > Aid. Changes in any of these factors, such as dropping courses or > withdrawing from the College, could result in delays in receiving a > refund or the reduction of the student\'s aid package, thereby > removing a potential credit balance.* > > ***Return of Federal Title IV Funds Policy*** > > *Philander Smith College returns unearned funds received from Federal > student assistance programs to the proper program accounts or lenders > in accordance with Federal Title IV student assistance regulations, as > amended, under 34 CFR, section 668.22(d) of the Reauthorization of the > Higher Education Act of 1965.\ > \ > The student receiving assistance from Federal Title IV programs is > required to complete a minimum number of hours for which assistance > was received. If the student completely withdraws from school during > the semester or stops attending, but fails to officially withdraw, the > student may be required to return the unearned part of the funds > received to help pay educational expenses for the semester. Liability > for return of Federal Title IV funds will be determined according to > the following guidelines:* 1. *If the student remains enrolled and attends class beyond the 60% mark of the semester in which aid is received, all federal aid is considered earned and not subject to this policy.* 2. *If the student completely withdraws from all classes before completing 60% of the semester, a pro-rated portion of the federal aid received must be returned to the federal aid programs equal to the percentage of the semester remaining.* 3. *If the student does not officially withdraw from classes, and stops attending all classes, a pro-rated portion of the federal aid received, based on the documented last date of attendance, must be returned to the federal aid programs. If the college is unable to document the last date of attendance, one-half of all federal aid received during the semester must be returned to the federal aid programs.* > *Return of Federal Title IV funds will be distributed according to > statutory regulations. Worksheets provided by the U.S. Department of > Education will be used to determine the amounts and order of return. > If a student\'s share of the return amount exists, the student will be > notified and allowed 45 days from the date of determination to return > the funds to the Business Office of the College for deposit into the > federal programs accounts. If the student does not return the amount > owed within the 45-day period, the amount of overpayment will be > reported to the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) via the National > Student Loan Database (NSLDS) and the student will be referred to the > DOE for resolution of the debt. Unearned aid will be refunded to the > appropriate program(s), if necessary based on these regulations.* > > PSC has strengthened its policies, procedures, and management controls > to ensure that the handling of credit balances complies with > regulatory requirements. 5.2 We have reviewed the three students representing the questioned \$7625.79. Please find documentation to support the corrections to their student ledger accounts and the return of funds to the proper program, if applicable attached. See Appendix C. Philander Smith College has reviewed all credit balances as of August 1, 2005. Philander Smith College anticipates closure of this project on or before December 31, 2006. If the credit balance is a result of Title IV aid, the funds will be returned to the appropriate program or student, if applicable. **Finding NO. 6 -- PSC Did Not Properly Administer the Direct Loan Program** **RESPONSE:** 1. Philander Smith College is in possession of a close out letter for 2003-2004. Letter dated April 2006. See Appendix B. 2. Philander Smith College does not concur with this recommendation as the 2003-2004 school year has been closed. **Finding NO. 7 -- Changes in Student Status Were Not Reported to NSLDS** **RESPONSE:** 7.1 The Registrar's Office submits the SSCR reports six times a year. The office now has the capability to submit timely information on behalf of the school as a result of the college's purchase of the new software system. The Registrar is keenly aware of this obligation and is committed to ensuring this task is completed. The Registrar will review the information and update each student record according to the federal regulations. Upon receipt of acceptance of the submitted SSCR, the Registrar will send a copy of the acknowledgement to the Director of Financial Aid for his records. The months of submission are: August, December, February, March, May and June. **Finding NO. 8 -- PSC Did Not Meet Administrative Capability Standards for Title IV Programs** **RESPONSE:** > Effective June 6, 2005 Philander Smith College hired a new Director of > Financial Aid. Mr. Page brings over 13 years of financial aid > experience to Philander Smith College and has been charged with > implementing policies and procedures that will bring Philander Smith > College into compliance with all Title IV regulations. The institution > has received numerous audit findings over the last 3-4 years and due > to high turnover within the office it was unable to implement the > necessary changes to become in compliance. > > Mr. Page, with the assistance of the new leadership at Philander Smith > College, will ensure that all audit findings are resolved and all > written policies and procedures are implemented and followed. Periodic > audits conducted by Mr. Page will ensure this. Training in the > financial aid office is on-going and the office has received a > commitment from the administration at Philander Smith College, as well > as outside agencies, to make sure it is up to date and knowledgeable > about all Title IV regulations. The staff is encouraged and does > participate in the state, regional and national financial aid > associations. > > As the Department of Education is aware, this administration and the > Director of Financial Aid were not employed at Philander Smith College > during the audit year in question. Therefore, we are asking for a > reasonable amount of time to implement and create the positive change > that is needed not only in the financial aid office but the campus > community as a whole. In one year alone, the current administration > has made great strides in bringing Philander Smith College into > compliance with the Title IV aid program. While it would be unfair to > the new administration to place Philander Smith College on > reimbursement, it would be severely detrimental to our student body to > terminate Philander Smith College's participation in the Title IV > program. Our issues did not evolve over night, thus our corrections > won't take place over night. The new Financial Aid team can and will > make the office 100% compliant with your assistance. > > Although Philander Smith College does not concur with all of the > recommendations outlined in the draft report, we do accept the > following financial responsibility. 2.1 Return of aid for lack of satisfactory academic progress \$289,861.00 3.2 Return of Title IV funds for official withdrawals \$12,892.34 3.3 Return of Title IV funds for unofficial withdrawals \$127,325.00 **Total Questioned Cost \$430,078.34** > We ask that the Department of Education look favorably upon our new > administrative team and its efforts and allow us to return these funds > on a payment plan acceptable to all parties. > > Philander Smith College respectfully asks that no action be taken to > fine, limit, suspend, place on reimbursement, or terminate its > participation in the Title IV program. We are confident that the new > administrative team in place can effectively administer all phases of > the Title IV Federal program. > > We have a total commitment from the students, faculty and staff of > Philander Smith College to comply with all regulatory requirements. > The Financial Aid Office (and its Director and staff) and the Business > Office (and its Comptroller and staff) are working hand in glove to > ensure that sufficient policies, procedures, and practices are in > place to meet all federal guidelines.
en
log-files
349135
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2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/sy=run setcl & 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/"tpi=v1,v2,v3,v4,v5,v6,v7,v8,if1,if3 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/"tpi=v9,v10,v11,v12,v13,v14,if2 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/tpi=formvc,formif 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/tpdiff=formvc,formif 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/caltemp=formvc,formif 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/"tsys1=v1,v2,v3,v4,v5,v6,v7,v8,if1,if3 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/"tsys2=v9,v10,v11,v12,v13,v14,if2 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/tsys=formvc,formif 2003.253.18:00:00.01&midob/atomic 2003.253.18:00:00.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:00:00.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:00:00.29/cable/+3.5882411E-02 2003.253.18:00:00.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9003,17088 2003.253.18:00:00.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,24671 2003.253.18:00:00.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7553 2003.253.18:00:00.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10080 2003.253.18:00:00.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7867 2003.253.18:00:01.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:00:01.74/tpi/1d,4616,2u,7557,3u,9078,4u,13812,i1,9002 2003.253.18:00:01.74/tpi/9u,8952,au,11111,bu,7818,cu,9966,du,50164,eu,15218,i2,17071 2003.253.18:00:01.75/tpi/5u,10736,6u,10082,7u,9232,8d,4461,i3,24667 2003.253.18:00:01.76/tpdiff/1d,2289,2u,3205,3u,4514,4u,6984,i1,4901 2003.253.18:00:01.76/tpdiff/9u,1818,au,4539,bu,3790,cu,606,du,3928,eu,3800,i2,1390 2003.253.18:00:01.77/tpdiff/5u,6330,6u,4729,7u,4610,8d,2135,i3,14303 2003.253.18:00:01.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:00:01.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:00:01.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:00:01.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:00:01.82/tsys/1d,49.9,2u,50.9,3u,47.9,4u,49.7,i1,47.2 2003.253.18:00:01.83/tsys/9u,146.5,au,70.7,bu,56.2,cu,468.2,du,378.4,eu,113.4,i2,366.9 2003.253.18:00:01.83/tsys/5u,42.5,6u,50.6,7u,45.5,8d,42.0,i3,44.5 2003.253.18:00:01.84&atomic/fmout-gps=gt,:fetc? 2003.253.18:00:01.85&atomic/fmout-gps=gt 2003.253.18:00:02.00/fmout-gps/+7.7974E-006 2003.253.18:00:02.03:!2003.253.18:03:32 2003.253.18:00:02.09#setcl#time/310642620,4,2003,253,18,00,02.04,2.439,0.197,-1 2003.253.18:00:02.09#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.18:03:08.05;rxmon 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=00,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=01,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=02,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=03,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=05,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=07,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=17,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=1e,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx=1f,*,*,*,*,*,* 2003.253.18:03:08.05&rxmon/rx 2003.253.18:03:08.17/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.18:03:08.28/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.18:03:08.39/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.18:03:08.50/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.18:03:08.61/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.253.18:03:08.72/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.18:03:08.83/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.46 2003.253.18:03:08.94/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.76 2003.253.18:03:09.05/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.18:03:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.18:03:32.00:disc_end 2003.253.18:03:32.48:disc_pos 2003.253.18:03:32.49/disc_pos/7107694720,81952, 2003.253.18:03:32.49:disc_check 2003.253.18:03:32.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d18h03m32.182s,70504,0.00250s,80000,247008198820, 2003.253.18:03:32.89:postob 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/"!+1s 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/mk5=get_stats 2003.253.18:03:32.89&postob/rxmon 2003.253.18:03:32.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 13535 : 26 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 13535 : 27 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 13531 : 32 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 13525 : 35 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 13537 : 26 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 13526 : 34 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 13524 : 37 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:32.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 13529 : 31 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:33.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.18:03:33.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.18:03:33.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.18:03:33.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.18:03:33.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.18:03:33.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.18:03:33.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.46 2003.253.18:03:33.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.76 2003.253.18:03:33.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.253.18:03:33.99:scan_name=253-1809,rd0308,98 2003.253.18:03:33.99:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.18:03:37.01:setup4f 2003.253.18:03:41.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:41.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.18:03:41.05:!2003.253.18:09:04 2003.253.18:09:04.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:09:04.02/disc_pos/7107694720,7106694720, 2003.253.18:09:04.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.18:09:04.25:!2003.253.18:09:04 2003.253.18:09:04.26:preob 2003.253.18:09:04.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:09:04.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:09:07.84/tpical/1d,9689,2u,14667,3u,18848,4u,29327,i1,19660 2003.253.18:09:07.84/tpical/9u,10744,au,15305,bu,13279,cu,8249,du,6872,eu,9478,i2,8093 2003.253.18:09:07.84/tpical/5u,23670,6u,20078,7u,18858,8d,8828,i3,55009 2003.253.18:09:10.49/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,102 2003.253.18:09:10.49/tpzero/9u,61,au,414,bu,724,cu,507,du,618,eu,854,i2,67 2003.253.18:09:10.49/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.18:09:13.58:!2003.253.18:09:14 2003.253.18:09:14.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:09:14.00/disc_pos/7363452928,7106694720, 2003.253.18:09:14.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.18:09:14.01:midob 2003.253.18:09:14.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:09:14.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:09:14.32/cable/+3.5883286E-02 2003.253.18:09:14.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,14669,6019 2003.253.18:09:14.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,40439 2003.253.18:09:14.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11395 2003.253.18:09:14.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15338 2003.253.18:09:14.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9533 2003.253.18:09:15.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:09:15.75/tpi/1d,7345,2u,11387,3u,14244,4u,22312,i1,14659 2003.253.18:09:15.75/tpi/9u,8970,au,11075,bu,9531,cu,6609,du,5263,eu,7283,i2,6011 2003.253.18:09:15.76/tpi/5u,17334,6u,15333,7u,14272,8d,6662,i3,40430 2003.253.18:09:15.77/tpdiff/1d,2344,2u,3280,3u,4604,4u,7015,i1,5001 2003.253.18:09:15.77/tpdiff/9u,1774,au,4230,bu,3748,cu,1640,du,1609,eu,2195,i2,2082 2003.253.18:09:15.78/tpdiff/5u,6336,6u,4745,7u,4586,8d,2166,i3,14579 2003.253.18:09:15.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:09:15.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:09:15.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:09:15.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:09:15.82/tsys/1d,79.0,2u,80.1,3u,76.2,4u,81.0,i1,75.7 2003.253.18:09:15.83/tsys/9u,150.7,au,75.6,bu,70.5,cu,111.6,du,86.6,eu,87.9,i2,85.6 2003.253.18:09:15.83/tsys/5u,69.5,6u,79.2,7u,74.3,8d,67.8,i3,71.8 2003.253.18:09:16.00/fmout-gps/+7.7239E-006 2003.253.18:09:16.01:!2003.253.18:10:52 2003.253.18:09:16.07#setcl#time/310698017,4,2003,253,18,09,16.02,2.053,0.351,-1 2003.253.18:09:16.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.18:10:52.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.18:10:52.02:disc_end 2003.253.18:10:52.51:disc_pos 2003.253.18:10:52.52/disc_pos/10562888376,7107694720, 2003.253.18:10:52.52:disc_check 2003.253.18:10:52.91/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d18h10m52.208s,46484,0.00250s,80000,10625630364, 2003.253.18:10:52.91:postob 2003.253.18:10:52.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 20112 : 42 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 20107 : 50 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 20111 : 45 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 20104 : 49 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 20115 : 41 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 20105 : 48 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 20101 : 55 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:52.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 20109 : 44 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:10:53.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.253.18:10:53.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.18:10:53.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.18:10:53.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.18:10:53.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.99 2003.253.18:10:53.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.18:10:53.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.46 2003.253.18:10:53.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.74 2003.253.18:10:53.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.18:10:53.96:scan_name=253-1819,rd0308,98 2003.253.18:10:53.96:source=4c39.25,092355.29,391523.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.18:10:56.97:setup4f 2003.253.18:11:01.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.18:11:01.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.18:11:01.05:!2003.253.18:19:39 2003.253.18:19:39.01:disc_pos 2003.253.18:19:39.03/disc_pos/10562888376,10561888376, 2003.253.18:19:39.03:disc_start=on 2003.253.18:19:39.28:!2003.253.18:19:39 2003.253.18:19:39.28:preob 2003.253.18:19:39.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:19:39.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:19:42.86/tpical/1d,7035,2u,10863,3u,13873,4u,21103,i1,14096 2003.253.18:19:42.86/tpical/9u,9043,au,13238,bu,11506,cu,6745,du,7178,eu,9044,i2,7116 2003.253.18:19:42.86/tpical/5u,17122,6u,14970,7u,13868,8d,6644,i3,39292 2003.253.18:19:45.51/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,465,i1,104 2003.253.18:19:45.51/tpzero/9u,64,au,413,bu,725,cu,508,du,617,eu,855,i2,71 2003.253.18:19:45.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.18:19:48.60:!2003.253.18:19:49 2003.253.18:19:49.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:19:49.00/disc_pos/10818809856,10561888376, 2003.253.18:19:49.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.18:19:49.01:midob 2003.253.18:19:49.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:19:49.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:19:49.37/cable/+3.5882249E-02 2003.253.18:19:49.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9203,5113 2003.253.18:19:49.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25136 2003.253.18:19:49.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7653 2003.253.18:19:49.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10270 2003.253.18:19:49.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7790 2003.253.18:19:50.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:19:50.82/tpi/1d,4733,2u,7652,3u,9315,4u,14135,i1,9202 2003.253.18:19:50.82/tpi/9u,6636,au,9016,bu,7794,cu,5209,du,6572,eu,7045,i2,5544 2003.253.18:19:50.83/tpi/5u,10898,6u,10262,7u,9331,8d,4527,i3,25125 2003.253.18:19:50.84/tpdiff/1d,2302,2u,3211,3u,4558,4u,6968,i1,4894 2003.253.18:19:50.84/tpdiff/9u,2407,au,4222,bu,3712,cu,1536,du,606,eu,1999,i2,1572 2003.253.18:19:50.85/tpdiff/5u,6224,6u,4708,7u,4537,8d,2117,i3,14167 2003.253.18:19:50.86/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:19:50.86/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:19:50.87/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:19:50.88/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:19:50.89/tsys/1d,50.9,2u,51.6,3u,48.8,4u,51.0,i1,48.3 2003.253.18:19:50.89/tsys/9u,81.9,au,61.1,bu,57.1,cu,91.8,du,294.8,eu,92.9,i2,104.4 2003.253.18:19:50.90/tsys/5u,43.9,6u,51.9,7u,46.8,8d,43.2,i3,45.8 2003.253.18:19:50.99/fmout-gps/+7.8039E-006 2003.253.18:19:51.01:!2003.253.18:21:27 2003.253.18:19:51.08#setcl#time/310761516,4,2003,253,18,19,51.03,2.277,0.527,0 2003.253.18:19:51.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.18:21:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.18:21:27.02:disc_end 2003.253.18:21:27.50:disc_pos 2003.253.18:21:27.50/disc_pos/14016967120,10562888376, 2003.253.18:21:27.51:disc_check 2003.253.18:21:27.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d18h21m27.198s,34716,0.00250s,80000,16865613024, 2003.253.18:21:27.90:postob 2003.253.18:21:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 26687 : 58 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 26681 : 70 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 26695 : 52 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 26678 : 66 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 26691 : 58 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 26681 : 63 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 26678 : 69 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:27.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 26685 : 59 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:28.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.253.18:21:28.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.18:21:28.35/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.253.18:21:28.47/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.18:21:28.58/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.253.18:21:28.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.18:21:28.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.29 2003.253.18:21:28.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.55 2003.253.18:21:29.02/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.18:21:29.02:scan_name=253-1823,rd0308,597 2003.253.18:21:29.02:source=1144-379,114430.85,-375530.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.18:21:32.04:setup4f 2003.253.18:21:36.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:36.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.18:21:36.06:!2003.253.18:22:54 2003.253.18:22:54.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:22:54.01/disc_pos/14016967120,14015967120, 2003.253.18:22:54.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.18:22:54.26:!2003.253.18:22:54 2003.253.18:22:54.26:preob 2003.253.18:22:54.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:22:54.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:22:57.84/tpical/1d,12395,2u,18406,3u,23392,4u,35808,i1,24402 2003.253.18:22:57.84/tpical/9u,12381,au,18569,bu,16127,cu,8949,du,7831,eu,11203 2003.253.18:22:57.84/tpical/i2,18289 2003.253.18:22:57.84/tpical/5u,28038,6u,23299,7u,21805,8d,10192,i3,65316 2003.253.18:23:00.49/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1283,3u,758,4u,467,i1,98 2003.253.18:23:00.49/tpzero/9u,62,au,414,bu,725,cu,509,du,617,eu,855,i2,69 2003.253.18:23:00.49/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.18:23:03.58:!2003.253.18:23:04 2003.253.18:23:04.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:23:04.00/disc_pos/14272860160,14015967120, 2003.253.18:23:04.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.18:23:04.01:midob 2003.253.18:23:04.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:23:04.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:23:04.13/cable/+3.5880635E-02 2003.253.18:23:04.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,19509,13445 2003.253.18:23:04.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,51242 2003.253.18:23:04.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15221 2003.253.18:23:04.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,18840 2003.253.18:23:04.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12227 2003.253.18:23:05.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:23:05.57/tpi/1d,10113,2u,15212,3u,18943,4u,29020,i1,19506 2003.253.18:23:05.57/tpi/9u,10230,au,14123,bu,12130,cu,7501,du,6345,eu,8917,i2,17985 2003.253.18:23:05.58/tpi/5u,21930,6u,18831,7u,17452,8d,8118,i3,51257 2003.253.18:23:05.59/tpdiff/1d,2282,2u,3194,3u,4449,4u,6788,i1,4896 2003.253.18:23:05.59/tpdiff/9u,2151,au,4446,bu,3997,cu,1448,du,1486,eu,2286,i2,304 2003.253.18:23:05.60/tpdiff/5u,6108,6u,4468,7u,4353,8d,2074,i3,14059 2003.253.18:23:05.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:23:05.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:23:05.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:23:05.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:23:05.65/tsys/1d,112.6,2u,113.4,3u,106.3,4u,109.4,i1,103.1 2003.253.18:23:05.65/tsys/9u,141.8,au,92.5,bu,85.6,cu,144.9,du,115.6,eu,105.8,i2,1768.0 2003.253.18:23:05.66/tsys/5u,91.7,6u,104.5,7u,97.3,8d,89.1,i3,94.4 2003.253.18:23:06.01/fmout-gps/+7.7709E-006 2003.253.18:23:06.02:!2003.253.18:33:01 2003.253.18:23:06.09#setcl#time/310781017,4,2003,253,18,23,06.04,2.064,0.581,-1 2003.253.18:23:06.09#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.18:33:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.18:33:01.00:disc_end 2003.253.18:33:01.49:disc_pos 2003.253.18:33:01.49/disc_pos/33439289560,14016967120, 2003.253.18:33:01.50:disc_check 2003.253.18:33:01.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d18h33m01.183s,10096,0.00250s,80000,2785222180, 2003.253.18:33:01.89:postob 2003.253.18:33:01.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 63665 : 134 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 63647 : 157 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 63674 : 125 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 63658 : 138 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 63678 : 122 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 63673 : 123 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 63650 : 148 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:01.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 63658 : 138 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:02.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.253.18:33:02.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.18:33:02.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.253.18:33:02.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.18:33:02.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.58 2003.253.18:33:02.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.18:33:02.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.46 2003.253.18:33:02.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.29 2003.253.18:33:02.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.18:33:02.97:scan_name=253-1836,rd0308,256 2003.253.18:33:02.97:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.18:33:05.99:setup4f 2003.253.18:33:10.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:10.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.18:33:10.05:!2003.253.18:36:21 2003.253.18:36:21.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:36:21.01/disc_pos/33439289560,33438289560, 2003.253.18:36:21.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.18:36:21.25:!2003.253.18:36:21 2003.253.18:36:21.25:preob 2003.253.18:36:21.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:36:21.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:36:24.85/tpical/1d,7253,2u,11188,3u,14278,4u,21755,i1,14590 2003.253.18:36:24.85/tpical/9u,9879,au,14344,bu,12506,cu,6788,du,6096,eu,8841,i2,7188 2003.253.18:36:24.85/tpical/5u,17651,6u,15401,7u,14288,8d,6805,i3,40723 2003.253.18:36:27.50/tpzero/1d,221,2u,1281,3u,756,4u,466,i1,97 2003.253.18:36:27.50/tpzero/9u,54,au,413,bu,724,cu,508,du,617,eu,853,i2,59 2003.253.18:36:27.50/tpzero/5u,386,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.18:36:30.59:!2003.253.18:36:31 2003.253.18:36:31.01:disc_pos 2003.253.18:36:31.01/disc_pos/33695268864,33438289560, 2003.253.18:36:31.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.18:36:31.02:midob 2003.253.18:36:31.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:36:31.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:36:31.24/cable/+3.5880612E-02 2003.253.18:36:31.31/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9736,6143 2003.253.18:36:31.38/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26660 2003.253.18:36:31.45/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8027 2003.253.18:36:31.52/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10760 2003.253.18:36:31.59/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8463 2003.253.18:36:32.15/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:36:32.67/tpi/1d,4980,2u,8025,3u,9775,4u,14863,i1,9738 2003.253.18:36:32.67/tpi/9u,6020,au,9782,bu,8458,cu,5101,du,4589,eu,6531,i2,5038 2003.253.18:36:32.68/tpi/5u,11504,6u,10751,7u,9802,8d,4712,i3,26653 2003.253.18:36:32.69/tpdiff/1d,2273,2u,3163,3u,4503,4u,6892,i1,4852 2003.253.18:36:32.69/tpdiff/9u,3859,au,4562,bu,4048,cu,1687,du,1507,eu,2310,i2,2150 2003.253.18:36:32.70/tpdiff/5u,6147,6u,4650,7u,4486,8d,2093,i3,14070 2003.253.18:36:32.71/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:36:32.71/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:36:32.72/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:36:32.73/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:36:32.74/tsys/1d,54.4,2u,55.4,3u,52.1,4u,54.3,i1,51.7 2003.253.18:36:32.74/tsys/9u,46.4,au,61.6,bu,57.3,cu,81.7,du,79.1,eu,73.7,i2,69.5 2003.253.18:36:32.75/tsys/5u,47.0,6u,55.2,7u,50.1,8d,46.0,i3,48.9 2003.253.18:36:33.01/fmout-gps/+7.8329E-006 2003.253.18:36:33.02:!2003.253.18:40:47 2003.253.18:36:33.08#setcl#time/310861715,4,2003,253,18,36,33.04,2.086,0.805,0 2003.253.18:36:33.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.18:40:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.18:40:47.00:disc_end 2003.253.18:40:47.49:disc_pos 2003.253.18:40:47.49/disc_pos/41949599504,33439289560, 2003.253.18:40:47.50:disc_check 2003.253.18:40:47.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d18h40m47.185s,50140,0.00250s,80000,6401730012, 2003.253.18:40:47.89:postob 2003.253.18:40:47.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 79855 : 182 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 79831 : 209 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 79876 : 161 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 79859 : 173 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 79876 : 162 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 79876 : 156 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 79852 : 182 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:47.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 79852 : 180 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:48.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.58 2003.253.18:40:48.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.18:40:48.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.68 2003.253.18:40:48.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.18:40:48.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.18:40:48.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.18:40:48.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.46 2003.253.18:40:48.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.18:40:48.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.18:40:48.96:scan_name=253-1847,rd0308,774 2003.253.18:40:48.96:source=1307+121,130704.35,121022.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.18:40:51.97:setup4f 2003.253.18:40:56.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:56.04/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.18:40:56.07:!2003.253.18:47:24 2003.253.18:47:24.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:47:24.01/disc_pos/41949599504,41948599504, 2003.253.18:47:24.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.18:47:24.26:!2003.253.18:47:24 2003.253.18:47:24.26:preob 2003.253.18:47:24.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:47:24.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:47:27.85/tpical/1d,6972,2u,10784,3u,13687,4u,20913,i1,14019 2003.253.18:47:27.85/tpical/9u,10938,au,16422,bu,11625,cu,13473,du,6716,eu,8293 2003.253.18:47:27.85/tpical/i2,18674 2003.253.18:47:27.85/tpical/5u,16904,6u,14809,7u,13786,8d,6559,i3,38932 2003.253.18:47:30.50/tpzero/1d,224,2u,1283,3u,756,4u,467,i1,103 2003.253.18:47:30.50/tpzero/9u,61,au,412,bu,724,cu,507,du,617,eu,853,i2,69 2003.253.18:47:30.50/tpzero/5u,387,6u,870,7u,1159,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.18:47:33.59:!2003.253.18:47:34 2003.253.18:47:34.00:disc_pos 2003.253.18:47:34.00/disc_pos/42205339648,41948599504, 2003.253.18:47:34.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.18:47:34.01:midob 2003.253.18:47:34.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.18:47:34.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.18:47:34.37/cable/+3.5880252E-02 2003.253.18:47:34.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9139,15844 2003.253.18:47:34.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,24840 2003.253.18:47:34.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7596 2003.253.18:47:34.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10148 2003.253.18:47:34.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7845 2003.253.18:47:35.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.18:47:35.81/tpi/1d,4690,2u,7596,3u,9194,4u,13952,i1,9141 2003.253.18:47:35.82/tpi/9u,9105,au,11433,bu,7845,cu,11912,du,5242,eu,6128,i2,16357 2003.253.18:47:35.82/tpi/5u,10727,6u,10143,7u,9254,8d,4461,i3,24833 2003.253.18:47:35.83/tpdiff/1d,2282,2u,3188,3u,4493,4u,6961,i1,4878 2003.253.18:47:35.84/tpdiff/9u,1833,au,4989,bu,3780,cu,1561,du,1474,eu,2165,i2,2317 2003.253.18:47:35.84/tpdiff/5u,6177,6u,4666,7u,4532,8d,2098,i3,14099 2003.253.18:47:35.85/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.18:47:35.86/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.18:47:35.86/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.18:47:35.87/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.18:47:35.88/tsys/1d,50.9,2u,51.5,3u,48.8,4u,50.4,i1,48.2 2003.253.18:47:35.89/tsys/9u,148.0,au,66.3,bu,56.5,cu,219.2,du,94.1,eu,73.1,i2,210.9 2003.253.18:47:35.89/tsys/5u,43.5,6u,51.7,7u,46.4,8d,42.8,i3,45.4 2003.253.18:47:36.00/fmout-gps/+7.8029E-006 2003.253.18:47:36.01:!2003.253.19:00:28 2003.253.18:47:36.08#setcl#time/310928013,4,2003,253,18,47,36.04,2.183,0.990,0 2003.253.18:47:36.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:00:28.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:00:28.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:00:28.50:disc_pos 2003.253.19:00:28.50/disc_pos/67036320576,41949599504, 2003.253.19:00:28.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:00:28.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h00m28.200s,3940,0.00250s,80000,12705805128, 2003.253.19:00:28.90:postob 2003.253.19:00:28.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 127604 : 292 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 127591 : 306 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 127634 : 260 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 127615 : 274 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 127620 : 276 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 127631 : 258 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 127600 : 291 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:28.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 127604 : 285 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:29.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.04 2003.253.19:00:29.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.80 2003.253.19:00:29.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.17 2003.253.19:00:29.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.19:00:29.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.97 2003.253.19:00:29.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.19:00:29.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.19:00:29.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.29 2003.253.19:00:29.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.19:00:29.97:scan_name=253-1902,rd0308,111 2003.253.19:00:29.97:source=1606+106,160623.42,103700.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:00:33.00:setup4f 2003.253.19:00:37.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:37.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:00:37.06:!2003.253.19:02:41 2003.253.19:02:41.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:02:41.02/disc_pos/67036320576,67035320576, 2003.253.19:02:41.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:02:41.26:!2003.253.19:02:41 2003.253.19:02:41.27:preob 2003.253.19:02:41.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:02:41.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:02:44.85/tpical/1d,7119,2u,11002,3u,14010,4u,21493,i1,14370 2003.253.19:02:44.85/tpical/9u,7046,au,12834,bu,11235,cu,6314,du,5370,eu,8059,i2,5851 2003.253.19:02:44.85/tpical/5u,17395,6u,15305,7u,14177,8d,6749,i3,40076 2003.253.19:02:47.51/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,103 2003.253.19:02:47.51/tpzero/9u,61,au,412,bu,724,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,68 2003.253.19:02:47.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.19:02:50.60:!2003.253.19:02:51 2003.253.19:02:51.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:02:51.01/disc_pos/67292213248,67035320576, 2003.253.19:02:51.02:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:02:51.03:midob 2003.253.19:02:51.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:02:51.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:02:51.29/cable/+3.5879160E-02 2003.253.19:02:51.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9465,3866 2003.253.19:02:51.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25857 2003.253.19:02:51.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7804 2003.253.19:02:51.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10581 2003.253.19:02:51.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7613 2003.253.19:02:52.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:02:52.72/tpi/1d,4825,2u,7803,3u,9469,4u,14487,i1,9465 2003.253.19:02:52.72/tpi/9u,5745,au,8764,bu,7614,cu,4677,du,4019,eu,5964,i2,3918 2003.253.19:02:52.73/tpi/5u,11165,6u,10580,7u,9603,8d,4634,i3,25864 2003.253.19:02:52.74/tpdiff/1d,2294,2u,3199,3u,4541,4u,7006,i1,4905 2003.253.19:02:52.74/tpdiff/9u,1301,au,4070,bu,3621,cu,1637,du,1351,eu,2095,i2,1933 2003.253.19:02:52.75/tpdiff/5u,6230,6u,4725,7u,4574,8d,2115,i3,14212 2003.253.19:02:52.76/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:02:52.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:02:52.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:02:52.78/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:02:52.79/tsys/1d,52.1,2u,53.0,3u,49.9,4u,52.0,i1,49.6 2003.253.19:02:52.79/tsys/9u,131.1,au,61.6,bu,57.1,cu,76.4,du,75.5,eu,73.2,i2,59.8 2003.253.19:02:52.80/tsys/5u,45.0,6u,53.4,7u,48.0,8d,44.5,i3,47.0 2003.253.19:02:52.99/fmout-gps/+7.7529E-006 2003.253.19:02:53.01:!2003.253.19:04:42 2003.253.19:02:53.08#setcl#time/311019710,3,2003,253,19,02,53.03,2.122,1.244,0 2003.253.19:02:53.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:04:42.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:04:42.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:04:42.50:disc_pos 2003.253.19:04:42.51/disc_pos/70907052368,67036320576, 2003.253.19:04:42.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:04:42.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h04m42.203s,18504,0.00250s,80000,4257333644, 2003.253.19:04:42.90:postob 2003.253.19:04:42.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 134968 : 313 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 134956 : 327 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 135005 : 276 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 134984 : 291 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 134990 : 292 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 135001 : 276 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 134966 : 311 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:42.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 134961 : 314 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:43.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.253.19:04:43.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.56 2003.253.19:04:43.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.253.19:04:43.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:04:43.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.48 2003.253.19:04:43.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.19:04:43.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.19:04:43.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.52 2003.253.19:04:43.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.19:04:43.99:scan_name=253-1907,rd0308,118 2003.253.19:04:43.99:source=1622-253,162244.12,-252051.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:04:47.00:setup4f 2003.253.19:04:51.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:51.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:04:51.05:!2003.253.19:07:21 2003.253.19:07:21.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:07:21.04/disc_pos/70907052368,70906052368, 2003.253.19:07:21.04:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:07:21.29:!2003.253.19:07:21 2003.253.19:07:21.29:preob 2003.253.19:07:21.30#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:07:21.30/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:07:24.89/tpical/1d,8274,2u,12657,3u,16172,4u,25008,i1,16744 2003.253.19:07:24.89/tpical/9u,11321,au,15377,bu,12939,cu,10372,du,9961,eu,9881 2003.253.19:07:24.89/tpical/i2,11017 2003.253.19:07:24.89/tpical/5u,20086,6u,17397,7u,16252,8d,7668,i3,46533 2003.253.19:07:27.55/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,465,i1,97 2003.253.19:07:27.55/tpzero/9u,62,au,411,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,65 2003.253.19:07:27.55/tpzero/5u,387,6u,870,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.19:07:30.64:!2003.253.19:07:31 2003.253.19:07:31.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:07:31.00/disc_pos/71162863616,70906052368, 2003.253.19:07:31.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:07:31.01:midob 2003.253.19:07:31.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:07:31.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:07:31.36/cable/+3.5879460E-02 2003.253.19:07:31.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11808,10622 2003.253.19:07:31.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32246 2003.253.19:07:31.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9419 2003.253.19:07:31.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12682 2003.253.19:07:31.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9037 2003.253.19:07:32.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:07:32.80/tpi/1d,5968,2u,9426,3u,11610,4u,18031,i1,11806 2003.253.19:07:32.80/tpi/9u,6419,au,10857,bu,9045,cu,8885,du,8939,eu,7711,i2,8963 2003.253.19:07:32.81/tpi/5u,13854,6u,12678,7u,11691,8d,5544,i3,32243 2003.253.19:07:32.82/tpdiff/1d,2306,2u,3231,3u,4562,4u,6977,i1,4938 2003.253.19:07:32.82/tpdiff/9u,4902,au,4520,bu,3894,cu,1487,du,1022,eu,2170,i2,2054 2003.253.19:07:32.83/tpdiff/5u,6232,6u,4719,7u,4561,8d,2124,i3,14290 2003.253.19:07:32.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:07:32.84/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:07:32.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:07:32.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:07:32.87/tsys/1d,64.7,2u,65.5,3u,61.9,4u,65.5,i1,61.7 2003.253.19:07:32.87/tsys/9u,38.9,au,69.3,bu,64.1,cu,169.0,du,244.3,eu,94.8,i2,130.0 2003.253.19:07:32.88/tsys/5u,56.2,6u,65.1,7u,60.0,8d,55.5,i3,58.3 2003.253.19:07:33.00/fmout-gps/+7.7784E-006 2003.253.19:07:33.00:!2003.253.19:09:29 2003.253.19:07:33.07#setcl#time/311047710,4,2003,253,19,07,33.03,1.997,1.322,0 2003.253.19:07:33.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:09:29.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:09:29.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:09:29.50:disc_pos 2003.253.19:09:29.51/disc_pos/75000439784,70907052368, 2003.253.19:09:29.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:09:29.91/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h09m29.198s,33508,0.00250s,80000,5090437580, 2003.253.19:09:29.92:postob 2003.253.19:09:29.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 142754 : 338 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 142745 : 348 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 142795 : 297 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 142778 : 307 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 142782 : 313 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 142793 : 294 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:29.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 142755 : 333 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:30.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 142751 : 336 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:30.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.45 2003.253.19:09:30.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.19:09:30.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.17 2003.253.19:09:30.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:09:30.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.85 2003.253.19:09:30.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.19:09:30.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.19:09:30.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.09 2003.253.19:09:30.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.253.19:09:30.99:scan_name=253-1911,rd0308,98 2003.253.19:09:30.99:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:09:34.01:setup4f 2003.253.19:09:38.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:38.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:09:38.06:!2003.253.19:11:01 2003.253.19:10:06.75;"weather - partly cloudy 2003.253.19:11:01.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:11:01.02/disc_pos/75000439784,74999439784, 2003.253.19:11:01.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:11:01.28:!2003.253.19:11:01 2003.253.19:11:01.28:preob 2003.253.19:11:01.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:11:01.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:11:04.86/tpical/1d,8454,2u,12914,3u,16477,4u,25366,i1,17027 2003.253.19:11:04.86/tpical/9u,11438,au,16006,bu,13120,cu,7441,du,8056,eu,9210,i2,10758 2003.253.19:11:04.86/tpical/5u,20296,6u,17412,7u,16253,8d,7710,i3,46885 2003.253.19:11:07.51/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,466,i1,98 2003.253.19:11:07.51/tpzero/9u,62,au,411,bu,724,cu,509,du,617,eu,854,i2,64 2003.253.19:11:07.51/tpzero/5u,387,6u,870,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.19:11:10.60:!2003.253.19:11:11 2003.253.19:11:11.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:11:11.01/disc_pos/75256340480,74999439784, 2003.253.19:11:11.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:11:11.02:midob 2003.253.19:11:11.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:11:11.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:11:11.32/cable/+3.5879203E-02 2003.253.19:11:11.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12168,10558 2003.253.19:11:11.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32964 2003.253.19:11:11.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9717 2003.253.19:11:11.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12850 2003.253.19:11:11.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9171 2003.253.19:11:12.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:11:12.76/tpi/1d,6168,2u,9717,3u,11971,4u,18502,i1,12165 2003.253.19:11:12.76/tpi/9u,10639,au,11817,bu,9182,cu,5650,du,6633,eu,6957,i2,11700 2003.253.19:11:12.77/tpi/5u,14210,6u,12850,7u,11857,8d,5645,i3,32976 2003.253.19:11:12.78/tpdiff/1d,2286,2u,3197,3u,4506,4u,6864,i1,4862 2003.253.19:11:12.78/tpdiff/9u,799,au,4189,bu,3938,cu,1791,du,1423,eu,2253,i2,-942 2003.253.19:11:12.79/tpdiff/5u,6086,6u,4562,7u,4396,8d,2065,i3,13909 2003.253.19:11:12.80/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:11:12.81/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:11:12.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:11:12.82/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:11:12.83?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.19:11:12.84/tsys/1d,67.6,2u,68.6,3u,64.7,4u,68.3,i1,64.5 2003.253.19:11:12.84/tsys/9u,397.1,au,81.7,bu,64.4,cu,86.1,du,126.8,eu,81.3,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.253.19:11:12.85/tsys/5u,59.1,6u,68.3,7u,63.3,8d,58.3,i3,61.3 2003.253.19:11:12.99/fmout-gps/+7.7514E-006 2003.253.19:11:13.01:!2003.253.19:12:49 2003.253.19:11:13.08#setcl#time/311069709,3,2003,253,19,11,13.03,2.082,1.383,0 2003.253.19:11:13.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:12:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:12:49.00:disc_end 2003.253.19:12:49.48:disc_pos 2003.253.19:12:49.50/disc_pos/78454177440,75000439784, 2003.253.19:12:49.50:disc_check 2003.253.19:12:49.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h12m49.185s,31636,0.00250s,80000,2945864216, 2003.253.19:12:49.89:postob 2003.253.19:12:49.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 149329 : 353 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 149321 : 365 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 149371 : 311 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 149349 : 327 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 149353 : 332 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 149364 : 313 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:49.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 149328 : 352 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:50.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 149322 : 355 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:50.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.253.19:12:50.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.19:12:50.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.253.19:12:50.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:12:50.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.19:12:50.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.19:12:50.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.19:12:50.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.80 2003.253.19:12:50.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.253.19:12:50.99:scan_name=253-1918,rd0308,104 2003.253.19:12:50.99:source=3c418,203707.50,510835.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:12:54.01:setup4f 2003.253.19:12:58.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:58.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:12:58.06:!2003.253.19:18:16 2003.253.19:18:16.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:18:16.02/disc_pos/78454177440,78453177440, 2003.253.19:18:16.03:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:18:16.28:!2003.253.19:18:16 2003.253.19:18:16.28:preob 2003.253.19:18:16.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:18:16.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:18:19.86/tpical/1d,7363,2u,11380,3u,14482,4u,22296,i1,14916 2003.253.19:18:19.86/tpical/9u,9710,au,13442,bu,11659,cu,6979,du,5445,eu,8306,i2,5878 2003.253.19:18:19.86/tpical/5u,18013,6u,15757,7u,14707,8d,6976,i3,41566 2003.253.19:18:22.51/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,465,i1,101 2003.253.19:18:22.51/tpzero/9u,57,au,411,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,852,i2,66 2003.253.19:18:22.51/tpzero/5u,387,6u,870,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.19:18:25.60:!2003.253.19:18:26 2003.253.19:18:26.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:18:26.00/disc_pos/78710136832,78453177440, 2003.253.19:18:26.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:18:26.01:midob 2003.253.19:18:26.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:18:26.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:18:26.20/cable/+3.5873671E-02 2003.253.19:18:26.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9979,4504 2003.253.19:18:26.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27217 2003.253.19:18:26.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8155 2003.253.19:18:26.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10979 2003.253.19:18:26.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7948 2003.253.19:18:27.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:18:27.64/tpi/1d,5062,2u,8150,3u,9926,4u,15262,i1,9981 2003.253.19:18:27.64/tpi/9u,8919,au,9292,bu,7947,cu,5392,du,4074,eu,6166,i2,4377 2003.253.19:18:27.65/tpi/5u,11721,6u,10989,7u,10080,8d,4835,i3,27220 2003.253.19:18:27.66/tpdiff/1d,2301,2u,3230,3u,4556,4u,7034,i1,4935 2003.253.19:18:27.66/tpdiff/9u,791,au,4150,bu,3712,cu,1587,du,1371,eu,2140,i2,1501 2003.253.19:18:27.67/tpdiff/5u,6292,6u,4768,7u,4627,8d,2141,i3,14346 2003.253.19:18:27.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:18:27.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:18:27.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:18:27.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:18:27.71/tsys/1d,54.7,2u,55.3,3u,52.3,4u,54.7,i1,52.1 2003.253.19:18:27.71/tsys/9u,336.1,au,64.2,bu,58.4,cu,92.3,du,75.6,eu,74.5,i2,86.2 2003.253.19:18:27.72/tsys/5u,46.8,6u,55.2,7u,50.1,8d,46.4,i3,49.0 2003.253.19:18:27.99/fmout-gps/+7.7974E-006 2003.253.19:18:28.01:!2003.253.19:20:10 2003.253.19:18:28.08#setcl#time/311113209,4,2003,253,19,18,28.03,1.915,1.504,-1 2003.253.19:18:28.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:20:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:20:10.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:20:10.49:disc_pos 2003.253.19:20:10.50/disc_pos/82099991952,78454177440, 2003.253.19:20:10.50:disc_check 2003.253.19:20:10.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h20m10.190s,2412,0.00250s,80000,10466374712, 2003.253.19:20:10.89:postob 2003.253.19:20:10.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 156272 : 367 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 156261 : 381 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 156313 : 326 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 156289 : 344 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 156292 : 352 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 156304 : 330 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 156266 : 371 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:10.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 156261 : 373 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:11.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.58 2003.253.19:20:11.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.58 2003.253.19:20:11.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.253.19:20:11.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.19:20:11.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.253.19:20:11.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.19:20:11.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.19:20:11.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.30 2003.253.19:20:11.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.19:20:11.99:scan_name=253-1924,rd0308,98 2003.253.19:20:11.99:source=0642+449,064252.98,445430.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:20:15.01:setup4f 2003.253.19:20:19.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:19.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:20:19.05:!2003.253.19:24:20 2003.253.19:24:20.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:24:20.02/disc_pos/82099991952,82098991952, 2003.253.19:24:20.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:24:20.26:!2003.253.19:24:20 2003.253.19:24:20.26:preob 2003.253.19:24:20.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:24:20.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:24:23.84/tpical/1d,7592,2u,11682,3u,14851,4u,22726,i1,15283 2003.253.19:24:23.84/tpical/9u,11311,au,15548,bu,12211,cu,7001,du,6213,eu,8635,i2,7385 2003.253.19:24:23.84/tpical/5u,18353,6u,15920,7u,14817,8d,7025,i3,42328 2003.253.19:24:26.49/tpzero/1d,222,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,96 2003.253.19:24:26.49/tpzero/9u,57,au,410,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,853,i2,63 2003.253.19:24:26.49/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.19:24:29.58:!2003.253.19:24:30 2003.253.19:24:30.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:24:30.01/disc_pos/82355929088,82098991952, 2003.253.19:24:30.02:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:24:30.02:midob 2003.253.19:24:30.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:24:30.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:24:30.16/cable/+3.5878674E-02 2003.253.19:24:30.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10414,6156 2003.253.19:24:30.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28233 2003.253.19:24:30.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8503 2003.253.19:24:30.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11259 2003.253.19:24:30.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8412 2003.253.19:24:31.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:24:31.58/tpi/1d,5308,2u,8495,3u,10358,4u,15826,i1,10411 2003.253.19:24:31.58/tpi/9u,9193,au,11367,bu,8406,cu,5377,du,4839,eu,6469,i2,5926 2003.253.19:24:31.59/tpi/5u,12182,6u,11262,7u,10319,8d,4933,i3,28227 2003.253.19:24:31.60/tpdiff/1d,2284,2u,3187,3u,4493,4u,6900,i1,4872 2003.253.19:24:31.60/tpdiff/9u,2118,au,4181,bu,3805,cu,1624,du,1374,eu,2166,i2,1459 2003.253.19:24:31.61/tpdiff/5u,6171,6u,4658,7u,4498,8d,2092,i3,14101 2003.253.19:24:31.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:24:31.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:24:31.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:24:31.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:24:31.65/tsys/1d,57.9,2u,58.8,3u,55.6,4u,57.9,i1,55.0 2003.253.19:24:31.66/tsys/9u,129.4,au,78.6,bu,60.6,cu,89.9,du,92.2,eu,77.8,i2,120.6 2003.253.19:24:31.67/tsys/5u,49.7,6u,58.0,7u,53.0,8d,48.7,i3,51.7 2003.253.19:24:31.99/fmout-gps/+7.7639E-006 2003.253.19:24:32.01:!2003.253.19:26:08 2003.253.19:24:32.08#setcl#time/311149607,3,2003,253,19,24,32.03,2.093,1.605,0 2003.253.19:24:32.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:26:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:26:08.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:26:08.50:disc_pos 2003.253.19:26:08.51/disc_pos/85554724736,82099991952, 2003.253.19:26:08.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:26:08.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h26m08.200s,15960,0.00250s,80000,8001573668, 2003.253.19:26:08.90:postob 2003.253.19:26:08.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 162849 : 382 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 162837 : 398 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 162889 : 342 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 162869 : 356 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 162871 : 365 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 162881 : 345 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 162843 : 390 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:08.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 162839 : 387 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:09.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.70 2003.253.19:26:09.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.58 2003.253.19:26:09.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.253.19:26:09.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.19:26:09.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.22 2003.253.19:26:09.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.19:26:09.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.19:26:09.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.29 2003.253.19:26:09.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.19:26:09.94:scan_name=253-1927,rd0308,406 2003.253.19:26:09.94:source=1451-375,145118.29,-373522.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:26:12.96:setup4f 2003.253.19:26:17.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:17.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:26:17.05:!2003.253.19:27:14 2003.253.19:27:14.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:27:14.03/disc_pos/85554724736,85553724736, 2003.253.19:27:14.03:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:27:14.27:!2003.253.19:27:14 2003.253.19:27:14.27:preob 2003.253.19:27:14.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:27:14.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:27:17.86/tpical/1d,8925,2u,13553,3u,17348,4u,26782,i1,18045 2003.253.19:27:17.86/tpical/9u,12010,au,15957,bu,13375,cu,10476,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$ 2003.253.19:27:17.86/tpical/i2,9649 2003.253.19:27:17.86/tpical/5u,21429,6u,18295,7u,17177,8d,8096,i3,49862 2003.253.19:27:20.51/tpzero/1d,223,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,93 2003.253.19:27:20.51/tpzero/9u,59,au,410,bu,723,cu,509,du,642,eu,874,i2,66 2003.253.19:27:20.51/tpzero/5u,386,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,188 2003.253.19:27:23.60:!2003.253.19:27:24 2003.253.19:27:24.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:27:24.00/disc_pos/85810606080,85553724736, 2003.253.19:27:24.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:27:24.01:midob 2003.253.19:27:24.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:27:24.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:27:24.40/cable/+3.5877514E-02 2003.253.19:27:24.47/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13172,7588 2003.253.19:27:24.54/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,35794 2003.253.19:27:24.61/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10375 2003.253.19:27:24.68/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13720 2003.253.19:27:24.75/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9474 2003.253.19:27:25.31/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:27:25.84/tpi/1d,6640,2u,10371,3u,12861,4u,19971,i1,13175 2003.253.19:27:25.84/tpi/9u,9054,au,11646,bu,9471,cu,10387,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,7403 2003.253.19:27:25.85/tpi/5u,15315,6u,13736,7u,12760,8d,6018,i3,35810 2003.253.19:27:25.86/tpdiff/1d,2285,2u,3182,3u,4487,4u,6811,i1,4870 2003.253.19:27:25.86/tpdiff/9u,2956,au,4311,bu,3904,cu,89,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,2246 2003.253.19:27:25.87/tpdiff/5u,6114,6u,4559,7u,4417,8d,2078,i3,14052 2003.253.19:27:25.88/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:27:25.88/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:27:25.89/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:27:25.90/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:27:25.91?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.19:27:25.91?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.19:27:25.92/tsys/1d,73.0,2u,74.3,3u,70.1,4u,74.5,i1,69.8 2003.253.19:27:25.93/tsys/9u,91.3,au,78.2,bu,67.2,cu,3329.7,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.253.19:27:25.93/tsys/i2,98.0 2003.253.19:27:25.94/tsys/5u,63.5,6u,73.4,7u,68.3,8d,62.6,i3,65.9 2003.253.19:27:25.99/fmout-gps/+7.8169E-006 2003.253.19:27:26.00:!2003.253.19:34:10 2003.253.19:27:26.07#setcl#time/311167007,4,2003,253,19,27,26.03,2.032,1.653,0 2003.253.19:27:26.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:34:10.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:34:10.02:disc_end 2003.253.19:34:10.51:disc_pos 2003.253.19:34:10.51/disc_pos/98865082480,85554724736, 2003.253.19:34:10.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:34:10.91/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h34m10.207s,76092,0.00250s,80000,2113822124, 2003.253.19:34:10.91:postob 2003.253.19:34:10.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 188193 : 433 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 188185 : 444 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 188229 : 395 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 188199 : 419 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 188205 : 423 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 188219 : 400 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 188174 : 451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:10.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 188175 : 444 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:11.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.58 2003.253.19:34:11.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.253.19:34:11.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.253.19:34:11.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.19:34:11.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.19:34:11.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.19:34:11.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.19:34:11.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.33 2003.253.19:34:11.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.19:34:11.98:scan_name=253-1936,rd0308,128 2003.253.19:34:11.98:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:34:15.01:setup4f 2003.253.19:34:19.03/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:19.04/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:34:19.06:!2003.253.19:35:59 2003.253.19:35:59.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:35:59.02/disc_pos/98865082480,98864082480, 2003.253.19:35:59.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:35:59.27:!2003.253.19:35:59 2003.253.19:35:59.27:preob 2003.253.19:35:59.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:35:59.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:36:02.87/tpical/1d,7017,2u,10833,3u,13820,4u,21203,i1,14158 2003.253.19:36:02.87/tpical/9u,8347,au,12856,bu,11233,cu,6216,du,5774,eu,8009,i2,6994 2003.253.19:36:02.87/tpical/5u,17202,6u,15126,7u,14023,8d,6674,i3,39646 2003.253.19:36:05.52/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,102 2003.253.19:36:05.52/tpzero/9u,62,au,410,bu,723,cu,508,du,618,eu,855,i2,73 2003.253.19:36:05.52/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.19:36:08.61:!2003.253.19:36:09 2003.253.19:36:09.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:36:09.00/disc_pos/99121065984,98864082480, 2003.253.19:36:09.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:36:09.02:midob 2003.253.19:36:09.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:36:09.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:36:09.28/cable/+3.5877731E-02 2003.253.19:36:09.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9229,6171 2003.253.19:36:09.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25282 2003.253.19:36:09.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7634 2003.253.19:36:09.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10365 2003.253.19:36:09.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7604 2003.253.19:36:10.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:36:10.73/tpi/1d,4721,2u,7637,3u,9268,4u,14148,i1,9228 2003.253.19:36:10.73/tpi/9u,6728,au,8782,bu,7603,cu,4667,du,4420,eu,5935,i2,5318 2003.253.19:36:10.74/tpi/5u,10923,6u,10361,7u,9383,8d,4527,i3,25274 2003.253.19:36:10.75/tpdiff/1d,2296,2u,3196,3u,4552,4u,7055,i1,4930 2003.253.19:36:10.75/tpdiff/9u,1619,au,4074,bu,3630,cu,1549,du,1354,eu,2074,i2,1676 2003.253.19:36:10.76/tpdiff/5u,6279,6u,4765,7u,4640,8d,2147,i3,14372 2003.253.19:36:10.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:36:10.77/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:36:10.78/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:36:10.79/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:36:10.80/tsys/1d,50.9,2u,51.7,3u,48.6,4u,50.4,i1,48.1 2003.253.19:36:10.81/tsys/9u,123.5,au,61.6,bu,56.9,cu,80.5,du,84.2,eu,73.5,i2,93.9 2003.253.19:36:10.81/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.8,7u,46.1,8d,42.6,i3,45.4 2003.253.19:36:10.99/fmout-gps/+7.7354E-006 2003.253.19:36:11.00:!2003.253.19:38:17 2003.253.19:36:11.07#setcl#time/311219506,4,2003,253,19,36,11.03,2.001,1.799,0 2003.253.19:36:11.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:38:17.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:38:17.01:disc_end 2003.253.19:38:17.49:disc_pos 2003.253.19:38:17.50/disc_pos/103279314352,98865082480, 2003.253.19:38:17.50:disc_check 2003.253.19:38:17.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h38m17.198s,19448,0.00250s,80000,3489504772, 2003.253.19:38:17.91:postob 2003.253.19:38:17.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 196597 : 451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 196596 : 458 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 196633 : 415 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 196607 : 434 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 196604 : 447 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 196624 : 417 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 196577 : 471 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:17.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 196571 : 470 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:18.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.19:38:18.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.19:38:18.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.19:38:18.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:38:18.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.75 2003.253.19:38:18.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.19:38:18.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.19:38:18.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.19:38:18.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.19:38:18.98:scan_name=253-1939,rd0308,98 2003.253.19:38:18.98:source=1357+769,135742.17,765753.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:38:22.01:setup4f 2003.253.19:38:26.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:26.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:38:26.05:!2003.253.19:39:10 2003.253.19:39:10.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:39:10.04/disc_pos/103279314352,103278314352, 2003.253.19:39:10.04:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:39:10.28:!2003.253.19:39:10 2003.253.19:39:10.29:preob 2003.253.19:39:10.29#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:39:10.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:39:13.87/tpical/1d,6992,2u,10806,3u,13796,4u,21109,i1,14100 2003.253.19:39:13.87/tpical/9u,11750,au,14082,bu,12041,cu,8263,du,5744,eu,8532,i2,11937 2003.253.19:39:13.87/tpical/5u,17210,6u,15114,7u,13996,8d,6659,i3,39564 2003.253.19:39:16.51/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,99 2003.253.19:39:16.51/tpzero/9u,61,au,409,bu,723,cu,507,du,618,eu,855,i2,76 2003.253.19:39:16.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1158,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.19:39:19.60:!2003.253.19:39:20 2003.253.19:39:20.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:39:20.01/disc_pos/103535177728,103278314352, 2003.253.19:39:20.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:39:20.02:midob 2003.253.19:39:20.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:39:20.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:39:20.09/cable/+3.5877120E-02 2003.253.19:39:20.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9178,12705 2003.253.19:39:20.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25177 2003.253.19:39:20.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7602 2003.253.19:39:20.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10325 2003.253.19:39:20.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8144 2003.253.19:39:21.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:39:21.54/tpi/1d,4699,2u,7605,3u,9245,4u,14069,i1,9174 2003.253.19:39:21.54/tpi/9u,9714,au,9911,bu,8135,cu,6655,du,4289,eu,6307,i2,9829 2003.253.19:39:21.55/tpi/5u,10882,6u,10315,7u,9347,8d,4508,i3,25150 2003.253.19:39:21.56/tpdiff/1d,2293,2u,3201,3u,4551,4u,7040,i1,4926 2003.253.19:39:21.56/tpdiff/9u,2036,au,4171,bu,3906,cu,1608,du,1455,eu,2225,i2,2108 2003.253.19:39:21.57/tpdiff/5u,6328,6u,4799,7u,4649,8d,2151,i3,14414 2003.253.19:39:21.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:39:21.59/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:39:21.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:39:21.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:39:21.61/tsys/1d,50.7,2u,51.4,3u,48.5,4u,50.2,i1,47.9 2003.253.19:39:21.61/tsys/9u,142.2,au,68.3,bu,56.9,cu,114.7,du,75.7,eu,73.5,i2,138.8 2003.253.19:39:21.62/tsys/5u,43.1,6u,51.2,7u,45.8,8d,42.3,i3,45.0 2003.253.19:39:21.99/fmout-gps/+7.7119E-006 2003.253.19:39:22.01:!2003.253.19:40:58 2003.253.19:39:22.08#setcl#time/311238606,4,2003,253,19,39,22.04,2.073,1.852,0 2003.253.19:39:22.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:40:58.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:40:58.02:disc_end 2003.253.19:40:58.50:disc_pos 2003.253.19:40:58.51/disc_pos/106733330720,103279314352, 2003.253.19:40:58.51:disc_check 2003.253.19:40:58.92/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h40m58.203s,31384,0.00250s,80000,1698131696, 2003.253.19:40:58.92:postob 2003.253.19:40:58.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 203170 : 469 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 203175 : 471 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 203208 : 431 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 203187 : 446 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 203177 : 467 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 203200 : 432 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 203155 : 484 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:58.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 203146 : 486 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:40:59.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.253.19:40:59.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.19:40:59.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.19:40:59.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:40:59.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.99 2003.253.19:40:59.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.19:40:59.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.19:40:59.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.253.19:40:59.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.19:40:59.97:scan_name=253-1942,rd0308,98 2003.253.19:40:59.97:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:41:02.99:setup4f 2003.253.19:41:07.03/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:41:07.04/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:41:07.06:!2003.253.19:42:00 2003.253.19:42:00.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:42:00.02/disc_pos/106733330720,106732330720, 2003.253.19:42:00.03:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:42:00.25:!2003.253.19:42:00 2003.253.19:42:00.26:preob 2003.253.19:42:00.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:42:00.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:42:03.85/tpical/1d,7063,2u,10914,3u,13931,4u,21381,i1,14259 2003.253.19:42:03.85/tpical/9u,11592,au,16236,bu,11631,cu,6724,du,5637,eu,8304,i2,20008 2003.253.19:42:03.85/tpical/5u,17431,6u,15288,7u,14156,8d,6743,i3,40037 2003.253.19:42:06.50/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,465,i1,104 2003.253.19:42:06.50/tpzero/9u,69,au,410,bu,723,cu,507,du,617,eu,855,i2,77 2003.253.19:42:06.50/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.19:42:09.59:!2003.253.19:42:10 2003.253.19:42:10.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:42:10.00/disc_pos/106989203456,106732330720, 2003.253.19:42:10.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:42:10.01:midob 2003.253.19:42:10.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:42:10.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:42:10.36/cable/+3.5878220E-02 2003.253.19:42:10.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9308,15544 2003.253.19:42:10.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25597 2003.253.19:42:10.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7699 2003.253.19:42:10.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10490 2003.253.19:42:10.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8007 2003.253.19:42:11.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:42:11.79/tpi/1d,4754,2u,7696,3u,9361,4u,14293,i1,9304 2003.253.19:42:11.79/tpi/9u,9611,au,12048,bu,8033,cu,5200,du,4300,eu,6240,i2,18470 2003.253.19:42:11.80/tpi/5u,11078,6u,10492,7u,9499,8d,4581,i3,25595 2003.253.19:42:11.81/tpdiff/1d,2309,2u,3218,3u,4570,4u,7088,i1,4955 2003.253.19:42:11.82/tpdiff/9u,1981,au,4188,bu,3598,cu,1524,du,1337,eu,2064,i2,1538 2003.253.19:42:11.82/tpdiff/5u,6353,6u,4796,7u,4657,8d,2162,i3,14442 2003.253.19:42:11.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:42:11.84/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:42:11.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:42:11.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:42:11.86/tsys/1d,51.0,2u,51.8,3u,49.0,4u,50.7,i1,48.3 2003.253.19:42:11.87/tsys/9u,144.5,au,83.4,bu,61.0,cu,92.4,du,82.6,eu,78.3,i2,358.8 2003.253.19:42:11.87/tsys/5u,43.7,6u,52.2,7u,46.6,8d,42.9,i3,45.7 2003.253.19:42:11.99/fmout-gps/+7.7369E-006 2003.253.19:42:12.00:!2003.253.19:43:48 2003.253.19:42:12.07#setcl#time/311255605,4,2003,253,19,42,12.03,2.022,1.900,0 2003.253.19:42:12.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.19:43:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.19:43:48.00:disc_end 2003.253.19:43:48.48:disc_pos 2003.253.19:43:48.49/disc_pos/110187675320,106733330720, 2003.253.19:43:48.49:disc_check 2003.253.19:43:48.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d19h43m48.188s,23804,0.00250s,80000,1985182980, 2003.253.19:43:48.88:postob 2003.253.19:43:48.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 209744 : 486 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 209751 : 488 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 209780 : 450 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 209762 : 463 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 209748 : 487 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 209781 : 445 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 209734 : 496 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:48.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 209722 : 502 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:49.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.45 2003.253.19:43:49.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.19:43:49.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.253.19:43:49.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.19:43:49.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.253.19:43:49.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.19:43:49.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.19:43:49.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.253.19:43:49.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.19:43:49.95:scan_name=253-1955,rd0308,259 2003.253.19:43:49.95:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.19:43:52.97:setup4f 2003.253.19:43:57.03/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:57.04/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.19:43:57.06:!2003.253.19:55:43 2003.253.19:55:43.00:disc_pos 2003.253.19:55:43.02/disc_pos/110187675320,110186675320, 2003.253.19:55:43.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.19:55:43.27:!2003.253.19:55:43 2003.253.19:55:43.28:preob 2003.253.19:55:43.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:55:43.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:55:46.86/tpical/1d,7273,2u,11210,3u,14243,4u,21832,i1,14589 2003.253.19:55:46.86/tpical/9u,6107,au,14428,bu,12640,cu,6786,du,10940,eu,10029 2003.253.19:55:46.86/tpical/i2,5814 2003.253.19:55:46.86/tpical/5u,17663,6u,15390,7u,14283,8d,6792,i3,40539 2003.253.19:55:49.51/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,98 2003.253.19:55:49.51/tpzero/9u,58,au,410,bu,722,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,74 2003.253.19:55:49.51/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.19:55:52.61:!2003.253.19:55:53 2003.253.19:55:53.01:disc_pos 2003.253.19:55:53.01/disc_pos/110443425792,110186675320, 2003.253.19:55:53.02:data_valid=on 2003.253.19:55:53.02:midob 2003.253.19:55:53.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.19:55:53.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.19:55:53.32/cable/+3.5874757E-02 2003.253.19:55:53.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9694,3995 2003.253.19:55:53.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26409 2003.253.19:55:53.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8003 2003.253.19:55:53.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10698 2003.253.19:55:53.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8614 2003.253.19:55:54.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.19:55:54.76/tpi/1d,4971,2u,8002,3u,9720,4u,14839,i1,9694 2003.253.19:55:54.76/tpi/9u,4263,au,9912,bu,8620,cu,5057,du,8583,eu,7530,i2,3999 2003.253.19:55:54.77/tpi/5u,11456,6u,10700,7u,9752,8d,4691,i3,26408 2003.253.19:55:54.78/tpdiff/1d,2302,2u,3208,3u,4523,4u,6993,i1,4895 2003.253.19:55:54.78/tpdiff/9u,1844,au,4516,bu,4020,cu,1729,du,2357,eu,2499,i2,1815 2003.253.19:55:54.79/tpdiff/5u,6207,6u,4690,7u,4531,8d,2101,i3,14131 2003.253.19:55:54.80/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.19:55:54.81/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.19:55:54.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.19:55:54.82/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.19:55:54.83/tsys/1d,53.6,2u,54.5,3u,51.5,4u,53.4,i1,51.0 2003.253.19:55:54.84/tsys/9u,68.4,au,63.1,bu,58.9,cu,78.9,du,101.4,eu,80.1,i2,64.9 2003.253.19:55:54.84/tsys/5u,46.4,6u,54.5,7u,49.3,8d,45.6,i3,48.2 2003.253.19:55:54.99/fmout-gps/+7.7874E-006 2003.253.19:55:55.00:!2003.253.20:00:12 2003.253.19:55:55.08#setcl#time/311337903,4,2003,253,19,55,55.03,2.030,2.128,0 2003.253.19:55:55.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:00:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:00:12.00:disc_end 2003.253.20:00:12.49:disc_pos 2003.253.20:00:12.50/disc_pos/118793766248,110187675320, 2003.253.20:00:12.50:disc_check 2003.253.20:00:12.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h00m12.197s,13752,0.00250s,80000,22882239124, 2003.253.20:00:12.89:postob 2003.253.20:00:12.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 226122 : 527 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 226135 : 523 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 226164 : 485 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 226162 : 484 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 226127 : 527 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 226164 : 481 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 226116 : 533 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:12.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 226104 : 540 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:13.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.253.20:00:13.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.253.20:00:13.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.253.20:00:13.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.20:00:13.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.85 2003.253.20:00:13.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.20:00:13.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.20:00:13.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.41 2003.253.20:00:13.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.20:00:13.95:scan_name=253-2002,rd0308,98 2003.253.20:00:13.95:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:00:16.96:setup4f 2003.253.20:00:21.01/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:21.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:00:21.05:!2003.253.20:02:25 2003.253.20:02:25.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:02:25.02/disc_pos/118793766248,118792766248, 2003.253.20:02:25.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:02:25.27:!2003.253.20:02:25 2003.253.20:02:25.28:preob 2003.253.20:02:25.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:02:25.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:02:28.86/tpical/1d,7413,2u,11410,3u,14547,4u,22369,i1,14955 2003.253.20:02:28.86/tpical/9u,6480,au,13268,bu,11582,cu,6715,du,5832,eu,8245,i2,5800 2003.253.20:02:28.86/tpical/5u,18176,6u,15854,7u,14722,8d,6989,i3,41778 2003.253.20:02:31.51/tpzero/1d,222,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,466,i1,98 2003.253.20:02:31.51/tpzero/9u,56,au,408,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,64 2003.253.20:02:31.51/tpzero/5u,387,6u,872,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.20:02:34.60:!2003.253.20:02:35 2003.253.20:02:35.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:02:35.00/disc_pos/119049707520,118792766248, 2003.253.20:02:35.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:02:35.01:midob 2003.253.20:02:35.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:02:35.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:02:35.10/cable/+3.5876472E-02 2003.253.20:02:35.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10040,3550 2003.253.20:02:35.25/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27478 2003.253.20:02:35.32/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8189 2003.253.20:02:35.39/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11110 2003.253.20:02:35.46/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7624 2003.253.20:02:36.02/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:02:36.54/tpi/1d,5111,2u,8195,3u,9998,4u,15346,i1,10042 2003.253.20:02:36.54/tpi/9u,3694,au,8772,bu,7620,cu,4992,du,4312,eu,5925,i2,3538 2003.253.20:02:36.55/tpi/5u,11874,6u,11120,7u,10139,8d,4860,i3,27497 2003.253.20:02:36.56/tpdiff/1d,2302,2u,3215,3u,4549,4u,7023,i1,4913 2003.253.20:02:36.56/tpdiff/9u,2786,au,4496,bu,3962,cu,1723,du,1520,eu,2320,i2,2262 2003.253.20:02:36.57/tpdiff/5u,6302,6u,4734,7u,4583,8d,2129,i3,14281 2003.253.20:02:36.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:02:36.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:02:36.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:02:36.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:02:36.61/tsys/1d,55.2,2u,55.9,3u,52.8,4u,55.1,i1,52.6 2003.253.20:02:36.62/tsys/9u,39.2,au,55.8,bu,52.2,cu,78.1,du,72.9,eu,65.6,i2,46.1 2003.253.20:02:36.62/tsys/5u,47.4,6u,56.3,7u,51.0,8d,47.0,i3,49.7 2003.253.20:02:36.99/fmout-gps/+7.8004E-006 2003.253.20:02:37.01:!2003.253.20:04:13 2003.253.20:02:37.08#setcl#time/311378102,4,2003,253,20,02,37.03,2.036,2.240,0 2003.253.20:02:37.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:04:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:04:13.00:disc_end 2003.253.20:04:13.49:disc_pos 2003.253.20:04:13.50/disc_pos/122247545896,118793766248, 2003.253.20:04:13.50:disc_check 2003.253.20:04:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h04m13.190s,72460,0.00250s,80000,4257921644, 2003.253.20:04:13.90:postob 2003.253.20:04:13.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 232697 : 543 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 232709 : 539 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 232738 : 503 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 232737 : 499 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 232702 : 542 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 232743 : 494 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 232688 : 551 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:13.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 232679 : 558 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:14.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.09 2003.253.20:04:14.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.20:04:14.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.253.20:04:14.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.20:04:14.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.253.20:04:14.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.20:04:14.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.20:04:14.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.20:04:14.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.20:04:14.97:scan_name=253-2009,rd0308,111 2003.253.20:04:14.97:source=1606+106,160623.42,103700.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:04:17.98:setup4f 2003.253.20:04:22.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:22.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:04:22.05:!2003.253.20:09:34 2003.253.20:09:34.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:09:34.02/disc_pos/122247545896,122246545896, 2003.253.20:09:34.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:09:34.27:!2003.253.20:09:34 2003.253.20:09:34.27:preob 2003.253.20:09:34.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:09:34.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:09:37.86/tpical/1d,7064,2u,10900,3u,13894,4u,21256,i1,14214 2003.253.20:09:37.86/tpical/9u,11888,au,16198,bu,12091,cu,7028,du,6330,eu,8786,i2,19448 2003.253.20:09:37.86/tpical/5u,17287,6u,15188,7u,14063,8d,6682,i3,39776 2003.253.20:09:40.51/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,93 2003.253.20:09:40.51/tpzero/9u,71,au,409,bu,723,cu,507,du,617,eu,853,i2,73 2003.253.20:09:40.51/tpzero/5u,387,6u,872,7u,1158,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.20:09:43.60:!2003.253.20:09:44 2003.253.20:09:44.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:09:44.00/disc_pos/122503475200,122246545896, 2003.253.20:09:44.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:09:44.01:midob 2003.253.20:09:44.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:09:44.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:09:44.20/cable/+3.5875247E-02 2003.253.20:09:44.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9323,14035 2003.253.20:09:44.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25546 2003.253.20:09:44.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7713 2003.253.20:09:44.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10441 2003.253.20:09:44.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8198 2003.253.20:09:45.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:09:45.63/tpi/1d,4768,2u,7713,3u,9380,4u,14283,i1,9325 2003.253.20:09:45.63/tpi/9u,10106,au,11179,bu,8194,cu,5113,du,4806,eu,6544,i2,15868 2003.253.20:09:45.64/tpi/5u,11049,6u,10460,7u,9492,8d,4572,i3,25565 2003.253.20:09:45.65/tpdiff/1d,2296,2u,3187,3u,4514,4u,6973,i1,4889 2003.253.20:09:45.65/tpdiff/9u,1782,au,5019,bu,3897,cu,1915,du,1524,eu,2242,i2,3580 2003.253.20:09:45.66/tpdiff/5u,6238,6u,4728,7u,4571,8d,2110,i3,14211 2003.253.20:09:45.67/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:09:45.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:09:45.68/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:09:45.69/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:09:45.70/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,52.5,3u,49.7,4u,51.5,i1,49.1 2003.253.20:09:45.70/tsys/9u,168.9,au,64.4,bu,57.5,cu,72.2,du,82.5,eu,76.2,i2,132.4 2003.253.20:09:45.71/tsys/5u,44.4,6u,52.7,7u,47.4,8d,43.9,i3,46.4 2003.253.20:09:45.99/fmout-gps/+7.7144E-006 2003.253.20:09:46.00:!2003.253.20:11:35 2003.253.20:09:46.07#setcl#time/311421001,4,2003,253,20,09,46.03,2.035,2.359,0 2003.253.20:09:46.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:11:35.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:11:35.00:disc_end 2003.253.20:11:35.48:disc_pos 2003.253.20:11:35.49/disc_pos/126117349768,122247545896, 2003.253.20:11:35.49:disc_check 2003.253.20:11:35.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h11m35.185s,36076,0.00250s,80000,10274072512, 2003.253.20:11:35.88:postob 2003.253.20:11:35.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 240059 : 565 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 240076 : 556 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 240105 : 521 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 240106 : 514 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 240061 : 567 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 240110 : 511 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 240055 : 568 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:35.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 240047 : 576 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:36.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.20:11:36.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.253.20:11:36.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.253.20:11:36.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.20:11:36.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.253.20:11:36.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.20:11:36.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.20:11:36.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.73 2003.253.20:11:36.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.20:11:36.97:scan_name=253-2017,rd0308,774 2003.253.20:11:36.97:source=1307+121,130704.35,121022.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:11:39.99:setup4f 2003.253.20:11:44.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:44.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:11:44.06:!2003.253.20:17:49 2003.253.20:13:57.72;"weather: clear 2003.253.20:17:49.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:17:49.02/disc_pos/126117349768,126116349768, 2003.253.20:17:49.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:17:49.27:!2003.253.20:17:49 2003.253.20:17:49.27:preob 2003.253.20:17:49.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:17:49.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:17:52.86/tpical/1d,6956,2u,10706,3u,13575,4u,20517,i1,13797 2003.253.20:17:52.86/tpical/9u,11197,au,15607,bu,11735,cu,10629,du,8429,eu,9091 2003.253.20:17:52.86/tpical/i2,19953 2003.253.20:17:52.86/tpical/5u,16459,6u,14412,7u,13415,8d,6398,i3,37884 2003.253.20:17:55.51/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1283,3u,756,4u,465,i1,98 2003.253.20:17:55.51/tpzero/9u,75,au,410,bu,723,cu,507,du,617,eu,854,i2,76 2003.253.20:17:55.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.20:17:58.60:!2003.253.20:17:59 2003.253.20:17:59.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:17:59.02/disc_pos/126373269504,126116349768, 2003.253.20:17:59.02:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:17:59.03:midob 2003.253.20:17:59.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:17:59.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:17:59.20/cable/+3.5876740E-02 2003.253.20:17:59.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9017,18222 2003.253.20:17:59.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,24333 2003.253.20:17:59.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7553 2003.253.20:17:59.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9943 2003.253.20:17:59.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7915 2003.253.20:18:00.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:18:00.64/tpi/1d,4678,2u,7555,3u,9130,4u,13782,i1,9025 2003.253.20:18:00.64/tpi/9u,9061,au,11355,bu,7913,cu,9127,du,6676,eu,6843,i2,18374 2003.253.20:18:00.65/tpi/5u,10539,6u,9966,7u,9087,8d,4395,i3,24384 2003.253.20:18:00.66/tpdiff/1d,2278,2u,3151,3u,4445,4u,6735,i1,4772 2003.253.20:18:00.66/tpdiff/9u,2136,au,4252,bu,3822,cu,1502,du,1753,eu,2248,i2,1579 2003.253.20:18:00.67/tpdiff/5u,5920,6u,4446,7u,4328,8d,2003,i3,13500 2003.253.20:18:00.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:18:00.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:18:00.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:18:00.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:18:00.71/tsys/1d,50.8,2u,51.8,3u,49.0,4u,51.4,i1,48.6 2003.253.20:18:00.71/tsys/9u,126.2,au,77.2,bu,56.4,cu,172.2,du,103.7,eu,79.9,i2,347.7 2003.253.20:18:00.72/tsys/5u,44.6,6u,53.2,7u,47.6,8d,43.9,i3,46.6 2003.253.20:18:00.99/fmout-gps/+7.7004E-006 2003.253.20:18:01.01:!2003.253.20:30:53 2003.253.20:18:01.08#setcl#time/311470501,4,2003,253,20,18,01.04,2.019,2.497,0 2003.253.20:18:01.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:30:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:30:53.01:disc_end 2003.253.20:30:53.49:disc_pos 2003.253.20:30:53.50/disc_pos/151203609600,126117349768, 2003.253.20:30:53.50:disc_check 2003.253.20:30:53.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h30m53.200s,48784,0.00250s,80000,11970207460, 2003.253.20:30:53.89:postob 2003.253.20:30:53.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 287892 : 592 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 287831 : 657 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 287958 : 525 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 287896 : 580 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 287788 : 696 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 287827 : 650 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:53.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 287909 : 570 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:54.02/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 287900 : 579 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:30:54.14/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.253.20:30:54.26/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.253.20:30:54.37/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.68 2003.253.20:30:54.48/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.20:30:54.59/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.20:30:54.70/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.20:30:54.81/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.20:30:54.93/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.95 2003.253.20:30:55.04/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.20:30:55.04:scan_name=253-2033,rd0308,98 2003.253.20:30:55.05:source=0955+476,095508.50,473928.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:30:58.07:setup4f 2003.253.20:31:02.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:31:02.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:31:02.05:!2003.253.20:33:06 2003.253.20:33:06.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:33:06.02/disc_pos/151203609600,151202609600, 2003.253.20:33:06.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:33:06.28:!2003.253.20:33:06 2003.253.20:33:06.29:preob 2003.253.20:33:06.29#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:33:06.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:33:09.86/tpical/1d,7135,2u,11007,3u,13988,4u,21385,i1,14279 2003.253.20:33:09.86/tpical/9u,11425,au,14117,bu,11820,cu,7138,du,5806,eu,8436,i2,16437 2003.253.20:33:09.86/tpical/5u,17216,6u,15081,7u,14025,8d,6683,i3,39592 2003.253.20:33:12.51/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,464,i1,96 2003.253.20:33:12.51/tpzero/9u,64,au,409,bu,723,cu,509,du,616,eu,855,i2,74 2003.253.20:33:12.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,873,7u,1156,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.20:33:15.60:!2003.253.20:33:16 2003.253.20:33:16.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:33:16.01/disc_pos/151459569664,151202609600, 2003.253.20:33:16.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:33:16.01:midob 2003.253.20:33:16.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:33:16.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:33:16.12/cable/+3.5870527E-02 2003.253.20:33:16.20/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9426,11248 2003.253.20:33:16.27/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25615 2003.253.20:33:16.34/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7811 2003.253.20:33:16.41/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10441 2003.253.20:33:16.48/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7946 2003.253.20:33:17.04/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:33:17.56/tpi/1d,4846,2u,7815,3u,9481,4u,14441,i1,9423 2003.253.20:33:17.56/tpi/9u,6303,au,9553,bu,7936,cu,5431,du,4370,eu,6217,i2,10168 2003.253.20:33:17.57/tpi/5u,11076,6u,10440,7u,9525,8d,4596,i3,25604 2003.253.20:33:17.58/tpdiff/1d,2289,2u,3192,3u,4507,4u,6944,i1,4856 2003.253.20:33:17.58/tpdiff/9u,5122,au,4564,bu,3884,cu,1707,du,1436,eu,2219,i2,6269 2003.253.20:33:17.59/tpdiff/5u,6140,6u,4641,7u,4500,8d,2087,i3,13988 2003.253.20:33:17.60/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:33:17.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:33:17.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:33:17.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:33:17.63/tsys/1d,52.5,2u,53.2,3u,50.3,4u,52.3,i1,49.9 2003.253.20:33:17.64/tsys/9u,36.5,au,60.1,bu,55.7,cu,86.5,du,78.4,eu,72.5,i2,48.3 2003.253.20:33:17.64/tsys/5u,45.3,6u,53.6,7u,48.4,8d,44.7,i3,47.2 2003.253.20:33:17.99/fmout-gps/+7.7129E-006 2003.253.20:33:18.01:!2003.253.20:34:54 2003.253.20:33:18.08#setcl#time/311562198,3,2003,253,20,33,18.04,2.094,2.751,1 2003.253.20:33:18.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:34:54.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:34:54.00:disc_end 2003.253.20:34:54.50:disc_pos 2003.253.20:34:54.50/disc_pos/154657406872,151203609600, 2003.253.20:34:54.51:disc_check 2003.253.20:34:54.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h34m54.200s,24888,0.00250s,80000,4258226624, 2003.253.20:34:54.90:postob 2003.253.20:34:54.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 294464 : 610 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 294387 : 692 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 294547 : 528 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 294457 : 609 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 294355 : 720 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 294398 : 669 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 294498 : 574 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:54.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 294488 : 581 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:34:55.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.20:34:55.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.253.20:34:55.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.80 2003.253.20:34:55.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.20:34:55.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.253.20:34:55.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.20:34:55.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.20:34:55.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.52 2003.253.20:34:55.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.20:34:55.97:scan_name=253-2039,rd0308,98 2003.253.20:34:55.97:source=3c371,180718.63,694857.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:34:58.98:setup4f 2003.253.20:35:03.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:35:03.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:35:03.07:!2003.253.20:39:10 2003.253.20:39:10.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:39:10.02/disc_pos/154657406872,154656406872, 2003.253.20:39:10.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:39:10.26:!2003.253.20:39:10 2003.253.20:39:10.27:preob 2003.253.20:39:10.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:39:10.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:39:13.84/tpical/1d,6998,2u,10822,3u,13760,4u,21096,i1,14052 2003.253.20:39:13.84/tpical/9u,10756,au,14123,bu,11585,cu,6411,du,5565,eu,8277,i2,10387 2003.253.20:39:13.84/tpical/5u,17085,6u,14996,7u,13914,8d,6631,i3,39226 2003.253.20:39:16.49/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,95 2003.253.20:39:16.49/tpzero/9u,60,au,409,bu,723,cu,508,du,616,eu,854,i2,70 2003.253.20:39:16.49/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.20:39:19.58:!2003.253.20:39:20 2003.253.20:39:20.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:39:20.00/disc_pos/154913169408,154656406872, 2003.253.20:39:20.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:39:20.01:midob 2003.253.20:39:20.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:39:20.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:39:20.08/cable/+3.5870043E-02 2003.253.20:39:20.15/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9144,8083 2003.253.20:39:20.22/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,24985 2003.253.20:39:20.29/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7610 2003.253.20:39:20.36/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10249 2003.253.20:39:20.43/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7802 2003.253.20:39:21.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:39:21.52/tpi/1d,4694,2u,7609,3u,9220,4u,14048,i1,9144 2003.253.20:39:21.52/tpi/9u,6141,au,9659,bu,7805,cu,4775,du,4158,eu,6103,i2,6721 2003.253.20:39:21.53/tpi/5u,10807,6u,10249,7u,9331,8d,4505,i3,24990 2003.253.20:39:21.54/tpdiff/1d,2304,2u,3213,3u,4540,4u,7048,i1,4908 2003.253.20:39:21.54/tpdiff/9u,4615,au,4464,bu,3780,cu,1636,du,1407,eu,2174,i2,3666 2003.253.20:39:21.55/tpdiff/5u,6278,6u,4747,7u,4583,8d,2126,i3,14236 2003.253.20:39:21.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:39:21.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:39:21.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:39:21.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:39:21.59/tsys/1d,50.4,2u,51.2,3u,48.5,4u,50.1,i1,47.9 2003.253.20:39:21.60/tsys/9u,39.5,au,62.2,bu,56.2,cu,78.2,du,75.5,eu,72.4,i2,54.4 2003.253.20:39:21.61/tsys/5u,43.2,6u,51.4,7u,46.4,8d,42.7,i3,45.3 2003.253.20:39:21.98/fmout-gps/+7.7254E-006 2003.253.20:39:22.00:!2003.253.20:40:58 2003.253.20:39:22.06#setcl#time/311598597,4,2003,253,20,39,22.03,2.019,2.852,1 2003.253.20:39:22.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:40:58.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:40:58.01:disc_end 2003.253.20:40:58.50:disc_pos 2003.253.20:40:58.50/disc_pos/158111643320,154657406872, 2003.253.20:40:58.51:disc_check 2003.253.20:40:58.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h40m58.200s,29864,0.00250s,80000,8193758576, 2003.253.20:40:58.90:postob 2003.253.20:40:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 301031 : 634 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 300942 : 730 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 301136 : 530 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 301027 : 633 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 300919 : 747 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 300974 : 685 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 301087 : 576 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:58.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 301076 : 584 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:40:59.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.20:40:59.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.20:40:59.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.253.20:40:59.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.20:40:59.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.253.20:40:59.68/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.20:40:59.79/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.20:40:59.90/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.253.20:41:00.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.20:41:00.01:scan_name=253-2052,rd0308,128 2003.253.20:41:00.01:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:41:03.03:setup4f 2003.253.20:41:07.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:41:07.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:41:07.06:!2003.253.20:52:04 2003.253.20:52:04.00:disc_pos 2003.253.20:52:04.02/disc_pos/158111643320,158110643320, 2003.253.20:52:04.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.20:52:04.26:!2003.253.20:52:04 2003.253.20:52:04.26:preob 2003.253.20:52:04.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:52:04.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:52:07.85/tpical/1d,7052,2u,10927,3u,13857,4u,21304,i1,14270 2003.253.20:52:07.85/tpical/9u,8265,au,11762,bu,10144,cu,14548,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$ 2003.253.20:52:07.85/tpical/i2,5840 2003.253.20:52:07.85/tpical/5u,17368,6u,15220,7u,14043,8d,6676,i3,39710 2003.253.20:52:10.50/tpzero/1d,224,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,96 2003.253.20:52:10.50/tpzero/9u,57,au,408,bu,723,cu,509,du,667,eu,875,i2,67 2003.253.20:52:10.50/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,188 2003.253.20:52:13.59:!2003.253.20:52:14 2003.253.20:52:14.01:disc_pos 2003.253.20:52:14.01/disc_pos/158367371264,158110643320, 2003.253.20:52:14.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.20:52:14.02:midob 2003.253.20:52:14.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.20:52:14.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.20:52:14.07/cable/+3.5873025E-02 2003.253.20:52:14.14/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9340,4027 2003.253.20:52:14.21/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25356 2003.253.20:52:14.29/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7722 2003.253.20:52:14.36/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10420 2003.253.20:52:14.43/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,6932 2003.253.20:52:14.99/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.20:52:15.53/tpi/1d,4756,2u,7725,3u,9329,4u,14239,i1,9345 2003.253.20:52:15.53/tpi/9u,5481,au,8067,bu,6952,cu,10521,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,3817 2003.253.20:52:15.54/tpi/5u,11027,6u,10421,7u,9428,8d,4536,i3,25360 2003.253.20:52:15.55/tpdiff/1d,2296,2u,3202,3u,4528,4u,7065,i1,4925 2003.253.20:52:15.55/tpdiff/9u,2784,au,3695,bu,3192,cu,4027,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,2023 2003.253.20:52:15.56/tpdiff/5u,6341,6u,4799,7u,4615,8d,2140,i3,14350 2003.253.20:52:15.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.20:52:15.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.20:52:15.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.20:52:15.61/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.20:52:15.62?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.20:52:15.62?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.20:52:15.63/tsys/1d,51.3,2u,52.3,3u,49.2,4u,50.7,i1,48.8 2003.253.20:52:15.64/tsys/9u,58.4,au,62.2,bu,58.5,cu,74.6,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.253.20:52:15.64/tsys/i2,55.6 2003.253.20:52:15.65/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.7,7u,46.6,8d,42.8,i3,45.6 2003.253.20:52:15.98/fmout-gps/+7.7584E-006 2003.253.20:52:16.02:!2003.253.20:54:22 2003.253.20:52:16.09#setcl#time/311675997,4,2003,253,20,52,16.05,2.034,3.067,1 2003.253.20:52:16.09#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.20:54:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.20:54:22.01:disc_end 2003.253.20:54:22.49:disc_pos 2003.253.20:54:22.50/disc_pos/162526263360,158111643320, 2003.253.20:54:22.50:disc_check 2003.253.20:54:22.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d20h54m22.205s,68864,0.00250s,80000,21313500960, 2003.253.20:54:22.90:postob 2003.253.20:54:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 309421 : 668 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 309319 : 776 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 309554 : 535 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 309427 : 656 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 309307 : 782 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 309374 : 710 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 309507 : 579 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:22.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 309499 : 587 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:23.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.20:54:23.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.58 2003.253.20:54:23.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.253.20:54:23.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.20:54:23.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.253.20:54:23.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.20:54:23.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.20:54:23.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.73 2003.253.20:54:23.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.20:54:23.98:scan_name=253-2102,rd0308,98 2003.253.20:54:23.98:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.20:54:27.00:setup4f 2003.253.20:54:31.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:31.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.20:54:31.05:!2003.253.21:02:32 2003.253.21:02:32.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:02:32.02/disc_pos/162526263360,162525263360, 2003.253.21:02:32.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:02:32.26:!2003.253.21:02:32 2003.253.21:02:32.26:preob 2003.253.21:02:32.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:02:32.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:02:35.84/tpical/1d,7330,2u,11264,3u,14426,4u,22084,i1,14760 2003.253.21:02:35.84/tpical/9u,6030,au,14474,bu,12738,cu,7034,du,7934,eu,8989,i2,5889 2003.253.21:02:35.84/tpical/5u,17969,6u,15759,7u,14624,8d,6945,i3,41392 2003.253.21:02:38.49/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,103 2003.253.21:02:38.49/tpzero/9u,59,au,409,bu,722,cu,508,du,618,eu,854,i2,74 2003.253.21:02:38.49/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,188 2003.253.21:02:41.58:!2003.253.21:02:42 2003.253.21:02:42.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:02:42.00/disc_pos/162782126080,162525263360, 2003.253.21:02:42.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:02:42.01:midob 2003.253.21:02:42.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:02:42.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:02:42.28/cable/+3.5873062E-02 2003.253.21:02:42.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9826,4047 2003.253.21:02:42.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26993 2003.253.21:02:42.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8046 2003.253.21:02:42.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10968 2003.253.21:02:42.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8649 2003.253.21:02:43.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:02:43.72/tpi/1d,5012,2u,8049,3u,9853,4u,15069,i1,9818 2003.253.21:02:43.72/tpi/9u,4187,au,9915,bu,8650,cu,5260,du,6555,eu,6678,i2,4047 2003.253.21:02:43.73/tpi/5u,11664,6u,10961,7u,9981,8d,4790,i3,26989 2003.253.21:02:43.74/tpdiff/1d,2318,2u,3215,3u,4573,4u,7015,i1,4942 2003.253.21:02:43.74/tpdiff/9u,1843,au,4559,bu,4088,cu,1774,du,1379,eu,2311,i2,1842 2003.253.21:02:43.75/tpdiff/5u,6305,6u,4798,7u,4643,8d,2155,i3,14403 2003.253.21:02:43.76/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:02:43.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:02:43.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:02:43.78/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:02:43.80/tsys/1d,53.7,2u,54.7,3u,51.7,4u,54.1,i1,51.1 2003.253.21:02:43.81/tsys/9u,67.2,au,62.6,bu,58.2,cu,80.4,du,129.2,eu,75.6,i2,64.7 2003.253.21:02:43.81/tsys/5u,46.5,6u,54.7,7u,49.4,8d,45.6,i3,48.4 2003.253.21:02:43.99/fmout-gps/+7.7439E-006 2003.253.21:02:44.01:!2003.253.21:04:20 2003.253.21:02:44.08#setcl#time/311738795,4,2003,253,21,02,44.04,1.999,3.242,0 2003.253.21:02:44.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:04:20.01:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:04:20.02:disc_end 2003.253.21:04:20.50:disc_pos 2003.253.21:04:20.50/disc_pos/165980923520,162526263360, 2003.253.21:04:20.51:disc_check 2003.253.21:04:20.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h04m20.203s,64628,0.00250s,80000,15681264076, 2003.253.21:04:20.90:postob 2003.253.21:04:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 315984 : 699 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 315874 : 813 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 316130 : 553 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 315996 : 679 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 315869 : 812 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 315964 : 712 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:20.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 316097 : 581 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:21.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 316089 : 591 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:21.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.253.21:04:21.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.21:04:21.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.253.21:04:21.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.21:04:21.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.51 2003.253.21:04:21.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.21:04:21.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.253.21:04:21.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.73 2003.253.21:04:22.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.21:04:22.00:scan_name=253-2107a,rd0308,266 2003.253.21:04:22.00:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:04:25.02:setup4f 2003.253.21:04:29.01/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:29.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:04:29.04:!2003.253.21:07:29 2003.253.21:05:59.24;"weather: clear 2003.253.21:07:29.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:07:29.02/disc_pos/165980923520,165979923520, 2003.253.21:07:29.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:07:29.25:!2003.253.21:07:29 2003.253.21:07:29.25:preob 2003.253.21:07:29.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:07:29.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:07:32.83/tpical/1d,7366,2u,11307,3u,14411,4u,21853,i1,14678 2003.253.21:07:32.83/tpical/9u,6029,au,14559,bu,12808,cu,6882,du,7014,eu,9098,i2,5904 2003.253.21:07:32.83/tpical/5u,17478,6u,14991,7u,14120,8d,6672,i3,40118 2003.253.21:07:35.48/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,98 2003.253.21:07:35.48/tpzero/9u,60,au,409,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,72 2003.253.21:07:35.48/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,188 2003.253.21:07:38.57:!2003.253.21:07:39 2003.253.21:07:39.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:07:39.00/disc_pos/166236643328,165979923520, 2003.253.21:07:39.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:07:39.01:midob 2003.253.21:07:39.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:07:39.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:07:39.27/cable/+3.5874840E-02 2003.253.21:07:39.34/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9814,4060 2003.253.21:07:39.41/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26283 2003.253.21:07:39.48/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8106 2003.253.21:07:39.55/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10472 2003.253.21:07:39.62/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8738 2003.253.21:07:40.18/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:07:40.71/tpi/1d,5072,2u,8111,3u,9897,4u,14980,i1,9822 2003.253.21:07:40.71/tpi/9u,4189,au,10014,bu,8739,cu,5124,du,5397,eu,6789,i2,4063 2003.253.21:07:40.72/tpi/5u,11409,6u,10499,7u,9714,8d,4642,i3,26338 2003.253.21:07:40.73/tpdiff/1d,2294,2u,3196,3u,4514,4u,6873,i1,4856 2003.253.21:07:40.73/tpdiff/9u,1840,au,4545,bu,4069,cu,1758,du,1617,eu,2309,i2,1841 2003.253.21:07:40.74/tpdiff/5u,6069,6u,4492,7u,4406,8d,2030,i3,13780 2003.253.21:07:40.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:07:40.75/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:07:40.76/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:07:40.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:07:40.78/tsys/1d,54.9,2u,55.6,3u,52.6,4u,54.9,i1,52.1 2003.253.21:07:40.78/tsys/9u,67.3,au,63.4,bu,59.1,cu,78.8,du,88.7,eu,77.1,i2,65.0 2003.253.21:07:40.79/tsys/5u,47.2,6u,55.7,7u,50.5,8d,46.5,i3,49.3 2003.253.21:07:40.98/fmout-gps/+7.7759E-006 2003.253.21:07:41.01:!2003.253.21:12:05 2003.253.21:07:41.08#setcl#time/311768494,4,2003,253,21,07,41.04,2.022,3.324,1 2003.253.21:07:41.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:12:05.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:12:05.00:disc_end 2003.253.21:12:05.49:disc_pos 2003.253.21:12:05.49/disc_pos/174811322848,165980923520, 2003.253.21:12:05.50:disc_check 2003.253.21:12:05.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h12m05.192s,25460,0.00250s,80000,6049319840, 2003.253.21:12:05.90:postob 2003.253.21:12:05.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 332754 : 775 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 332678 : 856 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 332916 : 615 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 332827 : 697 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 332656 : 872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 332798 : 725 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 332936 : 589 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:05.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 332914 : 612 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:06.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.21 2003.253.21:12:06.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.21:12:06.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.253.21:12:06.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.253.21:12:06.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.48 2003.253.21:12:06.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.21:12:06.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.12 2003.253.21:12:06.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.99 2003.253.21:12:06.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.21:12:06.98:scan_name=253-2112,rd0308,98 2003.253.21:12:06.98:source=1706-174,170640.11,-172508.4,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:12:10.00:setup4f 2003.253.21:12:14.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:14.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:12:14.04:!2003.253.21:12:45 2003.253.21:12:45.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:12:45.02/disc_pos/174811322848,174810322848, 2003.253.21:12:45.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:12:45.27:!2003.253.21:12:45 2003.253.21:12:45.27:preob 2003.253.21:12:45.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:12:45.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:12:48.86/tpical/1d,7478,2u,11500,3u,14681,4u,22405,i1,15009 2003.253.21:12:48.86/tpical/9u,6098,au,14680,bu,12898,cu,6991,du,6805,eu,9146,i2,5957 2003.253.21:12:48.86/tpical/5u,18225,6u,15861,7u,14756,8d,7007,i3,41864 2003.253.21:12:51.51/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,97 2003.253.21:12:51.51/tpzero/9u,61,au,410,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,72 2003.253.21:12:51.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.21:12:54.60:!2003.253.21:12:55 2003.253.21:12:55.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:12:55.00/disc_pos/175067262976,174810322848, 2003.253.21:12:55.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:12:55.01:midob 2003.253.21:12:55.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:12:55.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:12:55.36/cable/+3.5875138E-02 2003.253.21:12:55.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10088,4116 2003.253.21:12:55.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27584 2003.253.21:12:55.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8283 2003.253.21:12:55.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11125 2003.253.21:12:55.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8809 2003.253.21:12:56.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:12:56.79/tpi/1d,5171,2u,8283,3u,10116,4u,15441,i1,10089 2003.253.21:12:56.80/tpi/9u,4244,au,10136,bu,8811,cu,5244,du,5353,eu,6835,i2,4114 2003.253.21:12:56.81/tpi/5u,11933,6u,11123,7u,10161,8d,4871,i3,27580 2003.253.21:12:56.81/tpdiff/1d,2307,2u,3217,3u,4565,4u,6964,i1,4920 2003.253.21:12:56.82/tpdiff/9u,1854,au,4544,bu,4087,cu,1747,du,1452,eu,2311,i2,1843 2003.253.21:12:56.83/tpdiff/5u,6292,6u,4738,7u,4595,8d,2136,i3,14284 2003.253.21:12:56.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:12:56.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:12:56.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:12:56.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:12:56.87/tsys/1d,55.7,2u,56.6,3u,53.3,4u,55.9,i1,52.8 2003.253.21:12:56.88/tsys/9u,67.7,au,64.2,bu,59.4,cu,81.3,du,97.9,eu,77.6,i2,65.8 2003.253.21:12:56.88/tsys/5u,47.7,6u,56.3,7u,50.9,8d,47.0,i3,49.9 2003.253.21:12:57.00/fmout-gps/+7.7249E-006 2003.253.21:12:57.00:!2003.253.21:14:33 2003.253.21:12:57.08#setcl#time/311800093,4,2003,253,21,12,57.04,2.040,3.412,1 2003.253.21:12:57.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:14:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:14:33.01:disc_end 2003.253.21:14:33.50:disc_pos 2003.253.21:14:33.50/disc_pos/178265737832,174811322848, 2003.253.21:14:33.51:disc_check 2003.253.21:14:33.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h14m33.208s,65152,0.00250s,80000,1282025324, 2003.253.21:14:33.90:postob 2003.253.21:14:33.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 339332 : 789 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 339253 : 872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 339496 : 627 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 339402 : 713 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 339217 : 905 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 339371 : 745 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 339520 : 597 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:33.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 339489 : 629 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:34.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.253.21:14:34.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.253.21:14:34.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.253.21:14:34.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.21:14:34.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.24 2003.253.21:14:34.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.21:14:34.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.253.21:14:34.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.09 2003.253.21:14:34.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.21:14:34.96:scan_name=253-2120,rd0308,774 2003.253.21:14:34.96:source=1307+121,130704.35,121022.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:14:37.97:setup4f 2003.253.21:14:42.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:42.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:14:42.06:!2003.253.21:19:51 2003.253.21:19:51.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:19:51.01/disc_pos/178265737832,178264737832, 2003.253.21:19:51.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:19:51.26:!2003.253.21:19:51 2003.253.21:19:51.27:preob 2003.253.21:19:51.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:19:51.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:19:54.87/tpical/1d,7085,2u,10923,3u,13915,4u,21197,i1,14142 2003.253.21:19:54.87/tpical/9u,5890,au,14183,bu,12398,cu,7542,du,57827,eu,20373 2003.253.21:19:54.87/tpical/i2,5814 2003.253.21:19:54.87/tpical/5u,17203,6u,15050,7u,14011,8d,6678,i3,39466 2003.253.21:19:57.52/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,100 2003.253.21:19:57.52/tpzero/9u,61,au,409,bu,723,cu,509,du,623,eu,857,i2,78 2003.253.21:19:57.52/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.21:20:00.61:!2003.253.21:20:01 2003.253.21:20:01.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:20:01.00/disc_pos/178521575424,178264737832, 2003.253.21:20:01.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:20:01.01:midob 2003.253.21:20:01.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:20:01.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:20:01.24/cable/+3.5875405E-02 2003.253.21:20:01.31/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9242,4008 2003.253.21:20:01.38/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25290 2003.253.21:20:01.45/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7716 2003.253.21:20:01.52/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10332 2003.253.21:20:01.59/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8403 2003.253.21:20:02.15/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:20:02.67/tpi/1d,4782,2u,7717,3u,9362,4u,14202,i1,9243 2003.253.21:20:02.67/tpi/9u,4057,au,9706,bu,8407,cu,5952,du,62413,eu,19960,i2,4003 2003.253.21:20:02.68/tpi/5u,10957,6u,10336,7u,9431,8d,4548,i3,25290 2003.253.21:20:02.69/tpdiff/1d,2303,2u,3206,3u,4553,4u,6995,i1,4899 2003.253.21:20:02.69/tpdiff/9u,1833,au,4477,bu,3991,cu,1590,du,-4586,eu,413,i2,1811 2003.253.21:20:02.70/tpdiff/5u,6246,6u,4714,7u,4580,8d,2130,i3,14176 2003.253.21:20:02.71/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:20:02.71/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:20:02.72/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:20:02.73/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:20:02.74?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.21:20:02.74/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,52.2,3u,49.1,4u,51.1,i1,48.5 2003.253.21:20:02.75/tsys/9u,65.4,au,62.3,bu,57.8,cu,102.7,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,1387.6 2003.253.21:20:02.76/tsys/i2,65.0 2003.253.21:20:02.76/tsys/5u,44.0,6u,52.2,7u,47.0,8d,43.2,i3,46.0 2003.253.21:20:03.00/fmout-gps/+7.8164E-006 2003.253.21:20:03.01:!2003.253.21:32:55 2003.253.21:20:03.08#setcl#time/311842692,3,2003,253,21,20,03.04,2.039,3.530,1 2003.253.21:20:03.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:32:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:32:55.00:disc_end 2003.253.21:32:55.48:disc_pos 2003.253.21:32:55.49/disc_pos/203351591280,178265737832, 2003.253.21:32:55.49:disc_check 2003.253.21:32:55.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h32m55.188s,57960,0.00250s,80000,10177513744, 2003.253.21:32:55.88:postob 2003.253.21:32:55.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 387088 : 888 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 386984 : 999 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 387245 : 733 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 387152 : 819 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 386981 : 996 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 387117 : 854 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 387227 : 747 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:55.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 387230 : 743 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:32:56.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.21:32:56.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.21:32:56.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.253.21:32:56.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.21:32:56.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.87 2003.253.21:32:56.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.21:32:56.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.253.21:32:56.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.09 2003.253.21:32:56.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.21:32:56.96:scan_name=253-2135b,rd0308,98 2003.253.21:32:56.96:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:32:59.98:setup4f 2003.253.21:33:04.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:33:04.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:33:04.07:!2003.253.21:35:10 2003.253.21:35:10.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:35:10.01/disc_pos/203351591280,203350591280, 2003.253.21:35:10.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:35:10.25:!2003.253.21:35:10 2003.253.21:35:10.25:preob 2003.253.21:35:10.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:35:10.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:35:13.83/tpical/1d,7995,2u,12258,3u,15681,4u,24179,i1,16159 2003.253.21:35:13.83/tpical/9u,6148,au,14818,bu,12957,cu,7677,du,14466,eu,13245 2003.253.21:35:13.83/tpical/i2,6064 2003.253.21:35:13.83/tpical/5u,19570,6u,17001,7u,15860,8d,7497,i3,45268 2003.253.21:35:16.48/tpzero/1d,224,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,466,i1,94 2003.253.21:35:16.48/tpzero/9u,55,au,409,bu,724,cu,509,du,618,eu,854,i2,66 2003.253.21:35:16.48/tpzero/5u,387,6u,871,7u,1158,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.21:35:19.57:!2003.253.21:35:20 2003.253.21:35:20.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:35:20.00/disc_pos/203607515136,203350591280, 2003.253.21:35:20.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:35:20.02:midob 2003.253.21:35:20.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:35:20.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:35:20.31/cable/+3.5871207E-02 2003.253.21:35:20.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11233,4242 2003.253.21:35:20.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30923 2003.253.21:35:20.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9044 2003.253.21:35:20.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12249 2003.253.21:35:20.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8987 2003.253.21:35:21.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:35:21.74/tpi/1d,5696,2u,9034,3u,11124,4u,17205,i1,11225 2003.253.21:35:21.74/tpi/9u,4329,au,10346,bu,8985,cu,6106,du,13707,eu,11408,i2,4243 2003.253.21:35:21.75/tpi/5u,13313,6u,12243,7u,11248,8d,5345,i3,30896 2003.253.21:35:21.76/tpdiff/1d,2299,2u,3224,3u,4557,4u,6974,i1,4934 2003.253.21:35:21.76/tpdiff/9u,1819,au,4472,bu,3972,cu,1571,du,759,eu,1837,i2,1821 2003.253.21:35:21.77/tpdiff/5u,6257,6u,4758,7u,4612,8d,2152,i3,14372 2003.253.21:35:21.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:35:21.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:35:21.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:35:21.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:35:21.81/tsys/1d,61.9,2u,62.5,3u,59.2,4u,62.4,i1,58.7 2003.253.21:35:21.81/tsys/9u,70.5,au,66.7,bu,62.4,cu,106.9,du,517.4,eu,172.4,i2,68.8 2003.253.21:35:21.82/tsys/5u,53.7,6u,62.1,7u,56.9,8d,52.4,i3,55.6 2003.253.21:35:21.98/fmout-gps/+7.7714E-006 2003.253.21:35:22.00:!2003.253.21:36:58 2003.253.21:35:22.07#setcl#time/311934590,4,2003,253,21,35,22.03,1.965,3.786,0 2003.253.21:35:22.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:36:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:36:58.00:disc_end 2003.253.21:36:58.49:disc_pos 2003.253.21:36:58.50/disc_pos/206806313744,203351591280, 2003.253.21:36:58.50:disc_check 2003.253.21:36:58.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h36m58.197s,30284,0.00250s,80000,4321625212, 2003.253.21:36:58.89:postob 2003.253.21:36:58.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 393666 : 902 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 393554 : 1021 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 393822 : 748 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 393729 : 838 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 393563 : 1006 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 393692 : 872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 393806 : 760 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:58.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 393805 : 762 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:36:59.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.35 2003.253.21:36:59.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.97 2003.253.21:36:59.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.253.21:36:59.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.253.21:36:59.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.75 2003.253.21:36:59.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.21:36:59.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.253.21:36:59.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.21:36:59.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.21:36:59.95:scan_name=253-2139,rd0308,281 2003.253.21:36:59.95:source=2201+315,220101.46,313105.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:37:02.96:setup4f 2003.253.21:37:07.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:37:07.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:37:07.04:!2003.253.21:39:11 2003.253.21:39:11.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:39:11.01/disc_pos/206806313744,206805313744, 2003.253.21:39:11.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:39:11.26:!2003.253.21:39:11 2003.253.21:39:11.26:preob 2003.253.21:39:11.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:39:11.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:39:14.84/tpical/1d,7653,2u,11738,3u,14929,4u,23082,i1,15423 2003.253.21:39:14.84/tpical/9u,6044,au,14615,bu,12829,cu,6956,du,6156,eu,8964,i2,6477 2003.253.21:39:14.84/tpical/5u,19033,6u,16470,7u,15305,8d,7244,i3,43830 2003.253.21:39:17.49/tpzero/1d,225,2u,1283,3u,757,4u,465,i1,98 2003.253.21:39:17.49/tpzero/9u,58,au,409,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,74 2003.253.21:39:17.49/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.21:39:20.58:!2003.253.21:39:21 2003.253.21:39:21.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:39:21.00/disc_pos/207062339584,206805313744, 2003.253.21:39:21.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:39:21.03:midob 2003.253.21:39:21.04#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:39:21.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:39:21.16/cable/+3.5871775E-02 2003.253.21:39:21.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10435,4258 2003.253.21:39:21.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29077 2003.253.21:39:21.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8487 2003.253.21:39:21.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11605 2003.253.21:39:21.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8793 2003.253.21:39:22.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:39:22.59/tpi/1d,5313,2u,8490,3u,10343,4u,16014,i1,10437 2003.253.21:39:22.59/tpi/9u,4208,au,10078,bu,8786,cu,5238,du,4657,eu,6675,i2,4407 2003.253.21:39:22.60/tpi/5u,12566,6u,11607,7u,10612,8d,5059,i3,29085 2003.253.21:39:22.61/tpdiff/1d,2340,2u,3248,3u,4586,4u,7068,i1,4986 2003.253.21:39:22.61/tpdiff/9u,1836,au,4537,bu,4043,cu,1718,du,1499,eu,2289,i2,2070 2003.253.21:39:22.62/tpdiff/5u,6467,6u,4863,7u,4693,8d,2185,i3,14745 2003.253.21:39:22.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:39:22.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:39:22.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:39:22.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:39:22.66/tsys/1d,56.5,2u,57.7,3u,54.3,4u,57.2,i1,53.9 2003.253.21:39:22.66/tsys/9u,67.8,au,63.9,bu,59.8,cu,82.6,du,80.9,eu,76.3,i2,62.8 2003.253.21:39:22.67/tsys/5u,49.0,6u,57.4,7u,52.4,8d,48.2,i3,51.0 2003.253.21:39:22.98/fmout-gps/+7.7164E-006 2003.253.21:39:22.99:!2003.253.21:44:02 2003.253.21:39:23.06#setcl#time/311958689,4,2003,253,21,39,23.03,1.993,3.853,1 2003.253.21:39:23.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:44:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:44:02.00:disc_end 2003.253.21:44:02.49:disc_pos 2003.253.21:44:02.49/disc_pos/216116423344,206806313744, 2003.253.21:44:02.50:disc_check 2003.253.21:44:02.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h44m02.197s,79348,0.00250s,80000,4257841336, 2003.253.21:44:02.89:postob 2003.253.21:44:02.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 411392 : 938 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 411258 : 1081 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 411553 : 779 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 411452 : 877 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 411293 : 1038 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 411417 : 908 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 411519 : 809 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:02.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 411520 : 810 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:03.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.99 2003.253.21:44:03.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.73 2003.253.21:44:03.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.34 2003.253.21:44:03.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.21:44:03.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.77 2003.253.21:44:03.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.21:44:03.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.253.21:44:03.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.12 2003.253.21:44:03.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.21:44:03.97:scan_name=253-2146,rd0308,611 2003.253.21:44:03.97:source=1622-253,162244.12,-252051.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:44:06.99:setup4f 2003.253.21:44:11.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:11.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:44:11.04:!2003.253.21:46:01 2003.253.21:46:01.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:46:01.01/disc_pos/216116423344,216115423344, 2003.253.21:46:01.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:46:01.26:!2003.253.21:46:01 2003.253.21:46:01.26:preob 2003.253.21:46:01.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:46:01.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:46:04.86/tpical/1d,7746,2u,11877,3u,15056,4u,23226,i1,15542 2003.253.21:46:04.86/tpical/9u,6219,au,14998,bu,13170,cu,7211,du,6455,eu,9184,i2,7238 2003.253.21:46:04.86/tpical/5u,19152,6u,16493,7u,15350,8d,7251,i3,43924 2003.253.21:46:07.51/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1283,3u,757,4u,465,i1,104 2003.253.21:46:07.51/tpzero/9u,61,au,409,bu,723,cu,508,du,617,eu,854,i2,79 2003.253.21:46:07.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.21:46:10.60:!2003.253.21:46:11 2003.253.21:46:11.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:46:11.00/disc_pos/216372363264,216115423344, 2003.253.21:46:11.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:46:11.02:midob 2003.253.21:46:11.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:46:11.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:46:11.19/cable/+3.5874552E-02 2003.253.21:46:11.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10562,5414 2003.253.21:46:11.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29290 2003.253.21:46:11.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8618 2003.253.21:46:11.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11680 2003.253.21:46:11.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9077 2003.253.21:46:12.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:46:12.63/tpi/1d,5408,2u,8624,3u,10482,4u,16163,i1,10567 2003.253.21:46:12.63/tpi/9u,4351,au,10389,bu,9080,cu,5478,du,4912,eu,6834,i2,5564 2003.253.21:46:12.64/tpi/5u,12695,6u,11684,7u,10674,8d,5081,i3,29293 2003.253.21:46:12.65/tpdiff/1d,2338,2u,3253,3u,4574,4u,7063,i1,4975 2003.253.21:46:12.65/tpdiff/9u,1868,au,4609,bu,4090,cu,1733,du,1543,eu,2350,i2,1674 2003.253.21:46:12.66/tpdiff/5u,6457,6u,4809,7u,4676,8d,2170,i3,14631 2003.253.21:46:12.67/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:46:12.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:46:12.68/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:46:12.69/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:46:12.70/tsys/1d,57.6,2u,58.7,3u,55.3,4u,57.8,i1,54.7 2003.253.21:46:12.70/tsys/9u,68.9,au,65.0,bu,61.3,cu,86.0,du,83.5,eu,76.3,i2,98.3 2003.253.21:46:12.71/tsys/5u,49.6,6u,58.5,7u,52.9,8d,48.8,i3,51.7 2003.253.21:46:12.98/fmout-gps/+7.7974E-006 2003.253.21:46:13.00:!2003.253.21:56:22 2003.253.21:46:13.08#setcl#time/311999689,4,2003,253,21,46,13.04,1.997,3.966,1 2003.253.21:46:13.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.21:56:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.21:56:22.00:disc_end 2003.253.21:56:22.49:disc_pos 2003.253.21:56:22.50/disc_pos/235986522368,216116423344, 2003.253.21:56:22.50:disc_check 2003.253.21:56:22.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d21h56m22.195s,8512,0.00250s,80000,3809891812, 2003.253.21:56:22.89:postob 2003.253.21:56:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 449213 : 1023 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 449083 : 1163 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 449382 : 856 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 449275 : 961 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 449118 : 1121 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 449245 : 986 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 449345 : 889 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:22.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 449347 : 889 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:23.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.253.21:56:23.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.36 2003.253.21:56:23.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.73 2003.253.21:56:23.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.21:56:23.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.21:56:23.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.21:56:23.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.253.21:56:23.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.21:56:23.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.21:56:23.95:scan_name=253-2158,rd0308,98 2003.253.21:56:23.95:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.21:56:26.97:setup4f 2003.253.21:56:31.01/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:31.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.21:56:31.05:!2003.253.21:58:35 2003.253.21:58:35.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:58:35.01/disc_pos/235986522368,235985522368, 2003.253.21:58:35.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.21:58:35.26:!2003.253.21:58:35 2003.253.21:58:35.26:preob 2003.253.21:58:35.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:58:35.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:58:38.85/tpical/1d,7393,2u,11355,3u,14383,4u,22019,i1,14729 2003.253.21:58:38.85/tpical/9u,6109,au,14641,bu,12902,cu,6914,du,8872,eu,9003,i2,5959 2003.253.21:58:38.85/tpical/5u,18198,6u,15768,7u,14628,8d,6937,i3,41684 2003.253.21:58:41.50/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,96 2003.253.21:58:41.50/tpzero/9u,64,au,409,bu,724,cu,510,du,617,eu,855,i2,77 2003.253.21:58:41.50/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1009,i3,189 2003.253.21:58:44.59:!2003.253.21:58:45 2003.253.21:58:45.00:disc_pos 2003.253.21:58:45.00/disc_pos/236242391040,235985522368, 2003.253.21:58:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.21:58:45.01:midob 2003.253.21:58:45.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.21:58:45.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.21:58:45.39/cable/+3.5872274E-02 2003.253.21:58:45.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9785,4104 2003.253.21:58:45.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27283 2003.253.21:58:45.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8088 2003.253.21:58:45.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11041 2003.253.21:58:45.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8791 2003.253.21:58:46.30/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.21:58:46.83/tpi/1d,5045,2u,8084,3u,9756,4u,14996,i1,9771 2003.253.21:58:46.83/tpi/9u,4228,au,10002,bu,8787,cu,5266,du,7561,eu,6650,i2,4103 2003.253.21:58:46.84/tpi/5u,11793,6u,11010,7u,10013,8d,4798,i3,27189 2003.253.21:58:46.85/tpdiff/1d,2348,2u,3271,3u,4627,4u,7023,i1,4958 2003.253.21:58:46.85/tpdiff/9u,1881,au,4639,bu,4115,cu,1648,du,1311,eu,2353,i2,1856 2003.253.21:58:46.86/tpdiff/5u,6405,6u,4758,7u,4615,8d,2139,i3,14495 2003.253.21:58:46.87/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.21:58:46.87/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.21:58:46.88/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.21:58:46.89/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.21:58:46.90/tsys/1d,53.3,2u,54.1,3u,50.6,4u,53.8,i1,50.7 2003.253.21:58:46.90/tsys/9u,66.4,au,62.0,bu,58.8,cu,86.6,du,158.9,eu,73.9,i2,65.1 2003.253.21:58:46.91/tsys/5u,46.3,6u,55.4,7u,49.9,8d,46.1,i3,48.4 2003.253.21:58:46.98/fmout-gps/+7.7859E-006 2003.253.21:58:47.00:!2003.253.22:00:23 2003.253.21:58:47.06#setcl#time/312075086,4,2003,253,21,58,47.03,2.012,4.176,1 2003.253.21:58:47.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:00:23.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:00:23.00:disc_end 2003.253.22:00:23.48:disc_pos 2003.253.22:00:23.49/disc_pos/239440869536,235986522368, 2003.253.22:00:23.49:disc_check 2003.253.22:00:23.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h00m23.198s,65664,0.00250s,80000,4257675680, 2003.253.22:00:23.89:postob 2003.253.22:00:23.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 455785 : 1042 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 455660 : 1179 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 455955 : 874 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 455853 : 975 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 455693 : 1137 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 455823 : 1002 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 455921 : 904 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:23.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 455921 : 907 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:24.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.62 2003.253.22:00:24.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.253.22:00:24.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.253.22:00:24.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.22:00:24.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.90 2003.253.22:00:24.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.22:00:24.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.253.22:00:24.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.22:00:24.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.22:00:24.95:scan_name=253-2203,rd0308,275 2003.253.22:00:24.95:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:00:27.96:setup4f 2003.253.22:00:32.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:32.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:00:32.04:!2003.253.22:03:29 2003.253.22:03:29.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:03:29.01/disc_pos/239440869536,239439869536, 2003.253.22:03:29.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.22:03:29.24:!2003.253.22:03:29 2003.253.22:03:29.24:preob 2003.253.22:03:29.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:03:29.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:03:32.83/tpical/1d,7751,2u,11868,3u,15066,4u,23267,i1,15535 2003.253.22:03:32.83/tpical/9u,6217,au,15102,bu,13143,cu,6972,du,20534,eu,12162 2003.253.22:03:32.83/tpical/i2,6232 2003.253.22:03:32.83/tpical/5u,19131,6u,16460,7u,15327,8d,7257,i3,43955 2003.253.22:03:35.48/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,93 2003.253.22:03:35.48/tpzero/9u,60,au,408,bu,724,cu,509,du,617,eu,855,i2,72 2003.253.22:03:35.48/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.253.22:03:38.57:!2003.253.22:03:39 2003.253.22:03:39.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:03:39.00/disc_pos/239696781312,239439869536, 2003.253.22:03:39.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.22:03:39.01:midob 2003.253.22:03:39.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:03:39.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:03:39.15/cable/+3.5872219E-02 2003.253.22:03:39.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10554,4360 2003.253.22:03:39.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29306 2003.253.22:03:39.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8606 2003.253.22:03:39.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11662 2003.253.22:03:39.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9046 2003.253.22:03:40.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.22:03:40.58/tpi/1d,5411,2u,8600,3u,10472,4u,16173,i1,10557 2003.253.22:03:40.58/tpi/9u,4339,au,10505,bu,9036,cu,5224,du,23555,eu,11054,i2,4353 2003.253.22:03:40.59/tpi/5u,12677,6u,11664,7u,10662,8d,5088,i3,29307 2003.253.22:03:40.60/tpdiff/1d,2340,2u,3268,3u,4594,4u,7094,i1,4978 2003.253.22:03:40.61/tpdiff/9u,1878,au,4597,bu,4107,cu,1748,du,-3021,eu,1108,i2,1879 2003.253.22:03:40.61/tpdiff/5u,6454,6u,4796,7u,4665,8d,2169,i3,14648 2003.253.22:03:40.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.22:03:40.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.22:03:40.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.22:03:40.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.22:03:40.65?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.22:03:40.66/tsys/1d,57.6,2u,58.2,3u,55.0,4u,57.6,i1,54.7 2003.253.22:03:40.66/tsys/9u,68.4,au,65.9,bu,60.7,cu,80.9,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,276.1,i2,68.4 2003.253.22:03:40.67/tsys/5u,49.5,6u,58.5,7u,53.0,8d,48.9,i3,51.7 2003.253.22:03:40.99/fmout-gps/+7.8019E-006 2003.253.22:03:41.00:!2003.253.22:08:14 2003.253.22:03:41.07#setcl#time/312104486,4,2003,253,22,03,41.03,1.973,4.258,0 2003.253.22:03:41.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:08:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:08:14.00:disc_end 2003.253.22:08:14.49:disc_pos 2003.253.22:08:14.49/disc_pos/248559812112,239440869536, 2003.253.22:08:14.49:disc_check 2003.253.22:08:14.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h08m14.197s,3460,0.00250s,80000,5953119628, 2003.253.22:08:14.89:postob 2003.253.22:08:14.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 473142 : 1083 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 473019 : 1217 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 473307 : 919 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 473212 : 1013 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 473047 : 1180 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 473184 : 1038 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 473276 : 946 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:14.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 473276 : 953 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:15.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.38 2003.253.22:08:15.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.87 2003.253.22:08:15.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.253.22:08:15.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.253.22:08:15.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.90 2003.253.22:08:15.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.22:08:15.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.253.22:08:15.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.22:08:15.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.22:08:15.94:scan_name=253-2216,rd0308,128 2003.253.22:08:15.94:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:08:18.95:setup4f 2003.253.22:08:23.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:23.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:08:23.04:!2003.253.22:16:46 2003.253.22:10:08.87;"weather: clear 2003.253.22:16:46.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:16:46.01/disc_pos/248559812112,248558812112, 2003.253.22:16:46.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.22:16:46.27:!2003.253.22:16:46 2003.253.22:16:46.28:preob 2003.253.22:16:46.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:16:46.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:16:49.86/tpical/1d,7211,2u,11135,3u,14102,4u,21791,i1,14450 2003.253.22:16:49.86/tpical/9u,5851,au,13360,bu,11615,cu,42331,du,$$$$$,eu,38095 2003.253.22:16:49.86/tpical/i2,5820 2003.253.22:16:49.86/tpical/5u,18150,6u,15656,7u,14507,8d,6888,i3,41339 2003.253.22:16:52.53/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,95 2003.253.22:16:52.53/tpzero/9u,59,au,409,bu,723,cu,511,du,626,eu,858,i2,72 2003.253.22:16:52.53/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1155,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.22:16:55.62:!2003.253.22:16:56 2003.253.22:16:56.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:16:56.00/disc_pos/248815607808,248558812112, 2003.253.22:16:56.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.22:16:56.01:midob 2003.253.22:16:56.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:16:56.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:16:56.19/cable/+3.5870837E-02 2003.253.22:16:56.26/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9443,3975 2003.253.22:16:56.33/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26374 2003.253.22:16:56.40/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7861 2003.253.22:16:56.47/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10727 2003.253.22:16:56.54/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7902 2003.253.22:16:57.10/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.22:16:57.62/tpi/1d,4865,2u,7863,3u,9471,4u,14596,i1,9441 2003.253.22:16:57.62/tpi/9u,3986,au,9044,bu,7900,cu,39123,du,$$$$$,eu,38357,i2,3981 2003.253.22:16:57.63/tpi/5u,11527,6u,10730,7u,9720,8d,4669,i3,26381 2003.253.22:16:57.64/tpdiff/1d,2346,2u,3272,3u,4631,4u,7195,i1,5009 2003.253.22:16:57.64/tpdiff/9u,1865,au,4316,bu,3715,cu,3208,du,$$$$$,eu,-262,i2,1839 2003.253.22:16:57.65/tpdiff/5u,6623,6u,4926,7u,4787,8d,2219,i3,14958 2003.253.22:16:57.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.22:16:57.66/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.22:16:57.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.22:16:57.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.22:16:57.69?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.22:16:57.69?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.22:16:57.70/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,52.3,3u,48.9,4u,51.1,i1,48.5 2003.253.22:16:57.70/tsys/9u,63.2,au,60.0,bu,58.0,cu,361.1,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.253.22:16:57.71/tsys/i2,63.8 2003.253.22:16:57.71/tsys/5u,43.7,6u,52.0,7u,46.5,8d,42.9,i3,45.5 2003.253.22:16:57.98/fmout-gps/+7.7964E-006 2003.253.22:16:57.99:!2003.253.22:19:04 2003.253.22:16:58.06#setcl#time/312184184,4,2003,253,22,16,58.03,1.983,4.479,1 2003.253.22:16:58.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:19:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:19:04.00:disc_end 2003.253.22:19:04.49:disc_pos 2003.253.22:19:04.50/disc_pos/252973538656,248559812112, 2003.253.22:19:04.50:disc_check 2003.253.22:19:04.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h19m04.200s,13832,0.00250s,80000,16386343084, 2003.253.22:19:04.89:postob 2003.253.22:19:04.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 481542 : 1106 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 481417 : 1241 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 481708 : 940 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 481623 : 1025 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 481449 : 1200 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 481577 : 1066 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 481678 : 968 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:04.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 481671 : 979 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:05.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.253.22:19:05.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.253.22:19:05.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.253.22:19:05.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.04 2003.253.22:19:05.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.55 2003.253.22:19:05.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.22:19:05.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,34.04 2003.253.22:19:05.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.253.22:19:05.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.253.22:19:05.93:scan_name=253-2233,rd0308,98 2003.253.22:19:05.93:source=1156+295,115657.78,293126.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:19:08.94:setup4f 2003.253.22:19:13.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:13.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:19:13.05:!2003.253.22:33:44 2003.253.22:33:44.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:33:44.02/disc_pos/252973538656,252972538656, 2003.253.22:33:44.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.22:33:44.24:!2003.253.22:33:44 2003.253.22:33:44.24:preob 2003.253.22:33:44.24#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:33:44.24/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:33:47.81/tpical/1d,7515,2u,11517,3u,14699,4u,22641,i1,15103 2003.253.22:33:47.81/tpical/9u,6160,au,14866,bu,13174,cu,7190,du,6212,eu,9158,i2,6011 2003.253.22:33:47.81/tpical/5u,18970,6u,16433,7u,15242,8d,7226,i3,43473 2003.253.22:33:50.46/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,99 2003.253.22:33:50.46/tpzero/9u,60,au,408,bu,724,cu,509,du,616,eu,854,i2,74 2003.253.22:33:50.46/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1156,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.22:33:53.55:!2003.253.22:33:54 2003.253.22:33:54.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:33:54.00/disc_pos/253229490176,252972538656, 2003.253.22:33:54.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.22:33:54.01:midob 2003.253.22:33:54.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:33:54.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:33:54.28/cable/+3.5869269E-02 2003.253.22:33:54.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10063,4138 2003.253.22:33:54.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28354 2003.253.22:33:54.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8233 2003.253.22:33:54.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11428 2003.253.22:33:54.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8992 2003.253.22:33:55.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.22:33:55.72/tpi/1d,5161,2u,8234,3u,10060,4u,15472,i1,10065 2003.253.22:33:55.72/tpi/9u,4251,au,10140,bu,8999,cu,5356,du,4654,eu,6765,i2,4140 2003.253.22:33:55.73/tpi/5u,12322,6u,11439,7u,10400,8d,4973,i3,28361 2003.253.22:33:55.74/tpdiff/1d,2354,2u,3283,3u,4639,4u,7169,i1,5038 2003.253.22:33:55.74/tpdiff/9u,1909,au,4726,bu,4175,cu,1834,du,1558,eu,2393,i2,1871 2003.253.22:33:55.75/tpdiff/5u,6648,6u,4994,7u,4842,8d,2253,i3,15112 2003.253.22:33:55.76/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.22:33:55.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.22:33:55.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.22:33:55.78/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.22:33:55.79/tsys/1d,54.5,2u,55.1,3u,52.1,4u,54.4,i1,51.4 2003.253.22:33:55.79/tsys/9u,65.9,au,61.8,bu,59.5,cu,79.3,du,77.8,eu,74.1,i2,65.2 2003.253.22:33:55.80/tsys/5u,46.7,6u,55.0,7u,49.6,8d,45.7,i3,48.5 2003.253.22:33:55.98/fmout-gps/+7.8164E-006 2003.253.22:33:56.01:!2003.253.22:35:32 2003.253.22:33:56.08#setcl#time/312285982,4,2003,253,22,33,56.04,2.016,4.762,1 2003.253.22:33:56.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:35:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:35:32.00:disc_end 2003.253.22:35:32.49:disc_pos 2003.253.22:35:32.49/disc_pos/256428609168,252973538656, 2003.253.22:35:32.50:disc_check 2003.253.22:35:32.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h35m32.197s,30480,0.00250s,80000,28160832840, 2003.253.22:35:32.89:postob 2003.253.22:35:32.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 488115 : 1126 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 487990 : 1260 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 488284 : 957 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 488204 : 1038 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 488026 : 1218 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 488151 : 1085 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 488253 : 986 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:32.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 488244 : 999 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:33.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.253.22:35:33.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.02 2003.253.22:35:33.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.51 2003.253.22:35:33.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.04 2003.253.22:35:33.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.253.22:35:33.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.253.22:35:33.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.253.22:35:33.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.73 2003.253.22:35:33.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.22:35:33.96:scan_name=253-2239,rd0308,128 2003.253.22:35:33.96:source=1053+815,105336.14,813036.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:35:36.98:setup4f 2003.253.22:35:41.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:41.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:35:41.04:!2003.253.22:39:31 2003.253.22:39:31.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:39:31.01/disc_pos/256428609168,256427609168, 2003.253.22:39:31.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.22:39:31.27:!2003.253.22:39:31 2003.253.22:39:31.27:preob 2003.253.22:39:31.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:39:31.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:39:34.88/tpical/1d,7273,2u,11194,3u,14247,4u,22029,i1,14646 2003.253.22:39:34.88/tpical/9u,6010,au,14515,bu,12872,cu,7463,du,6091,eu,8929,i2,5886 2003.253.22:39:34.88/tpical/5u,18466,6u,16094,7u,14947,8d,7082,i3,42345 2003.253.22:39:37.54/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,100 2003.253.22:39:37.54/tpzero/9u,60,au,409,bu,723,cu,510,du,616,eu,854,i2,76 2003.253.22:39:37.54/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1157,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.22:39:40.63:!2003.253.22:39:41 2003.253.22:39:41.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:39:41.00/disc_pos/256684404736,256427609168, 2003.253.22:39:41.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.22:39:41.03:midob 2003.253.22:39:41.04#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:39:41.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:39:41.31/cable/+3.5868375E-02 2003.253.22:39:41.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9600,4006 2003.253.22:39:41.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27185 2003.253.22:39:41.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7907 2003.253.22:39:41.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11078 2003.253.22:39:41.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8694 2003.253.22:39:42.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.22:39:42.75/tpi/1d,4915,2u,7904,3u,9600,4u,14800,i1,9602 2003.253.22:39:42.75/tpi/9u,4107,au,9830,bu,8696,cu,5635,du,4554,eu,6559,i2,4006 2003.253.22:39:42.76/tpi/5u,11788,6u,11087,7u,10054,8d,4813,i3,27181 2003.253.22:39:42.77/tpdiff/1d,2358,2u,3290,3u,4647,4u,7229,i1,5044 2003.253.22:39:42.77/tpdiff/9u,1903,au,4685,bu,4176,cu,1828,du,1537,eu,2370,i2,1880 2003.253.22:39:42.78/tpdiff/5u,6678,6u,5007,7u,4893,8d,2269,i3,15164 2003.253.22:39:42.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.22:39:42.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.22:39:42.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.22:39:42.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.22:39:42.82/tsys/1d,51.7,2u,52.3,3u,49.5,4u,51.6,i1,49.0 2003.253.22:39:42.82/tsys/9u,63.8,au,60.3,bu,57.3,cu,84.1,du,76.9,eu,72.2,i2,62.7 2003.253.22:39:42.83/tsys/5u,44.4,6u,53.0,7u,47.3,8d,43.6,i3,46.3 2003.253.22:39:42.98/fmout-gps/+7.7769E-006 2003.253.22:39:42.99:!2003.253.22:41:49 2003.253.22:39:43.06#setcl#time/312320681,4,2003,253,22,39,43.03,1.976,4.858,1 2003.253.22:39:43.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:41:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:41:49.00:disc_end 2003.253.22:41:49.49:disc_pos 2003.253.22:41:49.50/disc_pos/260842338024,256428609168, 2003.253.22:41:49.50:disc_check 2003.253.22:41:49.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h41m49.200s,57888,0.00250s,80000,7650323736, 2003.253.22:41:49.89:postob 2003.253.22:41:49.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 496511 : 1153 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 496387 : 1285 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 496683 : 979 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 496606 : 1058 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 496423 : 1242 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 496553 : 1107 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 496655 : 1007 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:49.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 496645 : 1020 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:50.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.253.22:41:50.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.77 2003.253.22:41:50.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.90 2003.253.22:41:50.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.92 2003.253.22:41:50.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.253.22:41:50.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.22:41:50.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.253.22:41:50.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.22:41:50.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.253.22:41:50.95:scan_name=253-2245,rd0308,160 2003.253.22:41:50.95:source=0014+813,001404.48,811828.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:41:53.97:setup4f 2003.253.22:41:58.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:58.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:41:58.04:!2003.253.22:44:57 2003.253.22:44:57.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:44:57.01/disc_pos/260842338024,260841338024, 2003.253.22:44:57.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.22:44:57.26:!2003.253.22:44:57 2003.253.22:44:57.26:preob 2003.253.22:44:57.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:44:57.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:45:00.86/tpical/1d,7262,2u,11174,3u,14184,4u,21769,i1,14530 2003.253.22:45:00.86/tpical/9u,6038,au,14614,bu,12992,cu,7680,du,5994,eu,8954,i2,5903 2003.253.22:45:00.86/tpical/5u,18264,6u,15941,7u,14715,8d,6999,i3,41813 2003.253.22:45:03.52/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,98 2003.253.22:45:03.52/tpzero/9u,59,au,407,bu,723,cu,510,du,616,eu,855,i2,75 2003.253.22:45:03.52/tpzero/5u,389,6u,871,7u,1156,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.22:45:06.61:!2003.253.22:45:07 2003.253.22:45:07.00:disc_pos 2003.253.22:45:07.00/disc_pos/261098213376,260841338024, 2003.253.22:45:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.22:45:07.01:midob 2003.253.22:45:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.22:45:07.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.22:45:07.11/cable/+3.5870024E-02 2003.253.22:45:07.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9555,4016 2003.253.22:45:07.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27139 2003.253.22:45:07.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7887 2003.253.22:45:07.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11123 2003.253.22:45:07.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8785 2003.253.22:45:08.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.22:45:08.56/tpi/1d,4905,2u,7888,3u,9556,4u,14726,i1,9562 2003.253.22:45:08.56/tpi/9u,4124,au,9870,bu,8791,cu,5832,du,4426,eu,6549,i2,4012 2003.253.22:45:08.57/tpi/5u,11789,6u,11133,7u,10056,8d,4826,i3,27166 2003.253.22:45:08.58/tpdiff/1d,2357,2u,3286,3u,4628,4u,7043,i1,4968 2003.253.22:45:08.58/tpdiff/9u,1914,au,4744,bu,4201,cu,1848,du,1568,eu,2405,i2,1891 2003.253.22:45:08.59/tpdiff/5u,6475,6u,4808,7u,4659,8d,2173,i3,14647 2003.253.22:45:08.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.22:45:08.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.22:45:08.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.22:45:08.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.22:45:08.64/tsys/1d,51.6,2u,52.3,3u,49.4,4u,52.6,i1,49.5 2003.253.22:45:08.64/tsys/9u,63.7,au,59.8,bu,57.6,cu,86.4,du,72.9,eu,71.0,i2,62.5 2003.253.22:45:08.65/tsys/5u,45.8,6u,55.5,7u,49.7,8d,45.6,i3,47.9 2003.253.22:45:08.98/fmout-gps/+7.7294E-006 2003.253.22:45:08.99:!2003.253.22:47:47 2003.253.22:45:09.06#setcl#time/312353280,4,2003,253,22,45,09.03,1.988,4.949,1 2003.253.22:45:09.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.22:47:47.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.22:47:47.01:disc_end 2003.253.22:47:47.49:disc_pos 2003.253.22:47:47.50/disc_pos/266280885552,260842338024, 2003.253.22:47:47.50:disc_check 2003.253.22:47:47.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d22h47m47.210s,28724,0.00250s,80000,6017801636, 2003.253.22:47:47.89:postob 2003.253.22:47:47.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 506859 : 1183 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:47.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 506742 : 1306 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:47.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 507035 : 1004 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:47.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 506955 : 1085 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:47.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 506771 : 1273 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:47.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 506906 : 1130 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:48.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 507007 : 1032 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:48.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 506996 : 1045 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:48.13/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.253.22:47:48.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.41 2003.253.22:47:48.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.41 2003.253.22:47:48.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.92 2003.253.22:47:48.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.45 2003.253.22:47:48.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.22:47:48.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.253.22:47:48.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.253.22:47:49.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.253.22:47:49.00:scan_name=253-2305,rd0308,98 2003.253.22:47:49.00:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.22:47:52.02:setup4f 2003.253.22:47:55.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:56.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.22:47:56.03:!2003.253.23:05:25 2003.253.23:03:32.90;"weather: clear 2003.253.23:05:25.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:05:25.02/disc_pos/266280885552,266279885552, 2003.253.23:05:25.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:05:25.25:!2003.253.23:05:25 2003.253.23:05:25.25:preob 2003.253.23:05:25.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:05:25.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:05:28.83/tpical/1d,7456,2u,11435,3u,14487,4u,22069,i1,14824 2003.253.23:05:28.83/tpical/9u,6171,au,14871,bu,13209,cu,7083,du,6517,eu,9027,i2,6057 2003.253.23:05:28.83/tpical/5u,18671,6u,16141,7u,15029,8d,7096,i3,42485 2003.253.23:05:31.48/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,94 2003.253.23:05:31.48/tpzero/9u,60,au,408,bu,722,cu,510,du,617,eu,854,i2,77 2003.253.23:05:31.48/tpzero/5u,389,6u,872,7u,1156,8d,1011,i3,188 2003.253.23:05:34.57:!2003.253.23:05:35 2003.253.23:05:35.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:05:35.00/disc_pos/266536701952,266279885552, 2003.253.23:05:35.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:05:35.01:midob 2003.253.23:05:35.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:05:35.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:05:35.07/cable/+3.5875162E-02 2003.253.23:05:35.14/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9778,4168 2003.253.23:05:35.21/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27573 2003.253.23:05:35.28/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8096 2003.253.23:05:35.35/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11203 2003.253.23:05:35.42/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8971 2003.253.23:05:35.98/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:05:36.51/tpi/1d,5069,2u,8100,3u,9771,4u,14929,i1,9772 2003.253.23:05:36.51/tpi/9u,4347,au,10108,bu,8972,cu,5331,du,4950,eu,6635,i2,4167 2003.253.23:05:36.52/tpi/5u,12055,6u,11195,7u,10232,8d,4883,i3,27555 2003.253.23:05:36.53/tpdiff/1d,2387,2u,3335,3u,4716,4u,7140,i1,5052 2003.253.23:05:36.54/tpdiff/9u,1824,au,4763,bu,4237,cu,1752,du,1567,eu,2392,i2,1890 2003.253.23:05:36.54/tpdiff/5u,6616,6u,4946,7u,4797,8d,2213,i3,14930 2003.253.23:05:36.55/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:05:36.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:05:36.56/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:05:36.57/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:05:36.58/tsys/1d,52.7,2u,53.2,3u,49.7,4u,52.7,i1,49.8 2003.253.23:05:36.59/tsys/9u,70.5,au,61.1,bu,58.4,cu,82.6,du,83.0,eu,72.5,i2,64.9 2003.253.23:05:36.60/tsys/5u,45.8,6u,54.3,7u,49.2,8d,45.5,i3,47.7 2003.253.23:05:36.98/fmout-gps/+7.7339E-006 2003.253.23:05:37.00:!2003.253.23:07:13 2003.253.23:05:37.07#setcl#time/312476078,4,2003,253,23,05,37.04,1.996,5.290,1 2003.253.23:05:37.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:07:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:07:13.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:07:13.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:07:13.49/disc_pos/269735496152,266280885552, 2003.253.23:07:13.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:07:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h07m13.200s,18548,0.00250s,80000,33857079576, 2003.253.23:07:13.89:postob 2003.253.23:07:13.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 513434 : 1200 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 513316 : 1324 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 513608 : 1023 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 513530 : 1102 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 513347 : 1291 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 513484 : 1144 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 513582 : 1051 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 513566 : 1067 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:14.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.253.23:07:14.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.23:07:14.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.253.23:07:14.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.253.23:07:14.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.99 2003.253.23:07:14.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.23:07:14.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.253.23:07:14.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.80 2003.253.23:07:14.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.253.23:07:14.96:scan_name=253-2308,rd0308,98 2003.253.23:07:14.96:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:07:17.97:setup4f 2003.253.23:07:22.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:22.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:07:22.04:!2003.253.23:07:57 2003.253.23:07:57.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:07:57.01/disc_pos/269735496152,269734496152, 2003.253.23:07:57.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:07:57.26:!2003.253.23:07:57 2003.253.23:07:57.26:preob 2003.253.23:07:57.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:07:57.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:08:00.84/tpical/1d,9152,2u,13840,3u,17702,4u,27643,i1,18483 2003.253.23:08:00.84/tpical/9u,6723,au,16119,bu,14202,cu,11009,du,12356,eu,12889 2003.253.23:08:00.84/tpical/i2,6601 2003.253.23:08:00.84/tpical/5u,23510,6u,20132,7u,18871,8d,8801,i3,54044 2003.253.23:08:03.50/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,99 2003.253.23:08:03.50/tpzero/9u,60,au,408,bu,722,cu,510,du,617,eu,855,i2,73 2003.253.23:08:03.50/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1157,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.23:08:06.59:!2003.253.23:08:07 2003.253.23:08:07.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:08:07.00/disc_pos/269991329792,269734496152, 2003.253.23:08:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:08:07.01:midob 2003.253.23:08:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:08:07.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:08:07.35/cable/+3.5876236E-02 2003.253.23:08:07.42/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13329,4665 2003.253.23:08:07.49/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,38334 2003.253.23:08:07.56/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10479 2003.253.23:08:07.63/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14906 2003.253.23:08:07.70/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9959 2003.253.23:08:08.26/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:08:08.78/tpi/1d,6744,2u,10472,3u,12959,4u,20332,i1,13320 2003.253.23:08:08.78/tpi/9u,4777,au,11406,bu,9959,cu,9798,du,11495,eu,11041,i2,4669 2003.253.23:08:08.80/tpi/5u,16593,6u,14901,7u,13793,8d,6444,i3,38334 2003.253.23:08:08.80/tpdiff/1d,2408,2u,3368,3u,4743,4u,7311,i1,5163 2003.253.23:08:08.81/tpdiff/9u,1946,au,4713,bu,4243,cu,1211,du,861,eu,1848,i2,1932 2003.253.23:08:08.82/tpdiff/5u,6917,6u,5231,7u,5078,8d,2357,i3,15710 2003.253.23:08:08.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:08:08.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:08:08.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:08:08.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:08:08.85/tsys/1d,70.4,2u,70.9,3u,66.9,4u,70.6,i1,66.6 2003.253.23:08:08.86/tsys/9u,72.7,au,70.0,bu,65.3,cu,230.1,du,379.0,eu,165.4,i2,71.4 2003.253.23:08:08.87/tsys/5u,60.9,6u,69.7,7u,64.7,8d,59.9,i3,63.1 2003.253.23:08:08.98/fmout-gps/+7.7904E-006 2003.253.23:08:08.98:!2003.253.23:09:45 2003.253.23:08:09.06#setcl#time/312491277,4,2003,253,23,08,09.04,2.026,5.332,2 2003.253.23:08:09.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:09:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:09:45.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:09:45.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:09:45.49/disc_pos/273189804304,269735496152, 2003.253.23:09:45.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:09:45.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h09m45.205s,51364,0.00250s,80000,1409819032, 2003.253.23:09:45.89:postob 2003.253.23:09:45.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 520008 : 1217 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 519889 : 1343 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 520180 : 1042 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 520110 : 1116 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 519923 : 1306 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 520067 : 1153 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:45.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 520153 : 1073 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:46.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 520141 : 1083 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:46.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.253.23:09:46.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.253.23:09:46.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.06 2003.253.23:09:46.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.253.23:09:46.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.74 2003.253.23:09:46.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.23:09:46.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:09:46.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.73 2003.253.23:09:47.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.253.23:09:47.00:scan_name=253-2312,rd0308,306 2003.253.23:09:47.01:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:09:50.02:setup4f 2003.253.23:09:53.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:54.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:09:54.03:!2003.253.23:12:46 2003.253.23:12:46.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:12:46.02/disc_pos/273189804304,273188804304, 2003.253.23:12:46.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:12:46.26:!2003.253.23:12:46 2003.253.23:12:46.26:preob 2003.253.23:12:46.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:12:46.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:12:49.86/tpical/1d,9479,2u,14300,3u,18275,4u,28349,i1,19000 2003.253.23:12:49.86/tpical/9u,6877,au,16091,bu,14044,cu,13348,du,10064,eu,10140 2003.253.23:12:49.86/tpical/i2,6793 2003.253.23:12:49.86/tpical/5u,23973,6u,20426,7u,19006,8d,8924,i3,55166 2003.253.23:12:52.52/tpzero/1d,226,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,99 2003.253.23:12:52.52/tpzero/9u,61,au,408,bu,723,cu,510,du,616,eu,856,i2,76 2003.253.23:12:52.52/tpzero/5u,388,6u,871,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.253.23:12:55.61:!2003.253.23:12:56 2003.253.23:12:56.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:12:56.00/disc_pos/273445679104,273188804304, 2003.253.23:12:56.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:12:56.01:midob 2003.253.23:12:56.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:12:56.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:12:56.08/cable/+3.5877872E-02 2003.253.23:12:56.15/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13875,4871 2003.253.23:12:56.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,39612 2003.253.23:12:56.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10945 2003.253.23:12:56.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15368 2003.253.23:12:56.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10142 2003.253.23:12:57.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:12:57.54/tpi/1d,7086,2u,10952,3u,13554,4u,21167,i1,13891 2003.253.23:12:57.54/tpi/9u,4951,au,11529,bu,10043,cu,11488,du,8301,eu,7841,i2,4874 2003.253.23:12:57.55/tpi/5u,17178,6u,15384,7u,14067,8d,6598,i3,39683 2003.253.23:12:57.56/tpdiff/1d,2393,2u,3348,3u,4721,4u,7182,i1,5109 2003.253.23:12:57.56/tpdiff/9u,1926,au,4562,bu,4001,cu,1860,du,1763,eu,2299,i2,1919 2003.253.23:12:57.57/tpdiff/5u,6795,6u,5042,7u,4939,8d,2326,i3,15483 2003.253.23:12:57.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:12:57.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:12:57.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:12:57.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:12:57.61/tsys/1d,74.5,2u,75.1,3u,70.5,4u,74.9,i1,70.2 2003.253.23:12:57.62/tsys/9u,76.2,au,73.1,bu,69.9,cu,177.1,du,130.8,eu,91.1,i2,75.0 2003.253.23:12:57.62/tsys/5u,64.2,6u,74.8,7u,68.0,8d,62.5,i3,66.3 2003.253.23:12:57.98/fmout-gps/+7.7549E-006 2003.253.23:12:58.00:!2003.253.23:18:02 2003.253.23:12:58.06#setcl#time/312520176,4,2003,253,23,12,58.03,1.995,5.412,1 2003.253.23:12:58.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:18:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:18:02.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:18:02.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:18:02.50/disc_pos/283300485160,273189804304, 2003.253.23:18:02.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:18:02.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h18m02.210s,62460,0.00250s,80000,5793468048, 2003.253.23:18:02.89:postob 2003.253.23:18:02.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 539255 : 1259 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 539132 : 1391 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 539426 : 1085 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 539358 : 1157 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 539165 : 1353 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 539305 : 1207 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 539398 : 1117 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:02.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 539392 : 1121 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:03.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.253.23:18:03.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.21 2003.253.23:18:03.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.58 2003.253.23:18:03.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.253.23:18:03.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.89 2003.253.23:18:03.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.23:18:03.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:18:03.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.55 2003.253.23:18:03.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,53.49 2003.253.23:18:03.99:scan_name=253-2320,rd0308,431 2003.253.23:18:03.99:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:18:07.01:setup4f 2003.253.23:18:10.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:11.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:18:11.03:!2003.253.23:20:22 2003.253.23:20:22.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:20:22.01/disc_pos/283300485160,283299485160, 2003.253.23:20:22.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:20:22.27:!2003.253.23:20:22 2003.253.23:20:22.27:preob 2003.253.23:20:22.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:20:22.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:20:25.86/tpical/1d,7657,2u,11722,3u,14984,4u,23088,i1,15358 2003.253.23:20:25.86/tpical/9u,6232,au,15010,bu,13318,cu,6992,du,6266,eu,9155,i2,6114 2003.253.23:20:25.86/tpical/5u,19790,6u,17325,7u,16116,8d,7622,i3,45408 2003.253.23:20:28.51/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,92 2003.253.23:20:28.51/tpzero/9u,61,au,407,bu,723,cu,510,du,615,eu,855,i2,75 2003.253.23:20:28.51/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.23:20:31.60:!2003.253.23:20:32 2003.253.23:20:32.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:20:32.00/disc_pos/283556311040,283299485160, 2003.253.23:20:32.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:20:32.01:midob 2003.253.23:20:32.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:20:32.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:20:32.20/cable/+3.5877791E-02 2003.253.23:20:32.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10184,4163 2003.253.23:20:32.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29547 2003.253.23:20:32.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8335 2003.253.23:20:32.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12039 2003.253.23:20:32.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9023 2003.253.23:20:33.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:20:33.63/tpi/1d,5234,2u,8338,3u,10178,4u,15674,i1,10182 2003.253.23:20:33.63/tpi/9u,4286,au,10201,bu,9023,cu,5172,du,4686,eu,6748,i2,4163 2003.253.23:20:33.64/tpi/5u,12822,6u,12047,7u,10935,8d,5209,i3,29566 2003.253.23:20:33.65/tpdiff/1d,2423,2u,3384,3u,4806,4u,7414,i1,5176 2003.253.23:20:33.65/tpdiff/9u,1946,au,4809,bu,4295,cu,1820,du,1580,eu,2407,i2,1951 2003.253.23:20:33.66/tpdiff/5u,6968,6u,5278,7u,5181,8d,2413,i3,15842 2003.253.23:20:33.67/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:20:33.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:20:33.68/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:20:33.69/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:20:33.70/tsys/1d,53.7,2u,54.2,3u,51.0,4u,53.3,i1,50.7 2003.253.23:20:33.70/tsys/9u,65.1,au,61.1,bu,58.0,cu,76.8,du,77.3,eu,73.4,i2,62.9 2003.253.23:20:33.71/tsys/5u,46.4,6u,55.1,7u,49.1,8d,45.2,i3,48.2 2003.253.23:20:33.98/fmout-gps/+7.7244E-006 2003.253.23:20:34.01:!2003.253.23:27:43 2003.253.23:20:34.08#setcl#time/312565776,4,2003,253,23,20,34.04,1.993,5.539,1 2003.253.23:20:34.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:27:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:27:43.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:27:43.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:27:43.50/disc_pos/297410548080,283300485160, 2003.253.23:27:43.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:27:43.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h27m43.203s,23400,0.00250s,80000,4481736140, 2003.253.23:27:43.89:postob 2003.253.23:27:43.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 566104 : 1328 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 565990 : 1451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 566280 : 1149 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 566219 : 1216 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 566011 : 1425 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 566174 : 1258 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 566257 : 1176 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:43.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 566240 : 1191 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:44.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.253.23:27:44.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.253.23:27:44.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.253.23:27:44.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.253.23:27:44.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.253.23:27:44.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.253.23:27:44.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:27:44.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.253.23:27:44.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.253.23:27:44.95:scan_name=253-2332,rd0308,128 2003.253.23:27:44.95:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:27:47.96:setup4f 2003.253.23:27:52.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:52.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:27:52.05:!2003.253.23:32:35 2003.253.23:32:35.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:32:35.01/disc_pos/297410548080,297409548080, 2003.253.23:32:35.01:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:32:35.26:!2003.253.23:32:35 2003.253.23:32:35.26:preob 2003.253.23:32:35.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:32:35.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:32:38.84/tpical/1d,7313,2u,11261,3u,14257,4u,21973,i1,14633 2003.253.23:32:38.84/tpical/9u,6078,au,12915,bu,10828,cu,$$$$$,du,10488,eu,8062 2003.253.23:32:38.84/tpical/i2,5923 2003.253.23:32:38.84/tpical/5u,19009,6u,16591,7u,15344,8d,7267,i3,43005 2003.253.23:32:41.49/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,756,4u,464,i1,93 2003.253.23:32:41.49/tpzero/9u,61,au,408,bu,723,cu,511,du,616,eu,855,i2,77 2003.253.23:32:41.49/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.23:32:44.58:!2003.253.23:32:45 2003.253.23:32:45.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:32:45.00/disc_pos/297666289664,297409548080, 2003.253.23:32:45.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:32:45.03:midob 2003.253.23:32:45.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:32:45.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:32:45.16/cable/+3.5875921E-02 2003.253.23:32:45.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9446,3979 2003.253.23:32:45.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27147 2003.253.23:32:45.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7871 2003.253.23:32:45.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11217 2003.253.23:32:45.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7363 2003.253.23:32:46.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:32:46.59/tpi/1d,4889,2u,7871,3u,9464,4u,14502,i1,9443 2003.253.23:32:46.59/tpi/9u,4120,au,8760,bu,7364,cu,$$$$$,du,9332,eu,6278,i2,3974 2003.253.23:32:46.60/tpi/5u,11939,6u,11201,7u,10147,8d,4866,i3,27126 2003.253.23:32:46.61/tpdiff/1d,2424,2u,3390,3u,4793,4u,7471,i1,5190 2003.253.23:32:46.62/tpdiff/9u,1958,au,4155,bu,3464,cu,$$$$$,du,1156,eu,1784,i2,1949 2003.253.23:32:46.62/tpdiff/5u,7070,6u,5390,7u,5197,8d,2401,i3,15879 2003.253.23:32:46.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:32:46.64/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:32:46.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:32:46.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:32:46.66?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.23:32:46.67/tsys/1d,50.0,2u,50.5,3u,47.2,4u,48.9,i1,46.8 2003.253.23:32:46.67/tsys/9u,62.2,au,60.3,bu,57.5,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,226.2,eu,91.2,i2,60.0 2003.253.23:32:46.68/tsys/5u,42.5,6u,49.8,7u,45.0,8d,41.8,i3,44.1 2003.253.23:32:46.97/fmout-gps/+7.8114E-006 2003.253.23:32:46.98:!2003.253.23:34:53 2003.253.23:32:47.06#setcl#time/312639074,4,2003,253,23,32,47.03,1.964,5.743,1 2003.253.23:32:47.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:34:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:34:53.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:34:53.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:34:53.49/disc_pos/301824475288,297410548080, 2003.253.23:34:53.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:34:53.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h34m53.197s,70072,0.00250s,80000,9345866120, 2003.253.23:34:53.89:postob 2003.253.23:34:53.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 574502 : 1352 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 574386 : 1477 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 574682 : 1169 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 574622 : 1237 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 574413 : 1445 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 574572 : 1284 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:53.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 574655 : 1200 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:54.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 574645 : 1208 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:34:54.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.253.23:34:54.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.48 2003.253.23:34:54.35/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.48 2003.253.23:34:54.46/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.253.23:34:54.57/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.253.23:34:54.68/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.23:34:54.79/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:34:54.90/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.41 2003.253.23:34:55.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.62 2003.253.23:34:55.01:scan_name=253-2341,rd0308,272 2003.253.23:34:55.01:source=1749+096,174910.41,093942.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:34:58.03:setup4f 2003.253.23:35:02.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:35:02.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:35:02.05:!2003.253.23:41:15 2003.253.23:41:15.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:41:15.01/disc_pos/301824475288,301823475288, 2003.253.23:41:15.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:41:15.25:!2003.253.23:41:15 2003.253.23:41:15.25:preob 2003.253.23:41:15.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:41:15.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:41:18.83/tpical/1d,7396,2u,11349,3u,14418,4u,21942,i1,14719 2003.253.23:41:18.83/tpical/9u,6165,au,14499,bu,12630,cu,18471,du,7641,eu,9127,i2,6035 2003.253.23:41:18.83/tpical/5u,18968,6u,16325,7u,15222,8d,7171,i3,42852 2003.253.23:41:21.48/tpzero/1d,227,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,94 2003.253.23:41:21.48/tpzero/9u,61,au,408,bu,723,cu,511,du,616,eu,855,i2,77 2003.253.23:41:21.48/tpzero/5u,389,6u,871,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.23:41:24.57:!2003.253.23:41:25 2003.253.23:41:25.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:41:25.00/disc_pos/302080434176,301823475288, 2003.253.23:41:25.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:41:25.01:midob 2003.253.23:41:25.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:41:25.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:41:25.34/cable/+3.5878621E-02 2003.253.23:41:25.41/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9558,4081 2003.253.23:41:25.48/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27195 2003.253.23:41:25.55/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7961 2003.253.23:41:25.62/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11123 2003.253.23:41:25.69/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8437 2003.253.23:41:26.25/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:41:26.77/tpi/1d,4972,2u,7961,3u,9589,4u,14577,i1,9560 2003.253.23:41:26.77/tpi/9u,4183,au,9755,bu,8427,cu,17737,du,6115,eu,6681,i2,4081 2003.253.23:41:26.79/tpi/5u,12001,6u,11115,7u,10131,8d,4824,i3,27200 2003.253.23:41:26.80/tpdiff/1d,2424,2u,3388,3u,4829,4u,7365,i1,5159 2003.253.23:41:26.80/tpdiff/9u,1982,au,4744,bu,4203,cu,734,du,1526,eu,2446,i2,1954 2003.253.23:41:26.81/tpdiff/5u,6967,6u,5210,7u,5091,8d,2347,i3,15652 2003.253.23:41:26.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:41:26.82/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:41:26.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:41:26.83/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:41:26.85/tsys/1d,50.9,2u,51.3,3u,47.6,4u,49.8,i1,47.7 2003.253.23:41:26.85/tsys/9u,62.4,au,59.1,bu,55.0,cu,704.1,du,108.1,eu,71.5,i2,61.5 2003.253.23:41:26.86/tsys/5u,43.3,6u,51.1,7u,45.8,8d,42.3,i3,44.9 2003.253.23:41:26.97/fmout-gps/+7.8014E-006 2003.253.23:41:26.99:!2003.253.23:45:57 2003.253.23:41:27.05#setcl#time/312691072,4,2003,253,23,41,27.03,1.998,5.887,2 2003.253.23:41:27.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:45:57.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:45:57.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:45:57.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:45:57.50/disc_pos/310846808280,301824475288, 2003.253.23:45:57.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:45:57.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h45m57.205s,41880,0.00250s,80000,12225935200, 2003.253.23:45:57.90:postob 2003.253.23:45:57.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 591667 : 1400 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:57.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 591560 : 1516 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:57.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 591855 : 1209 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:57.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 591798 : 1273 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:57.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 591588 : 1483 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:57.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 591751 : 1319 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:58.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 591838 : 1232 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:58.02/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 591807 : 1259 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:45:58.14/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.88 2003.253.23:45:58.25/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.253.23:45:58.36/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.253.23:45:58.47/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.253.23:45:58.58/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.40 2003.253.23:45:58.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.23:45:58.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:45:58.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.94 2003.253.23:45:59.04/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.253.23:45:59.04:scan_name=253-2349,rd0308,98 2003.253.23:45:59.04:source=1307+121,130704.35,121022.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:46:02.06:setup4f 2003.253.23:46:06.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:46:06.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:46:06.03:!2003.253.23:49:43 2003.253.23:49:43.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:49:43.02/disc_pos/310846808280,310845808280, 2003.253.23:49:43.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:49:43.25:!2003.253.23:49:43 2003.253.23:49:43.26:preob 2003.253.23:49:43.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:49:43.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:49:46.86/tpical/1d,8243,2u,12572,3u,16056,4u,24754,i1,16542 2003.253.23:49:46.86/tpical/9u,6531,au,15691,bu,13819,cu,7341,du,7361,eu,9672,i2,6378 2003.253.23:49:46.86/tpical/5u,21340,6u,18435,7u,17241,8d,8125,i3,48785 2003.253.23:49:49.53/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,94 2003.253.23:49:49.53/tpzero/9u,61,au,407,bu,723,cu,509,du,615,eu,855,i2,79 2003.253.23:49:49.53/tpzero/5u,388,6u,872,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.23:49:52.62:!2003.253.23:49:53 2003.253.23:49:53.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:49:53.00/disc_pos/311102832640,310845808280, 2003.253.23:49:53.01:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:49:53.02:midob 2003.253.23:49:53.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:49:53.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:49:53.31/cable/+3.5881474E-02 2003.253.23:49:53.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11348,4404 2003.253.23:49:53.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32829 2003.253.23:49:53.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9158 2003.253.23:49:53.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13152 2003.253.23:49:53.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9436 2003.253.23:49:54.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:49:54.75/tpi/1d,5818,2u,9159,3u,11234,4u,17403,i1,11348 2003.253.23:49:54.75/tpi/9u,4549,au,10838,bu,9448,cu,5485,du,5725,eu,7222,i2,4411 2003.253.23:49:54.76/tpi/5u,14295,6u,13142,7u,12038,8d,5702,i3,32832 2003.253.23:49:54.77/tpdiff/1d,2425,2u,3413,3u,4822,4u,7351,i1,5194 2003.253.23:49:54.77/tpdiff/9u,1982,au,4853,bu,4371,cu,1856,du,1636,eu,2450,i2,1967 2003.253.23:49:54.79/tpdiff/5u,7045,6u,5293,7u,5203,8d,2423,i3,15953 2003.253.23:49:54.80/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:49:54.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:49:54.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:49:54.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:49:54.83/tsys/1d,59.9,2u,60.0,3u,56.5,4u,59.9,i1,56.3 2003.253.23:49:54.83/tsys/9u,67.9,au,64.5,bu,59.9,cu,80.4,du,93.7,eu,78.0,i2,66.1 2003.253.23:49:54.84/tsys/5u,51.3,6u,60.3,7u,54.4,8d,50.3,i3,53.2 2003.253.23:49:54.98/fmout-gps/+7.7974E-006 2003.253.23:49:55.00:!2003.253.23:51:31 2003.253.23:49:55.06#setcl#time/312741871,4,2003,253,23,49,55.03,1.991,6.028,1 2003.253.23:49:55.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:51:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:51:31.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:51:31.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:51:31.49/disc_pos/314300985448,310846808280, 2003.253.23:51:31.49:disc_check 2003.253.23:51:31.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h51m31.203s,35576,0.00250s,80000,7233749136, 2003.253.23:51:31.88:postob 2003.253.23:51:31.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 598244 : 1414 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 598128 : 1543 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 598430 : 1225 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 598370 : 1293 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 598163 : 1499 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 598327 : 1334 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 598408 : 1253 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:31.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 598380 : 1277 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:32.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.13 2003.253.23:51:32.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.87 2003.253.23:51:32.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.87 2003.253.23:51:32.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.253.23:51:32.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.253.23:51:32.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.23:51:32.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.253.23:51:32.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.12 2003.253.23:51:32.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.253.23:51:32.93:scan_name=253-2354,rd0308,98 2003.253.23:51:32.93:source=0955+476,095508.50,473928.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:51:35.95:setup4f 2003.253.23:51:40.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:40.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:51:40.05:!2003.253.23:54:04 2003.253.23:54:04.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:54:04.01/disc_pos/314300985448,314299985448, 2003.253.23:54:04.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:54:04.24:!2003.253.23:54:04 2003.253.23:54:04.24:preob 2003.253.23:54:04.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:54:04.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:54:07.85/tpical/1d,8782,2u,13298,3u,17049,4u,26157,i1,17548 2003.253.23:54:07.85/tpical/9u,6710,au,16159,bu,14219,cu,7727,du,6497,eu,9620,i2,6595 2003.253.23:54:07.85/tpical/5u,22665,6u,19371,7u,18231,8d,8573,i3,51787 2003.253.23:54:10.50/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,466,i1,98 2003.253.23:54:10.50/tpzero/9u,61,au,407,bu,723,cu,511,du,615,eu,855,i2,76 2003.253.23:54:10.50/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1156,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.253.23:54:13.59:!2003.253.23:54:14 2003.253.23:54:14.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:54:14.00/disc_pos/314556923904,314299985448, 2003.253.23:54:14.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:54:14.01:midob 2003.253.23:54:14.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:54:14.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:54:14.30/cable/+3.5880996E-02 2003.253.23:54:14.37/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12358,4624 2003.253.23:54:14.44/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,35923 2003.253.23:54:14.51/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9879 2003.253.23:54:14.58/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14168 2003.253.23:54:14.65/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9814 2003.253.23:54:15.21/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:54:15.73/tpi/1d,6331,2u,9880,3u,12204,4u,18892,i1,12364 2003.253.23:54:15.73/tpi/9u,4729,au,11275,bu,9818,cu,5906,du,4920,eu,7194,i2,4633 2003.253.23:54:15.74/tpi/5u,15650,6u,14168,7u,13084,8d,6158,i3,35944 2003.253.23:54:15.75/tpdiff/1d,2451,2u,3418,3u,4845,4u,7265,i1,5184 2003.253.23:54:15.75/tpdiff/9u,1981,au,4884,bu,4401,cu,1821,du,1577,eu,2426,i2,1962 2003.253.23:54:15.76/tpdiff/5u,7015,6u,5203,7u,5147,8d,2415,i3,15843 2003.253.23:54:15.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:54:15.77/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:54:15.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:54:15.79/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:54:15.80/tsys/1d,64.7,2u,65.4,3u,61.4,4u,65.9,i1,61.5 2003.253.23:54:15.81/tsys/9u,70.7,au,66.8,bu,62.0,cu,88.9,du,81.9,eu,78.4,i2,69.7 2003.253.23:54:15.82/tsys/5u,56.6,6u,66.5,7u,60.3,8d,55.4,i3,58.7 2003.253.23:54:15.97/fmout-gps/+7.7689E-006 2003.253.23:54:15.99:!2003.253.23:55:52 2003.253.23:54:16.06#setcl#time/312767971,4,2003,253,23,54,16.03,1.967,6.101,1 2003.253.23:54:16.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:55:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:55:52.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:55:52.48:disc_pos 2003.253.23:55:52.49/disc_pos/317755722136,314300985448, 2003.253.23:55:52.49:disc_check 2003.253.23:55:52.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h55m52.205s,44760,0.00250s,80000,4897334128, 2003.253.23:55:52.88:postob 2003.253.23:55:52.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 604822 : 1428 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 604715 : 1548 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 605006 : 1241 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 604946 : 1311 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 604737 : 1517 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 604909 : 1347 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 604985 : 1268 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:52.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 604953 : 1297 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:55:53.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.25 2003.253.23:55:53.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.62 2003.253.23:55:53.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.38 2003.253.23:55:53.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.253.23:55:53.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.253.23:55:53.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.253.23:55:53.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.253.23:55:53.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.92 2003.253.23:55:53.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.23:55:53.99:scan_name=253-2358,rd0308,98 2003.253.23:55:53.99:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:55:57.01:setup4f 2003.253.23:56:00.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.253.23:56:01.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.253.23:56:01.03:!2003.253.23:58:05 2003.253.23:58:05.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:58:05.02/disc_pos/317755722136,317754722136, 2003.253.23:58:05.02:disc_start=on 2003.253.23:58:05.25:!2003.253.23:58:05 2003.253.23:58:05.25:preob 2003.253.23:58:05.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:58:05.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:58:08.83/tpical/1d,7408,2u,11390,3u,14478,4u,22203,i1,14777 2003.253.23:58:08.83/tpical/9u,6134,au,13597,bu,11487,cu,49932,du,9291,eu,8812,i2,5935 2003.253.23:58:08.83/tpical/5u,19246,6u,16658,7u,15567,8d,7379,i3,43536 2003.253.23:58:11.49/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,95 2003.253.23:58:11.49/tpzero/9u,61,au,407,bu,723,cu,510,du,616,eu,855,i2,72 2003.253.23:58:11.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.253.23:58:14.58:!2003.253.23:58:15 2003.253.23:58:15.00:disc_pos 2003.253.23:58:15.00/disc_pos/318011670528,317754722136, 2003.253.23:58:15.00:data_valid=on 2003.253.23:58:15.01:midob 2003.253.23:58:15.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.253.23:58:15.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.253.23:58:15.15/cable/+3.5877958E-02 2003.253.23:58:15.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9488,3985 2003.253.23:58:15.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27266 2003.253.23:58:15.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7941 2003.253.23:58:15.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11248 2003.253.23:58:15.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7573 2003.253.23:58:16.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.253.23:58:16.58/tpi/1d,4947,2u,7944,3u,9569,4u,14638,i1,9486 2003.253.23:58:16.58/tpi/9u,4138,au,8976,bu,7521,cu,52052,du,8369,eu,7278,i2,3992 2003.253.23:58:16.60/tpi/5u,12001,6u,11220,7u,10214,8d,4891,i3,27247 2003.253.23:58:16.61/tpdiff/1d,2461,2u,3446,3u,4909,4u,7565,i1,5291 2003.253.23:58:16.61/tpdiff/9u,1996,au,4621,bu,3966,cu,-2120,du,922,eu,1534,i2,1943 2003.253.23:58:16.62/tpdiff/5u,7245,6u,5438,7u,5353,8d,2488,i3,16289 2003.253.23:58:16.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.253.23:58:16.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.253.23:58:16.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.253.23:58:16.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.253.23:58:16.65?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.253.23:58:16.66/tsys/1d,49.9,2u,50.3,3u,46.7,4u,48.7,i1,46.1 2003.253.23:58:16.67/tsys/9u,61.3,au,55.6,bu,51.4,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,252.3,eu,125.6 2003.253.23:58:16.67/tsys/i2,60.5 2003.253.23:58:16.68/tsys/5u,41.7,6u,49.5,7u,44.0,8d,40.6,i3,43.2 2003.253.23:58:16.98/fmout-gps/+7.7334E-006 2003.253.23:58:17.00:!2003.253.23:59:53 2003.253.23:58:17.07#setcl#time/312792070,4,2003,253,23,58,17.04,2.024,6.168,2 2003.253.23:58:17.07#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.253.23:59:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.253.23:59:53.00:disc_end 2003.253.23:59:53.49:disc_pos 2003.253.23:59:53.50/disc_pos/321210464912,317755722136, 2003.253.23:59:53.50:disc_check 2003.253.23:59:53.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y253d23h59m53.205s,24116,0.00250s,80000,4257277868, 2003.253.23:59:53.90:postob 2003.253.23:59:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 611399 : 1444 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 611277 : 1578 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 611584 : 1257 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 611522 : 1327 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 611311 : 1535 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 611483 : 1365 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 611566 : 1279 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:53.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 611530 : 1316 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.253.23:59:54.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.01 2003.253.23:59:54.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.253.23:59:54.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.26 2003.253.23:59:54.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.253.23:59:54.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.03 2003.253.23:59:54.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.253.23:59:54.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.253.23:59:54.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.41 2003.253.23:59:54.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.253.23:59:54.96:scan_name=254-0001,rd0308,98 2003.253.23:59:54.96:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.253.23:59:57.97:setup4f 2003.254.00:00:02.02/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:00:02.03/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:00:02.05:!2003.254.00:01:37 2003.254.00:01:35.86;"weather: clear 2003.254.00:01:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:01:37.02/disc_pos/321210464912,321209464912, 2003.254.00:01:37.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:01:37.26:!2003.254.00:01:37 2003.254.00:01:37.26:preob 2003.254.00:01:37.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:01:37.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:01:40.85/tpical/1d,7601,2u,11670,3u,14869,4u,22761,i1,15203 2003.254.00:01:40.85/tpical/9u,6293,au,14539,bu,12478,cu,18217,du,17055,eu,9143 2003.254.00:01:40.85/tpical/i2,6121 2003.254.00:01:40.85/tpical/5u,20000,6u,17284,7u,16131,8d,7604,i3,45188 2003.254.00:01:43.52/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,89 2003.254.00:01:43.52/tpzero/9u,60,au,407,bu,723,cu,511,du,616,eu,856,i2,70 2003.254.00:01:43.52/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.254.00:01:46.61:!2003.254.00:01:47 2003.254.00:01:47.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:01:47.00/disc_pos/321466490880,321209464912, 2003.254.00:01:47.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:01:47.01:midob 2003.254.00:01:47.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:01:47.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:01:47.18/cable/+3.5882921E-02 2003.254.00:01:47.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9960,4170 2003.254.00:01:47.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29037 2003.254.00:01:47.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8224 2003.254.00:01:47.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11890 2003.254.00:01:47.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8344 2003.254.00:01:48.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:01:48.61/tpi/1d,5148,2u,8225,3u,9981,4u,15331,i1,9965 2003.254.00:01:48.61/tpi/9u,4292,au,9772,bu,8328,cu,17401,du,16807,eu,6875,i2,4172 2003.254.00:01:48.62/tpi/5u,12769,6u,11884,7u,10819,8d,5141,i3,29036 2003.254.00:01:48.63/tpdiff/1d,2453,2u,3445,3u,4888,4u,7430,i1,5238 2003.254.00:01:48.63/tpdiff/9u,2001,au,4767,bu,4150,cu,816,du,248,eu,2268,i2,1949 2003.254.00:01:48.64/tpdiff/5u,7231,6u,5400,7u,5312,8d,2463,i3,16152 2003.254.00:01:48.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:01:48.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:01:48.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:01:48.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:01:48.68/tsys/1d,52.1,2u,52.4,3u,49.1,4u,52.0,i1,49.0 2003.254.00:01:48.68/tsys/9u,63.4,au,58.9,bu,55.0,cu,621.0,du,1958.6,eu,79.6,i2,63.1 2003.254.00:01:48.69/tsys/5u,44.5,6u,53.0,7u,47.3,8d,43.6,i3,46.4 2003.254.00:01:48.97/fmout-gps/+7.7309E-006 2003.254.00:01:48.99:!2003.254.00:03:25 2003.254.00:01:49.06#setcl#time/312813269,4,2003,254,00,01,49.03,2.004,6.226,2 2003.254.00:01:49.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:03:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:03:25.01:disc_end 2003.254.00:03:25.49:disc_pos 2003.254.00:03:25.50/disc_pos/324664966984,321210464912, 2003.254.00:03:25.50:disc_check 2003.254.00:03:25.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h03m25.215s,70964,0.00250s,80000,3329771080, 2003.254.00:03:25.90:postob 2003.254.00:03:25.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 617975 : 1459 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 617864 : 1583 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 618159 : 1275 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 618097 : 1346 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 617888 : 1550 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 618061 : 1379 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 618138 : 1299 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:25.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 618108 : 1331 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:26.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.64 2003.254.00:03:26.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.38 2003.254.00:03:26.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.62 2003.254.00:03:26.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.00:03:26.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.00:03:26.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.00:03:26.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.00:03:26.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.95 2003.254.00:03:26.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.62 2003.254.00:03:26.97:scan_name=254-0008,rd0308,98 2003.254.00:03:26.97:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:03:29.98:setup4f 2003.254.00:03:33.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:34.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:03:34.03:!2003.254.00:08:39 2003.254.00:08:39.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:08:39.02/disc_pos/324664966984,324663966984, 2003.254.00:08:39.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:08:39.26:!2003.254.00:08:39 2003.254.00:08:39.26:preob 2003.254.00:08:39.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:08:39.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:08:42.84/tpical/1d,8211,2u,12510,3u,16039,4u,24670,i1,16488 2003.254.00:08:42.84/tpical/9u,6449,au,15483,bu,13528,cu,7675,du,$$$$$,eu,60804 2003.254.00:08:42.84/tpical/i2,6573 2003.254.00:08:42.84/tpical/5u,21659,6u,18785,7u,17569,8d,8285,i3,49429 2003.254.00:08:45.49/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,466,i1,92 2003.254.00:08:45.49/tpzero/9u,61,au,408,bu,723,cu,511,du,625,eu,860,i2,71 2003.254.00:08:45.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,871,7u,1155,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.254.00:08:48.58:!2003.254.00:08:49 2003.254.00:08:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:08:49.00/disc_pos/324920815616,324663966984, 2003.254.00:08:49.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:08:49.02:midob 2003.254.00:08:49.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:08:49.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:08:49.10/cable/+3.5886067E-02 2003.254.00:08:49.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11196,4619 2003.254.00:08:49.24/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32911 2003.254.00:08:49.31/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9044 2003.254.00:08:49.38/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13265 2003.254.00:08:49.45/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9230 2003.254.00:08:50.01/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:08:50.54/tpi/1d,5730,2u,9044,3u,11100,4u,17187,i1,11199 2003.254.00:08:50.54/tpi/9u,4484,au,10712,bu,9304,cu,5766,du,$$$$$,eu,51577,i2,4625 2003.254.00:08:50.55/tpi/5u,14333,6u,13266,7u,12151,8d,5747,i3,32913 2003.254.00:08:50.56/tpdiff/1d,2481,2u,3466,3u,4939,4u,7483,i1,5289 2003.254.00:08:50.56/tpdiff/9u,1965,au,4771,bu,4224,cu,1909,du,$$$$$,eu,9227,i2,1948 2003.254.00:08:50.57/tpdiff/5u,7326,6u,5519,7u,5418,8d,2538,i3,16516 2003.254.00:08:50.59/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:08:50.60/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:08:50.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:08:50.61/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:08:50.62?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.00:08:50.63/tsys/1d,57.7,2u,58.2,3u,54.4,4u,58.1,i1,54.6 2003.254.00:08:50.63/tsys/9u,67.5,au,64.8,bu,60.9,cu,82.6,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,164.9,i2,70.1 2003.254.00:08:50.64/tsys/5u,49.5,6u,58.4,7u,52.8,8d,48.5,i3,51.5 2003.254.00:08:50.97/fmout-gps/+7.8179E-006 2003.254.00:08:50.99:!2003.254.00:10:27 2003.254.00:08:51.05#setcl#time/312855468,4,2003,254,00,08,51.03,2.005,6.344,2 2003.254.00:08:51.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:10:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:10:27.00:disc_end 2003.254.00:10:27.49:disc_pos 2003.254.00:10:27.49/disc_pos/328119292616,324664966984, 2003.254.00:10:27.50:disc_check 2003.254.00:10:27.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h10m27.207s,10972,0.00250s,80000,10049494360, 2003.254.00:10:27.89:postob 2003.254.00:10:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 624546 : 1480 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 624439 : 1599 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 624735 : 1293 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 624669 : 1365 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 624465 : 1565 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 624634 : 1397 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 624711 : 1317 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:27.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 624683 : 1349 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:28.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.00:10:28.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.254.00:10:28.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.26 2003.254.00:10:28.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.00:10:28.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.00:10:28.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.00:10:28.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.00:10:28.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.63 2003.254.00:10:28.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.62 2003.254.00:10:28.96:scan_name=254-0017,rd0308,426 2003.254.00:10:28.96:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:10:31.99:setup4f 2003.254.00:10:35.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:36.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:10:36.03:!2003.254.00:17:45 2003.254.00:17:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:17:45.01/disc_pos/328119292616,328118292616, 2003.254.00:17:45.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:17:45.23:!2003.254.00:17:45 2003.254.00:17:45.24:preob 2003.254.00:17:45.24#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:17:45.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:17:48.82/tpical/1d,7684,2u,11768,3u,15037,4u,22958,i1,15381 2003.254.00:17:48.82/tpical/9u,6217,au,14738,bu,13064,cu,10902,du,$$$$$,eu,45366 2003.254.00:17:48.82/tpical/i2,6528 2003.254.00:17:48.82/tpical/5u,20308,6u,17769,7u,16647,8d,7881,i3,46247 2003.254.00:17:51.48/tpzero/1d,228,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,94 2003.254.00:17:51.48/tpzero/9u,62,au,408,bu,723,cu,511,du,625,eu,860,i2,66 2003.254.00:17:51.48/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1154,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.00:17:54.57:!2003.254.00:17:55 2003.254.00:17:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:17:55.00/disc_pos/328375296000,328118292616, 2003.254.00:17:55.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:17:55.01:midob 2003.254.00:17:55.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:17:55.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:17:55.21/cable/+3.5884847E-02 2003.254.00:17:55.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10053,4433 2003.254.00:17:55.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29593 2003.254.00:17:55.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8270 2003.254.00:17:55.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12183 2003.254.00:17:55.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8817 2003.254.00:17:56.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:17:56.65/tpi/1d,5178,2u,8270,3u,10033,4u,15430,i1,10056 2003.254.00:17:56.65/tpi/9u,4254,au,9980,bu,8818,cu,9529,du,$$$$$,eu,36929,i2,4428 2003.254.00:17:56.66/tpi/5u,12943,6u,12174,7u,11105,8d,5299,i3,29601 2003.254.00:17:56.67/tpdiff/1d,2506,2u,3498,3u,5004,4u,7528,i1,5325 2003.254.00:17:56.68/tpdiff/9u,1963,au,4758,bu,4246,cu,1373,du,$$$$$,eu,8437,i2,2100 2003.254.00:17:56.68/tpdiff/5u,7365,6u,5595,7u,5542,8d,2582,i3,16646 2003.254.00:17:56.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:17:56.70/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:17:56.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:17:56.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:17:56.71?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.00:17:56.72/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,51.9,3u,48.2,4u,51.7,i1,48.6 2003.254.00:17:56.72/tsys/9u,64.1,au,60.4,bu,57.2,cu,197.0,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,128.3 2003.254.00:17:56.72/tsys/i2,62.3 2003.254.00:17:56.72/tsys/5u,44.3,6u,52.5,7u,46.7,8d,43.2,i3,45.9 2003.254.00:17:56.97/fmout-gps/+7.8014E-006 2003.254.00:17:56.97:!2003.254.00:25:01 2003.254.00:17:57.04#setcl#time/312910065,3,2003,254,00,17,57.01,1.995,6.495,2 2003.254.00:17:57.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:25:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:25:01.00:disc_end 2003.254.00:25:01.48:disc_pos 2003.254.00:25:01.49/disc_pos/342070151072,328119292616, 2003.254.00:25:01.49:disc_check 2003.254.00:25:01.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h25m01.205s,76932,0.00250s,80000,14016995584, 2003.254.00:25:01.88:postob 2003.254.00:25:01.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 651102 : 1538 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 650997 : 1658 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 651285 : 1357 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 651202 : 1447 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 651005 : 1641 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 651177 : 1468 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 651266 : 1377 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:01.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 651247 : 1399 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:02.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.00:25:02.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.13 2003.254.00:25:02.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.13 2003.254.00:25:02.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.00:25:02.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.00:25:02.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.00:25:02.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.00:25:02.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.96 2003.254.00:25:02.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.00:25:02.94:scan_name=254-0034,rd0308,129 2003.254.00:25:02.94:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:25:05.96:setup4f 2003.254.00:25:09.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:10.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:25:10.04:!2003.254.00:33:52 2003.254.00:33:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:33:52.02/disc_pos/342070151072,342069151072, 2003.254.00:33:52.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:33:52.26:!2003.254.00:33:52 2003.254.00:33:52.27:preob 2003.254.00:33:52.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:33:52.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:33:55.84/tpical/1d,7524,2u,11486,3u,14645,4u,22228,i1,14901 2003.254.00:33:55.84/tpical/9u,6207,au,14821,bu,13120,cu,7276,du,9685,eu,9364,i2,6043 2003.254.00:33:55.84/tpical/5u,19506,6u,17031,7u,15834,8d,7559,i3,44260 2003.254.00:33:58.49/tpzero/1d,229,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,465,i1,97 2003.254.00:33:58.49/tpzero/9u,63,au,407,bu,722,cu,511,du,615,eu,856,i2,70 2003.254.00:33:58.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1154,8d,1011,i3,189 2003.254.00:34:01.58:!2003.254.00:34:02 2003.254.00:34:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:34:02.00/disc_pos/342325882880,342069151072, 2003.254.00:34:02.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:34:02.01:midob 2003.254.00:34:02.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:34:02.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:34:02.18/cable/+3.5884412E-02 2003.254.00:34:02.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9638,4045 2003.254.00:34:02.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28135 2003.254.00:34:02.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7991 2003.254.00:34:02.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11613 2003.254.00:34:02.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8700 2003.254.00:34:03.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:34:03.62/tpi/1d,5003,2u,7986,3u,9713,4u,14813,i1,9641 2003.254.00:34:03.62/tpi/9u,4182,au,9912,bu,8703,cu,5438,du,8429,eu,6944,i2,4047 2003.254.00:34:03.63/tpi/5u,12351,6u,11611,7u,10542,8d,5075,i3,28147 2003.254.00:34:03.64/tpdiff/1d,2521,2u,3500,3u,4932,4u,7415,i1,5260 2003.254.00:34:03.64/tpdiff/9u,2025,au,4909,bu,4417,cu,1838,du,1256,eu,2420,i2,1996 2003.254.00:34:03.65/tpdiff/5u,7155,6u,5420,7u,5292,8d,2484,i3,16113 2003.254.00:34:03.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:34:03.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:34:03.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:34:03.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:34:03.69/tsys/1d,49.2,2u,49.8,3u,47.2,4u,50.3,i1,47.2 2003.254.00:34:03.69/tsys/9u,61.0,au,58.1,bu,54.2,cu,80.4,du,186.6,eu,75.5,i2,59.8 2003.254.00:34:03.70/tsys/5u,43.5,6u,51.5,7u,46.1,8d,42.5,i3,45.1 2003.254.00:34:03.97/fmout-gps/+7.7844E-006 2003.254.00:34:03.98:!2003.254.00:36:11 2003.254.00:34:04.05#setcl#time/313006765,4,2003,254,00,34,04.03,1.987,6.764,2 2003.254.00:34:04.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:36:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:36:11.00:disc_end 2003.254.00:36:11.49:disc_pos 2003.254.00:36:11.50/disc_pos/346516136848,342070151072, 2003.254.00:36:11.50:disc_check 2003.254.00:36:11.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h36m11.207s,38880,0.00250s,80000,16994132276, 2003.254.00:36:11.89:postob 2003.254.00:36:11.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 659560 : 1563 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 659459 : 1681 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 659750 : 1375 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 659667 : 1467 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 659469 : 1660 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 659638 : 1492 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 659728 : 1398 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:11.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 659707 : 1422 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:12.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.03 2003.254.00:36:12.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.01 2003.254.00:36:12.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.77 2003.254.00:36:12.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.00:36:12.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.00:36:12.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.00:36:12.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.00:36:12.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.19 2003.254.00:36:12.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.00:36:12.97:scan_name=254-0041,rd0308,270 2003.254.00:36:12.97:source=1749+096,174910.41,093942.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:36:15.99:setup4f 2003.254.00:36:19.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:20.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:36:20.03:!2003.254.00:41:06 2003.254.00:41:06.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:41:06.01/disc_pos/346516136848,346515136848, 2003.254.00:41:06.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:41:06.27:!2003.254.00:41:06 2003.254.00:41:06.27:preob 2003.254.00:41:06.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:41:06.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:41:09.86/tpical/1d,7546,2u,11518,3u,14701,4u,22344,i1,14975 2003.254.00:41:09.86/tpical/9u,9565,au,14050,bu,11842,cu,58671,du,9754,eu,8614,i2,8421 2003.254.00:41:09.86/tpical/5u,19583,6u,17089,7u,15954,8d,7543,i3,44502 2003.254.00:41:12.52/tpzero/1d,229,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,95 2003.254.00:41:12.52/tpzero/9u,63,au,407,bu,723,cu,512,du,616,eu,856,i2,69 2003.254.00:41:12.52/tpzero/5u,389,6u,871,7u,1154,8d,1011,i3,190 2003.254.00:41:15.61:!2003.254.00:41:16 2003.254.00:41:16.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:41:16.00/disc_pos/346771972096,346515136848, 2003.254.00:41:16.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:41:16.01:midob 2003.254.00:41:16.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:41:16.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:41:16.34/cable/+3.5884633E-02 2003.254.00:41:16.42/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9672,7208 2003.254.00:41:16.49/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28198 2003.254.00:41:16.56/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8022 2003.254.00:41:16.63/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11595 2003.254.00:41:16.70/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7939 2003.254.00:41:17.26/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:41:17.78/tpi/1d,5034,2u,8021,3u,9729,4u,14863,i1,9668 2003.254.00:41:17.78/tpi/9u,5778,au,9488,bu,7974,cu,58465,du,8068,eu,6226,i2,5983 2003.254.00:41:17.79/tpi/5u,12344,6u,11592,7u,10584,8d,5050,i3,28196 2003.254.00:41:17.80/tpdiff/1d,2512,2u,3497,3u,4972,4u,7481,i1,5307 2003.254.00:41:17.80/tpdiff/9u,3787,au,4562,bu,3868,cu,206,du,1686,eu,2388,i2,2438 2003.254.00:41:17.81/tpdiff/5u,7239,6u,5497,7u,5370,8d,2493,i3,16306 2003.254.00:41:17.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:41:17.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:41:17.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:41:17.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:41:17.85/tsys/1d,49.7,2u,50.1,3u,46.9,4u,50.0,i1,46.9 2003.254.00:41:17.85/tsys/9u,45.3,au,59.7,bu,56.2,cu,8439.8,du,132.6,eu,67.5,i2,72.8 2003.254.00:41:17.86/tsys/5u,42.9,6u,50.7,7u,45.7,8d,42.1,i3,44.7 2003.254.00:41:17.97/fmout-gps/+7.8034E-006 2003.254.00:41:17.98:!2003.254.00:45:46 2003.254.00:41:18.05#setcl#time/313050164,4,2003,254,00,41,18.03,1.987,6.884,2 2003.254.00:41:18.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:45:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:45:46.00:disc_end 2003.254.00:45:46.49:disc_pos 2003.254.00:45:46.49/disc_pos/355474024640,346516136848, 2003.254.00:45:46.50:disc_check 2003.254.00:45:46.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h45m46.208s,51496,0.00250s,80000,9442099592, 2003.254.00:45:46.89:postob 2003.254.00:45:46.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 676608 : 1605 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 676512 : 1720 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 676805 : 1410 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 676714 : 1510 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 676524 : 1695 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 676691 : 1530 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 676776 : 1440 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:46.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 676759 : 1460 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:47.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.03 2003.254.00:45:47.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.77 2003.254.00:45:47.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.254.00:45:47.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.00:45:47.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.00:45:47.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.00:45:47.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.00:45:47.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.25 2003.254.00:45:47.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.00:45:47.97:scan_name=254-0051,rd0308,98 2003.254.00:45:47.97:source=3c371,180718.63,694857.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:45:50.98:setup4f 2003.254.00:45:54.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:55.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:45:55.03:!2003.254.00:50:52 2003.254.00:50:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:50:52.01/disc_pos/355474024640,355473024640, 2003.254.00:50:52.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.00:50:52.26:!2003.254.00:50:52 2003.254.00:50:52.26:preob 2003.254.00:50:52.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:50:52.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:50:55.86/tpical/1d,7514,2u,11500,3u,14662,4u,22289,i1,14897 2003.254.00:50:55.86/tpical/9u,9022,au,13893,bu,12226,cu,7293,du,5978,eu,8388,i2,7235 2003.254.00:50:55.86/tpical/5u,19595,6u,17173,7u,16008,8d,7590,i3,44540 2003.254.00:50:58.51/tpzero/1d,229,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,96 2003.254.00:50:58.51/tpzero/9u,66,au,408,bu,722,cu,512,du,615,eu,857,i2,66 2003.254.00:50:58.51/tpzero/5u,389,6u,871,7u,1154,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.00:51:01.60:!2003.254.00:51:02 2003.254.00:51:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.00:51:02.00/disc_pos/355729768448,355473024640, 2003.254.00:51:02.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.00:51:02.01:midob 2003.254.00:51:02.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.00:51:02.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.00:51:02.06/cable/+3.5887809E-02 2003.254.00:51:02.13/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9578,5482 2003.254.00:51:02.21/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28086 2003.254.00:51:02.28/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7962 2003.254.00:51:02.35/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11590 2003.254.00:51:02.42/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8128 2003.254.00:51:02.98/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.00:51:03.52/tpi/1d,4970,2u,7962,3u,9625,4u,14713,i1,9556 2003.254.00:51:03.52/tpi/9u,9154,au,9432,bu,8133,cu,5815,du,4492,eu,6103,i2,7444 2003.254.00:51:03.53/tpi/5u,12256,6u,11521,7u,10499,8d,5016,i3,27923 2003.254.00:51:03.54/tpdiff/1d,2544,2u,3538,3u,5037,4u,7576,i1,5341 2003.254.00:51:03.54/tpdiff/9u,-132,au,4461,bu,4093,cu,1478,du,1486,eu,2285,i2,-209 2003.254.00:51:03.55/tpdiff/5u,7339,6u,5652,7u,5509,8d,2574,i3,16617 2003.254.00:51:03.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.00:51:03.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.00:51:03.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.00:51:03.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.00:51:03.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.00:51:03.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.00:51:03.60/tsys/1d,48.5,2u,49.1,3u,45.8,4u,48.9,i1,46.1 2003.254.00:51:03.61/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,60.7,bu,54.3,cu,107.6,du,78.3,eu,68.9,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.00:51:03.61/tsys/5u,42.0,6u,49.0,7u,44.1,8d,40.5,i3,43.4 2003.254.00:51:03.99/fmout-gps/+7.7794E-006 2003.254.00:51:04.00:!2003.254.00:52:40 2003.254.00:51:04.06#setcl#time/313108763,4,2003,254,00,51,04.04,2.009,7.047,2 2003.254.00:51:04.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.00:52:40.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.00:52:40.01:disc_end 2003.254.00:52:40.49:disc_pos 2003.254.00:52:40.50/disc_pos/358928566048,355474024640, 2003.254.00:52:40.50:disc_check 2003.254.00:52:40.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d00h52m40.210s,12804,0.00250s,80000,9793577284, 2003.254.00:52:40.89:postob 2003.254.00:52:40.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 683184 : 1621 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 683084 : 1739 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 683377 : 1430 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 683292 : 1525 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 683108 : 1705 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 683268 : 1545 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:40.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 683351 : 1457 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:41.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 683333 : 1478 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:41.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.91 2003.254.00:52:41.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.254.00:52:41.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.254.00:52:41.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.00:52:41.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.00:52:41.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.00:52:41.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.00:52:41.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.76 2003.254.00:52:41.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.00:52:41.99:scan_name=254-0101,rd0308,99 2003.254.00:52:41.99:source=3c418,203707.50,510835.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.00:52:45.01:setup4f 2003.254.00:52:48.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:49.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.00:52:49.03:!2003.254.01:00:51 2003.254.01:00:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:00:51.02/disc_pos/358928566048,358927566048, 2003.254.01:00:51.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:00:51.27:!2003.254.01:00:51 2003.254.01:00:51.27:preob 2003.254.01:00:51.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:00:51.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:00:54.85/tpical/1d,7574,2u,11633,3u,14819,4u,22830,i1,15147 2003.254.01:00:54.85/tpical/9u,11423,au,16164,bu,11853,cu,22714,du,7778,eu,8135 2003.254.01:00:54.85/tpical/i2,20172 2003.254.01:00:54.85/tpical/5u,20171,6u,17674,7u,16417,8d,7771,i3,45649 2003.254.01:00:57.50/tpzero/1d,229,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,465,i1,92 2003.254.01:00:57.50/tpzero/9u,82,au,408,bu,722,cu,513,du,614,eu,856,i2,69 2003.254.01:00:57.50/tpzero/5u,388,6u,870,7u,1155,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.254.01:01:00.59:!2003.254.01:01:01 2003.254.01:01:01.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:01:01.00/disc_pos/359184302080,358927566048, 2003.254.01:01:01.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:01:01.01:midob 2003.254.01:01:01.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:01:01.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:01:01.10/cable/+3.5887668E-02 2003.254.01:01:01.18/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9704,18762 2003.254.01:01:01.25/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28635 2003.254.01:01:01.32/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8055 2003.254.01:01:01.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11887 2003.254.01:01:01.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7924 2003.254.01:01:02.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:01:02.55/tpi/1d,5011,2u,8055,3u,9751,4u,15066,i1,9703 2003.254.01:01:02.55/tpi/9u,7081,au,9796,bu,7889,cu,21968,du,6371,eu,5950,i2,17898 2003.254.01:01:02.56/tpi/5u,12611,6u,11890,7u,10770,8d,5146,i3,28634 2003.254.01:01:02.57/tpdiff/1d,2563,2u,3578,3u,5068,4u,7764,i1,5444 2003.254.01:01:02.57/tpdiff/9u,4342,au,6368,bu,3964,cu,746,du,1407,eu,2185,i2,2274 2003.254.01:01:02.59/tpdiff/5u,7560,6u,5784,7u,5647,8d,2625,i3,17015 2003.254.01:01:02.60/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:01:02.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:01:02.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:01:02.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:01:02.63/tsys/1d,48.5,2u,49.2,3u,46.1,4u,48.9,i1,45.9 2003.254.01:01:02.63/tsys/9u,48.4,au,44.2,bu,54.2,cu,862.8,du,122.8,eu,69.9,i2,235.2 2003.254.01:01:02.64/tsys/5u,42.0,6u,49.5,7u,44.3,8d,41.0,i3,43.5 2003.254.01:01:02.97/fmout-gps/+7.7339E-006 2003.254.01:01:02.99:!2003.254.01:02:40 2003.254.01:01:03.06#setcl#time/313168661,3,2003,254,01,01,03.03,1.996,7.214,2 2003.254.01:01:03.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:02:40.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:02:40.01:disc_end 2003.254.01:02:40.50:disc_pos 2003.254.01:02:40.50/disc_pos/362414782312,358928566048, 2003.254.01:02:40.50:disc_check 2003.254.01:02:40.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h02m40.218s,6472,0.00250s,80000,15714030068, 2003.254.01:02:40.90:postob 2003.254.01:02:40.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 689817 : 1640 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 689722 : 1756 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 690014 : 1445 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 689925 : 1545 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 689749 : 1716 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 689907 : 1558 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 689993 : 1469 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:40.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 689969 : 1494 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:41.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.91 2003.254.01:02:41.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.254.01:02:41.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.01:02:41.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.01:02:41.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.01:02:41.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.01:02:41.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.01:02:41.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.29 2003.254.01:02:41.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.01:02:41.96:scan_name=254-0109,rd0308,144 2003.254.01:02:41.96:source=1726+455,172601.24,453304.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:02:44.97:setup4f 2003.254.01:02:48.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:49.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:02:49.04:!2003.254.01:08:59 2003.254.01:08:59.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:08:59.02/disc_pos/362414782312,362413782312, 2003.254.01:08:59.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:08:59.25:!2003.254.01:08:59 2003.254.01:08:59.26:preob 2003.254.01:08:59.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:08:59.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:09:02.83/tpical/1d,7522,2u,11538,3u,14701,4u,22435,i1,14918 2003.254.01:09:02.83/tpical/9u,7434,au,13765,bu,12179,cu,8293,du,5851,eu,8361,i2,7409 2003.254.01:09:02.83/tpical/5u,19778,6u,17307,7u,16101,8d,7630,i3,44641 2003.254.01:09:05.49/tpzero/1d,229,2u,1282,3u,758,4u,464,i1,95 2003.254.01:09:05.49/tpzero/9u,65,au,407,bu,722,cu,513,du,614,eu,857,i2,67 2003.254.01:09:05.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1154,8d,1011,i3,190 2003.254.01:09:08.58:!2003.254.01:09:09 2003.254.01:09:09.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:09:09.00/disc_pos/362670637056,362413782312, 2003.254.01:09:09.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:09:09.01:midob 2003.254.01:09:09.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:09:09.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:09:09.26/cable/+3.5886669E-02 2003.254.01:09:09.33/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9525,6174 2003.254.01:09:09.40/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27969 2003.254.01:09:09.47/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7956 2003.254.01:09:09.54/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11640 2003.254.01:09:09.61/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8095 2003.254.01:09:10.17/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:09:10.70/tpi/1d,4965,2u,7964,3u,9634,4u,14769,i1,9527 2003.254.01:09:10.70/tpi/9u,6611,au,9248,bu,8091,cu,6661,du,4382,eu,6078,i2,5960 2003.254.01:09:10.71/tpi/5u,12368,6u,11644,7u,10566,8d,5056,i3,27976 2003.254.01:09:10.72/tpdiff/1d,2557,2u,3574,3u,5067,4u,7666,i1,5391 2003.254.01:09:10.72/tpdiff/9u,823,au,4517,bu,4088,cu,1632,du,1469,eu,2283,i2,1449 2003.254.01:09:10.73/tpdiff/5u,7410,6u,5663,7u,5535,8d,2574,i3,16665 2003.254.01:09:10.74/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:09:10.74/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:09:10.75/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:09:10.76/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:09:10.77/tsys/1d,48.2,2u,48.6,3u,45.5,4u,48.5,i1,45.5 2003.254.01:09:10.77/tsys/9u,238.6,au,58.7,bu,54.1,cu,113.0,du,77.0,eu,68.6,i2,122.0 2003.254.01:09:10.78/tsys/5u,42.0,6u,49.5,7u,44.2,8d,40.9,i3,43.4 2003.254.01:09:10.97/fmout-gps/+7.7174E-006 2003.254.01:09:10.99:!2003.254.01:11:33 2003.254.01:09:11.06#setcl#time/313217460,3,2003,254,01,09,11.03,1.992,7.349,2 2003.254.01:09:11.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:11:32.53;"weather: clear 2003.254.01:11:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:11:33.00:disc_end 2003.254.01:11:33.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:11:33.49/disc_pos/367341255384,362414782312, 2003.254.01:11:33.50:disc_check 2003.254.01:11:33.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h11m33.212s,50096,0.00250s,80000,12129323304, 2003.254.01:11:33.89:postob 2003.254.01:11:33.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 699196 : 1661 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 699097 : 1780 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 699389 : 1472 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 699308 : 1563 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 699121 : 1744 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 699278 : 1587 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:33.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 699371 : 1492 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:34.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 699346 : 1517 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:34.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.01:11:34.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.40 2003.254.01:11:34.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.01:11:34.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.01:11:34.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.01:11:34.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.01:11:34.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.01:11:34.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.01:11:34.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.01:11:34.99:scan_name=254-0118,rd0308,98 2003.254.01:11:34.99:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:11:38.01:setup4f 2003.254.01:11:41.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:42.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:11:42.04:!2003.254.01:18:05 2003.254.01:18:05.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:18:05.02/disc_pos/367341255384,367340255384, 2003.254.01:18:05.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:18:05.27:!2003.254.01:18:05 2003.254.01:18:05.27:preob 2003.254.01:18:05.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:18:05.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:18:08.85/tpical/1d,7864,2u,11998,3u,15384,4u,23604,i1,15699 2003.254.01:18:08.85/tpical/9u,11039,au,15086,bu,13119,cu,16727,du,10703,eu,9988 2003.254.01:18:08.85/tpical/i2,7610 2003.254.01:18:08.85/tpical/5u,20838,6u,18197,7u,16985,8d,8010,i3,47272 2003.254.01:18:11.51/tpzero/1d,230,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,91 2003.254.01:18:11.51/tpzero/9u,63,au,407,bu,723,cu,512,du,614,eu,857,i2,66 2003.254.01:18:11.51/tpzero/5u,389,6u,873,7u,1154,8d,1010,i3,189 2003.254.01:18:14.60:!2003.254.01:18:15 2003.254.01:18:15.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:18:15.00/disc_pos/367597129728,367340255384, 2003.254.01:18:15.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:18:15.01:midob 2003.254.01:18:15.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:18:15.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:18:15.38/cable/+3.5891516E-02 2003.254.01:18:15.45/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10257,5518 2003.254.01:18:15.52/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30388 2003.254.01:18:15.59/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8413 2003.254.01:18:15.66/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12470 2003.254.01:18:15.73/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8840 2003.254.01:18:16.29/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:18:16.81/tpi/1d,5302,2u,8425,3u,10309,4u,15843,i1,10262 2003.254.01:18:16.81/tpi/9u,8432,au,10223,bu,8850,cu,14511,du,8652,eu,7512,i2,5967 2003.254.01:18:16.82/tpi/5u,13312,6u,12459,7u,11384,8d,5413,i3,30388 2003.254.01:18:16.83/tpdiff/1d,2562,2u,3573,3u,5075,4u,7761,i1,5437 2003.254.01:18:16.83/tpdiff/9u,2607,au,4863,bu,4269,cu,2216,du,2051,eu,2476,i2,1643 2003.254.01:18:16.84/tpdiff/5u,7526,6u,5738,7u,5601,8d,2597,i3,16884 2003.254.01:18:16.85/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:18:16.86/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:18:16.86/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:18:16.87/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:18:16.88/tsys/1d,51.5,2u,52.0,3u,48.9,4u,51.5,i1,48.6 2003.254.01:18:16.89/tsys/9u,96.3,au,60.6,bu,57.1,cu,189.5,du,117.6,eu,80.6,i2,107.7 2003.254.01:18:16.89/tsys/5u,44.6,6u,52.5,7u,47.5,8d,44.1,i3,46.5 2003.254.01:18:16.97/fmout-gps/+7.7729E-006 2003.254.01:18:16.98:!2003.254.01:19:53 2003.254.01:18:17.05#setcl#time/313272059,4,2003,254,01,18,17.03,1.984,7.501,2 2003.254.01:18:17.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:19:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:19:53.00:disc_end 2003.254.01:19:53.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:19:53.49/disc_pos/370795289480,367341255384, 2003.254.01:19:53.50:disc_check 2003.254.01:19:53.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h19m53.212s,41916,0.00250s,80000,12545974084, 2003.254.01:19:53.89:postob 2003.254.01:19:53.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 705771 : 1679 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 705675 : 1793 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 705961 : 1491 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 705882 : 1580 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 705701 : 1754 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 705851 : 1605 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 705941 : 1514 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:53.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 705921 : 1533 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:19:54.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.01:19:54.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.16 2003.254.01:19:54.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.01:19:54.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.01:19:54.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.33 2003.254.01:19:54.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.01:19:54.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.01:19:54.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.01:19:54.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.01:19:54.95:scan_name=254-0123,rd0308,98 2003.254.01:19:54.95:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:19:57.96:setup4f 2003.254.01:20:02.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:20:02.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:20:02.03:!2003.254.01:23:27 2003.254.01:23:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:23:27.02/disc_pos/370795289480,370794289480, 2003.254.01:23:27.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:23:27.26:!2003.254.01:23:27 2003.254.01:23:27.26:preob 2003.254.01:23:27.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:23:27.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:23:30.84/tpical/1d,8033,2u,12269,3u,15802,4u,24177,i1,16083 2003.254.01:23:30.84/tpical/9u,9236,au,15298,bu,13033,cu,7676,du,7005,eu,8914,i2,9615 2003.254.01:23:30.84/tpical/5u,21390,6u,18764,7u,17550,8d,8276,i3,48752 2003.254.01:23:33.50/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1282,3u,758,4u,463,i1,89 2003.254.01:23:33.50/tpzero/9u,64,au,407,bu,722,cu,513,du,614,eu,856,i2,67 2003.254.01:23:33.50/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.01:23:36.59:!2003.254.01:23:37 2003.254.01:23:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:23:37.00/disc_pos/371051192320,370794289480, 2003.254.01:23:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:23:37.01:midob 2003.254.01:23:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:23:37.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:23:37.22/cable/+3.5891800E-02 2003.254.01:23:37.29/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10622,10196 2003.254.01:23:37.36/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31594 2003.254.01:23:37.43/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8662 2003.254.01:23:37.50/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12930 2003.254.01:23:37.57/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8783 2003.254.01:23:38.13/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:23:38.65/tpi/1d,5458,2u,8658,3u,10641,4u,16414,i1,10612 2003.254.01:23:38.65/tpi/9u,9561,au,10610,bu,8773,cu,5902,du,5574,eu,6612,i2,9180 2003.254.01:23:38.66/tpi/5u,13811,6u,12937,7u,11816,8d,5609,i3,31581 2003.254.01:23:38.67/tpdiff/1d,2575,2u,3611,3u,5161,4u,7763,i1,5471 2003.254.01:23:38.67/tpdiff/9u,-325,au,4688,bu,4260,cu,1774,du,1431,eu,2302,i2,435 2003.254.01:23:38.68/tpdiff/5u,7579,6u,5827,7u,5734,8d,2667,i3,17171 2003.254.01:23:38.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:23:38.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:23:38.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:23:38.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:23:38.72?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:23:38.72/tsys/1d,52.8,2u,53.1,3u,49.8,4u,53.4,i1,50.0 2003.254.01:23:38.73/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,65.3,bu,56.7,cu,91.1,du,104.0,eu,75.0,i2,628.5 2003.254.01:23:38.74/tsys/5u,46.0,6u,53.8,7u,48.3,8d,44.8,i3,47.5 2003.254.01:23:38.97/fmout-gps/+7.7319E-006 2003.254.01:23:38.99:!2003.254.01:25:15 2003.254.01:23:39.05#setcl#time/313304258,4,2003,254,01,23,39.03,1.992,7.590,2 2003.254.01:23:39.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:25:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:25:15.00:disc_end 2003.254.01:25:15.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:25:15.49/disc_pos/374249669280,370795289480, 2003.254.01:25:15.49:disc_check 2003.254.01:25:15.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h25m15.210s,67256,0.00250s,80000,6849514860, 2003.254.01:25:15.88:postob 2003.254.01:25:15.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 712346 : 1695 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 712250 : 1812 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 712543 : 1502 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 712460 : 1594 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 712276 : 1771 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 712427 : 1620 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 712514 : 1533 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:15.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 712496 : 1549 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:16.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.30 2003.254.01:25:16.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.16 2003.254.01:25:16.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.03 2003.254.01:25:16.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.01:25:16.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.01:25:16.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.01:25:16.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.01:25:16.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.19 2003.254.01:25:16.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.01:25:16.97:scan_name=254-0133,rd0308,114 2003.254.01:25:16.97:source=1606+106,160623.42,103700.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:25:19.99:setup4f 2003.254.01:25:23.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:24.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:25:24.03:!2003.254.01:33:20 2003.254.01:33:20.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:33:20.01/disc_pos/374249669280,374248669280, 2003.254.01:33:20.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:33:20.25:!2003.254.01:33:20 2003.254.01:33:20.25:preob 2003.254.01:33:20.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:33:20.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:33:23.85/tpical/1d,7997,2u,12203,3u,15634,4u,23900,i1,15951 2003.254.01:33:23.85/tpical/9u,8278,au,15546,bu,13829,cu,7720,du,6816,eu,9538,i2,6659 2003.254.01:33:23.85/tpical/5u,21121,6u,18409,7u,17264,8d,8166,i3,48003 2003.254.01:33:26.50/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1282,3u,758,4u,464,i1,89 2003.254.01:33:26.50/tpzero/9u,63,au,408,bu,722,cu,512,du,614,eu,857,i2,66 2003.254.01:33:26.50/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.01:33:29.59:!2003.254.01:33:30 2003.254.01:33:30.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:33:30.00/disc_pos/374505472000,374248669280, 2003.254.01:33:30.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:33:30.01:midob 2003.254.01:33:30.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:33:30.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:33:30.14/cable/+3.5892413E-02 2003.254.01:33:30.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10496,4872 2003.254.01:33:30.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31004 2003.254.01:33:30.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8591 2003.254.01:33:30.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12710 2003.254.01:33:30.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9301 2003.254.01:33:31.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:33:31.57/tpi/1d,5410,2u,8599,3u,10511,4u,16179,i1,10495 2003.254.01:33:31.57/tpi/9u,9098,au,10585,bu,9255,cu,5783,du,5242,eu,7025,i2,6716 2003.254.01:33:31.58/tpi/5u,13578,6u,12688,7u,11622,8d,5522,i3,31010 2003.254.01:33:31.59/tpdiff/1d,2587,2u,3604,3u,5123,4u,7721,i1,5456 2003.254.01:33:31.60/tpdiff/9u,-820,au,4961,bu,4574,cu,1937,du,1574,eu,2513,i2,-57 2003.254.01:33:31.60/tpdiff/5u,7543,6u,5721,7u,5642,8d,2644,i3,16993 2003.254.01:33:31.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:33:31.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:33:31.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:33:31.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:33:31.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:33:31.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:33:31.66/tsys/1d,52.1,2u,52.8,3u,49.5,4u,52.9,i1,49.6 2003.254.01:33:31.66/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,61.5,bu,56.0,cu,81.6,du,88.2,eu,73.6,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.01:33:31.67/tsys/5u,45.5,6u,53.7,7u,48.2,8d,44.4,i3,47.2 2003.254.01:33:31.98/fmout-gps/+7.7134E-006 2003.254.01:33:31.99:!2003.254.01:35:24 2003.254.01:33:32.05#setcl#time/313363557,4,2003,254,01,33,32.03,1.981,7.755,2 2003.254.01:33:32.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:35:24.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:35:24.01:disc_end 2003.254.01:35:24.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:35:24.50/disc_pos/378216317680,374249669280, 2003.254.01:35:24.50:disc_check 2003.254.01:35:24.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h35m24.218s,29380,0.00250s,80000,15521629476, 2003.254.01:35:24.89:postob 2003.254.01:35:24.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 719904 : 1706 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 719798 : 1832 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 720094 : 1520 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 720014 : 1610 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 719817 : 1801 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 719978 : 1638 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:24.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 720061 : 1555 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:25.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 720045 : 1569 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:25.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.01:35:25.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.03 2003.254.01:35:25.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.79 2003.254.01:35:25.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.01:35:25.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.01:35:25.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.01:35:25.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.01:35:25.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.62 2003.254.01:35:26.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.01:35:26.00:scan_name=254-0138,rd0308,269 2003.254.01:35:26.00:source=1749+096,174910.41,093942.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:35:29.02:setup4f 2003.254.01:35:32.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:32.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:35:33.03:!2003.254.01:38:30 2003.254.01:38:30.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:38:30.01/disc_pos/378216317680,378215317680, 2003.254.01:38:30.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:38:30.26:!2003.254.01:38:30 2003.254.01:38:30.27:preob 2003.254.01:38:30.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:38:30.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:38:33.84/tpical/1d,7705,2u,11805,3u,15084,4u,22968,i1,15315 2003.254.01:38:33.84/tpical/9u,12049,au,15160,bu,12778,cu,16475,du,57849,eu,18049 2003.254.01:38:33.84/tpical/i2,11919 2003.254.01:38:33.84/tpical/5u,20268,6u,17666,7u,16521,8d,7835,i3,45934 2003.254.01:38:36.49/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,463,i1,90 2003.254.01:38:36.49/tpzero/9u,64,au,407,bu,722,cu,513,du,619,eu,857,i2,69 2003.254.01:38:36.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1154,8d,1011,i3,190 2003.254.01:38:39.58:!2003.254.01:38:40 2003.254.01:38:40.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:38:40.00/disc_pos/378472095744,378215317680, 2003.254.01:38:40.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:38:40.01:midob 2003.254.01:38:40.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:38:40.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:38:40.09/cable/+3.5892349E-02 2003.254.01:38:40.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9899,7974 2003.254.01:38:40.24/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29141 2003.254.01:38:40.31/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8203 2003.254.01:38:40.38/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12043 2003.254.01:38:40.45/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8560 2003.254.01:38:41.01/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:38:41.53/tpi/1d,5142,2u,8212,3u,9975,4u,15275,i1,9901 2003.254.01:38:41.53/tpi/9u,9885,au,10143,bu,8554,cu,15410,du,61714,eu,16698,i2,11030 2003.254.01:38:41.54/tpi/5u,12801,6u,12008,7u,10956,8d,5239,i3,29150 2003.254.01:38:41.55/tpdiff/1d,2563,2u,3593,3u,5109,4u,7693,i1,5414 2003.254.01:38:41.55/tpdiff/9u,2164,au,5017,bu,4224,cu,1065,du,-3865,eu,1351,i2,889 2003.254.01:38:41.56/tpdiff/5u,7467,6u,5658,7u,5565,8d,2596,i3,16784 2003.254.01:38:41.57/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:38:41.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:38:41.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:38:41.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:38:41.61?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:38:41.62/tsys/1d,49.8,2u,50.2,3u,46.9,4u,50.1,i1,47.1 2003.254.01:38:41.62/tsys/9u,136.2,au,58.2,bu,55.6,cu,419.6,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,351.8 2003.254.01:38:41.63/tsys/i2,369.9 2003.254.01:38:41.63/tsys/5u,43.2,6u,51.2,7u,45.8,8d,42.3,i3,44.9 2003.254.01:38:41.97/fmout-gps/+7.7694E-006 2003.254.01:38:41.98:!2003.254.01:43:09 2003.254.01:38:42.05#setcl#time/313394556,4,2003,254,01,38,42.03,1.990,7.841,2 2003.254.01:38:42.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:43:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:43:09.00:disc_end 2003.254.01:43:09.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:43:09.50/disc_pos/387142779896,378216317680, 2003.254.01:43:09.50:disc_check 2003.254.01:43:09.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h43m09.220s,72472,0.00250s,80000,5953574692, 2003.254.01:43:09.90:postob 2003.254.01:43:09.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 736888 : 1752 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 736783 : 1877 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 737091 : 1555 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 737010 : 1644 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 736816 : 1832 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 736967 : 1679 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 737054 : 1595 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:09.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 737030 : 1614 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:10.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.01:43:10.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.01:43:10.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.01:43:10.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.01:43:10.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.01:43:10.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.01:43:10.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.01:43:10.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.42 2003.254.01:43:10.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.01:43:10.96:scan_name=254-0144,rd0308,422 2003.254.01:43:10.96:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:43:13.98:setup4f 2003.254.01:43:17.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:17.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:43:18.02:!2003.254.01:44:07 2003.254.01:44:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:44:07.02/disc_pos/387142779896,387141779896, 2003.254.01:44:07.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:44:07.27:!2003.254.01:44:07 2003.254.01:44:07.28:preob 2003.254.01:44:07.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:44:07.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:44:10.87/tpical/1d,7692,2u,11765,3u,15066,4u,22977,i1,15321 2003.254.01:44:10.87/tpical/9u,8523,au,13989,bu,12329,cu,7286,du,6356,eu,8392,i2,7033 2003.254.01:44:10.87/tpical/5u,20439,6u,17958,7u,16705,8d,7926,i3,46406 2003.254.01:44:13.52/tpzero/1d,230,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,464,i1,93 2003.254.01:44:13.52/tpzero/9u,65,au,407,bu,721,cu,513,du,614,eu,857,i2,71 2003.254.01:44:13.52/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1154,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.01:44:16.61:!2003.254.01:44:17 2003.254.01:44:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:44:17.00/disc_pos/387398610944,387141779896, 2003.254.01:44:17.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:44:17.02:midob 2003.254.01:44:17.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:44:17.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:44:17.07/cable/+3.5893139E-02 2003.254.01:44:17.14/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9919,5254 2003.254.01:44:17.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29477 2003.254.01:44:17.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8198 2003.254.01:44:17.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12224 2003.254.01:44:17.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8227 2003.254.01:44:18.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:44:18.52/tpi/1d,5139,2u,8203,3u,9988,4u,15315,i1,9927 2003.254.01:44:18.52/tpi/9u,9162,au,9550,bu,8237,cu,5637,du,4866,eu,6112,i2,7228 2003.254.01:44:18.53/tpi/5u,12946,6u,12240,7u,11106,8d,5304,i3,29524 2003.254.01:44:18.54/tpdiff/1d,2553,2u,3562,3u,5078,4u,7662,i1,5394 2003.254.01:44:18.54/tpdiff/9u,-639,au,4439,bu,4092,cu,1649,du,1490,eu,2280,i2,-195 2003.254.01:44:18.55/tpdiff/5u,7493,6u,5718,7u,5599,8d,2622,i3,16882 2003.254.01:44:18.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:44:18.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:44:18.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:44:18.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:44:18.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:44:18.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.01:44:18.60/tsys/1d,50.0,2u,50.5,3u,47.3,4u,50.4,i1,47.4 2003.254.01:44:18.61/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,61.8,bu,55.1,cu,93.2,du,85.6,eu,69.1,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.01:44:18.61/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.7,7u,46.2,8d,42.6,i3,45.2 2003.254.01:44:18.97/fmout-gps/+7.7614E-006 2003.254.01:44:18.99:!2003.254.01:51:19 2003.254.01:44:19.06#setcl#time/313428255,4,2003,254,01,44,19.03,1.996,7.935,2 2003.254.01:44:19.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:51:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:51:19.01:disc_end 2003.254.01:51:19.50:disc_pos 2003.254.01:51:19.50/disc_pos/400965136424,387142779896, 2003.254.01:51:19.51:disc_check 2003.254.01:51:19.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h51m19.225s,22948,0.00250s,80000,1857852996, 2003.254.01:51:19.90:postob 2003.254.01:51:19.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 763186 : 1823 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:19.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 763092 : 1940 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 763398 : 1617 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:19.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 763326 : 1698 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:19.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 763130 : 1887 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:19.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 763272 : 1743 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:20.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 763352 : 1668 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:20.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 763336 : 1677 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:20.13/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.01:51:20.26/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.01:51:20.38/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.01:51:20.49/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.01:51:20.60/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.96 2003.254.01:51:20.71/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.01:51:20.82/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.01:51:20.93/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.89 2003.254.01:51:21.04/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.01:51:21.04:scan_name=254-0155,rd0308,98 2003.254.01:51:21.04:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:51:24.06:setup4f 2003.254.01:51:27.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:28.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:51:28.03:!2003.254.01:55:08 2003.254.01:55:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:55:08.01/disc_pos/400965136424,400964136424, 2003.254.01:55:08.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:55:08.27:!2003.254.01:55:08 2003.254.01:55:08.27:preob 2003.254.01:55:08.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:55:08.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:55:11.85/tpical/1d,8830,2u,13429,3u,17225,4u,26687,i1,17781 2003.254.01:55:11.85/tpical/9u,8296,au,14791,bu,13099,cu,7742,du,7195,eu,9377,i2,6264 2003.254.01:55:11.85/tpical/5u,23512,6u,20483,7u,19259,8d,9054,i3,53874 2003.254.01:55:14.50/tpzero/1d,230,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,88 2003.254.01:55:14.50/tpzero/9u,65,au,407,bu,721,cu,513,du,614,eu,857,i2,72 2003.254.01:55:14.50/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1154,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.01:55:17.59:!2003.254.01:55:18 2003.254.01:55:18.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:55:18.00/disc_pos/401220997120,400964136424, 2003.254.01:55:18.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:55:18.01:midob 2003.254.01:55:18.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:55:18.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:55:18.38/cable/+3.5897721E-02 2003.254.01:55:18.45/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12291,4899 2003.254.01:55:18.52/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,36631 2003.254.01:55:18.59/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9797 2003.254.01:55:18.66/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14667 2003.254.01:55:18.73/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9001 2003.254.01:55:19.29/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:55:19.81/tpi/1d,6264,2u,9804,3u,12119,4u,18940,i1,12294 2003.254.01:55:19.81/tpi/9u,6397,au,10202,bu,8998,cu,6111,du,5931,eu,7211,i2,4474 2003.254.01:55:19.82/tpi/5u,15906,6u,14655,7u,13530,8d,6379,i3,36615 2003.254.01:55:19.83/tpdiff/1d,2566,2u,3625,3u,5106,4u,7747,i1,5487 2003.254.01:55:19.83/tpdiff/9u,1899,au,4589,bu,4101,cu,1631,du,1264,eu,2166,i2,1790 2003.254.01:55:19.84/tpdiff/5u,7606,6u,5828,7u,5729,8d,2675,i3,17259 2003.254.01:55:19.85/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:55:19.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:55:19.86/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:55:19.87/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:55:19.88/tsys/1d,61.1,2u,61.1,3u,57.9,4u,62.0,i1,57.8 2003.254.01:55:19.88/tsys/9u,100.0,au,64.0,bu,60.5,cu,103.0,du,126.2,eu,88.0,i2,73.8 2003.254.01:55:19.89/tsys/5u,53.0,6u,61.5,7u,56.2,8d,52.2,i3,54.9 2003.254.01:55:19.98/fmout-gps/+7.7249E-006 2003.254.01:55:19.99:!2003.254.01:56:56 2003.254.01:55:20.06#setcl#time/313494354,3,2003,254,01,55,20.04,2.010,8.118,3 2003.254.01:55:20.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.01:56:56.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.01:56:56.00:disc_end 2003.254.01:56:56.49:disc_pos 2003.254.01:56:56.49/disc_pos/404419151608,400965136424, 2003.254.01:56:56.49:disc_check 2003.254.01:56:56.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d01h56m56.212s,14120,0.00250s,80000,7329593644, 2003.254.01:56:56.88:postob 2003.254.01:56:56.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 769758 : 1842 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 769664 : 1958 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 769969 : 1637 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 769898 : 1718 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 769701 : 1909 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 769851 : 1755 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 769922 : 1689 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:56.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 769909 : 1695 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.01:56:57.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.01:56:57.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.79 2003.254.01:56:57.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.01:56:57.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.01:56:57.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.01:56:57.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.01:56:57.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.01:56:57.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.59 2003.254.01:56:57.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.01:56:57.98:scan_name=254-0158,rd0308,98 2003.254.01:56:57.99:source=oq208,140445.63,284129.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.01:57:01.00:setup4f 2003.254.01:57:04.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.01:57:05.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.01:57:05.03:!2003.254.01:58:45 2003.254.01:58:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:58:45.02/disc_pos/404419151608,404418151608, 2003.254.01:58:45.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.01:58:45.26:!2003.254.01:58:45 2003.254.01:58:45.26:preob 2003.254.01:58:45.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:58:45.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:58:48.84/tpical/1d,8723,2u,13265,3u,17035,4u,26132,i1,17456 2003.254.01:58:48.84/tpical/9u,11664,au,14920,bu,13157,cu,7051,du,6079,eu,8842,i2,7341 2003.254.01:58:48.84/tpical/5u,23037,6u,20077,7u,18856,8d,8909,i3,52849 2003.254.01:58:51.49/tpzero/1d,230,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,90 2003.254.01:58:51.49/tpzero/9u,65,au,407,bu,723,cu,513,du,614,eu,857,i2,71 2003.254.01:58:51.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.01:58:54.58:!2003.254.01:58:55 2003.254.01:58:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.01:58:55.00/disc_pos/404675117056,404418151608, 2003.254.01:58:55.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.01:58:55.01:midob 2003.254.01:58:55.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.01:58:55.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.01:58:55.10/cable/+3.5895820E-02 2003.254.01:58:55.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12016,4807 2003.254.01:58:55.25/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,35762 2003.254.01:58:55.32/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9661 2003.254.01:58:55.39/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14366 2003.254.01:58:55.46/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9019 2003.254.01:58:56.02/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.01:58:56.54/tpi/1d,6152,2u,9656,3u,11910,4u,18453,i1,12019 2003.254.01:58:56.54/tpi/9u,6885,au,10298,bu,9018,cu,5274,du,4602,eu,6564,i2,4728 2003.254.01:58:56.55/tpi/5u,15531,6u,14359,7u,13220,8d,6251,i3,35764 2003.254.01:58:56.56/tpdiff/1d,2571,2u,3609,3u,5125,4u,7679,i1,5437 2003.254.01:58:56.56/tpdiff/9u,4779,au,4622,bu,4139,cu,1777,du,1477,eu,2278,i2,2613 2003.254.01:58:56.57/tpdiff/5u,7506,6u,5718,7u,5636,8d,2658,i3,17085 2003.254.01:58:56.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.01:58:56.59/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.01:58:56.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.01:58:56.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.01:58:56.61/tsys/1d,59.9,2u,60.3,3u,56.6,4u,60.9,i1,57.0 2003.254.01:58:56.62/tsys/9u,42.8,au,64.2,bu,60.1,cu,80.4,du,81.0,eu,75.2,i2,53.5 2003.254.01:58:56.62/tsys/5u,52.4,6u,61.3,7u,55.7,8d,51.3,i3,54.1 2003.254.01:58:56.96/fmout-gps/+7.7684E-006 2003.254.01:58:56.98:!2003.254.02:00:33 2003.254.01:58:57.04#setcl#time/313516053,4,2003,254,01,58,57.03,1.995,8.179,3 2003.254.01:58:57.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:00:33.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:00:33.01:disc_end 2003.254.02:00:33.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:00:33.50/disc_pos/407873277856,404419151608, 2003.254.02:00:33.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:00:33.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h00m33.212s,47192,0.00250s,80000,3489840680, 2003.254.02:00:33.89:postob 2003.254.02:00:33.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 776327 : 1864 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 776239 : 1976 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 776547 : 1650 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 776478 : 1729 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 776288 : 1915 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 776428 : 1769 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 776497 : 1707 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:33.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 776483 : 1712 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:34.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.02:00:34.25/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.02:00:34.36/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.02:00:34.47/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:00:34.58/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.96 2003.254.02:00:34.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.02:00:34.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.02:00:34.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.25 2003.254.02:00:35.03/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.02:00:35.03:scan_name=254-0205,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:00:35.03:source=1308+326,130807.57,323640.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:00:38.05:setup4f 2003.254.02:00:41.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:42.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:00:42.03:!2003.254.02:05:07 2003.254.02:05:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:05:07.01/disc_pos/407873277856,407872277856, 2003.254.02:05:07.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:05:07.25:!2003.254.02:05:07 2003.254.02:05:07.25:preob 2003.254.02:05:07.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:05:07.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:05:10.83/tpical/1d,10065,2u,15192,3u,19469,4u,30323,i1,20243 2003.254.02:05:10.83/tpical/9u,10718,au,16145,bu,14045,cu,7498,du,6475,eu,9348,i2,8833 2003.254.02:05:10.83/tpical/5u,26488,6u,22849,7u,21477,8d,10051,i3,60971 2003.254.02:05:13.48/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,464,i1,96 2003.254.02:05:13.48/tpzero/9u,65,au,408,bu,723,cu,513,du,614,eu,857,i2,71 2003.254.02:05:13.48/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.02:05:16.57:!2003.254.02:05:17 2003.254.02:05:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:05:17.00/disc_pos/408128991232,407872277856, 2003.254.02:05:17.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:05:17.01:midob 2003.254.02:05:17.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:05:17.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:05:17.06/cable/+3.5899111E-02 2003.254.02:05:17.13/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,14790,5359 2003.254.02:05:17.20/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,43880 2003.254.02:05:17.27/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11600 2003.254.02:05:17.34/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,17091 2003.254.02:05:17.41/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9879 2003.254.02:05:17.97/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:05:18.51/tpi/1d,7516,2u,11598,3u,14421,4u,22647,i1,14792 2003.254.02:05:18.51/tpi/9u,10247,au,11625,bu,9893,cu,5705,du,5001,eu,7056,i2,9412 2003.254.02:05:18.52/tpi/5u,18975,6u,17123,7u,15880,8d,7423,i3,43892 2003.254.02:05:18.53/tpdiff/1d,2549,2u,3594,3u,5048,4u,7676,i1,5451 2003.254.02:05:18.53/tpdiff/9u,471,au,4520,bu,4152,cu,1793,du,1474,eu,2292,i2,-579 2003.254.02:05:18.54/tpdiff/5u,7513,6u,5726,7u,5597,8d,2628,i3,17079 2003.254.02:05:18.55/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:05:18.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:05:18.56/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:05:18.57/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:05:18.58?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.02:05:18.59/tsys/1d,74.3,2u,74.6,3u,70.4,4u,75.1,i1,70.1 2003.254.02:05:18.59/tsys/9u,648.5,au,74.4,bu,66.3,cu,86.9,du,89.3,eu,81.1,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.02:05:18.60/tsys/5u,64.3,6u,73.8,7u,68.4,8d,63.4,i3,66.5 2003.254.02:05:18.96/fmout-gps/+7.7904E-006 2003.254.02:05:18.97:!2003.254.02:06:55 2003.254.02:05:19.05#setcl#time/313554252,3,2003,254,02,05,19.03,1.999,8.285,3 2003.254.02:05:19.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:06:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:06:55.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:06:55.48:disc_pos 2003.254.02:06:55.50/disc_pos/411327469384,407873277856, 2003.254.02:06:55.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:06:55.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h06m55.203s,5040,0.00250s,80000,8769530624, 2003.254.02:06:55.89:postob 2003.254.02:06:55.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 782903 : 1879 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 782816 : 1994 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 783124 : 1664 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 783050 : 1749 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 782856 : 1938 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 783005 : 1783 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 783070 : 1725 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:55.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 783061 : 1725 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:06:56.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.02:06:56.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.02:06:56.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.02:06:56.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:06:56.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.02:06:56.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.02:06:56.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.02:06:56.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.14 2003.254.02:06:56.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:06:56.94:scan_name=254-0211,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:06:56.95:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:06:59.96:setup4f 2003.254.02:07:03.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:07:04.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:07:04.03:!2003.254.02:11:49 2003.254.02:11:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:11:49.01/disc_pos/411327469384,411326469384, 2003.254.02:11:49.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:11:49.26:!2003.254.02:11:49 2003.254.02:11:49.26:preob 2003.254.02:11:49.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:11:49.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:11:52.84/tpical/1d,7838,2u,11970,3u,15312,4u,23432,i1,15610 2003.254.02:11:52.84/tpical/9u,11623,au,15388,bu,13634,cu,7106,du,6661,eu,9136,i2,8668 2003.254.02:11:52.84/tpical/5u,20721,6u,18147,7u,17003,8d,8061,i3,47163 2003.254.02:11:55.50/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,463,i1,93 2003.254.02:11:55.50/tpzero/9u,66,au,407,bu,723,cu,513,du,615,eu,858,i2,68 2003.254.02:11:55.50/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:11:58.59:!2003.254.02:11:59 2003.254.02:11:59.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:11:59.00/disc_pos/411583365120,411326469384, 2003.254.02:11:59.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:11:59.01:midob 2003.254.02:11:59.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:11:59.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:11:59.18/cable/+3.5894771E-02 2003.254.02:11:59.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10165,5427 2003.254.02:11:59.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30131 2003.254.02:11:59.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8363 2003.254.02:11:59.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12397 2003.254.02:11:59.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9138 2003.254.02:12:00.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:12:00.62/tpi/1d,5253,2u,8354,3u,10199,4u,15691,i1,10167 2003.254.02:12:00.62/tpi/9u,6149,au,10307,bu,9140,cu,5217,du,5047,eu,6676,i2,5080 2003.254.02:12:00.63/tpi/5u,13179,6u,12403,7u,11339,8d,5414,i3,30128 2003.254.02:12:00.64/tpdiff/1d,2585,2u,3616,3u,5113,4u,7741,i1,5443 2003.254.02:12:00.64/tpdiff/9u,5474,au,5081,bu,4494,cu,1889,du,1614,eu,2460,i2,3588 2003.254.02:12:00.65/tpdiff/5u,7542,6u,5744,7u,5664,8d,2647,i3,17035 2003.254.02:12:00.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:12:00.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:12:00.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:12:00.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:12:00.69/tsys/1d,50.5,2u,50.9,3u,48.0,4u,51.1,i1,48.1 2003.254.02:12:00.69/tsys/9u,33.3,au,58.5,bu,56.2,cu,74.7,du,82.4,eu,71.0,i2,41.9 2003.254.02:12:00.70/tsys/5u,44.1,6u,52.2,7u,46.8,8d,43.3,i3,45.7 2003.254.02:12:00.96/fmout-gps/+7.7159E-006 2003.254.02:12:00.98:!2003.254.02:13:37 2003.254.02:12:01.04#setcl#time/313594451,4,2003,254,02,12,01.03,2.001,8.396,3 2003.254.02:12:01.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:13:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:13:37.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:13:37.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:13:37.50/disc_pos/414781841808,411327469384, 2003.254.02:13:37.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:13:37.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h13m37.218s,75132,0.00250s,80000,9410037484, 2003.254.02:13:37.90:postob 2003.254.02:13:37.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 789482 : 1894 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 789387 : 2014 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 789700 : 1680 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 789628 : 1764 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 789430 : 1955 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 789580 : 1800 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 789643 : 1743 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:37.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 789638 : 1740 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:38.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.02:13:38.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.02:13:38.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.02:13:38.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:13:38.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.02:13:38.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.02:13:38.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.02:13:38.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.254.02:13:38.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:13:38.98:scan_name=254-0218,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:13:38.98:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:13:41.99:setup4f 2003.254.02:13:45.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:45.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:13:46.02:!2003.254.02:18:15 2003.254.02:18:15.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:18:15.01/disc_pos/414781841808,414780841808, 2003.254.02:18:15.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:18:15.26:!2003.254.02:18:15 2003.254.02:18:15.26:preob 2003.254.02:18:15.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:18:15.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:18:18.85/tpical/1d,7944,2u,12118,3u,15509,4u,23678,i1,15833 2003.254.02:18:18.85/tpical/9u,12584,au,17547,bu,13075,cu,7923,du,6931,eu,8883,i2,21170 2003.254.02:18:18.85/tpical/5u,20908,6u,18279,7u,17064,8d,8078,i3,47471 2003.254.02:18:21.51/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,89 2003.254.02:18:21.51/tpzero/9u,71,au,407,bu,722,cu,514,du,614,eu,857,i2,71 2003.254.02:18:21.51/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:18:24.60:!2003.254.02:18:25 2003.254.02:18:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:18:25.00/disc_pos/415037796352,414780841808, 2003.254.02:18:25.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:18:25.01:midob 2003.254.02:18:25.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:18:25.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:18:25.09/cable/+3.5895472E-02 2003.254.02:18:25.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10390,16222 2003.254.02:18:25.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30594 2003.254.02:18:25.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8548 2003.254.02:18:25.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12574 2003.254.02:18:25.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8775 2003.254.02:18:26.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:18:26.52/tpi/1d,5378,2u,8542,3u,10395,4u,15971,i1,10386 2003.254.02:18:26.52/tpi/9u,8900,au,10918,bu,8792,cu,5966,du,5277,eu,6502,i2,13848 2003.254.02:18:26.53/tpi/5u,13399,6u,12575,7u,11472,8d,5463,i3,30583 2003.254.02:18:26.54/tpdiff/1d,2566,2u,3576,3u,5114,4u,7707,i1,5447 2003.254.02:18:26.54/tpdiff/9u,3684,au,6629,bu,4283,cu,1957,du,1654,eu,2381,i2,7322 2003.254.02:18:26.55/tpdiff/5u,7509,6u,5704,7u,5592,8d,2615,i3,16888 2003.254.02:18:26.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:18:26.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:18:26.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:18:26.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:18:26.59/tsys/1d,52.2,2u,52.8,3u,49.0,4u,52.3,i1,49.2 2003.254.02:18:26.59/tsys/9u,71.9,au,47.6,bu,56.5,cu,83.6,du,84.6,eu,71.1,i2,56.4 2003.254.02:18:26.60/tsys/5u,45.0,6u,53.4,7u,48.0,8d,44.3,i3,46.8 2003.254.02:18:26.97/fmout-gps/+7.7739E-006 2003.254.02:18:26.98:!2003.254.02:20:03 2003.254.02:18:27.05#setcl#time/313633051,4,2003,254,02,18,27.03,1.976,8.504,2 2003.254.02:18:27.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:20:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:20:03.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:20:03.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:20:03.50/disc_pos/418236275632,414781841808, 2003.254.02:20:03.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:20:03.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h20m03.217s,24152,0.00250s,80000,8897617156, 2003.254.02:20:03.89:postob 2003.254.02:20:03.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 796053 : 1914 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 795963 : 2032 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 796274 : 1699 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 796205 : 1779 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 796003 : 1974 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 796160 : 1813 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:03.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 796219 : 1759 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:04.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 796214 : 1755 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:04.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.02:20:04.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.02:20:04.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.02:20:04.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:20:04.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.02:20:04.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.02:20:04.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.11 2003.254.02:20:04.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.08 2003.254.02:20:04.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:20:04.99:scan_name=254-0221c,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:20:04.99:source=2126-158,212626.80,-155150.4,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:20:08.01:setup4f 2003.254.02:20:11.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:12.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:20:12.02:!2003.254.02:21:25 2003.254.02:21:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:21:25.02/disc_pos/418236275632,418235275632, 2003.254.02:21:25.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:21:25.26:!2003.254.02:21:25 2003.254.02:21:25.27:preob 2003.254.02:21:25.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:21:25.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:21:28.84/tpical/1d,8098,2u,12335,3u,15803,4u,24203,i1,16146 2003.254.02:21:28.84/tpical/9u,6832,au,15484,bu,13762,cu,10530,du,7056,eu,9211,i2,6402 2003.254.02:21:28.84/tpical/5u,21435,6u,18787,7u,17603,8d,8330,i3,48864 2003.254.02:21:31.49/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,463,i1,94 2003.254.02:21:31.49/tpzero/9u,65,au,407,bu,722,cu,513,du,614,eu,856,i2,64 2003.254.02:21:31.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:21:34.58:!2003.254.02:21:35 2003.254.02:21:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:21:35.00/disc_pos/418492063744,418235275632, 2003.254.02:21:35.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:21:35.01:midob 2003.254.02:21:35.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:21:35.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:21:35.19/cable/+3.5895872E-02 2003.254.02:21:35.26/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10679,4445 2003.254.02:21:35.33/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31710 2003.254.02:21:35.40/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8720 2003.254.02:21:35.47/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12981 2003.254.02:21:35.54/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9333 2003.254.02:21:36.10/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:21:36.62/tpi/1d,5500,2u,8723,3u,10653,4u,16435,i1,10676 2003.254.02:21:36.62/tpi/9u,4802,au,10512,bu,9338,cu,7415,du,5336,eu,6785,i2,4386 2003.254.02:21:36.63/tpi/5u,13852,6u,12985,7u,11895,8d,5655,i3,31711 2003.254.02:21:36.64/tpdiff/1d,2598,2u,3612,3u,5150,4u,7768,i1,5470 2003.254.02:21:36.65/tpdiff/9u,2030,au,4972,bu,4424,cu,3115,du,1720,eu,2426,i2,2016 2003.254.02:21:36.65/tpdiff/5u,7583,6u,5802,7u,5708,8d,2675,i3,17153 2003.254.02:21:36.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:21:36.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:21:36.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:21:36.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:21:36.69/tsys/1d,52.7,2u,53.6,3u,50.0,4u,53.5,i1,50.3 2003.254.02:21:36.70/tsys/9u,70.0,au,61.0,bu,58.4,cu,66.5,du,82.4,eu,73.3,i2,64.3 2003.254.02:21:36.70/tsys/5u,46.2,6u,54.3,7u,48.9,8d,45.1,i3,47.8 2003.254.02:21:36.96/fmout-gps/+7.7434E-006 2003.254.02:21:36.98:!2003.254.02:23:13 2003.254.02:21:37.04#setcl#time/313652050,4,2003,254,02,21,37.03,1.992,8.556,3 2003.254.02:21:37.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:23:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:23:13.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:23:13.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:23:13.50/disc_pos/421690217816,418236275632, 2003.254.02:23:13.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:23:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h23m13.215s,46220,0.00250s,80000,2625955748, 2003.254.02:23:13.89:postob 2003.254.02:23:13.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 802629 : 1929 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 802536 : 2049 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 802850 : 1714 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 802779 : 1795 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 802573 : 1997 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 802732 : 1833 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 802793 : 1776 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 802784 : 1776 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:14.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.02:23:14.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.02:23:14.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.02:23:14.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:23:14.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.02:23:14.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.02:23:14.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.11 2003.254.02:23:14.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.02:23:14.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:23:14.96:scan_name=254-0227,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:23:14.96:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:23:17.97:setup4f 2003.254.02:23:21.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:22.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:23:22.03:!2003.254.02:27:44 2003.254.02:27:44.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:27:44.02/disc_pos/421690217816,421689217816, 2003.254.02:27:44.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:27:44.26:!2003.254.02:27:44 2003.254.02:27:44.26:preob 2003.254.02:27:44.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:27:44.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:27:47.84/tpical/1d,7851,2u,12023,3u,15426,4u,23593,i1,15723 2003.254.02:27:47.84/tpical/9u,10012,au,15903,bu,12765,cu,7575,du,6392,eu,8787,i2,15202 2003.254.02:27:47.84/tpical/5u,21009,6u,18441,7u,17260,8d,8184,i3,47802 2003.254.02:27:50.49/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,91 2003.254.02:27:50.49/tpzero/9u,89,au,407,bu,723,cu,514,du,613,eu,857,i2,69 2003.254.02:27:50.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:27:53.58:!2003.254.02:27:54 2003.254.02:27:54.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:27:54.00/disc_pos/421946064896,421689217816, 2003.254.02:27:54.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:27:54.01:midob 2003.254.02:27:54.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:27:54.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:27:54.25/cable/+3.5894225E-02 2003.254.02:27:54.32/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10222,11327 2003.254.02:27:54.39/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30459 2003.254.02:27:54.46/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8379 2003.254.02:27:54.53/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12550 2003.254.02:27:54.60/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8316 2003.254.02:27:55.16/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:27:55.68/tpi/1d,5254,2u,8374,3u,10219,4u,15772,i1,10216 2003.254.02:27:55.68/tpi/9u,7734,au,11217,bu,8394,cu,5513,du,4867,eu,6387,i2,13272 2003.254.02:27:55.69/tpi/5u,13323,6u,12559,7u,11478,8d,5477,i3,30458 2003.254.02:27:55.70/tpdiff/1d,2597,2u,3649,3u,5207,4u,7821,i1,5507 2003.254.02:27:55.70/tpdiff/9u,2278,au,4686,bu,4371,cu,2062,du,1525,eu,2400,i2,1930 2003.254.02:27:55.71/tpdiff/5u,7686,6u,5882,7u,5782,8d,2707,i3,17344 2003.254.02:27:55.72/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:27:55.72/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:27:55.73/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:27:55.74/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:27:55.75/tsys/1d,50.3,2u,50.5,3u,47.2,4u,50.9,i1,47.8 2003.254.02:27:55.75/tsys/9u,100.7,au,69.2,bu,52.6,cu,72.7,du,83.7,eu,69.1,i2,205.2 2003.254.02:27:55.76/tsys/5u,43.7,6u,51.7,7u,46.4,8d,42.9,i3,45.4 2003.254.02:27:55.96/fmout-gps/+7.7659E-006 2003.254.02:27:55.99:!2003.254.02:29:32 2003.254.02:27:56.05#setcl#time/313689950,4,2003,254,02,27,56.04,1.995,8.662,3 2003.254.02:27:56.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:29:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:29:32.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:29:32.48:disc_pos 2003.254.02:29:32.49/disc_pos/425144540080,421690217816, 2003.254.02:29:32.49:disc_check 2003.254.02:29:32.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h29m32.215s,11732,0.00250s,80000,8673712224, 2003.254.02:29:32.88:postob 2003.254.02:29:32.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 809199 : 1950 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 809116 : 2061 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 809422 : 1733 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 809361 : 1807 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 809148 : 2013 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 809307 : 1850 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:32.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 809370 : 1792 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:33.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 809357 : 1794 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:33.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.02:29:33.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.02:29:33.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.02:29:33.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.02:29:33.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.02:29:33.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.02:29:33.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.02:29:33.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.35 2003.254.02:29:34.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:29:34.00:scan_name=254-0236,rd0308,421 2003.254.02:29:34.01:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:29:37.04:setup4f 2003.254.02:29:41.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:41.02/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:29:41.05:!2003.254.02:36:06 2003.254.02:36:06.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:36:06.01/disc_pos/425144540080,425143540080, 2003.254.02:36:06.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:36:06.25:!2003.254.02:36:06 2003.254.02:36:06.25:preob 2003.254.02:36:06.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:36:06.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:36:09.83/tpical/1d,7734,2u,11814,3u,15165,4u,23075,i1,15390 2003.254.02:36:09.83/tpical/9u,10756,au,15590,bu,11814,cu,56196,du,51889,eu,54890 2003.254.02:36:09.83/tpical/i2,16703 2003.254.02:36:09.83/tpical/5u,20529,6u,17993,7u,16836,8d,7996,i3,46473 2003.254.02:36:12.48/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,464,i1,92 2003.254.02:36:12.48/tpzero/9u,75,au,407,bu,723,cu,515,du,618,eu,863,i2,70 2003.254.02:36:12.48/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:36:15.57:!2003.254.02:36:16 2003.254.02:36:16.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:36:16.00/disc_pos/425400479744,425143540080, 2003.254.02:36:16.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:36:16.01:midob 2003.254.02:36:16.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:36:16.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:36:16.09/cable/+3.5893126E-02 2003.254.02:36:16.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9920,16263 2003.254.02:36:16.24/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29321 2003.254.02:36:16.31/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8192 2003.254.02:36:16.38/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12177 2003.254.02:36:16.45/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7976 2003.254.02:36:17.01/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:36:17.53/tpi/1d,5144,2u,8196,3u,9971,4u,15297,i1,9917 2003.254.02:36:17.53/tpi/9u,8145,au,9907,bu,8013,cu,49751,du,52038,eu,54410,i2,13415 2003.254.02:36:17.54/tpi/5u,12914,6u,12174,7u,11111,8d,5312,i3,29327 2003.254.02:36:17.55/tpdiff/1d,2590,2u,3618,3u,5194,4u,7778,i1,5473 2003.254.02:36:17.55/tpdiff/9u,2611,au,5683,bu,3801,cu,6445,du,-149,eu,480,i2,3288 2003.254.02:36:17.56/tpdiff/5u,7615,6u,5819,7u,5725,8d,2684,i3,17146 2003.254.02:36:17.57/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:36:17.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:36:17.58/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:36:17.59/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:36:17.60?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.02:36:17.60/tsys/1d,49.3,2u,49.7,3u,46.1,4u,49.6,i1,46.7 2003.254.02:36:17.61/tsys/9u,92.7,au,50.1,bu,57.5,cu,229.2,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,3346.7 2003.254.02:36:17.62/tsys/i2,121.8 2003.254.02:36:17.62/tsys/5u,42.8,6u,50.5,7u,45.2,8d,41.7,i3,44.2 2003.254.02:36:17.96/fmout-gps/+7.7489E-006 2003.254.02:36:17.98:!2003.254.02:43:17 2003.254.02:36:18.05#setcl#time/313740148,3,2003,254,02,36,18.03,1.991,8.801,3 2003.254.02:36:18.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:43:17.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:43:17.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:43:17.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:43:17.49/disc_pos/438934996728,425144540080, 2003.254.02:43:17.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:43:17.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h43m17.218s,41940,0.00250s,80000,12609593144, 2003.254.02:43:17.89:postob 2003.254.02:43:17.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 835445 : 2015 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 835363 : 2122 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 835672 : 1792 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 835618 : 1858 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 835395 : 2076 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 835547 : 1920 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 835616 : 1854 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:17.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 835588 : 1872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:18.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.02:43:18.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.91 2003.254.02:43:18.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.02:43:18.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:43:18.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.02:43:18.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.02:43:18.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.02:43:18.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.69 2003.254.02:43:18.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.02:43:18.96:scan_name=254-0248,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:43:18.96:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:43:21.98:setup4f 2003.254.02:43:25.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:26.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:43:26.03:!2003.254.02:48:32 2003.254.02:48:32.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:48:32.01/disc_pos/438934996728,438933996728, 2003.254.02:48:32.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:48:32.27:!2003.254.02:48:32 2003.254.02:48:32.27:preob 2003.254.02:48:32.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:48:32.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:48:35.85/tpical/1d,7744,2u,11849,3u,15149,4u,23081,i1,15396 2003.254.02:48:35.85/tpical/9u,10395,au,14147,bu,12428,cu,7328,du,6199,eu,8767,i2,13556 2003.254.02:48:35.85/tpical/5u,20566,6u,18016,7u,16876,8d,8018,i3,46652 2003.254.02:48:38.51/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,464,i1,94 2003.254.02:48:38.51/tpzero/9u,66,au,407,bu,723,cu,514,du,613,eu,858,i2,69 2003.254.02:48:38.51/tpzero/5u,390,6u,868,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:48:41.60:!2003.254.02:48:42 2003.254.02:48:42.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:48:42.00/disc_pos/439191003136,438933996728, 2003.254.02:48:42.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:48:42.01:midob 2003.254.02:48:42.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:48:42.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:48:42.37/cable/+3.5896585E-02 2003.254.02:48:42.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9932,9488 2003.254.02:48:42.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29458 2003.254.02:48:42.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8216 2003.254.02:48:42.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12176 2003.254.02:48:42.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8317 2003.254.02:48:43.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:48:43.81/tpi/1d,5145,2u,8216,3u,9982,4u,15295,i1,9931 2003.254.02:48:43.81/tpi/9u,6263,au,9480,bu,8301,cu,5621,du,4693,eu,6416,i2,7829 2003.254.02:48:43.82/tpi/5u,12936,6u,12192,7u,11126,8d,5324,i3,29456 2003.254.02:48:43.83/tpdiff/1d,2599,2u,3633,3u,5167,4u,7786,i1,5465 2003.254.02:48:43.83/tpdiff/9u,4132,au,4667,bu,4127,cu,1707,du,1506,eu,2351,i2,5727 2003.254.02:48:43.84/tpdiff/5u,7630,6u,5824,7u,5750,8d,2694,i3,17196 2003.254.02:48:43.85/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:48:43.86/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:48:43.86/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:48:43.87/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:48:43.88/tsys/1d,49.2,2u,49.6,3u,46.4,4u,49.5,i1,46.8 2003.254.02:48:43.88/tsys/9u,45.0,au,58.3,bu,55.1,cu,89.8,du,81.3,eu,70.9,i2,40.6 2003.254.02:48:43.89/tsys/5u,42.8,6u,50.6,7u,45.1,8d,41.6,i3,44.2 2003.254.02:48:43.96/fmout-gps/+7.8414E-006 2003.254.02:48:43.98:!2003.254.02:50:20 2003.254.02:48:44.04#setcl#time/313814746,4,2003,254,02,48,44.03,1.998,9.008,3 2003.254.02:48:44.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:50:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:50:20.01:disc_end 2003.254.02:50:20.49:disc_pos 2003.254.02:50:20.50/disc_pos/442389157072,438934996728, 2003.254.02:50:20.50:disc_check 2003.254.02:50:20.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h50m20.223s,59676,0.00250s,80000,10081981920, 2003.254.02:50:20.89:postob 2003.254.02:50:20.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 842019 : 2032 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 841942 : 2134 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 842252 : 1805 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 842192 : 1875 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 841970 : 2094 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 842122 : 1936 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:20.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 842190 : 1871 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:21.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 842160 : 1891 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:21.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.02:50:21.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.02:50:21.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.02:50:21.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.02:50:21.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.02:50:21.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.02:50:21.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.02:50:21.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.49 2003.254.02:50:22.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.02:50:22.00:scan_name=254-0254,rd0308,98 2003.254.02:50:22.00:source=1357+769,135742.17,765753.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:50:25.02:setup4f 2003.254.02:50:28.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:28.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:50:29.02:!2003.254.02:54:31 2003.254.02:54:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:54:31.02/disc_pos/442389157072,442388157072, 2003.254.02:54:31.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:54:31.27:!2003.254.02:54:31 2003.254.02:54:31.27:preob 2003.254.02:54:31.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:54:31.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:54:34.85/tpical/1d,7894,2u,12051,3u,15470,4u,23640,i1,15758 2003.254.02:54:34.85/tpical/9u,11844,au,14675,bu,12818,cu,6814,du,5939,eu,8670,i2,8731 2003.254.02:54:34.85/tpical/5u,21038,6u,18495,7u,17335,8d,8202,i3,47906 2003.254.02:54:37.50/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1282,3u,758,4u,464,i1,92 2003.254.02:54:37.50/tpzero/9u,72,au,407,bu,723,cu,515,du,613,eu,858,i2,70 2003.254.02:54:37.50/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:54:40.59:!2003.254.02:54:41 2003.254.02:54:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:54:41.00/disc_pos/442644893696,442388157072, 2003.254.02:54:41.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:54:41.01:midob 2003.254.02:54:41.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:54:41.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:54:41.30/cable/+3.5895267E-02 2003.254.02:54:41.37/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10263,6457 2003.254.02:54:41.44/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30578 2003.254.02:54:41.51/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8417 2003.254.02:54:41.58/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12614 2003.254.02:54:41.65/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8526 2003.254.02:54:42.21/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:54:42.73/tpi/1d,5293,2u,8420,3u,10296,4u,15860,i1,10265 2003.254.02:54:42.73/tpi/9u,9794,au,9886,bu,8534,cu,4991,du,4389,eu,6292,i2,6755 2003.254.02:54:42.74/tpi/5u,13385,6u,12608,7u,11549,8d,5498,i3,30582 2003.254.02:54:42.75/tpdiff/1d,2601,2u,3631,3u,5174,4u,7780,i1,5493 2003.254.02:54:42.75/tpdiff/9u,2050,au,4789,bu,4284,cu,1823,du,1550,eu,2378,i2,1976 2003.254.02:54:42.76/tpdiff/5u,7653,6u,5887,7u,5786,8d,2704,i3,17324 2003.254.02:54:42.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:54:42.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:54:42.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:54:42.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:54:42.81/tsys/1d,50.6,2u,51.1,3u,47.9,4u,51.5,i1,48.2 2003.254.02:54:42.81/tsys/9u,142.3,au,59.4,bu,54.7,cu,73.7,du,73.1,eu,68.6,i2,101.5 2003.254.02:54:42.82/tsys/5u,44.1,6u,51.8,7u,46.7,8d,43.2,i3,45.6 2003.254.02:54:42.97/fmout-gps/+7.8014E-006 2003.254.02:54:42.98:!2003.254.02:56:19 2003.254.02:54:43.05#setcl#time/313850646,4,2003,254,02,54,43.03,1.976,9.108,2 2003.254.02:54:43.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.02:56:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.02:56:19.00:disc_end 2003.254.02:56:19.48:disc_pos 2003.254.02:56:19.49/disc_pos/445843049544,442389157072, 2003.254.02:56:19.49:disc_check 2003.254.02:56:19.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d02h56m19.212s,74432,0.00250s,80000,8033772772, 2003.254.02:56:19.88:postob 2003.254.02:56:19.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 848600 : 2041 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 848518 : 2149 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 848825 : 1822 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 848768 : 1890 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 848546 : 2110 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 848701 : 1950 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 848764 : 1888 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:19.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 848737 : 1905 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:20.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.02:56:20.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.02:56:20.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.02:56:20.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.02:56:20.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.02:56:20.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.02:56:20.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.95 2003.254.02:56:20.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.62 2003.254.02:56:20.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.02:56:20.98:scan_name=254-0258,rd0308,153 2003.254.02:56:20.98:source=0014+813,001404.48,811828.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.02:56:23.99:setup4f 2003.254.02:56:27.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:28.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.02:56:28.03:!2003.254.02:58:35 2003.254.02:58:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:58:35.01/disc_pos/445843049544,445842049544, 2003.254.02:58:35.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.02:58:35.27:!2003.254.02:58:35 2003.254.02:58:35.27:preob 2003.254.02:58:35.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:58:35.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:58:38.85/tpical/1d,7725,2u,11839,3u,15157,4u,23145,i1,15416 2003.254.02:58:38.85/tpical/9u,9669,au,14119,bu,12395,cu,6728,du,5901,eu,8486,i2,6352 2003.254.02:58:38.85/tpical/5u,20602,6u,18113,7u,16916,8d,8045,i3,46771 2003.254.02:58:41.51/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,463,i1,88 2003.254.02:58:41.51/tpzero/9u,64,au,407,bu,722,cu,515,du,613,eu,858,i2,70 2003.254.02:58:41.51/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.02:58:44.60:!2003.254.02:58:45 2003.254.02:58:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.02:58:45.00/disc_pos/446098825216,445842049544, 2003.254.02:58:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.02:58:45.01:midob 2003.254.02:58:45.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.02:58:45.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.02:58:45.37/cable/+3.5894707E-02 2003.254.02:58:45.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9943,4000 2003.254.02:58:45.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29617 2003.254.02:58:45.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8211 2003.254.02:58:45.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12306 2003.254.02:58:45.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8238 2003.254.02:58:46.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.02:58:46.80/tpi/1d,5136,2u,8210,3u,9996,4u,15350,i1,9944 2003.254.02:58:46.80/tpi/9u,6080,au,9381,bu,8238,cu,4910,du,4390,eu,6141,i2,4175 2003.254.02:58:46.81/tpi/5u,12982,6u,12302,7u,11207,8d,5365,i3,29612 2003.254.02:58:46.82/tpdiff/1d,2589,2u,3629,3u,5161,4u,7795,i1,5472 2003.254.02:58:46.83/tpdiff/9u,3589,au,4738,bu,4157,cu,1818,du,1511,eu,2345,i2,2177 2003.254.02:58:46.83/tpdiff/5u,7620,6u,5811,7u,5709,8d,2680,i3,17159 2003.254.02:58:46.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.02:58:46.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.02:58:46.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.02:58:46.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.02:58:46.87/tsys/1d,49.2,2u,49.6,3u,46.5,4u,49.7,i1,46.8 2003.254.02:58:46.88/tsys/9u,50.3,au,56.8,bu,54.2,cu,72.5,du,75.0,eu,67.6,i2,56.6 2003.254.02:58:46.88/tsys/5u,43.0,6u,51.2,7u,45.8,8d,42.3,i3,44.6 2003.254.02:58:46.96/fmout-gps/+7.7314E-006 2003.254.02:58:46.97:!2003.254.03:01:18 2003.254.02:58:47.04#setcl#time/313875045,4,2003,254,02,58,47.03,1.988,9.176,3 2003.254.02:58:47.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:01:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:01:18.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:01:18.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:01:18.50/disc_pos/451056833872,445843049544, 2003.254.03:01:18.50:disc_check 2003.254.03:01:18.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h01m18.218s,33660,0.00250s,80000,4354416444, 2003.254.03:01:18.89:postob 2003.254.03:01:18.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 858517 : 2072 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 858432 : 2185 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 858750 : 1845 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 858696 : 1910 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 858472 : 2132 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 858620 : 1978 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 858689 : 1911 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:18.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 858662 : 1929 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:19.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.03:01:19.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.03:01:19.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.03:01:19.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.03:01:19.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.03:01:19.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.03:01:19.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.03:01:19.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.49 2003.254.03:01:19.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.03:01:19.96:scan_name=254-0304,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:01:19.96:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:01:22.97:setup4f 2003.254.03:01:26.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:27.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:01:27.03:!2003.254.03:04:02 2003.254.03:03:42.34;"weather: clear 2003.254.03:04:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:04:02.02/disc_pos/451056833872,451055833872, 2003.254.03:04:02.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:04:02.26:!2003.254.03:04:02 2003.254.03:04:02.26:preob 2003.254.03:04:02.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:04:02.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:04:05.84/tpical/1d,8117,2u,12402,3u,15906,4u,24337,i1,16226 2003.254.03:04:05.84/tpical/9u,9531,au,14682,bu,12882,cu,6917,du,5927,eu,8729,i2,6531 2003.254.03:04:05.84/tpical/5u,21627,6u,18967,7u,17751,8d,8410,i3,49240 2003.254.03:04:08.49/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,92 2003.254.03:04:08.49/tpzero/9u,66,au,407,bu,722,cu,515,du,613,eu,858,i2,67 2003.254.03:04:08.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1009,i3,190 2003.254.03:04:11.58:!2003.254.03:04:12 2003.254.03:04:12.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:04:12.00/disc_pos/451312766976,451055833872, 2003.254.03:04:12.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:04:12.01:midob 2003.254.03:04:12.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:04:12.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:04:12.25/cable/+3.5896311E-02 2003.254.03:04:12.32/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10756,4631 2003.254.03:04:12.39/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31976 2003.254.03:04:12.46/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8769 2003.254.03:04:12.53/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13127 2003.254.03:04:12.60/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8699 2003.254.03:04:13.16/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:04:13.69/tpi/1d,5530,2u,8774,3u,10748,4u,16562,i1,10751 2003.254.03:04:13.69/tpi/9u,5523,au,9951,bu,8693,cu,5115,du,4405,eu,6385,i2,4380 2003.254.03:04:13.70/tpi/5u,13999,6u,13128,7u,12005,8d,5713,i3,31960 2003.254.03:04:13.71/tpdiff/1d,2587,2u,3628,3u,5158,4u,7775,i1,5475 2003.254.03:04:13.71/tpdiff/9u,4008,au,4731,bu,4189,cu,1802,du,1522,eu,2344,i2,2151 2003.254.03:04:13.72/tpdiff/5u,7628,6u,5839,7u,5746,8d,2697,i3,17280 2003.254.03:04:13.73/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:04:13.74/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:04:13.74/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:04:13.75/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:04:13.76/tsys/1d,53.2,2u,53.7,3u,50.4,4u,53.8,i1,50.6 2003.254.03:04:13.76/tsys/9u,40.8,au,60.5,bu,57.1,cu,76.6,du,74.7,eu,70.7,i2,60.2 2003.254.03:04:13.77/tsys/5u,46.4,6u,54.6,7u,49.1,8d,45.3,i3,47.8 2003.254.03:04:13.96/fmout-gps/+7.8084E-006 2003.254.03:04:13.99:!2003.254.03:05:50 2003.254.03:04:14.05#setcl#time/313907745,4,2003,254,03,04,14.04,1.994,9.267,3 2003.254.03:04:14.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:05:50.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:05:50.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:05:50.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:05:50.50/disc_pos/454511244584,451056833872, 2003.254.03:05:50.50:disc_check 2003.254.03:05:50.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h05m50.220s,18196,0.00250s,80000,5249684752, 2003.254.03:05:50.89:postob 2003.254.03:05:50.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 865099 : 2084 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 865006 : 2202 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 865328 : 1859 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 865267 : 1932 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 865051 : 2144 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 865199 : 1991 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:50.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 865257 : 1934 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:51.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 865236 : 1947 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:51.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.03:05:51.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.03:05:51.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.03:05:51.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:05:51.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.03:05:51.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.03:05:51.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.03:05:51.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.03:05:51.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:05:51.99:scan_name=254-0311,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:05:51.99:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:05:55.00:setup4f 2003.254.03:05:58.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:58.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:05:59.02:!2003.254.03:11:17 2003.254.03:11:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:11:17.02/disc_pos/454511244584,454510244584, 2003.254.03:11:17.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:11:17.27:!2003.254.03:11:17 2003.254.03:11:17.27:preob 2003.254.03:11:17.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:11:17.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:11:20.85/tpical/1d,7973,2u,12209,3u,15623,4u,23773,i1,15882 2003.254.03:11:20.85/tpical/9u,11482,au,14558,bu,12696,cu,12086,du,8422,eu,8616 2003.254.03:11:20.85/tpical/i2,10209 2003.254.03:11:20.85/tpical/5u,21144,6u,18527,7u,17403,8d,8249,i3,48023 2003.254.03:11:23.50/tpzero/1d,233,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,90 2003.254.03:11:23.50/tpzero/9u,68,au,407,bu,723,cu,514,du,613,eu,858,i2,74 2003.254.03:11:23.50/tpzero/5u,389,6u,870,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:11:26.59:!2003.254.03:11:27 2003.254.03:11:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:11:27.00/disc_pos/454767079424,454510244584, 2003.254.03:11:27.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:11:27.01:midob 2003.254.03:11:27.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:11:27.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:11:27.13/cable/+3.5896816E-02 2003.254.03:11:27.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10397,7615 2003.254.03:11:27.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30791 2003.254.03:11:27.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8538 2003.254.03:11:27.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12673 2003.254.03:11:27.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8558 2003.254.03:11:28.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:11:28.57/tpi/1d,5374,2u,8540,3u,10430,4u,16014,i1,10396 2003.254.03:11:28.57/tpi/9u,6917,au,9836,bu,8601,cu,10395,du,6929,eu,6331,i2,6908 2003.254.03:11:28.58/tpi/5u,13520,6u,12679,7u,11640,8d,5544,i3,30804 2003.254.03:11:28.59/tpdiff/1d,2599,2u,3669,3u,5193,4u,7759,i1,5486 2003.254.03:11:28.60/tpdiff/9u,4565,au,4722,bu,4095,cu,1691,du,1493,eu,2285,i2,3301 2003.254.03:11:28.60/tpdiff/5u,7624,6u,5848,7u,5763,8d,2705,i3,17219 2003.254.03:11:28.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:11:28.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:11:28.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:11:28.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:11:28.64/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,51.4,3u,48.4,4u,52.1,i1,48.8 2003.254.03:11:28.64/tsys/9u,45.0,au,59.9,bu,57.7,cu,175.3,du,126.9,eu,71.9,i2,62.1 2003.254.03:11:28.65/tsys/5u,44.8,6u,52.5,7u,47.3,8d,43.6,i3,46.2 2003.254.03:11:28.96/fmout-gps/+7.7674E-006 2003.254.03:11:28.98:!2003.254.03:13:05 2003.254.03:11:29.05#setcl#time/313951244,4,2003,254,03,11,29.03,1.969,9.387,2 2003.254.03:11:29.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:13:05.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:13:05.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:13:05.48:disc_pos 2003.254.03:13:05.49/disc_pos/457965234872,454511244584, 2003.254.03:13:05.49:disc_check 2003.254.03:13:05.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h13m05.215s,11384,0.00250s,80000,10465856524, 2003.254.03:13:05.89:postob 2003.254.03:13:05.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 871670 : 2105 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 871579 : 2220 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 871903 : 1876 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 871840 : 1950 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 871620 : 2166 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 871776 : 2007 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 871834 : 1948 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:05.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 871812 : 1962 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:06.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.03:13:06.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.03:13:06.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.03:13:06.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:13:06.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.03:13:06.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.03:13:06.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.03:13:06.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.03:13:06.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:13:06.95:scan_name=254-0315,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:13:06.95:source=2126-158,212626.80,-155150.4,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:13:09.98:setup4f 2003.254.03:13:13.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:13.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:13:14.02:!2003.254.03:15:01 2003.254.03:15:01.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:15:01.02/disc_pos/457965234872,457964234872, 2003.254.03:15:01.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:15:01.26:!2003.254.03:15:01 2003.254.03:15:01.26:preob 2003.254.03:15:01.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:15:01.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:15:04.84/tpical/1d,8115,2u,12364,3u,15864,4u,24194,i1,16153 2003.254.03:15:04.84/tpical/9u,11829,au,15341,bu,13299,cu,7756,du,10667,eu,9003 2003.254.03:15:04.84/tpical/i2,12962 2003.254.03:15:04.84/tpical/5u,21500,6u,18798,7u,17640,8d,8347,i3,48825 2003.254.03:15:07.49/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,464,i1,93 2003.254.03:15:07.49/tpzero/9u,69,au,408,bu,723,cu,514,du,613,eu,858,i2,69 2003.254.03:15:07.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:15:10.58:!2003.254.03:15:11 2003.254.03:15:11.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:15:11.00/disc_pos/458221137920,457964234872, 2003.254.03:15:11.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:15:11.01:midob 2003.254.03:15:11.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:15:11.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:15:11.05/cable/+3.5896491E-02 2003.254.03:15:11.12/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10663,8787 2003.254.03:15:11.20/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31629 2003.254.03:15:11.27/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8721 2003.254.03:15:11.34/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12980 2003.254.03:15:11.41/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8966 2003.254.03:15:11.97/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:15:12.51/tpi/1d,5508,2u,8721,3u,10679,4u,16417,i1,10659 2003.254.03:15:12.51/tpi/9u,8067,au,10275,bu,8974,cu,5912,du,8979,eu,6579,i2,9031 2003.254.03:15:12.52/tpi/5u,13867,6u,12968,7u,11892,8d,5655,i3,31625 2003.254.03:15:12.53/tpdiff/1d,2607,2u,3643,3u,5185,4u,7777,i1,5494 2003.254.03:15:12.53/tpdiff/9u,3762,au,5066,bu,4325,cu,1844,du,1688,eu,2424,i2,3931 2003.254.03:15:12.54/tpdiff/5u,7633,6u,5830,7u,5748,8d,2692,i3,17200 2003.254.03:15:12.55/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:15:12.55/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:15:12.56/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:15:12.57/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:15:12.58/tsys/1d,52.6,2u,53.1,3u,49.8,4u,53.3,i1,50.0 2003.254.03:15:12.59/tsys/9u,63.8,au,58.4,bu,57.2,cu,87.8,du,148.7,eu,70.8,i2,68.4 2003.254.03:15:12.59/tsys/5u,45.9,6u,54.0,7u,48.6,8d,44.9,i3,47.5 2003.254.03:15:12.96/fmout-gps/+7.8249E-006 2003.254.03:15:12.98:!2003.254.03:16:49 2003.254.03:15:13.05#setcl#time/313973644,4,2003,254,03,15,13.04,1.981,9.450,3 2003.254.03:15:13.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:16:49.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:16:49.01:disc_end 2003.254.03:16:49.50:disc_pos 2003.254.03:16:49.51/disc_pos/461419615208,457965234872, 2003.254.03:16:49.51:disc_check 2003.254.03:16:49.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h16m49.225s,29968,0.00250s,80000,3713921080, 2003.254.03:16:49.90:postob 2003.254.03:16:49.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 878236 : 2132 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:49.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 878154 : 2238 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:49.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 878480 : 1891 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:49.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 878415 : 1966 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:49.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 878195 : 2185 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:49.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 878353 : 2021 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:50.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 878411 : 1963 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:50.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 878384 : 1981 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:50.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.03:16:50.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.03:16:50.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.03:16:50.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.03:16:50.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.03:16:50.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.03:16:50.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.03:16:50.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.95 2003.254.03:16:51.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.03:16:51.00:scan_name=254-0319,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:16:51.00:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:16:54.02:setup4f 2003.254.03:16:57.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:58.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:16:58.03:!2003.254.03:19:36 2003.254.03:19:36.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:19:36.01/disc_pos/461419615208,461418615208, 2003.254.03:19:36.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:19:36.24:!2003.254.03:19:36 2003.254.03:19:36.24:preob 2003.254.03:19:36.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:19:36.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:19:39.82/tpical/1d,8638,2u,13119,3u,16850,4u,25789,i1,17221 2003.254.03:19:39.82/tpical/9u,10355,au,16055,bu,14087,cu,8204,du,7125,eu,9675,i2,10150 2003.254.03:19:39.82/tpical/5u,22790,6u,19821,7u,18639,8d,8798,i3,51946 2003.254.03:19:42.50/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1282,3u,757,4u,463,i1,87 2003.254.03:19:42.50/tpzero/9u,68,au,407,bu,722,cu,515,du,613,eu,858,i2,68 2003.254.03:19:42.50/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1153,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.03:19:45.60:!2003.254.03:19:46 2003.254.03:19:46.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:19:46.00/disc_pos/461675327488,461418615208, 2003.254.03:19:46.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:19:46.01:midob 2003.254.03:19:46.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:19:46.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:19:46.09/cable/+3.5899208E-02 2003.254.03:19:46.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11747,8036 2003.254.03:19:46.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34789 2003.254.03:19:46.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9475 2003.254.03:19:46.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14091 2003.254.03:19:46.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9628 2003.254.03:19:47.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:19:47.53/tpi/1d,6042,2u,9478,3u,11672,4u,18056,i1,11748 2003.254.03:19:47.53/tpi/9u,6414,au,11024,bu,9646,cu,6278,du,5504,eu,7181,i2,5964 2003.254.03:19:47.54/tpi/5u,15196,6u,14082,7u,12949,8d,6121,i3,34792 2003.254.03:19:47.55/tpdiff/1d,2596,2u,3641,3u,5178,4u,7733,i1,5473 2003.254.03:19:47.55/tpdiff/9u,3941,au,5031,bu,4441,cu,1926,du,1621,eu,2494,i2,4186 2003.254.03:19:47.56/tpdiff/5u,7594,6u,5739,7u,5690,8d,2677,i3,17154 2003.254.03:19:47.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:19:47.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:19:47.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:19:47.59/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:19:47.61/tsys/1d,58.2,2u,58.5,3u,54.8,4u,59.2,i1,55.4 2003.254.03:19:47.61/tsys/9u,48.3,au,63.3,bu,60.3,cu,89.8,du,90.5,eu,76.1,i2,42.3 2003.254.03:19:47.62/tsys/5u,50.7,6u,59.9,7u,53.9,8d,49.6,i3,52.4 2003.254.03:19:47.96/fmout-gps/+7.7134E-006 2003.254.03:19:47.98:!2003.254.03:21:24 2003.254.03:19:48.05#setcl#time/314001142,4,2003,254,03,19,48.03,1.990,9.526,3 2003.254.03:19:48.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:21:24.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:21:24.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:21:24.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:21:24.49/disc_pos/464874443352,461419615208, 2003.254.03:21:24.49:disc_check 2003.254.03:21:24.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h21m24.218s,6968,0.00250s,80000,5344954856, 2003.254.03:21:24.89:postob 2003.254.03:21:24.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 884814 : 2146 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 884733 : 2253 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 885059 : 1904 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 884994 : 1982 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 884771 : 2201 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 884931 : 2036 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 884986 : 1980 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:24.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 884964 : 1995 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:25.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.03:21:25.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.03:21:25.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.03:21:25.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:21:25.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.03:21:25.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.03:21:25.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.03:21:25.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.03:21:25.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:21:25.96:scan_name=254-0322,rd0308,326 2003.254.03:21:25.96:source=1908-201,190812.49,-201155.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:21:28.98:setup4f 2003.254.03:21:32.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:32.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:21:33.03:!2003.254.03:22:45 2003.254.03:22:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:22:45.01/disc_pos/464874443352,464873443352, 2003.254.03:22:45.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:22:45.25:!2003.254.03:22:45 2003.254.03:22:45.26:preob 2003.254.03:22:45.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:22:45.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:22:48.84/tpical/1d,8678,2u,13164,3u,16914,4u,25946,i1,17309 2003.254.03:22:48.84/tpical/9u,10993,au,16253,bu,14390,cu,7658,du,6838,eu,9588,i2,9398 2003.254.03:22:48.84/tpical/5u,22896,6u,19875,7u,18681,8d,8823,i3,52162 2003.254.03:22:51.49/tpzero/1d,233,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,94 2003.254.03:22:51.49/tpzero/9u,67,au,408,bu,722,cu,515,du,613,eu,858,i2,67 2003.254.03:22:51.49/tpzero/5u,389,6u,869,7u,1152,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:22:54.59:!2003.254.03:22:55 2003.254.03:22:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:22:55.00/disc_pos/465130459136,464873443352, 2003.254.03:22:55.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:22:55.01:midob 2003.254.03:22:55.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:22:55.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:22:55.10/cable/+3.5897116E-02 2003.254.03:22:55.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11814,7125 2003.254.03:22:55.24/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34976 2003.254.03:22:55.31/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9528 2003.254.03:22:55.38/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14121 2003.254.03:22:55.45/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9837 2003.254.03:22:56.01/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:22:56.54/tpi/1d,6080,2u,9525,3u,11732,4u,18176,i1,11813 2003.254.03:22:56.54/tpi/9u,6557,au,11053,bu,9824,cu,5702,du,5141,eu,7028,i2,7756 2003.254.03:22:56.55/tpi/5u,15284,6u,14113,7u,12992,8d,6142,i3,34973 2003.254.03:22:56.56/tpdiff/1d,2598,2u,3639,3u,5182,4u,7770,i1,5496 2003.254.03:22:56.56/tpdiff/9u,4436,au,5200,bu,4566,cu,1956,du,1697,eu,2560,i2,1642 2003.254.03:22:56.57/tpdiff/5u,7612,6u,5762,7u,5689,8d,2681,i3,17189 2003.254.03:22:56.59/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:22:56.59/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:22:56.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:22:56.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:22:56.61/tsys/1d,58.5,2u,58.9,3u,55.1,4u,59.3,i1,55.4 2003.254.03:22:56.62/tsys/9u,43.9,au,61.4,bu,59.8,cu,79.6,du,80.0,eu,72.3,i2,140.5 2003.254.03:22:56.63/tsys/5u,50.9,6u,59.8,7u,54.1,8d,49.8,i3,52.6 2003.254.03:22:56.98/fmout-gps/+7.7379E-006 2003.254.03:22:56.98:!2003.254.03:28:21 2003.254.03:22:57.05#setcl#time/314020042,4,2003,254,03,22,57.03,1.979,9.579,2 2003.254.03:22:57.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:28:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:28:21.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:28:21.48:disc_pos 2003.254.03:28:21.49/disc_pos/475624683432,464874443352, 2003.254.03:28:21.49:disc_check 2003.254.03:28:21.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h28m21.218s,40884,0.00250s,80000,2593726004, 2003.254.03:28:21.89:postob 2003.254.03:28:21.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 905274 : 2195 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 905191 : 2304 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 905517 : 1955 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 905462 : 2025 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 905239 : 2242 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 905396 : 2080 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 905448 : 2027 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:21.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 905411 : 2058 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:22.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.03:28:22.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.03:28:22.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.03:28:22.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:28:22.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.03:28:22.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.03:28:22.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.03:28:22.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.03:28:22.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:28:22.98:scan_name=254-0330,rd0308,206 2003.254.03:28:22.98:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:28:26.00:setup4f 2003.254.03:28:29.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:30.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:28:30.03:!2003.254.03:29:55 2003.254.03:29:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:29:55.01/disc_pos/475624683432,475623683432, 2003.254.03:29:55.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:29:55.27:!2003.254.03:29:55 2003.254.03:29:55.27:preob 2003.254.03:29:55.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:29:55.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:29:58.85/tpical/1d,8098,2u,12372,3u,15918,4u,24339,i1,16196 2003.254.03:29:58.85/tpical/9u,7674,au,14234,bu,12623,cu,10303,du,5933,eu,8584,i2,6437 2003.254.03:29:58.85/tpical/5u,21587,6u,19022,7u,17814,8d,8442,i3,49341 2003.254.03:30:01.50/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,462,i1,90 2003.254.03:30:01.50/tpzero/9u,66,au,408,bu,722,cu,515,du,612,eu,858,i2,65 2003.254.03:30:01.50/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1151,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.03:30:04.59:!2003.254.03:30:05 2003.254.03:30:05.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:30:05.00/disc_pos/475880427520,475623683432, 2003.254.03:30:05.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:30:05.01:midob 2003.254.03:30:05.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:30:05.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:30:05.29/cable/+3.5897127E-02 2003.254.03:30:05.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10661,4571 2003.254.03:30:05.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31820 2003.254.03:30:05.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8705 2003.254.03:30:05.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13076 2003.254.03:30:05.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8545 2003.254.03:30:06.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:30:06.72/tpi/1d,5486,2u,8710,3u,10658,4u,16493,i1,10662 2003.254.03:30:06.72/tpi/9u,5029,au,9636,bu,8534,cu,8090,du,4450,eu,6304,i2,4303 2003.254.03:30:06.73/tpi/5u,13872,6u,13076,7u,11962,8d,5695,i3,31829 2003.254.03:30:06.74/tpdiff/1d,2612,2u,3662,3u,5260,4u,7846,i1,5534 2003.254.03:30:06.74/tpdiff/9u,2645,au,4598,bu,4089,cu,2213,du,1483,eu,2280,i2,2134 2003.254.03:30:06.75/tpdiff/5u,7715,6u,5946,7u,5852,8d,2747,i3,17512 2003.254.03:30:06.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:30:06.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:30:06.78/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:30:06.79/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:30:06.80/tsys/1d,52.3,2u,52.7,3u,48.9,4u,53.1,i1,49.7 2003.254.03:30:06.81/tsys/9u,56.3,au,60.2,bu,57.3,cu,102.7,du,77.6,eu,71.7,i2,59.6 2003.254.03:30:06.81/tsys/5u,45.4,6u,53.4,7u,48.0,8d,44.4,i3,47.0 2003.254.03:30:06.96/fmout-gps/+7.7544E-006 2003.254.03:30:06.96:!2003.254.03:33:31 2003.254.03:30:07.04#setcl#time/314063041,4,2003,254,03,30,07.03,1.980,9.698,3 2003.254.03:30:07.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:33:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:33:31.01:disc_end 2003.254.03:33:31.50:disc_pos 2003.254.03:33:31.51/disc_pos/482534596864,475624683432, 2003.254.03:33:31.51:disc_check 2003.254.03:33:31.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h33m31.225s,21948,0.00250s,80000,3010345504, 2003.254.03:33:31.90:postob 2003.254.03:33:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 918423 : 2230 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:31.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 918341 : 2337 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:31.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 918672 : 1983 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:31.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 918615 : 2055 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:31.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 918393 : 2271 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:31.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 918540 : 2121 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:32.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 918596 : 2062 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:32.02/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 918568 : 2087 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:32.13/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.03:33:32.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.03:33:32.35/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.03:33:32.46/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.03:33:32.57/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.03:33:32.68/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.03:33:32.79/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.03:33:32.90/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.03:33:33.02/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:33:33.02:scan_name=254-0334,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:33:33.02:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:33:36.04:setup4f 2003.254.03:33:39.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:40.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:33:40.03:!2003.254.03:34:10 2003.254.03:34:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:34:10.01/disc_pos/482534596864,482533596864, 2003.254.03:34:10.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:34:10.25:!2003.254.03:34:10 2003.254.03:34:10.25:preob 2003.254.03:34:10.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/SLEWING 2003.254.03:34:10.26?ERROR qo -301 WARNING: ONSOURCE status is SLEWING! 2003.254.03:34:10.26/onsource/SLEWING 2003.254.03:34:13.83/tpical/1d,10092,2u,15190,3u,19660,4u,30557,i1,20311 2003.254.03:34:13.83/tpical/9u,8448,au,15558,bu,13912,cu,7456,du,6204,eu,9231,i2,6635 2003.254.03:34:13.83/tpical/5u,26816,6u,23074,7u,21716,8d,10210,i3,61674 2003.254.03:34:16.48/tpzero/1d,231,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,464,i1,91 2003.254.03:34:16.48/tpzero/9u,66,au,407,bu,723,cu,516,du,612,eu,858,i2,64 2003.254.03:34:16.48/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1151,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:34:19.57:!2003.254.03:34:20 2003.254.03:34:20.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:34:20.00/disc_pos/482790342656,482533596864, 2003.254.03:34:20.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:34:20.03:midob 2003.254.03:34:20.04#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:34:20.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:34:20.18/cable/+3.5896633E-02 2003.254.03:34:20.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,14807,5023 2003.254.03:34:20.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,44258 2003.254.03:34:20.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11563 2003.254.03:34:20.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,17255 2003.254.03:34:20.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9750 2003.254.03:34:21.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:34:21.61/tpi/1d,7499,2u,11558,3u,14496,4u,22788,i1,14800 2003.254.03:34:21.61/tpi/9u,5883,au,10973,bu,9745,cu,5740,du,4744,eu,6949,i2,4717 2003.254.03:34:21.62/tpi/5u,19139,6u,17250,7u,16047,8d,7503,i3,44241 2003.254.03:34:21.63/tpdiff/1d,2593,2u,3632,3u,5164,4u,7769,i1,5511 2003.254.03:34:21.63/tpdiff/9u,2565,au,4585,bu,4167,cu,1716,du,1460,eu,2282,i2,1918 2003.254.03:34:21.64/tpdiff/5u,7677,6u,5824,7u,5669,8d,2707,i3,17433 2003.254.03:34:21.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:34:21.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:34:21.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:34:21.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:34:21.68/tsys/1d,72.9,2u,73.6,3u,69.2,4u,74.7,i1,69.4 2003.254.03:34:21.68/tsys/9u,68.0,au,69.1,bu,65.0,cu,91.3,du,84.9,eu,80.1,i2,72.8 2003.254.03:34:21.69/tsys/5u,63.5,6u,73.1,7u,68.3,8d,62.4,i3,65.7 2003.254.03:34:21.96/fmout-gps/+7.7114E-006 2003.254.03:34:21.99:!2003.254.03:35:58 2003.254.03:34:22.05#setcl#time/314088541,4,2003,254,03,34,22.04,1.990,9.769,3 2003.254.03:34:22.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:35:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:35:58.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:35:58.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:35:58.49/disc_pos/485989140320,482534596864, 2003.254.03:35:58.49:disc_check 2003.254.03:35:58.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h35m58.220s,65456,0.00250s,80000,1249253036, 2003.254.03:35:58.89:postob 2003.254.03:35:58.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 924999 : 2247 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 924915 : 2355 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 925258 : 1989 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 925193 : 2071 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 924969 : 2287 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 925106 : 2147 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 925172 : 2078 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 925138 : 2110 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:35:59.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.03:35:59.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.03:35:59.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.03:35:59.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:35:59.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.03:35:59.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.03:35:59.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.03:35:59.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.03:35:59.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:35:59.97:scan_name=254-0337,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:35:59.97:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:36:02.99:setup4f 2003.254.03:36:06.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:36:06.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:36:07.01:!2003.254.03:37:30 2003.254.03:37:30.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:37:30.02/disc_pos/485989140320,485988140320, 2003.254.03:37:30.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:37:30.25:!2003.254.03:37:30 2003.254.03:37:30.26:preob 2003.254.03:37:30.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:37:30.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:37:33.83/tpical/1d,7788,2u,11931,3u,15309,4u,23472,i1,15574 2003.254.03:37:33.83/tpical/9u,11507,au,17689,bu,12693,cu,8459,du,6323,eu,8575,i2,19900 2003.254.03:37:33.83/tpical/5u,20922,6u,18498,7u,17234,8d,8161,i3,47487 2003.254.03:37:36.48/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,462,i1,91 2003.254.03:37:36.48/tpzero/9u,71,au,408,bu,723,cu,515,du,612,eu,858,i2,68 2003.254.03:37:36.48/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1151,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.03:37:39.57:!2003.254.03:37:40 2003.254.03:37:40.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:37:40.00/disc_pos/486245167104,485988140320, 2003.254.03:37:40.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:37:40.01:midob 2003.254.03:37:40.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:37:40.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:37:40.32/cable/+3.5895103E-02 2003.254.03:37:40.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10060,15657 2003.254.03:37:40.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30048 2003.254.03:37:40.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8275 2003.254.03:37:40.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12577 2003.254.03:37:40.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8514 2003.254.03:37:41.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:37:41.75/tpi/1d,5177,2u,8276,3u,10084,4u,15607,i1,10060 2003.254.03:37:41.75/tpi/9u,9590,au,13358,bu,8513,cu,6522,du,4793,eu,6270,i2,18081 2003.254.03:37:41.76/tpi/5u,13182,6u,12583,7u,11391,8d,5416,i3,30052 2003.254.03:37:41.77/tpdiff/1d,2611,2u,3655,3u,5225,4u,7865,i1,5514 2003.254.03:37:41.78/tpdiff/9u,1917,au,4331,bu,4180,cu,1937,du,1530,eu,2305,i2,1819 2003.254.03:37:41.78/tpdiff/5u,7740,6u,5915,7u,5843,8d,2745,i3,17435 2003.254.03:37:41.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:37:41.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:37:41.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:37:41.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:37:41.82/tsys/1d,49.2,2u,49.8,3u,46.4,4u,50.1,i1,47.0 2003.254.03:37:41.83/tsys/9u,149.0,au,89.7,bu,55.9,cu,93.0,du,82.0,eu,70.4,i2,297.1 2003.254.03:37:41.83/tsys/5u,43.0,6u,51.5,7u,45.6,8d,41.7,i3,44.5 2003.254.03:37:41.97/fmout-gps/+7.7654E-006 2003.254.03:37:41.98:!2003.254.03:39:18 2003.254.03:37:42.05#setcl#time/314108540,4,2003,254,03,37,42.04,2.003,9.824,4 2003.254.03:37:42.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:39:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:39:18.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:39:18.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:39:18.50/disc_pos/489443325440,485989140320, 2003.254.03:39:18.50:disc_check 2003.254.03:39:18.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h39m18.218s,60584,0.00250s,80000,2945739752, 2003.254.03:39:18.89:postob 2003.254.03:39:18.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 931573 : 2266 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 931490 : 2371 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 931845 : 1993 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 931772 : 2083 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 931544 : 2303 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 931691 : 2155 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:18.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 931747 : 2094 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:19.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 931713 : 2128 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:19.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.03:39:19.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.03:39:19.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.03:39:19.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.03:39:19.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.03:39:19.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.03:39:19.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.03:39:19.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.03:39:20.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:39:20.00:scan_name=254-0341,rd0308,98 2003.254.03:39:20.00:source=3c371,180718.63,694857.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:39:23.01:setup4f 2003.254.03:39:26.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:27.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:39:27.03:!2003.254.03:41:31 2003.254.03:41:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:41:31.01/disc_pos/489443325440,489442325440, 2003.254.03:41:31.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:41:31.25:!2003.254.03:41:31 2003.254.03:41:31.26:preob 2003.254.03:41:31.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:41:31.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:41:34.84/tpical/1d,7777,2u,11888,3u,15236,4u,23204,i1,15454 2003.254.03:41:34.84/tpical/9u,11285,au,14921,bu,12651,cu,6658,du,5750,eu,8600,i2,13006 2003.254.03:41:34.84/tpical/5u,20719,6u,18150,7u,17034,8d,8061,i3,46935 2003.254.03:41:37.49/tpzero/1d,232,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,463,i1,89 2003.254.03:41:37.49/tpzero/9u,76,au,407,bu,722,cu,515,du,612,eu,858,i2,70 2003.254.03:41:37.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1151,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:41:40.58:!2003.254.03:41:41 2003.254.03:41:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:41:41.00/disc_pos/489699291136,489442325440, 2003.254.03:41:41.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:41:41.01:midob 2003.254.03:41:41.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:41:41.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:41:41.17/cable/+3.5895701E-02 2003.254.03:41:41.24/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9967,12385 2003.254.03:41:41.31/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29699 2003.254.03:41:41.38/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8253 2003.254.03:41:41.45/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12304 2003.254.03:41:41.52/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8425 2003.254.03:41:42.08/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:41:42.60/tpi/1d,5175,2u,8248,3u,10055,4u,15385,i1,9968 2003.254.03:41:42.60/tpi/9u,9359,au,10173,bu,8426,cu,4869,du,4205,eu,6218,i2,11632 2003.254.03:41:42.61/tpi/5u,13045,6u,12304,7u,11244,8d,5361,i3,29686 2003.254.03:41:42.62/tpdiff/1d,2602,2u,3640,3u,5181,4u,7819,i1,5486 2003.254.03:41:42.62/tpdiff/9u,1926,au,4748,bu,4225,cu,1789,du,1545,eu,2382,i2,1374 2003.254.03:41:42.63/tpdiff/5u,7674,6u,5846,7u,5790,8d,2700,i3,17249 2003.254.03:41:42.64/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:41:42.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:41:42.65/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:41:42.66/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:41:42.67/tsys/1d,49.4,2u,49.8,3u,46.7,4u,49.6,i1,46.8 2003.254.03:41:42.68/tsys/9u,144.6,au,61.7,bu,54.7,cu,73.0,du,69.8,eu,67.5,i2,252.4 2003.254.03:41:42.68/tsys/5u,42.9,6u,50.9,7u,45.3,8d,41.9,i3,44.5 2003.254.03:41:42.96/fmout-gps/+7.7779E-006 2003.254.03:41:42.98:!2003.254.03:43:19 2003.254.03:41:43.05#setcl#time/314132639,3,2003,254,03,41,43.03,1.990,9.891,3 2003.254.03:41:43.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:43:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:43:19.00:disc_end 2003.254.03:43:19.48:disc_pos 2003.254.03:43:19.49/disc_pos/492897770744,489443325440, 2003.254.03:43:19.49:disc_check 2003.254.03:43:19.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h43m19.218s,34944,0.00250s,80000,4257580336, 2003.254.03:43:19.88:postob 2003.254.03:43:19.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 938150 : 2282 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 938066 : 2389 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 938431 : 1999 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 938347 : 2100 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 938119 : 2320 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 938273 : 2164 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:19.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 938322 : 2111 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:20.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 938289 : 2143 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:20.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.03:43:20.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.03:43:20.35/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.03:43:20.46/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.03:43:20.57/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.03:43:20.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.03:43:20.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.95 2003.254.03:43:20.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.03:43:21.02/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.03:43:21.02:scan_name=254-0345b,rd0308,176 2003.254.03:43:21.02:source=0804+499,080458.36,495923.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:43:24.04:setup4f 2003.254.03:43:27.99/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:28.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:43:28.03:!2003.254.03:45:36 2003.254.03:45:36.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:45:36.01/disc_pos/492897770744,492896770744, 2003.254.03:45:36.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:45:36.26:!2003.254.03:45:36 2003.254.03:45:36.26:preob 2003.254.03:45:36.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:45:36.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:45:39.85/tpical/1d,12965,2u,19281,3u,24826,4u,38874,i1,26002 2003.254.03:45:39.85/tpical/9u,10755,au,17691,bu,15833,cu,9670,du,7076,eu,10409 2003.254.03:45:39.85/tpical/i2,7879 2003.254.03:45:39.85/tpical/5u,33901,6u,28622,7u,26831,8d,12614,i3,65535 2003.254.03:45:42.51/tpzero/1d,233,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,463,i1,94 2003.254.03:45:42.51/tpzero/9u,67,au,408,bu,722,cu,515,du,612,eu,858,i2,66 2003.254.03:45:42.51/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1151,8d,1010,i3,190 2003.254.03:45:45.60:!2003.254.03:45:46 2003.254.03:45:46.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:45:46.00/disc_pos/493153755136,492896770744, 2003.254.03:45:46.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:45:46.01:midob 2003.254.03:45:46.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:45:46.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:45:46.34/cable/+3.5897284E-02 2003.254.03:45:46.41/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,20483,5722 2003.254.03:45:46.48/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,60912 2003.254.03:45:46.55/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15618 2003.254.03:45:46.62/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,22981 2003.254.03:45:46.69/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11674 2003.254.03:45:47.25/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:45:47.77/tpi/1d,10360,2u,15612,3u,19692,4u,31255,i1,20484 2003.254.03:45:47.78/tpi/9u,7387,au,13065,bu,11668,cu,7767,du,5599,eu,8125,i2,5596 2003.254.03:45:47.78/tpi/5u,26271,6u,22974,7u,21347,8d,9920,i3,60911 2003.254.03:45:47.79/tpdiff/1d,2605,2u,3669,3u,5134,4u,7619,i1,5518 2003.254.03:45:47.80/tpdiff/9u,3368,au,4626,bu,4165,cu,1903,du,1477,eu,2284,i2,2283 2003.254.03:45:47.80/tpdiff/5u,7630,6u,5648,7u,5484,8d,2694,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.03:45:47.81/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:45:47.82/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:45:47.82/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:45:47.83/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:45:47.84?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.03:45:47.85/tsys/1d,101.1,2u,101.6,3u,95.9,4u,105.1,i1,96.1 2003.254.03:45:47.86/tsys/9u,65.2,au,82.1,bu,78.8,cu,114.3,du,101.3,eu,95.5,i2,72.7 2003.254.03:45:47.86/tsys/5u,88.2,6u,101.8,7u,95.8,8d,86.0,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.03:45:47.97/fmout-gps/+7.7924E-006 2003.254.03:45:47.98:!2003.254.03:48:42 2003.254.03:45:47.99;"weather: clear 2003.254.03:45:48.06#setcl#time/314157139,3,2003,254,03,45,48.04,2.000,9.959,3 2003.254.03:45:48.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.03:48:42.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.03:48:42.01:disc_end 2003.254.03:48:42.49:disc_pos 2003.254.03:48:42.50/disc_pos/498848151080,492897770744, 2003.254.03:48:42.50:disc_check 2003.254.03:48:42.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d03h48m42.225s,4696,0.00250s,80000,4385889912, 2003.254.03:48:42.90:postob 2003.254.03:48:42.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 949477 : 2308 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 949391 : 2418 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 949780 : 2003 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 949671 : 2130 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 949442 : 2352 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 949605 : 2185 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 949646 : 2140 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:42.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 949614 : 2171 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:43.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.03:48:43.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.03:48:43.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.03:48:43.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.03:48:43.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.254.03:48:43.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.03:48:43.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.03:48:43.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.49 2003.254.03:48:43.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.03:48:43.98:scan_name=254-0354,rd0308,421 2003.254.03:48:43.98:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.03:48:47.00:setup4f 2003.254.03:48:50.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:50.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.03:48:51.02:!2003.254.03:54:00 2003.254.03:54:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:54:00.01/disc_pos/498848151080,498847151080, 2003.254.03:54:00.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.03:54:00.26:!2003.254.03:54:00 2003.254.03:54:00.26:preob 2003.254.03:54:00.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:54:00.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:54:03.85/tpical/1d,7719,2u,11810,3u,15102,4u,22969,i1,15304 2003.254.03:54:03.85/tpical/9u,12195,au,17571,bu,12589,cu,13497,du,18187,eu,19126 2003.254.03:54:03.85/tpical/i2,20554 2003.254.03:54:03.85/tpical/5u,20513,6u,17987,7u,16834,8d,7981,i3,46436 2003.254.03:54:06.50/tpzero/1d,233,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,463,i1,93 2003.254.03:54:06.50/tpzero/9u,70,au,407,bu,722,cu,516,du,614,eu,860,i2,69 2003.254.03:54:06.50/tpzero/5u,390,6u,868,7u,1151,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.03:54:09.59:!2003.254.03:54:10 2003.254.03:54:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.03:54:10.00/disc_pos/499104088064,498847151080, 2003.254.03:54:10.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.03:54:10.01:midob 2003.254.03:54:10.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.03:54:10.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.03:54:10.33/cable/+3.5895552E-02 2003.254.03:54:10.40/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9824,11757 2003.254.03:54:10.47/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29206 2003.254.03:54:10.54/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8165 2003.254.03:54:10.61/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12124 2003.254.03:54:10.68/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8437 2003.254.03:54:11.24/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.03:54:11.77/tpi/1d,5118,2u,8171,3u,9944,4u,15164,i1,9824 2003.254.03:54:11.78/tpi/9u,8249,au,11041,bu,8433,cu,13453,du,15205,eu,15659,i2,11479 2003.254.03:54:11.78/tpi/5u,12857,6u,12103,7u,11054,8d,5282,i3,29191 2003.254.03:54:11.79/tpdiff/1d,2601,2u,3639,3u,5158,4u,7805,i1,5480 2003.254.03:54:11.80/tpdiff/9u,3946,au,6530,bu,4156,cu,44,du,2982,eu,3467,i2,9075 2003.254.03:54:11.81/tpdiff/5u,7656,6u,5884,7u,5780,8d,2699,i3,17245 2003.254.03:54:11.81/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.03:54:11.82/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.03:54:11.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.03:54:11.83/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.03:54:11.84/tsys/1d,48.8,2u,49.2,3u,46.3,4u,49.0,i1,46.2 2003.254.03:54:11.85/tsys/9u,62.2,au,48.9,bu,55.7,cu,8820.7,du,146.8,eu,128.1,i2,37.7 2003.254.03:54:11.86/tsys/5u,42.3,6u,49.6,7u,44.5,8d,41.2,i3,43.7 2003.254.03:54:11.96/fmout-gps/+7.7409E-006 2003.254.03:54:11.99:!2003.254.04:01:11 2003.254.03:54:12.06#setcl#time/314207538,4,2003,254,03,54,12.04,1.996,10.099,3 2003.254.03:54:12.06#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:01:11.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:01:11.01:disc_end 2003.254.04:01:11.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:01:11.50/disc_pos/512638607952,498848151080, 2003.254.04:01:11.50:disc_check 2003.254.04:01:11.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h01m11.223s,52672,0.00250s,80000,10177415152, 2003.254.04:01:11.90:postob 2003.254.04:01:11.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 975718 : 2375 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 975649 : 2470 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 976017 : 2074 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 975929 : 2181 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 975693 : 2409 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 975867 : 2234 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 975884 : 2210 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:11.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 975856 : 2238 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:12.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.04:01:12.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.04:01:12.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.04:01:12.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.04:01:12.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.04:01:12.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.04:01:12.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.04:01:12.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.04:01:12.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.04:01:12.98:scan_name=254-0405,rd0308,278 2003.254.04:01:12.98:source=1749+096,174910.41,093942.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:01:16.00:setup4f 2003.254.04:01:19.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:19.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:01:20.03:!2003.254.04:04:57 2003.254.04:01:37.82;"weather: clear 2003.254.04:04:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:04:57.01/disc_pos/512638607952,512637607952, 2003.254.04:04:57.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:04:57.26:!2003.254.04:04:57 2003.254.04:04:57.26:preob 2003.254.04:04:57.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:04:57.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:05:00.84/tpical/1d,8447,2u,12956,3u,16491,4u,25152,i1,16759 2003.254.04:05:00.84/tpical/9u,8199,au,16100,bu,14274,cu,7639,du,9285,eu,9644,i2,6757 2003.254.04:05:00.84/tpical/5u,22354,6u,19470,7u,18289,8d,8647,i3,50742 2003.254.04:05:03.49/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,462,i1,90 2003.254.04:05:03.49/tpzero/9u,72,au,408,bu,722,cu,517,du,613,eu,860,i2,74 2003.254.04:05:03.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1150,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.04:05:06.58:!2003.254.04:05:07 2003.254.04:05:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:05:07.00/disc_pos/512894406656,512637607952, 2003.254.04:05:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:05:07.01:midob 2003.254.04:05:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:05:07.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:05:07.33/cable/+3.5896002E-02 2003.254.04:05:07.40/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11276,5624 2003.254.04:05:07.47/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33462 2003.254.04:05:07.54/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9272 2003.254.04:05:07.61/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13648 2003.254.04:05:07.68/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9711 2003.254.04:05:08.24/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:05:08.77/tpi/1d,5847,2u,9268,3u,11296,4u,17359,i1,11272 2003.254.04:05:08.77/tpi/9u,9581,au,11015,bu,9702,cu,5638,du,7675,eu,7084,i2,5530 2003.254.04:05:08.78/tpi/5u,14643,6u,13629,7u,12520,8d,5940,i3,33427 2003.254.04:05:08.79/tpdiff/1d,2600,2u,3688,3u,5195,4u,7793,i1,5487 2003.254.04:05:08.80/tpdiff/9u,-1382,au,5085,bu,4572,cu,2001,du,1610,eu,2560,i2,1227 2003.254.04:05:08.80/tpdiff/5u,7711,6u,5841,7u,5769,8d,2707,i3,17315 2003.254.04:05:08.81/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:05:08.82/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:05:08.82/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:05:08.83/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:05:08.84?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:05:08.85/tsys/1d,56.1,2u,56.3,3u,52.7,4u,56.4,i1,53.0 2003.254.04:05:08.85/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,62.6,bu,58.9,cu,76.8,du,131.6,eu,72.9,i2,133.4 2003.254.04:05:08.86/tsys/5u,48.1,6u,56.8,7u,51.2,8d,47.4,i3,49.9 2003.254.04:05:08.96/fmout-gps/+7.8154E-006 2003.254.04:05:08.98:!2003.254.04:09:45 2003.254.04:05:09.04#setcl#time/314273236,4,2003,254,04,05,09.03,1.984,10.282,3 2003.254.04:05:09.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:09:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:09:45.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:09:45.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:09:45.49/disc_pos/521852797368,512638607952, 2003.254.04:09:45.49:disc_check 2003.254.04:09:45.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h09m45.218s,50708,0.00250s,80000,7233652548, 2003.254.04:09:45.88:postob 2003.254.04:09:45.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 993203 : 2469 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 993227 : 2473 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 993544 : 2126 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 993480 : 2209 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 993210 : 2471 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 993443 : 2236 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 993363 : 2310 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 993338 : 2336 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:46.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.04:09:46.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.04:09:46.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.04:09:46.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:09:46.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.04:09:46.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.04:09:46.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.04:09:46.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.04:09:46.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.04:09:46.99:scan_name=254-0411,rd0308,98 2003.254.04:09:46.99:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:09:50.01:setup4f 2003.254.04:09:54.00/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:54.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:09:54.05:!2003.254.04:11:22 2003.254.04:11:22.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:11:22.01/disc_pos/521852797368,521851797368, 2003.254.04:11:22.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:11:22.27:!2003.254.04:11:22 2003.254.04:11:22.27:preob 2003.254.04:11:22.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:11:22.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:11:25.85/tpical/1d,7919,2u,12207,3u,15450,4u,23386,i1,15571 2003.254.04:11:25.85/tpical/9u,9998,au,14852,bu,12713,cu,6789,du,5900,eu,8603,i2,9330 2003.254.04:11:25.85/tpical/5u,20542,6u,17862,7u,16814,8d,7971,i3,46399 2003.254.04:11:28.50/tpzero/1d,238,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,461,i1,92 2003.254.04:11:28.50/tpzero/9u,74,au,409,bu,722,cu,519,du,611,eu,861,i2,75 2003.254.04:11:28.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,868,7u,1149,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.04:11:31.59:!2003.254.04:11:32 2003.254.04:11:32.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:11:32.00/disc_pos/522108715008,521851797368, 2003.254.04:11:32.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:11:32.01:midob 2003.254.04:11:32.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:11:32.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:11:32.18/cable/+3.5894600E-02 2003.254.04:11:32.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10124,5598 2003.254.04:11:32.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29584 2003.254.04:11:32.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8501 2003.254.04:11:32.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12190 2003.254.04:11:32.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8531 2003.254.04:11:33.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:11:33.61/tpi/1d,5301,2u,8505,3u,10258,4u,15616,i1,10121 2003.254.04:11:33.61/tpi/9u,9808,au,10238,bu,8511,cu,5072,du,4426,eu,6252,i2,8512 2003.254.04:11:33.62/tpi/5u,13038,6u,12185,7u,11187,8d,5343,i3,29569 2003.254.04:11:33.63/tpdiff/1d,2618,2u,3702,3u,5192,4u,7770,i1,5450 2003.254.04:11:33.63/tpdiff/9u,190,au,4614,bu,4202,cu,1717,du,1474,eu,2351,i2,818 2003.254.04:11:33.64/tpdiff/5u,7504,6u,5677,7u,5627,8d,2628,i3,16830 2003.254.04:11:33.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:11:33.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:11:33.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:11:33.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:11:33.68/tsys/1d,50.3,2u,50.7,3u,47.6,4u,50.7,i1,47.8 2003.254.04:11:33.68/tsys/9u,1536.9,au,63.9,bu,55.6,cu,79.6,du,77.6,eu,68.8,i2,309.4 2003.254.04:11:33.69/tsys/5u,43.8,6u,51.8,7u,46.4,8d,42.9,i3,45.4 2003.254.04:11:33.96/fmout-gps/+7.7959E-006 2003.254.04:11:33.98:!2003.254.04:13:10 2003.254.04:11:34.05#setcl#time/314311735,4,2003,254,04,11,34.03,1.987,10.389,3 2003.254.04:11:34.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:13:10.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:13:10.01:disc_end 2003.254.04:13:10.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:13:10.50/disc_pos/525306871296,521852797368, 2003.254.04:13:10.50:disc_check 2003.254.04:13:10.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h13m10.225s,35568,0.00250s,80000,3106181212, 2003.254.04:13:10.89:postob 2003.254.04:13:10.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 999756 : 2507 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 999808 : 2485 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1000113 : 2148 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1000052 : 2230 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 999770 : 2502 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1000031 : 2239 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 999914 : 2350 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:10.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 999888 : 2377 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:11.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.04:13:11.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.04:13:11.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.04:13:11.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:13:11.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.04:13:11.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.04:13:11.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.04:13:11.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.04:13:11.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.04:13:11.95:scan_name=254-0421,rd0308,98 2003.254.04:13:11.95:source=1741-038,174120.64,-034848.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:13:14.98:setup4f 2003.254.04:13:18.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:18.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:13:19.02:!2003.254.04:21:41 2003.254.04:21:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:21:41.01/disc_pos/525306871296,525305871296, 2003.254.04:21:41.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:21:41.25:!2003.254.04:21:41 2003.254.04:21:41.26:preob 2003.254.04:21:41.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:21:41.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:21:44.83/tpical/1d,13050,2u,19434,3u,24705,4u,37617,i1,25290 2003.254.04:21:44.83/tpical/9u,12141,au,33577,bu,17286,cu,9337,du,8461,eu,11505 2003.254.04:21:44.83/tpical/i2,9400 2003.254.04:21:44.83/tpical/5u,32388,6u,27672,7u,25785,8d,12178,i3,65535 2003.254.04:21:47.48/tpzero/1d,248,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,461,i1,89 2003.254.04:21:47.48/tpzero/9u,76,au,411,bu,722,cu,520,du,610,eu,862,i2,75 2003.254.04:21:47.48/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1146,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.04:21:50.57:!2003.254.04:21:51 2003.254.04:21:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:21:51.00/disc_pos/525562834944,525305871296, 2003.254.04:21:51.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:21:51.02:midob 2003.254.04:21:51.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:21:51.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:21:51.36/cable/+3.5900638E-02 2003.254.04:21:51.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,19824,7049 2003.254.04:21:51.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,57406 2003.254.04:21:51.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15752 2003.254.04:21:51.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,22026 2003.254.04:21:51.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12784 2003.254.04:21:52.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:21:52.79/tpi/1d,10445,2u,15761,3u,19564,4u,30018,i1,19833 2003.254.04:21:52.79/tpi/9u,11906,au,28806,bu,12797,cu,7370,du,6902,eu,9032,i2,7853 2003.254.04:21:52.80/tpi/5u,24833,6u,22053,7u,20327,8d,9514,i3,57418 2003.254.04:21:52.81/tpdiff/1d,2605,2u,3673,3u,5141,4u,7599,i1,5457 2003.254.04:21:52.81/tpdiff/9u,235,au,4771,bu,4489,cu,1967,du,1559,eu,2473,i2,1547 2003.254.04:21:52.82/tpdiff/5u,7555,6u,5619,7u,5458,8d,2664,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.04:21:52.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:21:52.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:21:52.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:21:52.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:21:52.86?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:21:52.86/tsys/1d,101.8,2u,102.5,3u,95.1,4u,101.1,i1,94.1 2003.254.04:21:52.87/tsys/9u,1510.2,au,178.5,bu,80.7,cu,104.5,du,121.1,eu,99.1,i2,150.8 2003.254.04:21:52.87/tsys/5u,84.1,6u,98.0,7u,91.4,8d,83.0,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.04:21:52.96/fmout-gps/+7.7184E-006 2003.254.04:21:52.96:!2003.254.04:23:29 2003.254.04:21:53.04#setcl#time/314373634,4,2003,254,04,21,53.03,1.977,10.561,3 2003.254.04:21:53.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:23:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:23:29.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:23:29.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:23:29.49/disc_pos/528761310576,525306871296, 2003.254.04:23:29.49:disc_check 2003.254.04:23:29.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h23m29.225s,66200,0.00250s,80000,16353530088, 2003.254.04:23:29.89:postob 2003.254.04:23:29.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1006309 : 2546 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1006375 : 2509 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1006680 : 2175 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1006615 : 2260 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1006333 : 2531 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1006621 : 2241 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1006465 : 2390 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:29.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1006438 : 2419 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:30.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.04:23:30.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.04:23:30.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.04:23:30.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:23:30.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.04:23:30.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.04:23:30.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.04:23:30.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.04:23:30.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,54.18 2003.254.04:23:30.96:scan_name=254-0429,rd0308,201 2003.254.04:23:30.96:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:23:33.97:setup4f 2003.254.04:23:37.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:37.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:23:38.01:!2003.254.04:29:41 2003.254.04:29:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:29:41.01/disc_pos/528761310576,528760310576, 2003.254.04:29:41.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:29:41.27:!2003.254.04:29:41 2003.254.04:29:41.27:preob 2003.254.04:29:41.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:29:41.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:29:44.84/tpical/1d,8011,2u,12296,3u,15669,4u,23991,i1,15828 2003.254.04:29:44.84/tpical/9u,10071,au,14279,bu,12709,cu,12428,du,57330,eu,32379 2003.254.04:29:44.84/tpical/i2,7308 2003.254.04:29:44.84/tpical/5u,21349,6u,18888,7u,17587,8d,8349,i3,48370 2003.254.04:29:47.50/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,459,i1,79 2003.254.04:29:47.50/tpzero/9u,75,au,409,bu,722,cu,521,du,613,eu,865,i2,71 2003.254.04:29:47.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1144,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.04:29:50.59:!2003.254.04:29:51 2003.254.04:29:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:29:51.00/disc_pos/529017110528,528760310576, 2003.254.04:29:51.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:29:51.03:midob 2003.254.04:29:51.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:29:51.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:29:51.24/cable/+3.5897093E-02 2003.254.04:29:51.31/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10314,5129 2003.254.04:29:51.38/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30903 2003.254.04:29:51.45/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8591 2003.254.04:29:51.52/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12896 2003.254.04:29:51.60/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8530 2003.254.04:29:52.16/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:29:52.71/tpi/1d,5379,2u,8593,3u,10440,4u,16053,i1,10322 2003.254.04:29:52.71/tpi/9u,8890,au,9626,bu,8541,cu,10743,du,55942,eu,30715,i2,6371 2003.254.04:29:52.72/tpi/5u,13585,6u,12908,7u,11693,8d,5590,i3,30914 2003.254.04:29:52.73/tpdiff/1d,2632,2u,3703,3u,5229,4u,7938,i1,5506 2003.254.04:29:52.73/tpdiff/9u,1181,au,4653,bu,4168,cu,1685,du,1388,eu,1664,i2,937 2003.254.04:29:52.74/tpdiff/5u,7764,6u,5980,7u,5894,8d,2759,i3,17456 2003.254.04:29:52.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:29:52.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:29:52.76/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:29:52.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:29:52.78/tsys/1d,50.8,2u,51.3,3u,48.1,4u,51.1,i1,48.4 2003.254.04:29:52.79/tsys/9u,223.9,au,59.4,bu,56.3,cu,182.0,du,1195.9,eu,538.2,i2,201.7 2003.254.04:29:52.79/tsys/5u,44.2,6u,52.4,7u,46.5,8d,43.2,i3,45.8 2003.254.04:29:52.95/fmout-gps/+7.7839E-006 2003.254.04:29:52.97:!2003.254.04:33:12 2003.254.04:29:53.04#setcl#time/314421633,4,2003,254,04,29,53.03,1.975,10.694,3 2003.254.04:29:53.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:33:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:33:12.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:33:12.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:33:12.49/disc_pos/535511266496,528761310576, 2003.254.04:33:12.50:disc_check 2003.254.04:33:12.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h33m12.223s,35996,0.00250s,80000,11905994284, 2003.254.04:33:12.89:postob 2003.254.04:33:12.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1019107 : 2626 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1019194 : 2568 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1019511 : 2224 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1019438 : 2315 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1019151 : 2593 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1019497 : 2243 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1019268 : 2467 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:12.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1019286 : 2449 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:13.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.04:33:13.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.04:33:13.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.04:33:13.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:33:13.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.04:33:13.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.04:33:13.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.04:33:13.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.04:33:13.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.04:33:13.98:scan_name=254-0435a,rd0308,98 2003.254.04:33:13.98:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:33:17.00:setup4f 2003.254.04:33:20.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:20.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:33:21.02:!2003.254.04:34:51 2003.254.04:34:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:34:51.01/disc_pos/535511266496,535510266496, 2003.254.04:34:51.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:34:51.27:!2003.254.04:34:51 2003.254.04:34:51.28:preob 2003.254.04:34:51.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:34:51.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:34:54.85/tpical/1d,7963,2u,12205,3u,15513,4u,23380,i1,15512 2003.254.04:34:54.85/tpical/9u,9819,au,15725,bu,13821,cu,7372,du,58643,eu,51667 2003.254.04:34:54.85/tpical/i2,7124 2003.254.04:34:54.85/tpical/5u,20719,6u,18238,7u,17016,8d,8087,i3,46918 2003.254.04:34:57.51/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,459,i1,76 2003.254.04:34:57.51/tpzero/9u,76,au,409,bu,721,cu,521,du,615,eu,868,i2,67 2003.254.04:34:57.51/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.04:35:00.60:!2003.254.04:35:01 2003.254.04:35:01.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:35:01.00/disc_pos/535767142400,535510266496, 2003.254.04:35:01.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:35:01.01:midob 2003.254.04:35:01.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:35:01.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:35:01.21/cable/+3.5898530E-02 2003.254.04:35:01.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10179,5678 2003.254.04:35:01.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30348 2003.254.04:35:01.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8541 2003.254.04:35:01.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12613 2003.254.04:35:01.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9199 2003.254.04:35:02.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:35:02.63/tpi/1d,5355,2u,8543,3u,10369,4u,15853,i1,10178 2003.254.04:35:02.63/tpi/9u,5699,au,10616,bu,9184,cu,5562,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,5184 2003.254.04:35:02.64/tpi/5u,13372,6u,12617,7u,11472,8d,5490,i3,30344 2003.254.04:35:02.65/tpdiff/1d,2608,2u,3662,3u,5144,4u,7527,i1,5334 2003.254.04:35:02.65/tpdiff/9u,4120,au,5109,bu,4637,cu,1810,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,1940 2003.254.04:35:02.66/tpdiff/5u,7347,6u,5621,7u,5544,8d,2597,i3,16574 2003.254.04:35:02.67/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:35:02.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:35:02.68/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:35:02.69/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:35:02.70?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:35:02.70?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:35:02.71/tsys/1d,51.0,2u,51.6,3u,48.6,4u,53.2,i1,49.2 2003.254.04:35:02.71/tsys/9u,40.9,au,59.9,bu,54.8,cu,83.6,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.04:35:02.72/tsys/i2,79.1 2003.254.04:35:02.72/tsys/5u,45.9,6u,54.3,7u,48.4,8d,44.9,i3,47.3 2003.254.04:35:02.97/fmout-gps/+7.7094E-006 2003.254.04:35:02.98:!2003.254.04:36:39 2003.254.04:35:03.05#setcl#time/314452632,4,2003,254,04,35,03.04,2.004,10.780,4 2003.254.04:35:03.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:36:39.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:36:39.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:36:39.48:disc_pos 2003.254.04:36:39.49/disc_pos/538964981392,535511266496, 2003.254.04:36:39.49:disc_check 2003.254.04:36:39.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h36m39.220s,13360,0.00250s,80000,3170227740, 2003.254.04:36:39.88:postob 2003.254.04:36:39.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1025676 : 2647 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1025747 : 2606 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1026077 : 2248 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1026026 : 2317 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1025707 : 2627 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1026083 : 2247 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1025820 : 2509 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:39.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1025874 : 2451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:40.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.04:36:40.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.04:36:40.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.04:36:40.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.04:36:40.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.04:36:40.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.04:36:40.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.04:36:40.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.04:36:40.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.04:36:40.93:scan_name=254-0437,rd0308,121 2003.254.04:36:40.93:source=1908-201,190812.49,-201155.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:36:43.94:setup4f 2003.254.04:36:47.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:47.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:36:48.02:!2003.254.04:37:19 2003.254.04:37:19.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:37:19.01/disc_pos/538964981392,538963981392, 2003.254.04:37:19.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:37:19.26:!2003.254.04:37:19 2003.254.04:37:19.26:preob 2003.254.04:37:19.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:37:19.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:37:22.84/tpical/1d,13115,2u,19543,3u,24805,4u,38229,i1,25488 2003.254.04:37:22.84/tpical/9u,13954,au,21775,bu,16936,cu,10191,du,8052,eu,11178 2003.254.04:37:22.84/tpical/i2,21063 2003.254.04:37:22.84/tpical/5u,32693,6u,27821,7u,25847,8d,12182,i3,65535 2003.254.04:37:25.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,460,i1,77 2003.254.04:37:25.49/tpzero/9u,82,au,409,bu,722,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,68 2003.254.04:37:25.49/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.04:37:28.58:!2003.254.04:37:29 2003.254.04:37:29.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:37:29.00/disc_pos/539220766720,538963981392, 2003.254.04:37:29.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:37:29.02:midob 2003.254.04:37:29.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:37:29.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:37:29.16/cable/+3.5899702E-02 2003.254.04:37:29.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,20013,14194 2003.254.04:37:29.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,57862 2003.254.04:37:29.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15828 2003.254.04:37:29.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,22173 2003.254.04:37:29.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12459 2003.254.04:37:30.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:37:30.60/tpi/1d,10513,2u,15846,3u,19688,4u,30583,i1,20034 2003.254.04:37:30.60/tpi/9u,8792,au,15068,bu,12507,cu,8114,du,6467,eu,8729,i2,12905 2003.254.04:37:30.61/tpi/5u,25154,6u,22192,7u,20350,8d,9514,i3,57898 2003.254.04:37:30.62/tpdiff/1d,2602,2u,3697,3u,5117,4u,7646,i1,5454 2003.254.04:37:30.62/tpdiff/9u,5162,au,6707,bu,4429,cu,2077,du,1585,eu,2449,i2,8158 2003.254.04:37:30.63/tpdiff/5u,7539,6u,5629,7u,5497,8d,2668,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.04:37:30.64/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:37:30.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:37:30.65/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:37:30.66/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:37:30.67?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:37:30.68/tsys/1d,102.6,2u,102.4,3u,96.2,4u,102.4,i1,95.1 2003.254.04:37:30.68/tsys/9u,50.6,au,65.6,bu,79.8,cu,109.7,du,110.9,eu,96.3,i2,47.2 2003.254.04:37:30.69/tsys/5u,85.4,6u,98.5,7u,90.8,8d,82.9,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.04:37:30.95/fmout-gps/+7.7924E-006 2003.254.04:37:30.98:!2003.254.04:39:30 2003.254.04:37:31.05#setcl#time/314467433,4,2003,254,04,37,31.04,1.974,10.821,3 2003.254.04:37:31.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:39:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:39:30.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:39:30.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:39:30.49/disc_pos/543154994464,538964981392, 2003.254.04:39:30.49:disc_check 2003.254.04:39:30.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h39m30.218s,64592,0.00250s,80000,1281855696, 2003.254.04:39:30.89:postob 2003.254.04:39:30.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1033668 : 2650 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1033697 : 2652 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1034040 : 2280 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1034018 : 2320 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1033660 : 2671 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1034075 : 2250 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1033768 : 2556 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:30.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1033866 : 2454 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:31.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.04:39:31.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.04:39:31.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.04:39:31.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:39:31.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.04:39:31.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.04:39:31.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.04:39:31.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.04:39:31.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.04:39:31.98:scan_name=254-0440,rd0308,98 2003.254.04:39:31.98:source=0119+115,011903.08,113409.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:39:35.00:setup4f 2003.254.04:39:38.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:38.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:39:39.02:!2003.254.04:40:25 2003.254.04:40:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:40:25.01/disc_pos/543154994464,543153994464, 2003.254.04:40:25.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:40:25.25:!2003.254.04:40:25 2003.254.04:40:25.26:preob 2003.254.04:40:25.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:40:25.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:40:28.84/tpical/1d,7927,2u,12188,3u,15559,4u,23815,i1,15650 2003.254.04:40:28.84/tpical/9u,6167,au,13459,bu,12003,cu,6342,du,6058,eu,8185,i2,5432 2003.254.04:40:28.84/tpical/5u,21153,6u,18802,7u,17459,8d,8295,i3,47903 2003.254.04:40:31.49/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.04:40:31.49/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,68 2003.254.04:40:31.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.04:40:34.58:!2003.254.04:40:35 2003.254.04:40:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:40:35.00/disc_pos/543410970624,543153994464, 2003.254.04:40:35.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:40:35.01:midob 2003.254.04:40:35.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:40:35.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:40:35.29/cable/+3.5896488E-02 2003.254.04:40:35.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10135,3735 2003.254.04:40:35.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30406 2003.254.04:40:35.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8464 2003.254.04:40:35.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12770 2003.254.04:40:35.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8056 2003.254.04:40:36.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:40:36.72/tpi/1d,5292,2u,8462,3u,10281,4u,15862,i1,10129 2003.254.04:40:36.72/tpi/9u,4204,au,9026,bu,8060,cu,4694,du,4511,eu,5971,i2,3738 2003.254.04:40:36.73/tpi/5u,13367,6u,12766,7u,11544,8d,5523,i3,30390 2003.254.04:40:36.74/tpdiff/1d,2635,2u,3726,3u,5278,4u,7953,i1,5521 2003.254.04:40:36.74/tpdiff/9u,1963,au,4433,bu,3943,cu,1648,du,1547,eu,2214,i2,1694 2003.254.04:40:36.75/tpdiff/5u,7786,6u,6036,7u,5915,8d,2772,i3,17513 2003.254.04:40:36.76/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:40:36.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:40:36.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:40:36.78/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:40:36.79/tsys/1d,49.8,2u,50.1,3u,46.9,4u,50.4,i1,47.3 2003.254.04:40:36.80/tsys/9u,63.1,au,58.3,bu,55.8,cu,76.0,du,75.7,eu,69.2,i2,65.0 2003.254.04:40:36.80/tsys/5u,43.3,6u,51.3,7u,45.7,8d,42.3,i3,44.8 2003.254.04:40:36.96/fmout-gps/+7.7344E-006 2003.254.04:40:36.98:!2003.254.04:42:13 2003.254.04:40:37.04#setcl#time/314486031,4,2003,254,04,40,37.03,1.987,10.873,3 2003.254.04:40:37.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.04:42:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.04:42:13.00:disc_end 2003.254.04:42:13.49:disc_pos 2003.254.04:42:13.49/disc_pos/546609447328,543154994464, 2003.254.04:42:13.50:disc_check 2003.254.04:42:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d04h42m13.223s,73880,0.00250s,80000,1761697848, 2003.254.04:42:13.89:postob 2003.254.04:42:13.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1040257 : 2653 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1040272 : 2669 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1040601 : 2310 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1040608 : 2322 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1040218 : 2704 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1040661 : 2256 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1040314 : 2603 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:13.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1040457 : 2457 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:14.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.04:42:14.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.04:42:14.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.04:42:14.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.04:42:14.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.04:42:14.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.04:42:14.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.04:42:14.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.04:42:14.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.04:42:14.97:scan_name=254-0449,rd0308,774 2003.254.04:42:14.97:source=2318+049,231812.14,045723.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.04:42:17.99:setup4f 2003.254.04:42:21.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:21.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.04:42:22.01:!2003.254.04:49:18 2003.254.04:49:18.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:49:18.02/disc_pos/546609447328,546608447328, 2003.254.04:49:18.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.04:49:18.27:!2003.254.04:49:18 2003.254.04:49:18.27:preob 2003.254.04:49:18.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:49:18.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:49:21.85/tpical/1d,7883,2u,12068,3u,15413,4u,23411,i1,15462 2003.254.04:49:21.85/tpical/9u,9025,au,15488,bu,13707,cu,7138,du,6516,eu,9218,i2,8443 2003.254.04:49:21.85/tpical/5u,20769,6u,18341,7u,17062,8d,8087,i3,46832 2003.254.04:49:24.50/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,459,i1,77 2003.254.04:49:24.50/tpzero/9u,75,au,409,bu,720,cu,521,du,609,eu,862,i2,68 2003.254.04:49:24.50/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.04:49:27.59:!2003.254.04:49:28 2003.254.04:49:28.00:disc_pos 2003.254.04:49:28.00/disc_pos/546865348608,546608447328, 2003.254.04:49:28.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.04:49:28.02:midob 2003.254.04:49:28.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.04:49:28.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.04:49:28.10/cable/+3.5897633E-02 2003.254.04:49:28.17/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9984,6432 2003.254.04:49:28.24/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29656 2003.254.04:49:28.31/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8376 2003.254.04:49:28.38/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12428 2003.254.04:49:28.45/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9121 2003.254.04:49:29.01/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.04:49:29.53/tpi/1d,5259,2u,8374,3u,10160,4u,15550,i1,9984 2003.254.04:49:29.53/tpi/9u,9597,au,10533,bu,9096,cu,5238,du,4920,eu,6640,i2,7652 2003.254.04:49:29.54/tpi/5u,13106,6u,12434,7u,11286,8d,5390,i3,29659 2003.254.04:49:29.55/tpdiff/1d,2624,2u,3694,3u,5253,4u,7861,i1,5478 2003.254.04:49:29.55/tpdiff/9u,-572,au,4955,bu,4611,cu,1900,du,1596,eu,2578,i2,791 2003.254.04:49:29.56/tpdiff/5u,7663,6u,5907,7u,5776,8d,2697,i3,17173 2003.254.04:49:29.57/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.04:49:29.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.04:49:29.58/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.04:49:29.59/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.04:49:29.60?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.04:49:29.60/tsys/1d,49.7,2u,49.9,3u,46.5,4u,49.9,i1,47.0 2003.254.04:49:29.61/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,61.3,bu,54.5,cu,74.5,du,81.0,eu,67.2,i2,287.6 2003.254.04:49:29.62/tsys/5u,43.1,6u,50.9,7u,45.7,8d,42.2,i3,44.6 2003.254.04:49:29.98/fmout-gps/+7.7819E-006 2003.254.04:49:29.98:!2003.254.05:02:22 2003.254.04:49:30.05#setcl#time/314539331,4,2003,254,04,49,30.04,1.982,11.021,3 2003.254.04:49:30.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:02:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:02:22.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:02:22.49:disc_pos 2003.254.05:02:22.49/disc_pos/571695359992,546609447328, 2003.254.05:02:22.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:02:22.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h02m22.220s,57496,0.00250s,80000,13602023720, 2003.254.05:02:22.89:postob 2003.254.05:02:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1088010 : 2757 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1088015 : 2781 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1088355 : 2412 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1088345 : 2440 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1087955 : 2825 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1088420 : 2352 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1088050 : 2723 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:22.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1088196 : 2573 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:23.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.05:02:23.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.79 2003.254.05:02:23.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.05:02:23.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:02:23.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.05:02:23.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.05:02:23.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.11 2003.254.05:02:23.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.05:02:23.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.05:02:23.98:scan_name=254-0504b,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:02:23.98:source=1749+096,174910.41,093942.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:02:27.00:setup4f 2003.254.05:02:30.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:30.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:02:31.02:!2003.254.05:04:35 2003.254.05:03:42.46;"weather: clear 2003.254.05:04:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:04:35.01/disc_pos/571695359992,571694359992, 2003.254.05:04:35.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:04:35.27:!2003.254.05:04:35 2003.254.05:04:35.27:preob 2003.254.05:04:35.28#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:04:35.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:04:38.86/tpical/1d,9834,2u,14828,3u,19092,4u,29241,i1,19379 2003.254.05:04:38.86/tpical/9u,8861,au,17250,bu,15241,cu,8070,du,7255,eu,10070,i2,7526 2003.254.05:04:38.86/tpical/5u,25571,6u,22114,7u,20680,8d,9789,i3,58271 2003.254.05:04:41.51/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,78 2003.254.05:04:41.51/tpzero/9u,73,au,409,bu,722,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,69 2003.254.05:04:41.51/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1144,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.05:04:44.60:!2003.254.05:04:45 2003.254.05:04:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:04:45.00/disc_pos/571951308800,571694359992, 2003.254.05:04:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:04:45.01:midob 2003.254.05:04:45.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:04:45.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:04:45.37/cable/+3.5897749E-02 2003.254.05:04:45.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13925,5749 2003.254.05:04:45.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,41165 2003.254.05:04:45.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11162 2003.254.05:04:45.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,16387 2003.254.05:04:45.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10576 2003.254.05:04:46.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:04:46.80/tpi/1d,7227,2u,11156,3u,13889,4u,21548,i1,13945 2003.254.05:04:46.80/tpi/9u,9277,au,12307,bu,10580,cu,6176,du,5603,eu,7498,i2,6292 2003.254.05:04:46.81/tpi/5u,18085,6u,16487,7u,15189,8d,7154,i3,41379 2003.254.05:04:46.82/tpdiff/1d,2607,2u,3672,3u,5203,4u,7693,i1,5434 2003.254.05:04:46.82/tpdiff/9u,-416,au,4943,bu,4661,cu,1894,du,1652,eu,2572,i2,1234 2003.254.05:04:46.83/tpdiff/5u,7486,6u,5627,7u,5491,8d,2635,i3,16892 2003.254.05:04:46.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:04:46.84/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:04:46.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:04:46.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:04:46.87?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:04:46.87/tsys/1d,69.7,2u,69.9,3u,65.6,4u,71.3,i1,66.3 2003.254.05:04:46.88/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,72.2,bu,63.4,cu,89.6,du,90.7,eu,77.4,i2,151.3 2003.254.05:04:46.89/tsys/5u,61.5,6u,72.2,7u,66.5,8d,60.6,i3,63.4 2003.254.05:04:46.98/fmout-gps/+7.7789E-006 2003.254.05:04:46.99:!2003.254.05:06:23 2003.254.05:04:47.05#setcl#time/314631029,4,2003,254,05,04,47.04,1.979,11.276,3 2003.254.05:04:47.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:06:23.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:06:23.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:06:23.48:disc_pos 2003.254.05:06:23.49/disc_pos/575149145160,571695359992, 2003.254.05:06:23.49:disc_check 2003.254.05:06:23.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h06m23.220s,37296,0.00250s,80000,4258235032, 2003.254.05:06:23.88:postob 2003.254.05:06:23.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1094583 : 2774 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1094592 : 2795 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1094927 : 2430 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1094929 : 2449 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1094528 : 2842 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1094994 : 2369 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1094624 : 2741 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:23.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1094765 : 2594 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:24.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.30 2003.254.05:06:24.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.05:06:24.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.05:06:24.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.05:06:24.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.05:06:24.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.05:06:24.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:06:24.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.95 2003.254.05:06:24.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.05:06:24.93:scan_name=254-0508,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:06:24.93:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:06:27.95:setup4f 2003.254.05:06:31.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:31.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:06:32.02:!2003.254.05:07:57 2003.254.05:07:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:07:57.01/disc_pos/575149145160,575148145160, 2003.254.05:07:57.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:07:57.24:!2003.254.05:07:57 2003.254.05:07:57.24:preob 2003.254.05:07:57.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:07:57.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:08:00.82/tpical/1d,7776,2u,11915,3u,15217,4u,23399,i1,15380 2003.254.05:08:00.82/tpical/9u,9378,au,16094,bu,12927,cu,8423,du,7179,eu,9106,i2,20395 2003.254.05:08:00.82/tpical/5u,20875,6u,18516,7u,17117,8d,8107,i3,46849 2003.254.05:08:03.47/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,81 2003.254.05:08:03.47/tpzero/9u,158,au,409,bu,722,cu,521,du,610,eu,863,i2,81 2003.254.05:08:03.47/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1144,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.05:08:06.56:!2003.254.05:08:07 2003.254.05:08:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:08:07.00/disc_pos/575405170688,575148145160, 2003.254.05:08:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:08:07.01:midob 2003.254.05:08:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:08:07.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:08:07.32/cable/+3.5898202E-02 2003.254.05:08:07.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9861,19199 2003.254.05:08:07.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29398 2003.254.05:08:07.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8237 2003.254.05:08:07.61/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12429 2003.254.05:08:07.68/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8707 2003.254.05:08:08.24/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:08:08.76/tpi/1d,5158,2u,8225,3u,10001,4u,15435,i1,9859 2003.254.05:08:08.77/tpi/9u,9124,au,11339,bu,8606,cu,6920,du,5529,eu,6561,i2,18882 2003.254.05:08:08.77/tpi/5u,13043,6u,12436,7u,11218,8d,5355,i3,29393 2003.254.05:08:08.78/tpdiff/1d,2618,2u,3690,3u,5216,4u,7964,i1,5521 2003.254.05:08:08.79/tpdiff/9u,254,au,4755,bu,4321,cu,1503,du,1650,eu,2545,i2,1513 2003.254.05:08:08.79/tpdiff/5u,7832,6u,6080,7u,5899,8d,2752,i3,17456 2003.254.05:08:08.80/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:08:08.81/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:08:08.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:08:08.82/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:08:08.83/tsys/1d,48.8,2u,48.9,3u,46.1,4u,48.9,i1,46.0 2003.254.05:08:08.83/tsys/9u,1059.0,au,69.0,bu,54.7,cu,127.7,du,89.4,eu,67.2,i2,372.8 2003.254.05:08:08.84/tsys/5u,42.0,6u,49.5,7u,44.4,8d,41.1,i3,43.5 2003.254.05:08:08.95/fmout-gps/+7.7774E-006 2003.254.05:08:08.97:!2003.254.05:09:45 2003.254.05:08:09.03#setcl#time/314651227,4,2003,254,05,08,09.03,1.991,11.332,4 2003.254.05:08:09.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:09:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:09:45.01:disc_end 2003.254.05:09:45.50:disc_pos 2003.254.05:09:45.50/disc_pos/578603966656,575149145160, 2003.254.05:09:45.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:09:45.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h09m45.227s,30892,0.00250s,80000,3009424908, 2003.254.05:09:45.90:postob 2003.254.05:09:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1101163 : 2789 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1101166 : 2813 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1101500 : 2450 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1101507 : 2463 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1101104 : 2858 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1101571 : 2386 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1101197 : 2760 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:45.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1101340 : 2612 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:46.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.05:09:46.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.05:09:46.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.05:09:46.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.05:09:46.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.05:09:46.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.05:09:46.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:09:46.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.68 2003.254.05:09:46.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:09:46.98:scan_name=254-0512,rd0308,134 2003.254.05:09:46.98:source=1053+815,105336.14,813036.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:09:49.99:setup4f 2003.254.05:09:53.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:54.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:09:54.03:!2003.254.05:11:58 2003.254.05:11:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:11:58.01/disc_pos/578603966656,578602966656, 2003.254.05:11:58.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:11:58.24:!2003.254.05:11:58 2003.254.05:11:58.24:preob 2003.254.05:11:58.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:11:58.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:12:01.84/tpical/1d,8038,2u,12285,3u,15763,4u,24120,i1,15893 2003.254.05:12:01.84/tpical/9u,10205,au,15438,bu,13691,cu,7467,du,6063,eu,9183,i2,8197 2003.254.05:12:01.84/tpical/5u,21467,6u,18979,7u,17672,8d,8384,i3,48448 2003.254.05:12:04.51/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,81 2003.254.05:12:04.51/tpzero/9u,75,au,408,bu,721,cu,520,du,610,eu,863,i2,75 2003.254.05:12:04.51/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.05:12:07.60:!2003.254.05:12:08 2003.254.05:12:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:12:08.00/disc_pos/578859859968,578602966656, 2003.254.05:12:08.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:12:08.02:midob 2003.254.05:12:08.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:12:08.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:12:08.18/cable/+3.5897025E-02 2003.254.05:12:08.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10392,5617 2003.254.05:12:08.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31018 2003.254.05:12:08.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8600 2003.254.05:12:08.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12980 2003.254.05:12:08.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9112 2003.254.05:12:09.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:12:09.62/tpi/1d,5419,2u,8599,3u,10526,4u,16220,i1,10392 2003.254.05:12:09.62/tpi/9u,7404,au,10335,bu,9096,cu,5596,du,4397,eu,6629,i2,5669 2003.254.05:12:09.63/tpi/5u,13670,6u,12971,7u,11804,8d,5626,i3,31016 2003.254.05:12:09.64/tpdiff/1d,2619,2u,3686,3u,5237,4u,7900,i1,5501 2003.254.05:12:09.64/tpdiff/9u,2801,au,5103,bu,4595,cu,1871,du,1666,eu,2554,i2,2528 2003.254.05:12:09.65/tpdiff/5u,7797,6u,6008,7u,5868,8d,2758,i3,17432 2003.254.05:12:09.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:12:09.67/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:12:09.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:12:09.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:12:09.69/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,51.6,3u,48.5,4u,51.9,i1,48.7 2003.254.05:12:09.69/tsys/9u,78.5,au,58.4,bu,54.7,cu,81.4,du,68.2,eu,67.7,i2,66.4 2003.254.05:12:09.70/tsys/5u,44.3,6u,52.4,7u,47.2,8d,43.5,i3,46.0 2003.254.05:12:09.98/fmout-gps/+7.7804E-006 2003.254.05:12:09.98:!2003.254.05:14:22 2003.254.05:12:10.05#setcl#time/314675328,4,2003,254,05,12,10.04,1.979,11.399,3 2003.254.05:12:10.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:14:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:14:22.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:14:22.48:disc_pos 2003.254.05:14:22.49/disc_pos/583210769928,578603966656, 2003.254.05:14:22.49:disc_check 2003.254.05:14:22.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h14m22.223s,58376,0.00250s,80000,4257009244, 2003.254.05:14:22.88:postob 2003.254.05:14:22.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1109928 : 2814 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1109928 : 2841 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1110272 : 2469 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1110278 : 2482 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1109871 : 2881 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1110344 : 2403 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1109967 : 2780 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:22.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1110112 : 2632 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:23.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.05:14:23.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.05:14:23.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.05:14:23.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:14:23.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.05:14:23.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.05:14:23.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.05:14:23.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.05:14:23.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:14:23.93:scan_name=254-0517,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:14:23.93:source=1726+455,172601.24,453304.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:14:26.95:setup4f 2003.254.05:14:30.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:30.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:14:31.02:!2003.254.05:17:11 2003.254.05:17:11.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:17:11.02/disc_pos/583210769928,583209769928, 2003.254.05:17:11.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:17:11.27:!2003.254.05:17:11 2003.254.05:17:11.27:preob 2003.254.05:17:11.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:17:11.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:17:14.85/tpical/1d,8276,2u,12632,3u,16198,4u,24760,i1,16342 2003.254.05:17:14.85/tpical/9u,7794,au,14787,bu,13099,cu,8477,du,6019,eu,8836,i2,6101 2003.254.05:17:14.85/tpical/5u,21952,6u,19355,7u,17969,8d,8526,i3,49584 2003.254.05:17:17.50/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,460,i1,80 2003.254.05:17:17.50/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.05:17:17.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.05:17:20.59:!2003.254.05:17:21 2003.254.05:17:21.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:17:21.00/disc_pos/583466504192,583209769928, 2003.254.05:17:21.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:17:21.01:midob 2003.254.05:17:21.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:17:21.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:17:21.38/cable/+3.5899442E-02 2003.254.05:17:21.45/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10847,4179 2003.254.05:17:21.52/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32308 2003.254.05:17:21.59/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8933 2003.254.05:17:21.66/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13427 2003.254.05:17:21.73/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8835 2003.254.05:17:22.29/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:17:22.83/tpi/1d,5655,2u,8938,3u,10954,4u,16876,i1,10846 2003.254.05:17:22.83/tpi/9u,7056,au,10008,bu,8827,cu,6704,du,4461,eu,6425,i2,4384 2003.254.05:17:22.84/tpi/5u,14252,6u,13430,7u,12188,8d,5805,i3,32526 2003.254.05:17:22.85/tpdiff/1d,2621,2u,3694,3u,5244,4u,7884,i1,5496 2003.254.05:17:22.85/tpdiff/9u,738,au,4779,bu,4272,cu,1773,du,1558,eu,2411,i2,1717 2003.254.05:17:22.86/tpdiff/5u,7700,6u,5925,7u,5781,8d,2721,i3,17058 2003.254.05:17:22.87/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:17:22.88/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:17:22.88/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:17:22.89/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:17:22.90/tsys/1d,53.7,2u,53.9,3u,50.6,4u,54.1,i1,50.9 2003.254.05:17:22.90/tsys/9u,283.8,au,60.3,bu,56.9,cu,104.6,du,74.2,eu,69.2,i2,75.4 2003.254.05:17:22.91/tsys/5u,46.8,6u,55.1,7u,49.7,8d,45.8,i3,49.3 2003.254.05:17:22.97/fmout-gps/+7.7569E-006 2003.254.05:17:22.98:!2003.254.05:18:59 2003.254.05:17:23.04#setcl#time/314706626,4,2003,254,05,17,23.03,1.985,11.486,3 2003.254.05:17:23.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:18:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:18:59.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:18:59.49:disc_pos 2003.254.05:18:59.50/disc_pos/586664978832,583210769928, 2003.254.05:18:59.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:18:59.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h18m59.225s,32464,0.00250s,80000,5409897008, 2003.254.05:18:59.89:postob 2003.254.05:18:59.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1116503 : 2834 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1116498 : 2862 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1116852 : 2481 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1116852 : 2499 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1116444 : 2901 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1116922 : 2416 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1116542 : 2796 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:18:59.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1116687 : 2648 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:19:00.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.05:19:00.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.05:19:00.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.05:19:00.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:19:00.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.05:19:00.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.05:19:00.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:19:00.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.05:19:00.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:19:00.99:scan_name=254-0520,rd0308,723 2003.254.05:19:01.00:source=0104-408,010427.58,-405021.4,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:19:04.01:setup4f 2003.254.05:19:07.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:19:07.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:19:08.03:!2003.254.05:20:17 2003.254.05:20:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:20:17.01/disc_pos/586664978832,586663978832, 2003.254.05:20:17.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:20:17.24:!2003.254.05:20:17 2003.254.05:20:17.24:preob 2003.254.05:20:17.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:20:17.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:20:20.83/tpical/1d,13246,2u,19606,3u,25156,4u,38907,i1,25911 2003.254.05:20:20.83/tpical/9u,13228,au,20198,bu,16304,cu,22651,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$ 2003.254.05:20:20.83/tpical/i2,18667 2003.254.05:20:20.83/tpical/5u,33719,6u,28659,7u,26600,8d,12562,i3,65535 2003.254.05:20:23.48/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,460,i1,76 2003.254.05:20:23.48/tpzero/9u,81,au,409,bu,722,cu,522,du,693,eu,879,i2,72 2003.254.05:20:23.48/tpzero/5u,393,6u,865,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.05:20:26.57:!2003.254.05:20:27 2003.254.05:20:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:20:27.00/disc_pos/586920857600,586663978832, 2003.254.05:20:27.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:20:27.01:midob 2003.254.05:20:27.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:20:27.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:20:27.13/cable/+3.5901895E-02 2003.254.05:20:27.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,20411,16434 2003.254.05:20:27.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,60005 2003.254.05:20:27.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15927 2003.254.05:20:27.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,23005 2003.254.05:20:27.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11805 2003.254.05:20:28.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:20:28.57/tpi/1d,10604,2u,15900,3u,19971,4u,31192,i1,20391 2003.254.05:20:28.57/tpi/9u,10114,au,14784,bu,11879,cu,26575,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,13731 2003.254.05:20:28.58/tpi/5u,26128,6u,22997,7u,21143,8d,9878,i3,59963 2003.254.05:20:28.59/tpdiff/1d,2642,2u,3706,3u,5185,4u,7715,i1,5520 2003.254.05:20:28.60/tpdiff/9u,3114,au,5414,bu,4425,cu,-3924,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,4936 2003.254.05:20:28.60/tpdiff/5u,7591,6u,5662,7u,5457,8d,2684,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.05:20:28.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:20:28.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:20:28.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:20:28.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:20:28.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:20:28.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:20:28.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:20:28.64?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:20:28.65/tsys/1d,102.0,2u,102.6,3u,96.3,4u,103.6,i1,95.7 2003.254.05:20:28.66/tsys/9u,96.7,au,79.7,bu,75.6,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.05:20:28.66/tsys/i2,83.0 2003.254.05:20:28.67/tsys/5u,88.1,6u,101.6,7u,95.3,8d,85.9,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.05:20:28.97/fmout-gps/+7.7004E-006 2003.254.05:20:28.97:!2003.254.05:32:30 2003.254.05:20:29.04#setcl#time/314725226,4,2003,254,05,20,29.03,1.976,11.537,3 2003.254.05:20:29.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:32:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:32:30.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:32:30.49:disc_pos 2003.254.05:32:30.50/disc_pos/610119676808,586664978832, 2003.254.05:32:30.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:32:30.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h32m30.223s,43476,0.00250s,80000,2497211012, 2003.254.05:32:30.89:postob 2003.254.05:32:30.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1161137 : 2945 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1161112 : 2992 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1161504 : 2572 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1161492 : 2603 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1161086 : 3004 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1161572 : 2512 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:30.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1161193 : 2889 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:31.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1161333 : 2746 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:31.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.17 2003.254.05:32:31.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.05:32:31.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.05:32:31.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:32:31.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.05:32:31.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.05:32:31.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:32:31.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.05:32:32.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:32:32.01:scan_name=254-0534,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:32:32.01:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:32:35.03:setup4f 2003.254.05:32:38.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:38.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:32:39.02:!2003.254.05:34:43 2003.254.05:34:43.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:34:43.01/disc_pos/610119676808,610118676808, 2003.254.05:34:43.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:34:43.26:!2003.254.05:34:43 2003.254.05:34:43.26:preob 2003.254.05:34:43.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:34:43.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:34:46.84/tpical/1d,8030,2u,12271,3u,15722,4u,23962,i1,15797 2003.254.05:34:46.84/tpical/9u,11868,au,15917,bu,13791,cu,7514,du,7612,eu,9466,i2,9467 2003.254.05:34:46.84/tpical/5u,21099,6u,18643,7u,17373,8d,8255,i3,47980 2003.254.05:34:49.50/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,461,i1,79 2003.254.05:34:49.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,863,i2,72 2003.254.05:34:49.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.05:34:52.59:!2003.254.05:34:53 2003.254.05:34:53.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:34:53.00/disc_pos/610375471104,610118676808, 2003.254.05:34:53.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:34:53.01:midob 2003.254.05:34:53.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:34:53.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:34:53.28/cable/+3.5898697E-02 2003.254.05:34:53.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10334,5844 2003.254.05:34:53.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30861 2003.254.05:34:53.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8601 2003.254.05:34:53.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12787 2003.254.05:34:53.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9324 2003.254.05:34:54.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:34:54.71/tpi/1d,5420,2u,8603,3u,10501,4u,16106,i1,10335 2003.254.05:34:54.71/tpi/9u,7678,au,10706,bu,9316,cu,5527,du,5900,eu,6984,i2,5460 2003.254.05:34:54.72/tpi/5u,13499,6u,12776,7u,11617,8d,5547,i3,30767 2003.254.05:34:54.73/tpdiff/1d,2610,2u,3668,3u,5221,4u,7856,i1,5462 2003.254.05:34:54.73/tpdiff/9u,4190,au,5211,bu,4475,cu,1987,du,1712,eu,2482,i2,4007 2003.254.05:34:54.74/tpdiff/5u,7600,6u,5867,7u,5756,8d,2708,i3,17213 2003.254.05:34:54.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:34:54.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:34:54.76/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:34:54.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:34:54.79/tsys/1d,51.6,2u,51.9,3u,48.5,4u,51.8,i1,48.8 2003.254.05:34:54.79/tsys/9u,54.4,au,59.3,bu,57.6,cu,75.6,du,92.7,eu,74.0,i2,40.3 2003.254.05:34:54.80/tsys/5u,44.8,6u,52.8,7u,47.3,8d,43.6,i3,46.2 2003.254.05:34:54.98/fmout-gps/+7.7379E-006 2003.254.05:34:54.99:!2003.254.05:36:31 2003.254.05:34:55.05#setcl#time/314811825,4,2003,254,05,34,55.05,1.997,11.778,4 2003.254.05:34:55.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:36:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:36:31.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:36:31.48:disc_pos 2003.254.05:36:31.49/disc_pos/613573944352,610119676808, 2003.254.05:36:31.49:disc_check 2003.254.05:36:31.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h36m31.223s,25296,0.00250s,80000,4257750636, 2003.254.05:36:31.88:postob 2003.254.05:36:31.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1167714 : 2961 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1167685 : 3010 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1168081 : 2589 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1168067 : 2619 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1167658 : 3024 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1168143 : 2532 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1167768 : 2905 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:31.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1167908 : 2762 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:32.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.93 2003.254.05:36:32.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.05:36:32.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.05:36:32.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:36:32.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.05:36:32.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.05:36:32.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.05:36:32.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.05:36:32.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.05:36:32.95:scan_name=254-0537,rd0308,342 2003.254.05:36:32.95:source=0458-020,045841.33,-020333.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:36:35.97:setup4f 2003.254.05:36:39.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:39.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:36:40.03:!2003.254.05:37:26 2003.254.05:37:26.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:37:26.01/disc_pos/613573944352,613572944352, 2003.254.05:37:26.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:37:26.26:!2003.254.05:37:26 2003.254.05:37:26.27:preob 2003.254.05:37:26.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:37:26.29/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:37:29.87/tpical/1d,9548,2u,14451,3u,18566,4u,28725,i1,18920 2003.254.05:37:29.87/tpical/9u,9533,au,15525,bu,13869,cu,8055,du,6808,eu,9799,i2,6893 2003.254.05:37:29.87/tpical/5u,25318,6u,22044,7u,20565,8d,9717,i3,57623 2003.254.05:37:32.52/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,461,i1,80 2003.254.05:37:32.52/tpzero/9u,75,au,409,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,72 2003.254.05:37:32.52/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.05:37:35.61:!2003.254.05:37:36 2003.254.05:37:36.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:37:36.00/disc_pos/613829955584,613572944352, 2003.254.05:37:36.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:37:36.01:midob 2003.254.05:37:36.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:37:36.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:37:36.36/cable/+3.5898619E-02 2003.254.05:37:36.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13429,4581 2003.254.05:37:36.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,40293 2003.254.05:37:36.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10758 2003.254.05:37:36.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,16172 2003.254.05:37:36.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9625 2003.254.05:37:37.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:37:37.79/tpi/1d,6928,2u,10754,3u,13374,4u,20897,i1,13434 2003.254.05:37:37.79/tpi/9u,7730,au,10802,bu,9620,cu,6351,du,5271,eu,7449,i2,4809 2003.254.05:37:37.80/tpi/5u,17610,6u,16162,7u,14836,8d,6986,i3,40266 2003.254.05:37:37.81/tpdiff/1d,2620,2u,3697,3u,5192,4u,7828,i1,5486 2003.254.05:37:37.81/tpdiff/9u,1803,au,4723,bu,4249,cu,1704,du,1537,eu,2350,i2,2084 2003.254.05:37:37.82/tpdiff/5u,7708,6u,5882,7u,5729,8d,2731,i3,17357 2003.254.05:37:37.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:37:37.84/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:37:37.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:37:37.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:37:37.86/tsys/1d,66.4,2u,66.6,3u,63.2,4u,67.9,i1,63.3 2003.254.05:37:37.87/tsys/9u,127.4,au,66.0,bu,62.8,cu,102.6,du,91.0,eu,84.1,i2,68.2 2003.254.05:37:37.87/tsys/5u,58.1,6u,67.6,7u,62.1,8d,56.9,i3,60.0 2003.254.05:37:37.95/fmout-gps/+7.7834E-006 2003.254.05:37:37.97:!2003.254.05:43:18 2003.254.05:37:38.04#setcl#time/314828124,4,2003,254,05,37,38.04,1.989,11.823,4 2003.254.05:37:38.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:43:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:43:18.01:disc_end 2003.254.05:43:18.49:disc_pos 2003.254.05:43:18.50/disc_pos/624836225112,613573944352, 2003.254.05:43:18.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:43:18.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h43m18.233s,79044,0.00250s,80000,1761985492, 2003.254.05:43:18.90:postob 2003.254.05:43:18.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1189148 : 3014 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1189124 : 3057 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1189521 : 2634 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1189499 : 2673 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1189098 : 3071 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1189583 : 2580 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1189202 : 2957 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:18.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1189343 : 2813 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:19.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.05:43:19.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.05:43:19.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.05:43:19.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.05:43:19.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.96 2003.254.05:43:19.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.05:43:19.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.11 2003.254.05:43:19.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.05:43:19.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:43:19.99:scan_name=254-0548,rd0308,425 2003.254.05:43:19.99:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:43:23.01:setup4f 2003.254.05:43:26.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:27.01/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:43:27.03:!2003.254.05:47:58 2003.254.05:47:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:47:58.01/disc_pos/624836225112,624835225112, 2003.254.05:47:58.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:47:58.26:!2003.254.05:47:58 2003.254.05:47:58.26:preob 2003.254.05:47:58.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:47:58.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:48:01.84/tpical/1d,7828,2u,11964,3u,15228,4u,23157,i1,15291 2003.254.05:48:01.84/tpical/9u,12146,au,17032,bu,13076,cu,18585,du,14666,eu,10236 2003.254.05:48:01.84/tpical/i2,20627 2003.254.05:48:01.84/tpical/5u,20442,6u,18103,7u,16779,8d,8000,i3,46141 2003.254.05:48:04.49/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.05:48:04.49/tpzero/9u,83,au,408,bu,722,cu,522,du,610,eu,863,i2,70 2003.254.05:48:04.49/tpzero/5u,390,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1008,i3,192 2003.254.05:48:07.58:!2003.254.05:48:08 2003.254.05:48:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:48:08.00/disc_pos/625092210688,624835225112, 2003.254.05:48:08.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:48:08.01:midob 2003.254.05:48:08.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:48:08.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:48:08.17/cable/+3.5897755E-02 2003.254.05:48:08.24/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9932,18045 2003.254.05:48:08.31/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29399 2003.254.05:48:08.38/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8346 2003.254.05:48:08.45/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12354 2003.254.05:48:08.52/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8752 2003.254.05:48:09.08/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:48:09.60/tpi/1d,5240,2u,8346,3u,10107,4u,15452,i1,9927 2003.254.05:48:09.60/tpi/9u,8885,au,11854,bu,8752,cu,17460,du,15442,eu,8287,i2,15365 2003.254.05:48:09.61/tpi/5u,12977,6u,12349,7u,11148,8d,5360,i3,29386 2003.254.05:48:09.62/tpdiff/1d,2588,2u,3618,3u,5121,4u,7705,i1,5364 2003.254.05:48:09.62/tpdiff/9u,3261,au,5178,bu,4324,cu,1125,du,-776,eu,1949,i2,5262 2003.254.05:48:09.63/tpdiff/5u,7465,6u,5754,7u,5631,8d,2640,i3,16755 2003.254.05:48:09.64/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:48:09.64/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:48:09.65/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:48:09.66/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:48:09.67?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.05:48:09.68/tsys/1d,50.2,2u,50.8,3u,47.5,4u,50.6,i1,47.7 2003.254.05:48:09.68/tsys/9u,81.0,au,66.3,bu,55.7,cu,451.7,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,114.3 2003.254.05:48:09.69/tsys/i2,87.2 2003.254.05:48:09.69/tsys/5u,43.8,6u,51.9,7u,46.2,8d,42.9,i3,45.3 2003.254.05:48:09.96/fmout-gps/+7.8044E-006 2003.254.05:48:09.96:!2003.254.05:55:13 2003.254.05:48:10.04#setcl#time/314891322,4,2003,254,05,48,10.04,2.000,11.999,4 2003.254.05:48:10.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:55:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:55:13.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:55:13.49:disc_pos 2003.254.05:55:13.50/disc_pos/638754419560,624836225112, 2003.254.05:55:13.50:disc_check 2003.254.05:55:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h55m13.225s,53008,0.00250s,80000,8961591588, 2003.254.05:55:13.89:postob 2003.254.05:55:13.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1215638 : 3078 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1215617 : 3116 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1216011 : 2696 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1215992 : 2732 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1215591 : 3130 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1216076 : 2639 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1215690 : 3021 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:13.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1215834 : 2876 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:14.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.05:55:14.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.05:55:14.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.05:55:14.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:55:14.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.05:55:14.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.05:55:14.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:55:14.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.05:55:14.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:55:14.95:scan_name=254-0557,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:55:14.95:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:55:17.97:setup4f 2003.254.05:55:21.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:21.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:55:22.03:!2003.254.05:57:26 2003.254.05:57:26.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:57:26.02/disc_pos/638754419560,638753419560, 2003.254.05:57:26.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.05:57:26.26:!2003.254.05:57:26 2003.254.05:57:26.26:preob 2003.254.05:57:26.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:57:26.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:57:29.84/tpical/1d,8262,2u,12626,3u,16184,4u,24884,i1,16363 2003.254.05:57:29.84/tpical/9u,5886,au,13793,bu,12273,cu,6449,du,5834,eu,8338,i2,5497 2003.254.05:57:29.84/tpical/5u,22125,6u,19572,7u,18161,8d,8607,i3,50084 2003.254.05:57:32.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.05:57:32.49/tpzero/9u,75,au,409,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.05:57:32.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1008,i3,191 2003.254.05:57:35.58:!2003.254.05:57:36 2003.254.05:57:36.00:disc_pos 2003.254.05:57:36.00/disc_pos/639010185216,638753419560, 2003.254.05:57:36.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.05:57:36.02:midob 2003.254.05:57:36.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.05:57:36.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.05:57:36.25/cable/+3.5898189E-02 2003.254.05:57:36.32/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10860,3770 2003.254.05:57:36.39/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32590 2003.254.05:57:36.46/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8937 2003.254.05:57:36.53/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13555 2003.254.05:57:36.60/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8310 2003.254.05:57:37.16/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.05:57:37.70/tpi/1d,5637,2u,8938,3u,10938,4u,16950,i1,10856 2003.254.05:57:37.70/tpi/9u,4049,au,9332,bu,8306,cu,4810,du,4397,eu,6112,i2,3771 2003.254.05:57:37.71/tpi/5u,14328,6u,13556,7u,12292,8d,5844,i3,32575 2003.254.05:57:37.72/tpdiff/1d,2625,2u,3688,3u,5246,4u,7934,i1,5507 2003.254.05:57:37.72/tpdiff/9u,1837,au,4461,bu,3967,cu,1639,du,1437,eu,2226,i2,1726 2003.254.05:57:37.73/tpdiff/5u,7797,6u,6016,7u,5869,8d,2763,i3,17509 2003.254.05:57:37.74/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.05:57:37.74/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.05:57:37.75/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.05:57:37.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.05:57:37.78/tsys/1d,53.4,2u,54.0,3u,50.5,4u,54.0,i1,50.9 2003.254.05:57:37.79/tsys/9u,64.9,au,60.0,bu,57.4,cu,78.5,du,79.1,eu,70.7,i2,64.3 2003.254.05:57:37.79/tsys/5u,46.5,6u,54.8,7u,49.4,8d,45.5,i3,48.1 2003.254.05:57:37.95/fmout-gps/+7.7809E-006 2003.254.05:57:37.98:!2003.254.05:59:14 2003.254.05:57:38.05#setcl#time/314948121,4,2003,254,05,57,38.04,1.994,12.157,4 2003.254.05:57:38.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.05:59:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.05:59:14.00:disc_end 2003.254.05:59:14.48:disc_pos 2003.254.05:59:14.49/disc_pos/642208659144,638754419560, 2003.254.05:59:14.49:disc_check 2003.254.05:59:14.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d05h59m14.225s,32252,0.00250s,80000,4257781172, 2003.254.05:59:14.88:postob 2003.254.05:59:14.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1222212 : 3097 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1222189 : 3135 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1222585 : 2716 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1222568 : 2747 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1222166 : 3147 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1222653 : 2653 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1222266 : 3036 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:14.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1222409 : 2892 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:15.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.05:59:15.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.05:59:15.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.05:59:15.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.05:59:15.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.05:59:15.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.05:59:15.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.05:59:15.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.05:59:15.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.05:59:15.94:scan_name=254-0604,rd0308,98 2003.254.05:59:15.94:source=0642+449,064252.98,445430.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.05:59:18.96:setup4f 2003.254.05:59:22.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:22.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.05:59:23.02:!2003.254.06:04:15 2003.254.06:01:12.61;"weather: clear 2003.254.06:04:15.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:04:15.01/disc_pos/642208659144,642207659144, 2003.254.06:04:15.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:04:15.26:!2003.254.06:04:15 2003.254.06:04:15.27:preob 2003.254.06:04:15.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:04:15.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:04:18.84/tpical/1d,8256,2u,12615,3u,16184,4u,24815,i1,16352 2003.254.06:04:18.84/tpical/9u,11474,au,14919,bu,13152,cu,7064,du,6019,eu,8870,i2,7612 2003.254.06:04:18.84/tpical/5u,21983,6u,19445,7u,18113,8d,8591,i3,49829 2003.254.06:04:21.49/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.06:04:21.49/tpzero/9u,73,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.06:04:21.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.06:04:24.58:!2003.254.06:04:25 2003.254.06:04:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:04:25.00/disc_pos/642464534528,642207659144, 2003.254.06:04:25.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:04:25.01:midob 2003.254.06:04:25.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:04:25.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:04:25.21/cable/+3.5898473E-02 2003.254.06:04:25.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10817,5020 2003.254.06:04:25.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32300 2003.254.06:04:25.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8910 2003.254.06:04:25.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13416 2003.254.06:04:25.57/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8854 2003.254.06:04:26.13/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:04:26.65/tpi/1d,5614,2u,8908,3u,10901,4u,16875,i1,10815 2003.254.06:04:26.65/tpi/9u,9391,au,10119,bu,8850,cu,5227,du,4462,eu,6471,i2,5465 2003.254.06:04:26.66/tpi/5u,14169,6u,13408,7u,12227,8d,5822,i3,32287 2003.254.06:04:26.67/tpdiff/1d,2642,2u,3707,3u,5283,4u,7940,i1,5537 2003.254.06:04:26.67/tpdiff/9u,2083,au,4800,bu,4302,cu,1837,du,1557,eu,2399,i2,2147 2003.254.06:04:26.68/tpdiff/5u,7814,6u,6037,7u,5886,8d,2769,i3,17542 2003.254.06:04:26.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:04:26.70/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:04:26.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:04:26.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:04:26.72/tsys/1d,52.9,2u,53.5,3u,49.9,4u,53.8,i1,50.4 2003.254.06:04:26.72/tsys/9u,134.2,au,60.7,bu,56.7,cu,76.9,du,74.2,eu,70.1,i2,75.4 2003.254.06:04:26.73/tsys/5u,45.8,6u,54.0,7u,49.0,8d,45.2,i3,47.6 2003.254.06:04:26.95/fmout-gps/+7.7719E-006 2003.254.06:04:26.98:!2003.254.06:06:03 2003.254.06:04:27.05#setcl#time/314989020,4,2003,254,06,04,27.04,1.995,12.270,4 2003.254.06:04:27.05#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:06:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:06:03.00:disc_end 2003.254.06:06:03.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:06:03.50/disc_pos/645663010928,642208659144, 2003.254.06:06:03.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:06:03.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h06m03.228s,10768,0.00250s,80000,9633749700, 2003.254.06:06:03.89:postob 2003.254.06:06:03.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1228780 : 3120 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1228771 : 3145 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1229158 : 2734 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1229145 : 2764 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1228744 : 3162 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1229230 : 2668 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1228839 : 3055 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:03.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1228980 : 2912 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:04.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.06:06:04.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.06:06:04.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.06:06:04.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.06:06:04.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.96 2003.254.06:06:04.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.06:06:04.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.06:06:04.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.06:06:04.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:06:04.99:scan_name=254-0611,rd0308,198 2003.254.06:06:04.99:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:06:08.01:setup4f 2003.254.06:06:11.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:11.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:06:12.02:!2003.254.06:11:31 2003.254.06:11:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:11:31.01/disc_pos/645663010928,645662010928, 2003.254.06:11:31.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:11:31.26:!2003.254.06:11:31 2003.254.06:11:31.27:preob 2003.254.06:11:31.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:11:31.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:11:34.84/tpical/1d,7919,2u,12136,3u,15525,4u,23689,i1,15610 2003.254.06:11:34.84/tpical/9u,11590,au,14581,bu,12698,cu,7029,du,6235,eu,8605,i2,10645 2003.254.06:11:34.84/tpical/5u,21151,6u,18821,7u,17400,8d,8275,i3,47695 2003.254.06:11:37.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,76 2003.254.06:11:37.49/tpzero/9u,79,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,608,eu,864,i2,75 2003.254.06:11:37.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1008,i3,192 2003.254.06:11:40.58:!2003.254.06:11:41 2003.254.06:11:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:11:41.00/disc_pos/645918871552,645662010928, 2003.254.06:11:41.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:11:41.01:midob 2003.254.06:11:41.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:11:41.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:11:41.17/cable/+3.5894891E-02 2003.254.06:11:41.24/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10104,7864 2003.254.06:11:41.31/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30216 2003.254.06:11:41.38/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8421 2003.254.06:11:41.45/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12759 2003.254.06:11:41.52/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8469 2003.254.06:11:42.08/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:11:42.60/tpi/1d,5285,2u,8421,3u,10260,4u,15770,i1,10104 2003.254.06:11:42.60/tpi/9u,9257,au,9818,bu,8469,cu,5228,du,4665,eu,6225,i2,8253 2003.254.06:11:42.61/tpi/5u,13351,6u,12765,7u,11490,8d,5501,i3,30212 2003.254.06:11:42.62/tpdiff/1d,2634,2u,3715,3u,5265,4u,7919,i1,5506 2003.254.06:11:42.62/tpdiff/9u,2333,au,4763,bu,4229,cu,1801,du,1570,eu,2380,i2,2392 2003.254.06:11:42.63/tpdiff/5u,7800,6u,6056,7u,5910,8d,2774,i3,17483 2003.254.06:11:42.64/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:11:42.64/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:11:42.65/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:11:42.66/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:11:42.67/tsys/1d,49.8,2u,50.0,3u,46.9,4u,50.3,i1,47.4 2003.254.06:11:42.67/tsys/9u,118.0,au,59.3,bu,55.0,cu,78.4,du,77.5,eu,67.6,i2,102.6 2003.254.06:11:42.68/tsys/5u,43.2,6u,51.1,7u,45.5,8d,42.1,i3,44.6 2003.254.06:11:42.95/fmout-gps/+7.7889E-006 2003.254.06:11:42.97:!2003.254.06:14:59 2003.254.06:11:43.04#setcl#time/315032618,3,2003,254,06,11,43.03,1.995,12.391,4 2003.254.06:11:43.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:14:59.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:14:59.01:disc_end 2003.254.06:14:59.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:14:59.50/disc_pos/652317338152,645663010928, 2003.254.06:14:59.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:14:59.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h14m59.233s,11944,0.00250s,80000,10497831600, 2003.254.06:14:59.89:postob 2003.254.06:14:59.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1241441 : 3155 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1241441 : 3170 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1241824 : 2764 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1241809 : 2795 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1241408 : 3196 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1241897 : 2698 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1241495 : 3095 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:14:59.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1241639 : 2949 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:15:00.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.06:15:00.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.06:15:00.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.06:15:00.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.06:15:00.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.06:15:00.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.06:15:00.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.06:15:00.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.06:15:00.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:15:00.95:scan_name=254-0618,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:15:00.95:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:15:03.96:setup4f 2003.254.06:15:07.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:15:07.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:15:08.01:!2003.254.06:18:35 2003.254.06:18:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:18:35.01/disc_pos/652317338152,652316338152, 2003.254.06:18:35.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:18:35.26:!2003.254.06:18:35 2003.254.06:18:35.26:preob 2003.254.06:18:35.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:18:35.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:18:38.84/tpical/1d,7887,2u,12155,3u,15500,4u,24003,i1,15641 2003.254.06:18:38.84/tpical/9u,11707,au,16887,bu,12652,cu,11895,du,$$$$$,eu,60011 2003.254.06:18:38.84/tpical/i2,18726 2003.254.06:18:38.84/tpical/5u,21257,6u,18796,7u,17378,8d,8248,i3,47571 2003.254.06:18:41.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,459,i1,77 2003.254.06:18:41.49/tpzero/9u,126,au,409,bu,721,cu,524,du,622,eu,869,i2,79 2003.254.06:18:41.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.06:18:44.58:!2003.254.06:18:45 2003.254.06:18:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:18:45.00/disc_pos/652573278208,652316338152, 2003.254.06:18:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:18:45.01:midob 2003.254.06:18:45.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:18:45.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:18:45.24/cable/+3.5897595E-02 2003.254.06:18:45.31/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10104,16397 2003.254.06:18:45.38/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30037 2003.254.06:18:45.45/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8440 2003.254.06:18:45.52/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12698 2003.254.06:18:45.59/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8485 2003.254.06:18:46.15/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:18:46.68/tpi/1d,5262,2u,8442,3u,10214,4u,15923,i1,10107 2003.254.06:18:46.68/tpi/9u,9968,au,13445,bu,8569,cu,8647,du,$$$$$,eu,55460,i2,19329 2003.254.06:18:46.69/tpi/5u,13376,6u,12693,7u,11457,8d,5468,i3,30038 2003.254.06:18:46.70/tpdiff/1d,2625,2u,3713,3u,5286,4u,8080,i1,5534 2003.254.06:18:46.70/tpdiff/9u,1739,au,3442,bu,4083,cu,3248,du,$$$$$,eu,4551,i2,-603 2003.254.06:18:46.71/tpdiff/5u,7881,6u,6103,7u,5921,8d,2780,i3,17533 2003.254.06:18:46.72/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:18:46.73/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:18:46.73/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:18:46.74/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:18:46.75?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.06:18:46.75?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.06:18:46.76/tsys/1d,49.7,2u,50.2,3u,46.5,4u,49.8,i1,47.1 2003.254.06:18:46.77/tsys/9u,169.8,au,113.6,bu,57.7,cu,75.0,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,359.9 2003.254.06:18:46.78/tsys/i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.06:18:46.78/tsys/5u,42.8,6u,50.4,7u,45.3,8d,41.7,i3,44.3 2003.254.06:18:46.95/fmout-gps/+7.8239E-006 2003.254.06:18:46.97:!2003.254.06:20:23 2003.254.06:18:47.04#setcl#time/315075018,4,2003,254,06,18,47.03,1.976,12.509,3 2003.254.06:18:47.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:20:23.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:20:23.00:disc_end 2003.254.06:20:23.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:20:23.50/disc_pos/655771753432,652317338152, 2003.254.06:20:23.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:20:23.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h20m23.230s,35992,0.00250s,80000,6913480672, 2003.254.06:20:23.89:postob 2003.254.06:20:23.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1248012 : 3176 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1248014 : 3189 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1248397 : 2782 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1248383 : 2813 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1247985 : 3210 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1248472 : 2715 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1248067 : 3116 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:23.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1248215 : 2967 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:24.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.06:20:24.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.06:20:24.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.06:20:24.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.06:20:24.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.06:20:24.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.06:20:24.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.06:20:24.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.06:20:24.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:20:24.98:scan_name=254-0621,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:20:24.98:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:20:27.99:setup4f 2003.254.06:20:31.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:31.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:20:32.02:!2003.254.06:21:39 2003.254.06:21:39.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:21:39.01/disc_pos/655771753432,655770753432, 2003.254.06:21:39.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:21:39.25:!2003.254.06:21:39 2003.254.06:21:39.26:preob 2003.254.06:21:39.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:21:39.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:21:42.83/tpical/1d,8393,2u,12814,3u,16388,4u,25007,i1,16509 2003.254.06:21:42.83/tpical/9u,8741,au,14904,bu,13116,cu,6919,du,6291,eu,8829,i2,6175 2003.254.06:21:42.83/tpical/5u,22163,6u,19465,7u,18096,8d,8571,i3,49979 2003.254.06:21:45.48/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,79 2003.254.06:21:45.48/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,75 2003.254.06:21:45.48/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.06:21:48.57:!2003.254.06:21:49 2003.254.06:21:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:21:49.00/disc_pos/656027602944,655770753432, 2003.254.06:21:49.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:21:49.01:midob 2003.254.06:21:49.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:21:49.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:21:49.20/cable/+3.5897858E-02 2003.254.06:21:49.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11052,4317 2003.254.06:21:49.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33033 2003.254.06:21:49.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9121 2003.254.06:21:49.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13702 2003.254.06:21:49.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8849 2003.254.06:21:50.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:21:50.64/tpi/1d,5770,2u,9118,3u,11173,4u,17194,i1,11050 2003.254.06:21:50.64/tpi/9u,6643,au,10099,bu,8848,cu,5085,du,4735,eu,6415,i2,4236 2003.254.06:21:50.65/tpi/5u,14571,6u,13711,7u,12450,8d,5916,i3,33037 2003.254.06:21:50.66/tpdiff/1d,2623,2u,3696,3u,5215,4u,7813,i1,5459 2003.254.06:21:50.66/tpdiff/9u,2098,au,4805,bu,4268,cu,1834,du,1556,eu,2414,i2,1939 2003.254.06:21:50.67/tpdiff/5u,7592,6u,5754,7u,5646,8d,2655,i3,16942 2003.254.06:21:50.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:21:50.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:21:50.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:21:50.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:21:50.71/tsys/1d,54.8,2u,55.1,3u,51.9,4u,55.7,i1,52.3 2003.254.06:21:50.71/tsys/9u,93.9,au,60.5,bu,57.1,cu,74.7,du,79.5,eu,69.0,i2,64.4 2003.254.06:21:50.72/tsys/5u,48.6,6u,58.0,7u,52.1,8d,48.1,i3,50.4 2003.254.06:21:50.95/fmout-gps/+7.8109E-006 2003.254.06:21:50.97:!2003.254.06:23:27 2003.254.06:21:51.03#setcl#time/315093417,4,2003,254,06,21,51.03,1.987,12.560,4 2003.254.06:21:51.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:23:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:23:27.00:disc_end 2003.254.06:23:27.48:disc_pos 2003.254.06:23:27.50/disc_pos/659226075832,655771753432, 2003.254.06:23:27.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:23:27.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h23m27.227s,74688,0.00250s,80000,2433558904, 2003.254.06:23:27.89:postob 2003.254.06:23:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1254579 : 3202 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1254596 : 3198 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1254967 : 2804 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1254956 : 2831 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1254562 : 3227 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1255048 : 2730 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1254649 : 3126 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:27.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1254792 : 2981 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:28.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.06:23:28.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.06:23:28.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.06:23:28.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.06:23:28.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.06:23:28.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.06:23:28.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.06:23:28.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.29 2003.254.06:23:28.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:23:28.96:scan_name=254-0630,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:23:28.97:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:23:31.98:setup4f 2003.254.06:23:35.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:35.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:23:36.01:!2003.254.06:29:55 2003.254.06:29:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:29:55.01/disc_pos/659226075832,659225075832, 2003.254.06:29:55.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:29:55.26:!2003.254.06:29:55 2003.254.06:29:55.26:preob 2003.254.06:29:55.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:29:55.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:29:58.84/tpical/1d,8205,2u,12576,3u,16040,4u,24550,i1,16172 2003.254.06:29:58.84/tpical/9u,7682,au,15736,bu,14051,cu,7416,du,18751,eu,16077 2003.254.06:29:58.84/tpical/i2,6600 2003.254.06:29:58.84/tpical/5u,21709,6u,19149,7u,17727,8d,8433,i3,48980 2003.254.06:30:01.50/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,459,i1,79 2003.254.06:30:01.50/tpzero/9u,73,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,611,eu,864,i2,70 2003.254.06:30:01.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.06:30:04.59:!2003.254.06:30:05 2003.254.06:30:05.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:30:05.00/disc_pos/659482058752,659225075832, 2003.254.06:30:05.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:30:05.01:midob 2003.254.06:30:05.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:30:05.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:30:05.28/cable/+3.5897436E-02 2003.254.06:30:05.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10681,4908 2003.254.06:30:05.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31708 2003.254.06:30:05.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8857 2003.254.06:30:05.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13213 2003.254.06:30:05.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9438 2003.254.06:30:06.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:30:06.71/tpi/1d,5580,2u,8865,3u,10794,4u,16642,i1,10683 2003.254.06:30:06.71/tpi/9u,5618,au,10616,bu,9434,cu,5534,du,16128,eu,12592,i2,4740 2003.254.06:30:06.72/tpi/5u,13993,6u,13218,7u,11946,8d,5712,i3,31710 2003.254.06:30:06.73/tpdiff/1d,2625,2u,3711,3u,5246,4u,7908,i1,5489 2003.254.06:30:06.73/tpdiff/9u,2064,au,5120,bu,4617,cu,1882,du,2623,eu,3485,i2,1860 2003.254.06:30:06.74/tpdiff/5u,7716,6u,5931,7u,5781,8d,2721,i3,17270 2003.254.06:30:06.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:30:06.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:30:06.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:30:06.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:30:06.78/tsys/1d,52.9,2u,53.1,3u,49.7,4u,53.2,i1,50.2 2003.254.06:30:06.79/tsys/9u,80.6,au,59.8,bu,56.6,cu,79.9,du,177.5,eu,101.0,i2,75.3 2003.254.06:30:06.79/tsys/5u,45.8,6u,54.1,7u,48.6,8d,44.9,i3,47.5 2003.254.06:30:06.96/fmout-gps/+7.7379E-006 2003.254.06:30:06.97:!2003.254.06:31:43 2003.254.06:30:07.04#setcl#time/315143017,4,2003,254,06,30,07.04,1.985,12.698,4 2003.254.06:30:07.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:31:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:31:43.01:disc_end 2003.254.06:31:43.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:31:43.50/disc_pos/662680532056,659226075832, 2003.254.06:31:43.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:31:43.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h31m43.235s,2336,0.00250s,80000,12417856128, 2003.254.06:31:43.89:postob 2003.254.06:31:43.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1261153 : 3220 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1261178 : 3208 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1261538 : 2824 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1261532 : 2847 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1261137 : 3243 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1261619 : 2751 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:43.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1261230 : 3138 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:44.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1261372 : 2995 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:44.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.06:31:44.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.06:31:44.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.06:31:44.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.06:31:44.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.06:31:44.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.06:31:44.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.06:31:44.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.06:31:45.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.06:31:45.01:scan_name=254-0637,rd0308,430 2003.254.06:31:45.01:source=2136+141,213637.43,141000.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:31:48.03:setup4f 2003.254.06:31:51.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:51.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:31:52.00:!2003.254.06:37:45 2003.254.06:37:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:37:45.01/disc_pos/662680532056,662679532056, 2003.254.06:37:45.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:37:45.26:!2003.254.06:37:45 2003.254.06:37:45.27:preob 2003.254.06:37:45.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:37:45.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:37:48.84/tpical/1d,8062,2u,12330,3u,15803,4u,24157,i1,15890 2003.254.06:37:48.84/tpical/9u,12368,au,17208,bu,13611,cu,7857,du,10079,eu,10234 2003.254.06:37:48.84/tpical/i2,19562 2003.254.06:37:48.84/tpical/5u,21374,6u,18908,7u,17499,8d,8332,i3,48202 2003.254.06:37:51.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,459,i1,77 2003.254.06:37:51.50/tpzero/9u,79,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,611,eu,863,i2,72 2003.254.06:37:51.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1008,i3,192 2003.254.06:37:54.59:!2003.254.06:37:55 2003.254.06:37:55.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:37:55.00/disc_pos/662936551424,662679532056, 2003.254.06:37:55.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:37:55.01:midob 2003.254.06:37:55.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:37:55.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:37:55.08/cable/+3.5898380E-02 2003.254.06:37:55.15/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10400,15467 2003.254.06:37:55.22/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30945 2003.254.06:37:55.29/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8645 2003.254.06:37:55.36/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12957 2003.254.06:37:55.43/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9090 2003.254.06:37:55.99/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:37:56.52/tpi/1d,5436,2u,8649,3u,10546,4u,16256,i1,10399 2003.254.06:37:56.52/tpi/9u,9507,au,11425,bu,9107,cu,6503,du,8613,eu,7856,i2,15560 2003.254.06:37:56.53/tpi/5u,13662,6u,12954,7u,11716,8d,5603,i3,30947 2003.254.06:37:56.54/tpdiff/1d,2626,2u,3681,3u,5257,4u,7901,i1,5491 2003.254.06:37:56.54/tpdiff/9u,2861,au,5783,bu,4504,cu,1354,du,1466,eu,2378,i2,4002 2003.254.06:37:56.55/tpdiff/5u,7712,6u,5954,7u,5783,8d,2729,i3,17255 2003.254.06:37:56.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:37:56.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:37:56.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:37:56.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:37:56.59/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,52.0,3u,48.4,4u,52.0,i1,48.9 2003.254.06:37:56.59/tsys/9u,98.9,au,57.2,bu,55.9,cu,132.5,du,163.8,eu,88.2,i2,116.1 2003.254.06:37:56.60/tsys/5u,44.7,6u,52.8,7u,47.5,8d,43.8,i3,46.3 2003.254.06:37:56.95/fmout-gps/+7.7069E-006 2003.254.06:37:56.97:!2003.254.06:45:05 2003.254.06:37:57.04#setcl#time/315190015,3,2003,254,06,37,57.04,2.002,12.828,5 2003.254.06:37:57.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:45:05.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:45:05.01:disc_end 2003.254.06:45:05.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:45:05.50/disc_pos/676758776472,662680532056, 2003.254.06:45:05.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:45:05.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h45m05.235s,3856,0.00250s,80000,11585754064, 2003.254.06:45:05.89:postob 2003.254.06:45:05.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1287947 : 3285 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1287973 : 3272 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1288348 : 2872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1288329 : 2907 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1287935 : 3305 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1288420 : 2807 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:05.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1288038 : 3188 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:06.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1288172 : 3052 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:06.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.06:45:06.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.06:45:06.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.06:45:06.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.06:45:06.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.06:45:06.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.06:45:06.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.06:45:06.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.19 2003.254.06:45:07.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.06:45:07.00:scan_name=254-0651,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:45:07.01:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:45:10.03:setup4f 2003.254.06:45:13.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:13.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:45:14.01:!2003.254.06:51:18 2003.254.06:51:18.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:51:18.01/disc_pos/676758776472,676757776472, 2003.254.06:51:18.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:51:18.26:!2003.254.06:51:18 2003.254.06:51:18.26:preob 2003.254.06:51:18.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:51:18.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:51:21.86/tpical/1d,10455,2u,15773,3u,20277,4u,31516,i1,20729 2003.254.06:51:21.86/tpical/9u,7719,au,17081,bu,15042,cu,21402,du,8790,eu,9967,i2,7097 2003.254.06:51:21.86/tpical/5u,27537,6u,23948,7u,22336,8d,10524,i3,62829 2003.254.06:51:24.52/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,75 2003.254.06:51:24.52/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,80 2003.254.06:51:24.52/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.06:51:27.61:!2003.254.06:51:28 2003.254.06:51:28.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:51:28.00/disc_pos/677014642688,676757776472, 2003.254.06:51:28.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:51:28.01:midob 2003.254.06:51:28.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:51:28.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:51:28.32/cable/+3.5901159E-02 2003.254.06:51:28.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,15199,5048 2003.254.06:51:28.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,45278 2003.254.06:51:28.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12038 2003.254.06:51:28.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,17992 2003.254.06:51:28.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10592 2003.254.06:51:29.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:51:29.76/tpi/1d,7813,2u,12041,3u,15038,4u,23629,i1,15204 2003.254.06:51:29.77/tpi/9u,5697,au,12033,bu,10586,cu,19849,du,7134,eu,7473,i2,5053 2003.254.06:51:29.77/tpi/5u,19793,6u,18006,7u,16553,8d,7764,i3,45322 2003.254.06:51:29.78/tpdiff/1d,2642,2u,3732,3u,5239,4u,7887,i1,5525 2003.254.06:51:29.79/tpdiff/9u,2022,au,5048,bu,4456,cu,1553,du,1656,eu,2494,i2,2044 2003.254.06:51:29.79/tpdiff/5u,7744,6u,5942,7u,5783,8d,2760,i3,17507 2003.254.06:51:29.80/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:51:29.81/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:51:29.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:51:29.82/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:51:29.83/tsys/1d,74.5,2u,75.0,3u,70.9,4u,76.4,i1,71.2 2003.254.06:51:29.84/tsys/9u,83.4,au,69.1,bu,66.4,cu,373.3,du,118.2,eu,79.5,i2,73.0 2003.254.06:51:29.84/tsys/5u,65.1,6u,75.0,7u,69.3,8d,63.6,i3,67.0 2003.254.06:51:29.95/fmout-gps/+7.7424E-006 2003.254.06:51:29.98:!2003.254.06:53:06 2003.254.06:51:30.04#setcl#time/315271314,4,2003,254,06,51,30.04,1.986,13.054,4 2003.254.06:51:30.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:53:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:53:06.00:disc_end 2003.254.06:53:06.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:53:06.50/disc_pos/680213115984,676758776472, 2003.254.06:53:06.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:53:06.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h53m06.235s,50004,0.00250s,80000,11937614340, 2003.254.06:53:06.89:postob 2003.254.06:53:06.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1294525 : 3298 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1294549 : 3289 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1294924 : 2887 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1294908 : 2920 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1294509 : 3322 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1294998 : 2823 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:06.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1294613 : 3204 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:07.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1294747 : 3069 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:07.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.06:53:07.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.06:53:07.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.06:53:07.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.06:53:07.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.06:53:07.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.06:53:07.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.06:53:07.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.06:53:08.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:53:08.00:scan_name=254-0655,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:53:08.00:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:53:11.02:setup4f 2003.254.06:53:14.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:14.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:53:15.01:!2003.254.06:55:41 2003.254.06:55:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:55:41.02/disc_pos/680213115984,680212115984, 2003.254.06:55:41.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.06:55:41.27:!2003.254.06:55:41 2003.254.06:55:41.27:preob 2003.254.06:55:41.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:55:41.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:55:44.85/tpical/1d,8069,2u,12400,3u,15858,4u,24292,i1,15965 2003.254.06:55:44.85/tpical/9u,10764,au,16266,bu,13712,cu,9044,du,8443,eu,9784,i2,14408 2003.254.06:55:44.85/tpical/5u,21556,6u,19206,7u,17837,8d,8475,i3,48821 2003.254.06:55:47.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.06:55:47.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,73 2003.254.06:55:47.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.06:55:50.59:!2003.254.06:55:51 2003.254.06:55:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.06:55:51.00/disc_pos/680468930560,680212115984, 2003.254.06:55:51.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.06:55:51.01:midob 2003.254.06:55:51.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.06:55:51.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.06:55:51.11/cable/+3.5899772E-02 2003.254.06:55:51.18/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10423,8644 2003.254.06:55:51.25/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31256 2003.254.06:55:51.32/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8647 2003.254.06:55:51.39/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13138 2003.254.06:55:51.46/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9028 2003.254.06:55:52.02/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.06:55:52.54/tpi/1d,5426,2u,8650,3u,10562,4u,16304,i1,10422 2003.254.06:55:52.54/tpi/9u,8926,au,13280,bu,8997,cu,7723,du,6488,eu,7035,i2,16240 2003.254.06:55:52.55/tpi/5u,13735,6u,13141,7u,11883,8d,5679,i3,31257 2003.254.06:55:52.56/tpdiff/1d,2643,2u,3750,3u,5296,4u,7988,i1,5543 2003.254.06:55:52.57/tpdiff/9u,1838,au,2986,bu,4715,cu,1321,du,1955,eu,2749,i2,-1832 2003.254.06:55:52.57/tpdiff/5u,7821,6u,6065,7u,5954,8d,2796,i3,17564 2003.254.06:55:52.58/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.06:55:52.59/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.06:55:52.59/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.06:55:52.60/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.06:55:52.61?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.06:55:52.62/tsys/1d,51.0,2u,51.1,3u,48.1,4u,51.6,i1,48.5 2003.254.06:55:52.62/tsys/9u,144.4,au,129.3,bu,52.7,cu,163.5,du,90.2,eu,67.3,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.06:55:52.63/tsys/5u,44.4,6u,52.6,7u,46.9,8d,43.4,i3,46.0 2003.254.06:55:52.94/fmout-gps/+7.7534E-006 2003.254.06:55:52.96:!2003.254.06:57:29 2003.254.06:55:53.03#setcl#time/315297612,4,2003,254,06,55,53.03,1.993,13.127,5 2003.254.06:55:53.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.06:57:19.31;"weather: clear 2003.254.06:57:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.06:57:29.00:disc_end 2003.254.06:57:29.49:disc_pos 2003.254.06:57:29.49/disc_pos/683666764192,680213115984, 2003.254.06:57:29.50:disc_check 2003.254.06:57:29.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d06h57m29.227s,58348,0.00250s,80000,4962103448, 2003.254.06:57:29.89:postob 2003.254.06:57:29.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1301094 : 3320 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1301124 : 3304 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1301495 : 2906 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1301480 : 2938 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1301084 : 3337 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1301571 : 2840 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1301185 : 3222 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:29.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1301319 : 3091 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:30.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.06:57:30.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.06:57:30.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.06:57:30.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.06:57:30.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.254.06:57:30.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.06:57:30.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.06:57:30.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.08 2003.254.06:57:30.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.06:57:30.96:scan_name=254-0701,rd0308,98 2003.254.06:57:30.96:source=3c371,180718.63,694857.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.06:57:33.98:setup4f 2003.254.06:57:37.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:37.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.06:57:38.01:!2003.254.07:01:32 2003.254.07:01:32.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:01:32.01/disc_pos/683666764192,683665764192, 2003.254.07:01:32.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:01:32.26:!2003.254.07:01:32 2003.254.07:01:32.26:preob 2003.254.07:01:32.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:01:32.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:01:35.85/tpical/1d,8130,2u,12469,3u,15971,4u,24391,i1,16045 2003.254.07:01:35.85/tpical/9u,11653,au,17125,bu,13774,cu,7713,du,6285,eu,9211,i2,17439 2003.254.07:01:35.85/tpical/5u,21626,6u,19242,7u,17819,8d,8480,i3,48970 2003.254.07:01:38.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.07:01:38.50/tpzero/9u,83,au,408,bu,720,cu,522,du,608,eu,864,i2,71 2003.254.07:01:38.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,865,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.07:01:41.59:!2003.254.07:01:42 2003.254.07:01:42.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:01:42.00/disc_pos/683922530304,683665764192, 2003.254.07:01:42.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:01:42.02:midob 2003.254.07:01:42.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:01:42.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:01:42.12/cable/+3.5896115E-02 2003.254.07:01:42.20/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10509,8975 2003.254.07:01:42.27/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31452 2003.254.07:01:42.34/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8737 2003.254.07:01:42.41/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13184 2003.254.07:01:42.48/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9369 2003.254.07:01:43.04/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:01:43.56/tpi/1d,5483,2u,8735,3u,10668,4u,16413,i1,10508 2003.254.07:01:43.57/tpi/9u,6827,au,10593,bu,9395,cu,5813,du,4704,eu,6798,i2,6132 2003.254.07:01:43.57/tpi/5u,13826,6u,13189,7u,11912,8d,5697,i3,31455 2003.254.07:01:43.58/tpdiff/1d,2647,2u,3734,3u,5303,4u,7978,i1,5537 2003.254.07:01:43.59/tpdiff/9u,4826,au,6532,bu,4379,cu,1900,du,1581,eu,2413,i2,11307 2003.254.07:01:43.59/tpdiff/5u,7800,6u,6053,7u,5907,8d,2783,i3,17515 2003.254.07:01:43.60/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:01:43.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:01:43.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:01:43.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:01:43.63/tsys/1d,51.5,2u,51.9,3u,48.6,4u,52.0,i1,49.0 2003.254.07:01:43.64/tsys/9u,41.9,au,46.8,bu,59.4,cu,83.5,du,77.7,eu,73.8,i2,16.1 2003.254.07:01:43.64/tsys/5u,44.8,6u,52.9,7u,47.4,8d,43.8,i3,46.4 2003.254.07:01:43.97/fmout-gps/+7.7339E-006 2003.254.07:01:43.98:!2003.254.07:03:20 2003.254.07:01:44.04#setcl#time/315332713,4,2003,254,07,01,44.05,1.996,13.225,5 2003.254.07:01:44.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:03:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:03:20.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:03:20.49:disc_pos 2003.254.07:03:20.50/disc_pos/687121003856,683666764192, 2003.254.07:03:20.50:disc_check 2003.254.07:03:20.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h03m20.235s,15744,0.00250s,80000,7778042940, 2003.254.07:03:20.89:postob 2003.254.07:03:20.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1307674 : 3333 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1307698 : 3321 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1308072 : 2923 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1308054 : 2955 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1307655 : 3358 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1308145 : 2857 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1307759 : 3239 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:20.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1307891 : 3110 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:21.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.07:03:21.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.07:03:21.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.07:03:21.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.07:03:21.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.07:03:21.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.07:03:21.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.07:03:21.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.07:03:21.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:03:21.94:scan_name=254-0707,rd0308,162 2003.254.07:03:21.95:source=1726+455,172601.24,453304.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:03:24.96:setup4f 2003.254.07:03:28.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:28.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:03:29.00:!2003.254.07:07:38 2003.254.07:07:38.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:07:38.01/disc_pos/687121003856,687120003856, 2003.254.07:07:38.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:07:38.26:!2003.254.07:07:38 2003.254.07:07:38.27:preob 2003.254.07:07:38.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:07:38.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:07:41.85/tpical/1d,9401,2u,14275,3u,18319,4u,28163,i1,18534 2003.254.07:07:41.85/tpical/9u,7432,au,16875,bu,15042,cu,7888,du,6673,eu,9955,i2,6758 2003.254.07:07:41.85/tpical/5u,24781,6u,21672,7u,20211,8d,9569,i3,56307 2003.254.07:07:44.50/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,458,i1,80 2003.254.07:07:44.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,409,bu,720,cu,521,du,608,eu,864,i2,69 2003.254.07:07:44.50/tpzero/5u,393,6u,865,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.07:07:47.59:!2003.254.07:07:48 2003.254.07:07:48.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:07:48.00/disc_pos/687376904192,687120003856, 2003.254.07:07:48.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:07:48.01:midob 2003.254.07:07:48.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:07:48.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:07:48.24/cable/+3.5901857E-02 2003.254.07:07:48.31/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13023,4699 2003.254.07:07:48.38/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,38894 2003.254.07:07:48.45/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10550 2003.254.07:07:48.52/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15769 2003.254.07:07:48.59/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10356 2003.254.07:07:49.15/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:07:49.69/tpi/1d,6757,2u,10553,3u,13053,4u,20289,i1,13024 2003.254.07:07:49.69/tpi/9u,5275,au,11612,bu,10356,cu,5903,du,4962,eu,7340,i2,4694 2003.254.07:07:49.70/tpi/5u,17046,6u,15775,7u,14429,8d,6818,i3,38894 2003.254.07:07:49.71/tpdiff/1d,2644,2u,3722,3u,5266,4u,7874,i1,5510 2003.254.07:07:49.72/tpdiff/9u,2157,au,5263,bu,4686,cu,1985,du,1711,eu,2615,i2,2064 2003.254.07:07:49.72/tpdiff/5u,7735,6u,5897,7u,5782,8d,2751,i3,17413 2003.254.07:07:49.73/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:07:49.74/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:07:49.74/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:07:49.75/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:07:49.76/tsys/1d,64.1,2u,64.8,3u,60.7,4u,65.5,i1,61.1 2003.254.07:07:49.77/tsys/9u,72.3,au,63.9,bu,61.7,cu,81.3,du,76.3,eu,74.3,i2,67.2 2003.254.07:07:49.77/tsys/5u,56.0,6u,65.7,7u,59.8,8d,54.9,i3,57.8 2003.254.07:07:49.95/fmout-gps/+7.7394E-006 2003.254.07:07:49.95:!2003.254.07:10:30 2003.254.07:07:50.03#setcl#time/315369311,4,2003,254,07,07,50.03,1.981,13.327,4 2003.254.07:07:50.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:10:30.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:10:30.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:10:30.48:disc_pos 2003.254.07:10:30.49/disc_pos/692623256528,687121003856, 2003.254.07:10:30.49:disc_check 2003.254.07:10:30.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h10m30.233s,59852,0.00250s,80000,8257623220, 2003.254.07:10:30.88:postob 2003.254.07:10:30.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1318140 : 3365 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1318169 : 3348 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1318547 : 2948 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1318527 : 2980 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1318129 : 3384 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1318614 : 2886 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1318235 : 3261 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:30.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1318373 : 3126 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:31.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.07:10:31.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.07:10:31.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.07:10:31.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.07:10:31.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.07:10:31.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.07:10:31.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.07:10:31.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.07:10:31.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.07:10:31.97:scan_name=254-0714,rd0308,180 2003.254.07:10:31.97:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:10:34.99:setup4f 2003.254.07:10:38.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:38.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:10:39.00:!2003.254.07:13:50 2003.254.07:13:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:13:50.01/disc_pos/692623256528,692622256528, 2003.254.07:13:50.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:13:50.24:!2003.254.07:13:50 2003.254.07:13:50.24:preob 2003.254.07:13:50.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:13:50.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:13:53.82/tpical/1d,7989,2u,12289,3u,15648,4u,24257,i1,15762 2003.254.07:13:53.82/tpical/9u,11935,au,13912,bu,12164,cu,7168,du,6133,eu,8265,i2,9301 2003.254.07:13:53.82/tpical/5u,21419,6u,18874,7u,17435,8d,8265,i3,47830 2003.254.07:13:56.47/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,458,i1,79 2003.254.07:13:56.47/tpzero/9u,78,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,67 2003.254.07:13:56.47/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.07:13:59.56:!2003.254.07:14:00 2003.254.07:14:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:14:00.00/disc_pos/692879183872,692622256528, 2003.254.07:14:00.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:14:00.01:midob 2003.254.07:14:00.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:14:00.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:14:00.12/cable/+3.5896928E-02 2003.254.07:14:00.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10222,6750 2003.254.07:14:00.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30398 2003.254.07:14:00.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8568 2003.254.07:14:00.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12791 2003.254.07:14:00.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8156 2003.254.07:14:01.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:14:01.55/tpi/1d,5349,2u,8565,3u,10376,4u,16162,i1,10221 2003.254.07:14:01.55/tpi/9u,9705,au,9642,bu,8172,cu,5361,du,4624,eu,6009,i2,9166 2003.254.07:14:01.56/tpi/5u,13581,6u,12804,7u,11576,8d,5515,i3,30423 2003.254.07:14:01.57/tpdiff/1d,2640,2u,3724,3u,5272,4u,8095,i1,5541 2003.254.07:14:01.58/tpdiff/9u,2230,au,4270,bu,3992,cu,1807,du,1509,eu,2256,i2,135 2003.254.07:14:01.58/tpdiff/5u,7838,6u,6070,7u,5859,8d,2750,i3,17407 2003.254.07:14:01.59/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:14:01.60/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:14:01.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:14:01.61/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:14:01.62/tsys/1d,50.3,2u,50.9,3u,47.4,4u,50.4,i1,47.6 2003.254.07:14:01.63/tsys/9u,129.5,au,64.9,bu,56.0,cu,80.3,du,79.8,eu,68.4,i2,2022.0 2003.254.07:14:01.63/tsys/5u,43.8,6u,51.1,7u,46.3,8d,42.6,i3,45.2 2003.254.07:14:01.96/fmout-gps/+7.7839E-006 2003.254.07:14:01.97:!2003.254.07:17:00 2003.254.07:14:02.04#setcl#time/315406510,4,2003,254,07,14,02.03,1.984,13.430,4 2003.254.07:14:02.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:17:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:17:00.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:17:00.49:disc_pos 2003.254.07:17:00.49/disc_pos/698702233592,692623256528, 2003.254.07:17:00.50:disc_check 2003.254.07:17:00.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h17m00.235s,24248,0.00250s,80000,6401138540, 2003.254.07:17:00.89:postob 2003.254.07:17:00.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1329712 : 3391 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1329750 : 3365 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1330121 : 2972 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1330097 : 3008 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1329692 : 3423 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1330189 : 2909 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1329809 : 3286 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:00.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1329941 : 3156 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:01.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.07:17:01.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.07:17:01.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.07:17:01.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.07:17:01.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.07:17:01.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.07:17:01.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.07:17:01.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.07:17:01.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:17:01.98:scan_name=254-0729,rd0308,144 2003.254.07:17:01.98:source=0014+813,001404.48,811828.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:17:05.00:setup4f 2003.254.07:17:08.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:08.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:17:09.00:!2003.254.07:29:07 2003.254.07:29:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:29:07.02/disc_pos/698702233592,698701233592, 2003.254.07:29:07.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:29:07.26:!2003.254.07:29:07 2003.254.07:29:07.26:preob 2003.254.07:29:07.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:29:07.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:29:10.84/tpical/1d,7908,2u,12168,3u,15558,4u,23835,i1,15581 2003.254.07:29:10.84/tpical/9u,8856,au,14213,bu,12624,cu,8580,du,5707,eu,8575,i2,6667 2003.254.07:29:10.84/tpical/5u,21265,6u,18891,7u,17462,8d,8275,i3,47614 2003.254.07:29:13.49/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,458,i1,74 2003.254.07:29:13.49/tpzero/9u,78,au,409,bu,720,cu,523,du,609,eu,864,i2,73 2003.254.07:29:13.49/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1139,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.07:29:16.58:!2003.254.07:29:17 2003.254.07:29:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:29:17.00/disc_pos/698957987840,698701233592, 2003.254.07:29:17.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:29:17.01:midob 2003.254.07:29:17.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:29:17.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:29:17.40/cable/+3.5894142E-02 2003.254.07:29:17.47/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10031,4605 2003.254.07:29:17.54/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30013 2003.254.07:29:17.61/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8427 2003.254.07:29:17.68/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12727 2003.254.07:29:17.75/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8414 2003.254.07:29:18.31/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:29:18.83/tpi/1d,5256,2u,8422,3u,10237,4u,15805,i1,10032 2003.254.07:29:18.83/tpi/9u,10338,au,9735,bu,8413,cu,6765,du,4170,eu,6216,i2,8806 2003.254.07:29:18.84/tpi/5u,13377,6u,12742,7u,11487,8d,5480,i3,30018 2003.254.07:29:18.85/tpdiff/1d,2652,2u,3746,3u,5321,4u,8030,i1,5549 2003.254.07:29:18.86/tpdiff/9u,-1482,au,4478,bu,4211,cu,1815,du,1537,eu,2359,i2,-2139 2003.254.07:29:18.86/tpdiff/5u,7888,6u,6149,7u,5975,8d,2795,i3,17596 2003.254.07:29:18.87/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:29:18.88/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:29:18.88/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:29:18.89/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:29:18.90?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.07:29:18.90?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.07:29:18.91/tsys/1d,49.1,2u,49.6,3u,46.3,4u,49.7,i1,46.7 2003.254.07:29:18.92/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,62.5,bu,54.8,cu,103.2,du,69.5,eu,68.1,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.07:29:18.92/tsys/5u,42.8,6u,50.2,7u,45.0,8d,41.6,i3,44.1 2003.254.07:29:18.95/fmout-gps/+7.7274E-006 2003.254.07:29:18.97:!2003.254.07:31:41 2003.254.07:29:19.04#setcl#time/315498208,4,2003,254,07,29,19.04,1.999,13.685,5 2003.254.07:29:19.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:31:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:31:41.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:31:41.49:disc_pos 2003.254.07:31:41.50/disc_pos/703628610480,698702233592, 2003.254.07:31:41.50:disc_check 2003.254.07:31:41.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h31m41.235s,32200,0.00250s,80000,23265615160, 2003.254.07:31:41.90:postob 2003.254.07:31:41.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1339086 : 3416 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:41.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1339121 : 3394 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:41.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1339498 : 2994 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:41.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1339473 : 3032 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:41.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1339061 : 3453 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:41.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1339562 : 2938 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:42.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1339185 : 3311 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:42.02/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1339320 : 3177 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:42.14/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.07:31:42.25/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.07:31:42.36/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.07:31:42.47/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.07:31:42.58/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.07:31:42.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.07:31:42.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.07:31:42.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.07:31:43.03/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:31:43.03:scan_name=254-0737,rd0308,98 2003.254.07:31:43.03:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:31:46.05:setup4f 2003.254.07:31:49.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:49.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:31:50.00:!2003.254.07:37:19 2003.254.07:37:19.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:37:19.01/disc_pos/703628610480,703627610480, 2003.254.07:37:19.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:37:19.26:!2003.254.07:37:19 2003.254.07:37:19.26:preob 2003.254.07:37:19.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:37:19.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:37:22.84/tpical/1d,8632,2u,13164,3u,16899,4u,25844,i1,16982 2003.254.07:37:22.84/tpical/9u,9968,au,16144,bu,14354,cu,8557,du,8902,eu,9947,i2,6947 2003.254.07:37:22.84/tpical/5u,22811,6u,20175,7u,18595,8d,8851,i3,51502 2003.254.07:37:25.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,458,i1,76 2003.254.07:37:25.50/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,721,cu,524,du,609,eu,865,i2,68 2003.254.07:37:25.50/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1138,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.07:37:28.59:!2003.254.07:37:29 2003.254.07:37:29.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:37:29.00/disc_pos/703884558336,703627610480, 2003.254.07:37:29.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:37:29.01:midob 2003.254.07:37:29.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:37:29.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:37:29.16/cable/+3.5898968E-02 2003.254.07:37:29.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11458,6077 2003.254.07:37:29.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34098 2003.254.07:37:29.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9429 2003.254.07:37:29.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14151 2003.254.07:37:29.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9663 2003.254.07:37:30.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:37:30.59/tpi/1d,5985,2u,9430,3u,11592,4u,17939,i1,11457 2003.254.07:37:30.59/tpi/9u,6444,au,10936,bu,9677,cu,6688,du,7010,eu,7258,i2,5400 2003.254.07:37:30.60/tpi/5u,15059,6u,14143,7u,12774,8d,6094,i3,34103 2003.254.07:37:30.61/tpdiff/1d,2647,2u,3734,3u,5307,4u,7905,i1,5525 2003.254.07:37:30.61/tpdiff/9u,3524,au,5208,bu,4677,cu,1869,du,1892,eu,2689,i2,1547 2003.254.07:37:30.62/tpdiff/5u,7752,6u,6032,7u,5821,8d,2757,i3,17399 2003.254.07:37:30.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:37:30.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:37:30.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:37:30.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:37:30.66/tsys/1d,56.4,2u,56.8,3u,53.1,4u,57.5,i1,53.6 2003.254.07:37:30.66/tsys/9u,54.2,au,60.6,bu,57.4,cu,98.9,du,101.5,eu,71.3,i2,103.4 2003.254.07:37:30.67/tsys/5u,49.2,6u,57.2,7u,52.0,8d,48.0,i3,50.7 2003.254.07:37:30.96/fmout-gps/+7.8164E-006 2003.254.07:37:30.96:!2003.254.07:39:07 2003.254.07:37:31.03#setcl#time/315547407,4,2003,254,07,37,31.03,1.980,13.821,4 2003.254.07:37:31.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:39:07.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:39:07.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:39:07.48:disc_pos 2003.254.07:39:07.49/disc_pos/707082714832,703628610480, 2003.254.07:39:07.49:disc_check 2003.254.07:39:07.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h39m07.230s,1532,0.00250s,80000,10817766316, 2003.254.07:39:07.88:postob 2003.254.07:39:07.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1345661 : 3432 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1345695 : 3411 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1346069 : 3014 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1346046 : 3052 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1345633 : 3472 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1346135 : 2956 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1345763 : 3324 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:07.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1345893 : 3198 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:08.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.07:39:08.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.07:39:08.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.07:39:08.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.07:39:08.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.07:39:08.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.07:39:08.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.07:39:08.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.35 2003.254.07:39:08.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:39:08.98:scan_name=254-0746,rd0308,98 2003.254.07:39:08.98:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:39:12.00:setup4f 2003.254.07:39:15.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:15.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:39:16.01:!2003.254.07:46:27 2003.254.07:46:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:46:27.01/disc_pos/707082714832,707081714832, 2003.254.07:46:27.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:46:27.25:!2003.254.07:46:27 2003.254.07:46:27.26:preob 2003.254.07:46:27.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:46:27.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:46:30.84/tpical/1d,8088,2u,12384,3u,15863,4u,24266,i1,15948 2003.254.07:46:30.84/tpical/9u,7091,au,14107,bu,12604,cu,6818,du,6567,eu,8525,i2,5829 2003.254.07:46:30.84/tpical/5u,21492,6u,19072,7u,17587,8d,8385,i3,48388 2003.254.07:46:33.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,76 2003.254.07:46:33.49/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,863,i2,65 2003.254.07:46:33.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.07:46:36.58:!2003.254.07:46:37 2003.254.07:46:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:46:37.00/disc_pos/707338616832,707081714832, 2003.254.07:46:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:46:37.01:midob 2003.254.07:46:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:46:37.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:46:37.09/cable/+3.5897976E-02 2003.254.07:46:37.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10422,4019 2003.254.07:46:37.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30969 2003.254.07:46:37.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8677 2003.254.07:46:37.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13019 2003.254.07:46:37.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8391 2003.254.07:46:38.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:46:38.52/tpi/1d,5452,2u,8675,3u,10583,4u,16327,i1,10424 2003.254.07:46:38.52/tpi/9u,5516,au,9371,bu,8391,cu,5053,du,4933,eu,6143,i2,3944 2003.254.07:46:38.53/tpi/5u,13712,6u,13039,7u,11747,8d,5625,i3,31010 2003.254.07:46:38.54/tpdiff/1d,2636,2u,3709,3u,5280,4u,7939,i1,5524 2003.254.07:46:38.54/tpdiff/9u,1575,au,4736,bu,4213,cu,1765,du,1634,eu,2382,i2,1885 2003.254.07:46:38.56/tpdiff/5u,7780,6u,6033,7u,5840,8d,2760,i3,17378 2003.254.07:46:38.57/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:46:38.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:46:38.58/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:46:38.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:46:38.59/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,51.8,3u,48.4,4u,52.0,i1,48.7 2003.254.07:46:38.60/tsys/9u,103.7,au,56.8,bu,54.6,cu,77.0,du,79.4,eu,66.5,i2,61.7 2003.254.07:46:38.61/tsys/5u,44.5,6u,52.5,7u,47.2,8d,43.5,i3,46.1 2003.254.07:46:38.95/fmout-gps/+7.7924E-006 2003.254.07:46:38.96:!2003.254.07:48:15 2003.254.07:46:39.03#setcl#time/315602205,3,2003,254,07,46,39.03,1.992,13.973,5 2003.254.07:46:39.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:48:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:48:15.00:disc_end 2003.254.07:48:15.48:disc_pos 2003.254.07:48:15.50/disc_pos/710537091696,707082714832, 2003.254.07:48:15.50:disc_check 2003.254.07:48:15.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h48m15.235s,43328,0.00250s,80000,14081741340, 2003.254.07:48:15.89:postob 2003.254.07:48:15.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1352234 : 3451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1352278 : 3419 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1352646 : 3031 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1352621 : 3068 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1352199 : 3498 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1352707 : 2975 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1352339 : 3341 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:15.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1352466 : 3217 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:16.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.07:48:16.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.07:48:16.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.07:48:16.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.07:48:16.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.07:48:16.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.07:48:16.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.07:48:16.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.07:48:16.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:48:16.97:scan_name=254-0754a,rd0308,98 2003.254.07:48:16.97:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:48:19.99:setup4f 2003.254.07:48:23.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:23.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:48:24.00:!2003.254.07:53:52 2003.254.07:53:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:53:52.01/disc_pos/710537091696,710536091696, 2003.254.07:53:52.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:53:52.25:!2003.254.07:53:52 2003.254.07:53:52.26:preob 2003.254.07:53:52.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:53:52.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:53:55.85/tpical/1d,9008,2u,13708,3u,17559,4u,26969,i1,17735 2003.254.07:53:55.85/tpical/9u,9950,au,16547,bu,14080,cu,9590,du,6889,eu,9330,i2,8267 2003.254.07:53:55.85/tpical/5u,23623,6u,20853,7u,19308,8d,9147,i3,53647 2003.254.07:53:58.50/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.07:53:58.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,70 2003.254.07:53:58.50/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.07:54:01.59:!2003.254.07:54:02 2003.254.07:54:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:54:02.00/disc_pos/710792835072,710536091696, 2003.254.07:54:02.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:54:02.01:midob 2003.254.07:54:02.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:54:02.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:54:02.39/cable/+3.5899832E-02 2003.254.07:54:02.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12210,7267 2003.254.07:54:02.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,36230 2003.254.07:54:02.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9985 2003.254.07:54:02.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14874 2003.254.07:54:02.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9691 2003.254.07:54:03.30/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:54:03.82/tpi/1d,6370,2u,9989,3u,12293,4u,19053,i1,12222 2003.254.07:54:03.82/tpi/9u,10556,au,11625,bu,9693,cu,7632,du,5280,eu,6887,i2,10366 2003.254.07:54:03.83/tpi/5u,15900,6u,14846,7u,13491,8d,6393,i3,36242 2003.254.07:54:03.84/tpdiff/1d,2638,2u,3719,3u,5266,4u,7916,i1,5513 2003.254.07:54:03.85/tpdiff/9u,-606,au,4922,bu,4387,cu,1958,du,1609,eu,2443,i2,-2099 2003.254.07:54:03.85/tpdiff/5u,7723,6u,6007,7u,5817,8d,2754,i3,17405 2003.254.07:54:03.86/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:54:03.87/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:54:03.87/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:54:03.88/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:54:03.89?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.07:54:03.89?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.07:54:03.90/tsys/1d,60.4,2u,60.9,3u,57.0,4u,61.1,i1,57.3 2003.254.07:54:03.90/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,68.4,bu,61.4,cu,108.9,du,87.1,eu,74.0,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.07:54:03.91/tsys/5u,52.2,6u,60.5,7u,55.2,8d,50.8,i3,53.9 2003.254.07:54:03.94/fmout-gps/+7.7739E-006 2003.254.07:54:03.96:!2003.254.07:55:40 2003.254.07:54:04.03#setcl#time/315646705,4,2003,254,07,54,04.03,1.975,14.097,4 2003.254.07:54:04.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.07:55:40.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.07:55:40.01:disc_end 2003.254.07:55:40.49:disc_pos 2003.254.07:55:40.50/disc_pos/713991631456,710537091696, 2003.254.07:55:40.50:disc_check 2003.254.07:55:40.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d07h55m40.240s,15312,0.00250s,80000,10785648256, 2003.254.07:55:40.89:postob 2003.254.07:55:40.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1358810 : 3469 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:40.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1358853 : 3436 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:40.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1359226 : 3043 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:40.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1359192 : 3089 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:40.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1358770 : 3518 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:40.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1359282 : 2992 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:41.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1358916 : 3357 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:41.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1359036 : 3239 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:41.13/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.07:55:41.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.07:55:41.36/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.07:55:41.47/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.07:55:41.58/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.07:55:41.69/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.07:55:41.80/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.11 2003.254.07:55:41.91/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.02 2003.254.07:55:42.02/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.07:55:42.02:scan_name=254-0758,rd0308,134 2003.254.07:55:42.02:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.07:55:45.04:setup4f 2003.254.07:55:48.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:48.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.07:55:49.01:!2003.254.07:58:28 2003.254.07:58:28.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:58:28.01/disc_pos/713991631456,713990631456, 2003.254.07:58:28.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.07:58:28.27:!2003.254.07:58:28 2003.254.07:58:28.27:preob 2003.254.07:58:28.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:58:28.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:58:31.85/tpical/1d,8969,2u,13673,3u,17507,4u,26993,i1,17771 2003.254.07:58:31.85/tpical/9u,9573,au,14919,bu,13340,cu,9499,du,13393,eu,12326 2003.254.07:58:31.85/tpical/i2,6569 2003.254.07:58:31.85/tpical/5u,23856,6u,21080,7u,19569,8d,9269,i3,54218 2003.254.07:58:34.52/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,76 2003.254.07:58:34.52/tpzero/9u,74,au,407,bu,720,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,70 2003.254.07:58:34.52/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.07:58:37.61:!2003.254.07:58:38 2003.254.07:58:38.00:disc_pos 2003.254.07:58:38.00/disc_pos/714247491584,713990631456, 2003.254.07:58:38.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.07:58:38.01:midob 2003.254.07:58:38.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.07:58:38.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.07:58:38.16/cable/+3.5897437E-02 2003.254.07:58:38.23/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12191,4395 2003.254.07:58:38.30/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,36532 2003.254.07:58:38.37/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9898 2003.254.07:58:38.44/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14988 2003.254.07:58:38.51/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9129 2003.254.07:58:39.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.07:58:39.59/tpi/1d,6304,2u,9902,3u,12195,4u,19050,i1,12195 2003.254.07:58:39.59/tpi/9u,6681,au,10240,bu,9125,cu,8110,du,12734,eu,10348,i2,4518 2003.254.07:58:39.60/tpi/5u,16015,6u,14995,7u,13638,8d,6463,i3,36538 2003.254.07:58:39.61/tpdiff/1d,2665,2u,3771,3u,5312,4u,7943,i1,5576 2003.254.07:58:39.61/tpdiff/9u,2892,au,4679,bu,4215,cu,1389,du,659,eu,1978,i2,2051 2003.254.07:58:39.62/tpdiff/5u,7841,6u,6085,7u,5931,8d,2806,i3,17680 2003.254.07:58:39.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.07:58:39.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.07:58:39.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.07:58:39.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.07:58:39.66/tsys/1d,59.2,2u,59.5,3u,56.0,4u,60.9,i1,56.5 2003.254.07:58:39.66/tsys/9u,68.5,au,63.0,bu,59.8,cu,163.9,du,551.9,eu,143.8,i2,65.1 2003.254.07:58:39.67/tsys/5u,51.8,6u,60.4,7u,54.8,8d,50.5,i3,53.4 2003.254.07:58:39.95/fmout-gps/+7.7699E-006 2003.254.07:58:39.97:!2003.254.08:00:52 2003.254.07:58:40.04#setcl#time/315674304,4,2003,254,07,58,40.04,1.998,14.174,5 2003.254.07:58:40.04#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:00:33.74;"weather: clear 2003.254.08:00:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:00:52.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:00:52.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:00:52.50/disc_pos/718597691720,713991631456, 2003.254.08:00:52.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:00:52.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h00m52.235s,25928,0.00250s,80000,5377769120, 2003.254.08:00:52.89:postob 2003.254.08:00:52.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1367564 : 3503 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1367626 : 3454 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1368003 : 3056 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1367957 : 3114 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1367546 : 3531 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1368045 : 3017 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1367687 : 3375 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:52.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1367802 : 3261 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:00:53.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:00:53.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.08:00:53.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.08:00:53.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:00:53.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.08:00:53.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.08:00:53.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:00:53.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.15 2003.254.08:00:53.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.08:00:53.95:scan_name=254-0810,rd0308,197 2003.254.08:00:53.95:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:00:56.97:setup4f 2003.254.08:01:00.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:01:00.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:01:01.00:!2003.254.08:09:57 2003.254.08:09:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:09:57.01/disc_pos/718597691720,718596691720, 2003.254.08:09:57.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:09:57.26:!2003.254.08:09:57 2003.254.08:09:57.26:preob 2003.254.08:09:57.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:09:57.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:10:00.84/tpical/1d,7871,2u,12068,3u,15461,4u,23567,i1,15440 2003.254.08:10:00.84/tpical/9u,7790,au,15349,bu,13582,cu,9339,du,6825,eu,9117,i2,6433 2003.254.08:10:00.84/tpical/5u,20992,6u,18605,7u,17275,8d,8213,i3,47133 2003.254.08:10:03.51/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,458,i1,77 2003.254.08:10:03.51/tpzero/9u,82,au,408,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,78 2003.254.08:10:03.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.08:10:06.60:!2003.254.08:10:07 2003.254.08:10:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:10:07.00/disc_pos/718853582848,718596691720, 2003.254.08:10:07.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:10:07.02:midob 2003.254.08:10:07.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:10:07.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:10:07.19/cable/+3.5896955E-02 2003.254.08:10:07.26/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9916,9733 2003.254.08:10:07.33/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29605 2003.254.08:10:07.40/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8347 2003.254.08:10:07.47/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12533 2003.254.08:10:07.54/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8879 2003.254.08:10:08.10/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:10:08.62/tpi/1d,5226,2u,8338,3u,10141,4u,15555,i1,9918 2003.254.08:10:08.62/tpi/9u,8116,au,10501,bu,8890,cu,7540,du,5136,eu,6497,i2,8077 2003.254.08:10:08.63/tpi/5u,13129,6u,12541,7u,11328,8d,5419,i3,29602 2003.254.08:10:08.64/tpdiff/1d,2645,2u,3730,3u,5320,4u,8012,i1,5522 2003.254.08:10:08.64/tpdiff/9u,-326,au,4848,bu,4692,cu,1799,du,1689,eu,2620,i2,-1644 2003.254.08:10:08.65/tpdiff/5u,7863,6u,6064,7u,5947,8d,2794,i3,17531 2003.254.08:10:08.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:10:08.66/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:10:08.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:10:08.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:10:08.69?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:10:08.69?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:10:08.70/tsys/1d,49.0,2u,49.2,3u,45.9,4u,49.0,i1,46.3 2003.254.08:10:08.70/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,62.5,bu,52.2,cu,117.0,du,80.4,eu,64.5,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.08:10:08.71/tsys/5u,42.1,6u,50.1,7u,44.5,8d,41.0,i3,43.6 2003.254.08:10:08.94/fmout-gps/+7.7079E-006 2003.254.08:10:08.96:!2003.254.08:13:24 2003.254.08:10:09.03#setcl#time/315743203,4,2003,254,08,10,09.04,1.988,14.365,5 2003.254.08:10:09.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:13:24.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:13:24.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:13:24.48:disc_pos 2003.254.08:13:24.49/disc_pos/725219728384,718597691720, 2003.254.08:13:24.49:disc_check 2003.254.08:13:24.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h13m24.227s,3008,0.00250s,80000,17441746256, 2003.254.08:13:24.88:postob 2003.254.08:13:24.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1380172 : 3529 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1380229 : 3487 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1380615 : 3078 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1380559 : 3148 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1380153 : 3558 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1380645 : 3051 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1380285 : 3411 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:24.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1380404 : 3293 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:25.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.08:13:25.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.08:13:25.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.33 2003.254.08:13:25.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:13:25.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.08:13:25.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.08:13:25.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:13:25.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.74 2003.254.08:13:25.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.08:13:25.97:scan_name=254-0816,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:13:25.97:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:13:28.98:setup4f 2003.254.08:13:32.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:33.00/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:13:33.02:!2003.254.08:16:21 2003.254.08:16:21.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:16:21.01/disc_pos/725219728384,725218728384, 2003.254.08:16:21.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:16:21.24:!2003.254.08:16:21 2003.254.08:16:21.25:preob 2003.254.08:16:21.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:16:21.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:16:24.83/tpical/1d,7967,2u,12209,3u,15641,4u,24051,i1,15728 2003.254.08:16:24.83/tpical/9u,9710,au,14450,bu,12674,cu,9992,du,18747,eu,19275 2003.254.08:16:24.83/tpical/i2,8561 2003.254.08:16:24.83/tpical/5u,21445,6u,19123,7u,17710,8d,8429,i3,48309 2003.254.08:16:27.48/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,458,i1,81 2003.254.08:16:27.48/tpzero/9u,79,au,408,bu,720,cu,523,du,610,eu,866,i2,74 2003.254.08:16:27.48/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.08:16:30.57:!2003.254.08:16:31 2003.254.08:16:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:16:31.00/disc_pos/725475516416,725218728384, 2003.254.08:16:31.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:16:31.02:midob 2003.254.08:16:31.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:16:31.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:16:31.31/cable/+3.5898888E-02 2003.254.08:16:31.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10160,7428 2003.254.08:16:31.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30511 2003.254.08:16:31.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8479 2003.254.08:16:31.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12925 2003.254.08:16:31.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8447 2003.254.08:16:32.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:16:32.75/tpi/1d,5314,2u,8479,3u,10354,4u,15970,i1,10158 2003.254.08:16:32.76/tpi/9u,5604,au,9545,bu,8448,cu,8639,du,21452,eu,19838,i2,5209 2003.254.08:16:32.76/tpi/5u,13479,6u,12941,7u,11653,8d,5581,i3,30506 2003.254.08:16:32.77/tpdiff/1d,2653,2u,3730,3u,5287,4u,8081,i1,5570 2003.254.08:16:32.78/tpdiff/9u,4106,au,4905,bu,4226,cu,1353,du,-2705,eu,-563,i2,3352 2003.254.08:16:32.78/tpdiff/5u,7966,6u,6182,7u,6057,8d,2848,i3,17803 2003.254.08:16:32.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:16:32.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:16:32.81/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:16:32.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:16:32.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:16:32.82?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:16:32.83/tsys/1d,49.7,2u,50.2,3u,47.2,4u,49.9,i1,47.0 2003.254.08:16:32.84/tsys/9u,40.4,au,55.9,bu,54.9,cu,180.0,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.08:16:32.84/tsys/i2,46.0 2003.254.08:16:32.85/tsys/5u,42.7,6u,50.8,7u,45.1,8d,41.7,i3,44.3 2003.254.08:16:32.94/fmout-gps/+7.7089E-006 2003.254.08:16:32.96:!2003.254.08:18:09 2003.254.08:16:33.03#setcl#time/315781601,4,2003,254,08,16,33.03,1.990,14.472,5 2003.254.08:16:33.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:18:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:18:09.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:18:09.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:18:09.50/disc_pos/728674633064,725219728384, 2003.254.08:18:09.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:18:09.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h18m09.242s,38496,0.00250s,80000,5665539832, 2003.254.08:18:09.89:postob 2003.254.08:18:09.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1386750 : 3546 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1386807 : 3501 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1387193 : 3093 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1387137 : 3164 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1386730 : 3573 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1387218 : 3071 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1386859 : 3429 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:09.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1386979 : 3311 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:10.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:18:10.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.08:18:10.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.08:18:10.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:18:10.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.254.08:18:10.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.08:18:10.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:18:10.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.74 2003.254.08:18:10.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.08:18:10.97:scan_name=254-0819,rd0308,220 2003.254.08:18:10.97:source=0718+793,071808.69,791722.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:18:13.99:setup4f 2003.254.08:18:17.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:17.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:18:18.00:!2003.254.08:19:12 2003.254.08:19:12.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:19:12.02/disc_pos/728674633064,728673633064, 2003.254.08:19:12.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:19:12.26:!2003.254.08:19:12 2003.254.08:19:12.26:preob 2003.254.08:19:12.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:19:12.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:19:15.85/tpical/1d,7938,2u,12182,3u,15604,4u,23960,i1,15664 2003.254.08:19:15.85/tpical/9u,6599,au,14271,bu,12757,cu,6705,du,6077,eu,8638,i2,5703 2003.254.08:19:15.85/tpical/5u,21344,6u,19074,7u,17690,8d,8412,i3,48151 2003.254.08:19:18.50/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,74 2003.254.08:19:18.50/tpzero/9u,73,au,408,bu,721,cu,523,du,609,eu,864,i2,68 2003.254.08:19:18.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.08:19:21.59:!2003.254.08:19:22 2003.254.08:19:22.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:19:22.00/disc_pos/728930557952,728673633064, 2003.254.08:19:22.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:19:22.02:midob 2003.254.08:19:22.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:19:22.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:19:22.31/cable/+3.5895891E-02 2003.254.08:19:22.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10099,4169 2003.254.08:19:22.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30409 2003.254.08:19:22.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8434 2003.254.08:19:22.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12878 2003.254.08:19:22.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8475 2003.254.08:19:23.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:19:23.74/tpi/1d,5280,2u,8434,3u,10319,4u,15895,i1,10100 2003.254.08:19:23.75/tpi/9u,6689,au,9516,bu,8484,cu,4879,du,4513,eu,6243,i2,4061 2003.254.08:19:23.76/tpi/5u,13423,6u,12884,7u,11665,8d,5576,i3,30417 2003.254.08:19:23.76/tpdiff/1d,2658,2u,3748,3u,5285,4u,8065,i1,5564 2003.254.08:19:23.77/tpdiff/9u,-90,au,4755,bu,4273,cu,1826,du,1564,eu,2395,i2,1642 2003.254.08:19:23.78/tpdiff/5u,7921,6u,6190,7u,6025,8d,2836,i3,17734 2003.254.08:19:23.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:19:23.79/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:19:23.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:19:23.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:19:23.81?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:19:23.82/tsys/1d,49.3,2u,49.6,3u,47.0,4u,49.8,i1,46.9 2003.254.08:19:23.82/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,57.5,bu,54.5,cu,71.6,du,74.9,eu,67.4,i2,73.0 2003.254.08:19:23.83/tsys/5u,42.8,6u,50.5,7u,45.4,8d,41.9,i3,44.3 2003.254.08:19:23.95/fmout-gps/+7.7264E-006 2003.254.08:19:23.96:!2003.254.08:23:02 2003.254.08:19:24.03#setcl#time/315798701,3,2003,254,08,19,24.04,2.000,14.519,6 2003.254.08:19:24.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:23:02.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:23:02.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:23:02.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:23:02.50/disc_pos/736032770784,728674633064, 2003.254.08:23:02.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:23:02.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h23m02.240s,49540,0.00250s,80000,2017771236, 2003.254.08:23:02.89:postob 2003.254.08:23:02.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1400752 : 3582 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1400811 : 3535 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1401206 : 3120 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1401146 : 3193 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1400740 : 3604 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1401219 : 3108 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1400866 : 3461 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:02.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1400986 : 3342 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:03.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.08:23:03.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.08:23:03.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.08:23:03.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:23:03.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.08:23:03.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.08:23:03.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.08:23:03.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.74 2003.254.08:23:03.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.08:23:03.98:scan_name=254-0833,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:23:03.98:source=3c446,222311.09,-051217.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:23:06.99:setup4f 2003.254.08:23:10.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:10.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:23:11.01:!2003.254.08:33:37 2003.254.08:33:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:33:37.02/disc_pos/736032770784,736031770784, 2003.254.08:33:37.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:33:37.25:!2003.254.08:33:37 2003.254.08:33:37.25:preob 2003.254.08:33:37.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:33:37.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:33:40.84/tpical/1d,10575,2u,15949,3u,20435,4u,31476,i1,20766 2003.254.08:33:40.84/tpical/9u,10280,au,17741,bu,15442,cu,9103,du,8525,eu,10423 2003.254.08:33:40.84/tpical/i2,10571 2003.254.08:33:40.84/tpical/5u,27516,6u,23986,7u,22118,8d,10455,i3,62697 2003.254.08:33:43.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.08:33:43.50/tpzero/9u,75,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,610,eu,863,i2,72 2003.254.08:33:43.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.08:33:46.59:!2003.254.08:33:47 2003.254.08:33:47.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:33:47.00/disc_pos/736288804864,736031770784, 2003.254.08:33:47.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:33:47.01:midob 2003.254.08:33:47.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:33:47.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:33:47.39/cable/+3.5899596E-02 2003.254.08:33:47.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,15248,6869 2003.254.08:33:47.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,45163 2003.254.08:33:47.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12228 2003.254.08:33:47.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,18063 2003.254.08:33:47.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10926 2003.254.08:33:48.30/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:33:48.82/tpi/1d,7940,2u,12223,3u,15186,4u,23630,i1,15248 2003.254.08:33:48.82/tpi/9u,11239,au,12983,bu,10909,cu,6815,du,6653,eu,7901,i2,12187 2003.254.08:33:48.83/tpi/5u,19791,6u,18087,7u,16352,8d,7686,i3,45200 2003.254.08:33:48.84/tpdiff/1d,2635,2u,3726,3u,5249,4u,7846,i1,5518 2003.254.08:33:48.84/tpdiff/9u,-959,au,4758,bu,4533,cu,2288,du,1872,eu,2522,i2,-1616 2003.254.08:33:48.85/tpdiff/5u,7725,6u,5899,7u,5766,8d,2769,i3,17497 2003.254.08:33:48.86/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:33:48.87/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:33:48.87/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:33:48.88/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:33:48.89?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:33:48.89?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:33:48.90/tsys/1d,76.0,2u,76.4,3u,71.5,4u,76.8,i1,71.5 2003.254.08:33:48.91/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,79.3,bu,67.4,cu,82.5,du,96.8,eu,83.7,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.08:33:48.91/tsys/5u,65.3,6u,75.9,7u,68.6,8d,62.7,i3,66.9 2003.254.08:33:48.95/fmout-gps/+7.7389E-006 2003.254.08:33:48.96:!2003.254.08:35:25 2003.254.08:33:49.03#setcl#time/315885199,4,2003,254,08,33,49.03,1.984,14.760,5 2003.254.08:33:49.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:35:25.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:35:25.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:35:25.48:disc_pos 2003.254.08:35:25.49/disc_pos/739486957968,736032770784, 2003.254.08:35:25.49:disc_check 2003.254.08:35:25.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h35m25.227s,26072,0.00250s,80000,20321436284, 2003.254.08:35:25.89:postob 2003.254.08:35:25.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1407327 : 3598 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1407380 : 3558 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1407794 : 3123 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1407722 : 3210 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1407309 : 3626 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1407797 : 3121 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1407442 : 3480 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:25.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1407557 : 3362 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:26.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:35:26.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.08:35:26.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.08:35:26.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:35:26.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.254.08:35:26.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.08:35:26.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.30 2003.254.08:35:26.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.08:35:26.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.08:35:26.99:scan_name=254-0839,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:35:26.99:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:35:30.01:setup4f 2003.254.08:35:33.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:33.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:35:34.02:!2003.254.08:39:10 2003.254.08:39:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:39:10.01/disc_pos/739486957968,739485957968, 2003.254.08:39:10.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:39:10.26:!2003.254.08:39:10 2003.254.08:39:10.27:preob 2003.254.08:39:10.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:39:10.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:39:13.86/tpical/1d,9678,2u,14677,3u,18822,4u,28963,i1,19078 2003.254.08:39:13.86/tpical/9u,8703,au,16139,bu,14294,cu,7762,du,6780,eu,9487,i2,6899 2003.254.08:39:13.86/tpical/5u,25283,6u,22042,7u,20524,8d,9698,i3,57572 2003.254.08:39:16.51/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,78 2003.254.08:39:16.51/tpzero/9u,75,au,408,bu,720,cu,521,du,610,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.08:39:16.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.08:39:19.60:!2003.254.08:39:20 2003.254.08:39:20.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:39:20.00/disc_pos/739742912512,739485957968, 2003.254.08:39:20.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:39:20.01:midob 2003.254.08:39:20.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:39:20.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:39:20.39/cable/+3.5900318E-02 2003.254.08:39:20.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13495,5280 2003.254.08:39:20.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,40039 2003.254.08:39:20.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10931 2003.254.08:39:20.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,16123 2003.254.08:39:20.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9873 2003.254.08:39:21.30/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:39:21.82/tpi/1d,7018,2u,10914,3u,13514,4u,21022,i1,13517 2003.254.08:39:21.82/tpi/9u,6033,au,11252,bu,9895,cu,5832,du,5156,eu,7022,i2,4923 2003.254.08:39:21.83/tpi/5u,17679,6u,16324,7u,14937,8d,7049,i3,40437 2003.254.08:39:21.84/tpdiff/1d,2660,2u,3763,3u,5308,4u,7941,i1,5561 2003.254.08:39:21.84/tpdiff/9u,2670,au,4887,bu,4399,cu,1930,du,1624,eu,2465,i2,1976 2003.254.08:39:21.85/tpdiff/5u,7604,6u,5718,7u,5587,8d,2649,i3,17135 2003.254.08:39:21.86/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:39:21.87/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:39:21.87/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:39:21.88/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:39:21.89/tsys/1d,66.2,2u,66.6,3u,62.5,4u,67.3,i1,62.8 2003.254.08:39:21.89/tsys/9u,66.9,au,66.6,bu,62.6,cu,82.6,du,84.0,eu,75.0,i2,73.7 2003.254.08:39:21.90/tsys/5u,59.1,6u,70.3,7u,64.2,8d,59.3,i3,61.1 2003.254.08:39:21.94/fmout-gps/+7.7579E-006 2003.254.08:39:21.96:!2003.254.08:40:58 2003.254.08:39:22.03#setcl#time/315918499,4,2003,254,08,39,22.04,1.988,14.852,5 2003.254.08:39:22.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:40:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:40:58.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:40:58.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:40:58.50/disc_pos/742941386640,739486957968, 2003.254.08:40:58.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:40:58.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h40m58.245s,25748,0.00250s,80000,7202131652, 2003.254.08:40:58.89:postob 2003.254.08:40:58.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1413903 : 3616 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1413949 : 3580 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1414378 : 3131 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1414302 : 3223 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1413882 : 3644 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1414370 : 3140 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1414012 : 3501 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:58.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1414132 : 3379 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:40:59.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:40:59.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.08:40:59.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.08:40:59.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:40:59.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.23 2003.254.08:40:59.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.08:40:59.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:40:59.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.74 2003.254.08:40:59.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.08:40:59.96:scan_name=254-0842,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:40:59.96:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:41:02.98:setup4f 2003.254.08:41:06.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:41:06.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:41:07.02:!2003.254.08:42:29 2003.254.08:42:29.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:42:29.02/disc_pos/742941386640,742940386640, 2003.254.08:42:29.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:42:29.27:!2003.254.08:42:29 2003.254.08:42:29.27:preob 2003.254.08:42:29.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:42:29.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:42:32.87/tpical/1d,7810,2u,11987,3u,15301,4u,23364,i1,15294 2003.254.08:42:32.87/tpical/9u,6320,au,13645,bu,12179,cu,7313,du,5734,eu,8363,i2,6796 2003.254.08:42:32.87/tpical/5u,20651,6u,18280,7u,16901,8d,8029,i3,46208 2003.254.08:42:35.53/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,458,i1,80 2003.254.08:42:35.53/tpzero/9u,79,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.08:42:35.53/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.08:42:38.62:!2003.254.08:42:39 2003.254.08:42:39.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:42:39.00/disc_pos/743197257728,742940386640, 2003.254.08:42:39.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:42:39.02:midob 2003.254.08:42:39.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:42:39.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:42:39.12/cable/+3.5897753E-02 2003.254.08:42:39.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9852,5006 2003.254.08:42:39.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29301 2003.254.08:42:39.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8281 2003.254.08:42:39.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12449 2003.254.08:42:39.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8137 2003.254.08:42:40.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:42:40.55/tpi/1d,5178,2u,8275,3u,10069,4u,15452,i1,9846 2003.254.08:42:40.55/tpi/9u,5756,au,9099,bu,8091,cu,5567,du,4251,eu,6052,i2,5559 2003.254.08:42:40.56/tpi/5u,13030,6u,12425,7u,11198,8d,5353,i3,29268 2003.254.08:42:40.57/tpdiff/1d,2632,2u,3712,3u,5232,4u,7912,i1,5448 2003.254.08:42:40.58/tpdiff/9u,564,au,4546,bu,4088,cu,1746,du,1483,eu,2311,i2,1237 2003.254.08:42:40.58/tpdiff/5u,7621,6u,5855,7u,5703,8d,2676,i3,16940 2003.254.08:42:40.59/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:42:40.60/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:42:40.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:42:40.61/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:42:40.62/tsys/1d,48.8,2u,49.0,3u,46.3,4u,49.3,i1,46.6 2003.254.08:42:40.63/tsys/9u,302.0,au,57.3,bu,54.1,cu,86.7,du,73.7,eu,67.4,i2,133.1 2003.254.08:42:40.63/tsys/5u,43.1,6u,51.3,7u,45.8,8d,42.2,i3,44.6 2003.254.08:42:40.95/fmout-gps/+7.7299E-006 2003.254.08:42:40.96:!2003.254.08:44:17 2003.254.08:42:41.02#setcl#time/315938397,4,2003,254,08,42,41.02,1.980,14.907,4 2003.254.08:42:41.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:44:17.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:44:17.01:disc_end 2003.254.08:44:17.50:disc_pos 2003.254.08:44:17.50/disc_pos/746395414072,742941386640, 2003.254.08:44:17.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:44:17.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h44m17.242s,27360,0.00250s,80000,2913890956, 2003.254.08:44:17.90:postob 2003.254.08:44:17.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1420473 : 3637 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1420525 : 3595 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1420958 : 3143 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1420877 : 3239 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1420456 : 3661 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1420941 : 3160 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1420586 : 3518 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:17.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1420706 : 3398 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:18.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.08:44:18.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.08:44:18.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.08:44:18.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:44:18.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.08:44:18.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.08:44:18.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:44:18.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.95 2003.254.08:44:19.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.08:44:19.00:scan_name=254-0846,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:44:19.00:source=0727-115,072758.08,-113452.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:44:22.01:setup4f 2003.254.08:44:25.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:25.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:44:26.00:!2003.254.08:46:30 2003.254.08:46:30.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:46:30.01/disc_pos/746395414072,746394414072, 2003.254.08:46:30.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:46:30.26:!2003.254.08:46:30 2003.254.08:46:30.27:preob 2003.254.08:46:30.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:46:30.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:46:33.85/tpical/1d,9595,2u,14599,3u,18725,4u,28919,i1,19014 2003.254.08:46:33.85/tpical/9u,12096,au,16466,bu,14519,cu,8464,du,6563,eu,9630,i2,9642 2003.254.08:46:33.85/tpical/5u,25618,6u,22427,7u,20864,8d,9874,i3,58205 2003.254.08:46:36.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,459,i1,80 2003.254.08:46:36.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,74 2003.254.08:46:36.50/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.08:46:39.59:!2003.254.08:46:40 2003.254.08:46:40.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:46:40.00/disc_pos/746651205632,746394414072, 2003.254.08:46:40.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:46:40.01:midob 2003.254.08:46:40.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:46:40.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:46:40.31/cable/+3.5900489E-02 2003.254.08:46:40.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13453,6596 2003.254.08:46:40.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,40500 2003.254.08:46:40.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10838 2003.254.08:46:40.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,16387 2003.254.08:46:40.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10100 2003.254.08:46:41.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:46:41.75/tpi/1d,6943,2u,10840,3u,13427,4u,20969,i1,13453 2003.254.08:46:41.76/tpi/9u,9983,au,11484,bu,10086,cu,6735,du,4909,eu,7130,i2,7315 2003.254.08:46:41.76/tpi/5u,17749,6u,16388,7u,14976,8d,7068,i3,40507 2003.254.08:46:41.77/tpdiff/1d,2652,2u,3759,3u,5298,4u,7950,i1,5561 2003.254.08:46:41.78/tpdiff/9u,2113,au,4982,bu,4433,cu,1729,du,1654,eu,2500,i2,2327 2003.254.08:46:41.78/tpdiff/5u,7869,6u,6039,7u,5888,8d,2806,i3,17698 2003.254.08:46:41.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:46:41.80/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:46:41.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:46:41.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:46:41.82/tsys/1d,65.7,2u,66.1,3u,62.2,4u,67.1,i1,62.5 2003.254.08:46:41.83/tsys/9u,140.6,au,66.7,bu,63.4,cu,107.8,du,78.0,eu,75.2,i2,93.4 2003.254.08:46:41.83/tsys/5u,57.3,6u,66.8,7u,61.1,8d,56.1,i3,59.2 2003.254.08:46:41.94/fmout-gps/+7.7434E-006 2003.254.08:46:41.96:!2003.254.08:48:18 2003.254.08:46:42.02#setcl#time/315962497,4,2003,254,08,46,42.03,1.987,14.974,5 2003.254.08:46:42.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:48:18.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:48:18.01:disc_end 2003.254.08:48:18.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:48:18.50/disc_pos/749849679864,746395414072, 2003.254.08:48:18.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:48:18.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h48m18.242s,9068,0.00250s,80000,4257752500, 2003.254.08:48:18.89:postob 2003.254.08:48:18.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1427041 : 3662 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1427097 : 3614 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1427543 : 3152 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1427458 : 3249 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1427027 : 3682 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1427517 : 3175 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1427158 : 3537 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:18.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1427281 : 3414 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:19.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:48:19.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.08:48:19.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.08:48:19.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.08:48:19.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.08:48:19.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.08:48:19.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.08:48:19.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.08:48:19.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.08:48:19.99:scan_name=254-0852,rd0308,98 2003.254.08:48:19.99:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:48:23.01:setup4f 2003.254.08:48:26.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:26.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:48:26.99:!2003.254.08:52:26 2003.254.08:52:26.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:52:26.01/disc_pos/749849679864,749848679864, 2003.254.08:52:26.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.08:52:26.26:!2003.254.08:52:26 2003.254.08:52:26.27:preob 2003.254.08:52:26.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:52:26.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:52:29.85/tpical/1d,8674,2u,13286,3u,17052,4u,26113,i1,17148 2003.254.08:52:29.85/tpical/9u,10499,au,16405,bu,14461,cu,7995,du,6883,eu,9570,i2,9708 2003.254.08:52:29.85/tpical/5u,23037,6u,20365,7u,18888,8d,8973,i3,52195 2003.254.08:52:32.50/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,759,4u,459,i1,83 2003.254.08:52:32.50/tpzero/9u,78,au,408,bu,721,cu,523,du,609,eu,865,i2,73 2003.254.08:52:32.50/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.08:52:35.59:!2003.254.08:52:36 2003.254.08:52:36.00:disc_pos 2003.254.08:52:36.00/disc_pos/750105509888,749848679864, 2003.254.08:52:36.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.08:52:36.01:midob 2003.254.08:52:36.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.08:52:36.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.08:52:36.36/cable/+3.5901748E-02 2003.254.08:52:36.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11626,6770 2003.254.08:52:36.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34700 2003.254.08:52:36.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9548 2003.254.08:52:36.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14345 2003.254.08:52:36.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9749 2003.254.08:52:37.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.08:52:37.80/tpi/1d,6042,2u,9546,3u,11745,4u,18181,i1,11628 2003.254.08:52:37.80/tpi/9u,9040,au,11808,bu,9616,cu,6229,du,5113,eu,6893,i2,11932 2003.254.08:52:37.81/tpi/5u,15221,6u,14348,7u,13010,8d,6191,i3,34704 2003.254.08:52:37.82/tpdiff/1d,2632,2u,3740,3u,5307,4u,7932,i1,5520 2003.254.08:52:37.82/tpdiff/9u,1459,au,4597,bu,4845,cu,1766,du,1770,eu,2677,i2,-2224 2003.254.08:52:37.83/tpdiff/5u,7816,6u,6017,7u,5878,8d,2782,i3,17491 2003.254.08:52:37.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.08:52:37.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.08:52:37.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.08:52:37.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.08:52:37.87?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.08:52:37.87/tsys/1d,57.3,2u,57.5,3u,53.8,4u,58.1,i1,54.4 2003.254.08:52:37.88/tsys/9u,184.3,au,74.4,bu,55.1,cu,96.9,du,76.3,eu,67.6,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.08:52:37.89/tsys/5u,49.3,6u,58.3,7u,52.5,8d,48.4,i3,51.3 2003.254.08:52:37.94/fmout-gps/+7.7849E-006 2003.254.08:52:37.96:!2003.254.08:54:14 2003.254.08:52:38.03#setcl#time/315998096,4,2003,254,08,52,38.03,1.990,15.073,5 2003.254.08:52:38.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.08:53:02.73;"weather: clear 2003.254.08:54:14.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.08:54:14.00:disc_end 2003.254.08:54:14.49:disc_pos 2003.254.08:54:14.50/disc_pos/753303985800,749849679864, 2003.254.08:54:14.50:disc_check 2003.254.08:54:14.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d08h54m14.242s,35468,0.00250s,80000,7937667664, 2003.254.08:54:14.89:postob 2003.254.08:54:14.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1433613 : 3681 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1433671 : 3634 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1434122 : 3164 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1434030 : 3269 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1433608 : 3694 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1434088 : 3195 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1433735 : 3552 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:14.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1433855 : 3431 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:15.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.08:54:15.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.08:54:15.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.08:54:15.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.08:54:15.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.98 2003.254.08:54:15.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.08:54:15.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.08:54:15.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.08:54:15.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.08:54:15.97:scan_name=254-0902,rd0308,198 2003.254.08:54:15.97:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.08:54:18.99:setup4f 2003.254.08:54:22.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:22.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.08:54:23.01:!2003.254.09:02:33 2003.254.09:02:33.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:02:33.01/disc_pos/753303985800,753302985800, 2003.254.09:02:33.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:02:33.25:!2003.254.09:02:33 2003.254.09:02:33.25:preob 2003.254.09:02:33.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:02:33.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:02:36.84/tpical/1d,7830,2u,12041,3u,15368,4u,23388,i1,15371 2003.254.09:02:36.84/tpical/9u,6528,au,15013,bu,13380,cu,19600,du,11206,eu,9311 2003.254.09:02:36.84/tpical/i2,6160 2003.254.09:02:36.84/tpical/5u,20726,6u,18374,7u,17047,8d,8114,i3,46618 2003.254.09:02:39.49/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,458,i1,73 2003.254.09:02:39.49/tpzero/9u,72,au,407,bu,720,cu,522,du,611,eu,863,i2,69 2003.254.09:02:39.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.09:02:42.58:!2003.254.09:02:43 2003.254.09:02:43.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:02:43.00/disc_pos/753559969792,753302985800, 2003.254.09:02:43.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:02:43.03:midob 2003.254.09:02:43.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:02:43.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:02:43.31/cable/+3.5896436E-02 2003.254.09:02:43.39/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9831,4122 2003.254.09:02:43.46/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29211 2003.254.09:02:43.53/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8297 2003.254.09:02:43.60/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12346 2003.254.09:02:43.67/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8915 2003.254.09:02:44.23/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:02:44.75/tpi/1d,5178,2u,8297,3u,10066,4u,15380,i1,9823 2003.254.09:02:44.75/tpi/9u,4374,au,9979,bu,8924,cu,17017,du,10467,eu,6779,i2,4125 2003.254.09:02:44.76/tpi/5u,12911,6u,12338,7u,11163,8d,5343,i3,29190 2003.254.09:02:44.77/tpdiff/1d,2652,2u,3744,3u,5302,4u,8008,i1,5548 2003.254.09:02:44.77/tpdiff/9u,2154,au,5034,bu,4456,cu,2583,du,739,eu,2532,i2,2035 2003.254.09:02:44.78/tpdiff/5u,7815,6u,6036,7u,5884,8d,2771,i3,17428 2003.254.09:02:44.79/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:02:44.79/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:02:44.80/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:02:44.81/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:02:44.82/tsys/1d,48.4,2u,48.7,3u,45.6,4u,48.4,i1,45.7 2003.254.09:02:44.82/tsys/9u,59.9,au,57.0,bu,55.2,cu,191.6,du,400.1,eu,70.1,i2,59.8 2003.254.09:02:44.83/tsys/5u,41.6,6u,49.4,7u,44.3,8d,40.7,i3,43.3 2003.254.09:02:44.95/fmout-gps/+7.7999E-006 2003.254.09:02:44.96:!2003.254.09:06:01 2003.254.09:02:45.03#setcl#time/316058795,3,2003,254,09,02,45.04,2.000,15.242,6 2003.254.09:02:45.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:06:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:06:01.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:06:01.48:disc_pos 2003.254.09:06:01.49/disc_pos/759958110776,753303985800, 2003.254.09:06:01.49:disc_check 2003.254.09:06:01.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h06m01.230s,31324,0.00250s,80000,15969479168, 2003.254.09:06:01.89:postob 2003.254.09:06:01.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1446278 : 3713 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1446330 : 3670 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1446784 : 3197 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1446700 : 3296 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1446273 : 3724 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1446755 : 3226 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1446402 : 3580 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:01.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1446516 : 3466 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:02.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.07 2003.254.09:06:02.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.09:06:02.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.09:06:02.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:06:02.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.254.09:06:02.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.09:06:02.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.09:06:02.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.88 2003.254.09:06:02.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.09:06:02.97:scan_name=254-0907b,rd0308,100 2003.254.09:06:02.97:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:06:05.98:setup4f 2003.254.09:06:09.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:09.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:06:10.01:!2003.254.09:07:25 2003.254.09:07:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:07:25.01/disc_pos/759958110776,759957110776, 2003.254.09:07:25.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:07:25.26:!2003.254.09:07:25 2003.254.09:07:25.27:preob 2003.254.09:07:25.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:07:25.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:07:28.84/tpical/1d,8055,2u,12338,3u,15787,4u,24055,i1,15813 2003.254.09:07:28.84/tpical/9u,6635,au,15599,bu,14044,cu,7511,du,6339,eu,9375,i2,6244 2003.254.09:07:28.84/tpical/5u,21343,6u,18845,7u,17520,8d,8327,i3,48018 2003.254.09:07:31.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,82 2003.254.09:07:31.49/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,864,i2,70 2003.254.09:07:31.49/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.09:07:34.58:!2003.254.09:07:35 2003.254.09:07:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:07:35.00/disc_pos/760214073344,759957110776, 2003.254.09:07:35.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:07:35.01:midob 2003.254.09:07:35.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:07:35.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:07:35.28/cable/+3.5899260E-02 2003.254.09:07:35.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10286,4197 2003.254.09:07:35.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30619 2003.254.09:07:35.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8608 2003.254.09:07:35.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12861 2003.254.09:07:35.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9375 2003.254.09:07:36.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:07:36.71/tpi/1d,5401,2u,8595,3u,10512,4u,16065,i1,10284 2003.254.09:07:36.71/tpi/9u,4473,au,10405,bu,9369,cu,5534,du,4623,eu,6770,i2,4195 2003.254.09:07:36.72/tpi/5u,13565,6u,12864,7u,11636,8d,5562,i3,30630 2003.254.09:07:36.73/tpdiff/1d,2654,2u,3743,3u,5275,4u,7990,i1,5529 2003.254.09:07:36.73/tpdiff/9u,2162,au,5194,bu,4675,cu,1977,du,1716,eu,2605,i2,2049 2003.254.09:07:36.74/tpdiff/5u,7778,6u,5981,7u,5884,8d,2765,i3,17388 2003.254.09:07:36.76/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:07:36.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:07:36.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:07:36.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:07:36.79/tsys/1d,50.6,2u,50.8,3u,48.1,4u,50.8,i1,48.0 2003.254.09:07:36.79/tsys/9u,61.0,au,57.7,bu,55.5,cu,76.1,du,70.2,eu,68.0,i2,60.4 2003.254.09:07:36.80/tsys/5u,44.0,6u,52.2,7u,46.4,8d,42.8,i3,45.5 2003.254.09:07:36.94/fmout-gps/+7.7049E-006 2003.254.09:07:36.96:!2003.254.09:09:15 2003.254.09:07:37.03#setcl#time/316087995,4,2003,254,09,07,37.03,1.974,15.323,4 2003.254.09:07:37.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:09:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:09:15.01:disc_end 2003.254.09:09:15.50:disc_pos 2003.254.09:09:15.50/disc_pos/763476556088,759958110776, 2003.254.09:09:15.50:disc_check 2003.254.09:09:15.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h09m15.248s,41760,0.00250s,80000,2690104252, 2003.254.09:09:15.90:postob 2003.254.09:09:15.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1452976 : 3730 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1453027 : 3689 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1453483 : 3212 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1453393 : 3317 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1452966 : 3745 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1453445 : 3249 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:15.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1453096 : 3600 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:16.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1453214 : 3481 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:16.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.09:09:16.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.09:09:16.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.09:09:16.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:09:16.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.254.09:09:16.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.09:09:16.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:09:16.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.35 2003.254.09:09:17.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.09:09:17.00:scan_name=254-0916,rd0308,774 2003.254.09:09:17.01:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:09:20.02:setup4f 2003.254.09:09:23.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:23.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:09:24.00:!2003.254.09:16:34 2003.254.09:16:34.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:16:34.01/disc_pos/763476556088,763475556088, 2003.254.09:16:34.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:16:34.26:!2003.254.09:16:34 2003.254.09:16:34.27:preob 2003.254.09:16:34.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:16:34.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:16:37.86/tpical/1d,8274,2u,12721,3u,16298,4u,24964,i1,16367 2003.254.09:16:37.86/tpical/9u,6717,au,15822,bu,14211,cu,7368,du,6434,eu,9459,i2,6314 2003.254.09:16:37.86/tpical/5u,22159,6u,19651,7u,18243,8d,8645,i3,50050 2003.254.09:16:40.51/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,83 2003.254.09:16:40.51/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,72 2003.254.09:16:40.51/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.09:16:43.60:!2003.254.09:16:44 2003.254.09:16:44.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:16:44.00/disc_pos/763732529152,763475556088, 2003.254.09:16:44.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:16:44.01:midob 2003.254.09:16:44.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:16:44.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:16:44.27/cable/+3.5899342E-02 2003.254.09:16:44.34/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10829,4279 2003.254.09:16:44.41/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32474 2003.254.09:16:44.48/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8972 2003.254.09:16:44.55/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13574 2003.254.09:16:44.62/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9552 2003.254.09:16:45.18/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:16:45.71/tpi/1d,5637,2u,8969,3u,10970,4u,16973,i1,10827 2003.254.09:16:45.71/tpi/9u,4583,au,10694,bu,9553,cu,5488,du,4774,eu,6903,i2,4279 2003.254.09:16:45.72/tpi/5u,14307,6u,13576,7u,12301,8d,5845,i3,32471 2003.254.09:16:45.73/tpdiff/1d,2637,2u,3752,3u,5328,4u,7991,i1,5540 2003.254.09:16:45.73/tpdiff/9u,2134,au,5128,bu,4658,cu,1880,du,1660,eu,2556,i2,2035 2003.254.09:16:45.74/tpdiff/5u,7852,6u,6075,7u,5942,8d,2800,i3,17579 2003.254.09:16:45.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:16:45.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:16:45.76/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:16:45.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:16:45.78/tsys/1d,53.2,2u,53.3,3u,49.8,4u,53.7,i1,50.4 2003.254.09:16:45.79/tsys/9u,63.4,au,60.2,bu,56.9,cu,79.2,du,75.3,eu,70.9,i2,62.0 2003.254.09:16:45.79/tsys/5u,46.1,6u,54.4,7u,48.8,8d,44.9,i3,47.7 2003.254.09:16:45.94/fmout-gps/+7.7529E-006 2003.254.09:16:45.96:!2003.254.09:29:38 2003.254.09:16:46.03#setcl#time/316142893,4,2003,254,09,16,46.03,1.985,15.475,5 2003.254.09:16:46.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:29:38.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:29:38.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:29:38.49:disc_pos 2003.254.09:29:38.49/disc_pos/788562543392,763476556088, 2003.254.09:29:38.50:disc_check 2003.254.09:29:38.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h29m38.237s,69668,0.00250s,80000,14049664788, 2003.254.09:29:38.89:postob 2003.254.09:29:38.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1500713 : 3849 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1500769 : 3802 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1501238 : 3315 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1501138 : 3429 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1500709 : 3858 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1501205 : 3345 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:38.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1500834 : 3717 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:39.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1500961 : 3590 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:39.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.09:29:39.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.09:29:39.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.09:29:39.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:29:39.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.254.09:29:39.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.09:29:39.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:29:39.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.31 2003.254.09:29:40.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.09:29:40.01:scan_name=254-0932,rd0308,98 2003.254.09:29:40.02:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:29:43.03:setup4f 2003.254.09:29:46.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:46.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:29:47.00:!2003.254.09:31:51 2003.254.09:31:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:31:51.01/disc_pos/788562543392,788561543392, 2003.254.09:31:51.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:31:51.25:!2003.254.09:31:51 2003.254.09:31:51.25:preob 2003.254.09:31:51.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:31:51.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:31:54.83/tpical/1d,7860,2u,12154,3u,15488,4u,23881,i1,15562 2003.254.09:31:54.83/tpical/9u,6553,au,15209,bu,13573,cu,10739,du,10493,eu,11092 2003.254.09:31:54.83/tpical/i2,6159 2003.254.09:31:54.83/tpical/5u,21253,6u,18931,7u,17408,8d,8236,i3,47596 2003.254.09:31:57.48/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,458,i1,81 2003.254.09:31:57.48/tpzero/9u,76,au,409,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,74 2003.254.09:31:57.48/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.09:32:00.57:!2003.254.09:32:01 2003.254.09:32:01.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:32:01.00/disc_pos/788818497536,788561543392, 2003.254.09:32:01.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:32:01.01:midob 2003.254.09:32:01.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:32:01.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:32:01.20/cable/+3.5897477E-02 2003.254.09:32:01.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10003,4137 2003.254.09:32:01.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29910 2003.254.09:32:01.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8409 2003.254.09:32:01.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12754 2003.254.09:32:01.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8971 2003.254.09:32:02.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:32:02.64/tpi/1d,5226,2u,8417,3u,10184,4u,15768,i1,10004 2003.254.09:32:02.64/tpi/9u,4389,au,10071,bu,8983,cu,9330,du,10174,eu,8859,i2,4142 2003.254.09:32:02.65/tpi/5u,13320,6u,12754,7u,11406,8d,5436,i3,29911 2003.254.09:32:02.66/tpdiff/1d,2634,2u,3737,3u,5304,4u,8113,i1,5558 2003.254.09:32:02.66/tpdiff/9u,2164,au,5138,bu,4590,cu,1409,du,319,eu,2233,i2,2017 2003.254.09:32:02.67/tpdiff/5u,7933,6u,6177,7u,6002,8d,2800,i3,17685 2003.254.09:32:02.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:32:02.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:32:02.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:32:02.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:32:02.71/tsys/1d,49.2,2u,49.7,3u,46.2,4u,49.1,i1,46.4 2003.254.09:32:02.71/tsys/9u,59.8,au,56.4,bu,54.0,cu,187.5,du,899.4,eu,107.4,i2,60.5 2003.254.09:32:02.72/tsys/5u,42.4,6u,50.0,7u,44.5,8d,41.1,i3,43.7 2003.254.09:32:02.94/fmout-gps/+7.8094E-006 2003.254.09:32:02.96:!2003.254.09:33:39 2003.254.09:32:03.02#setcl#time/316234591,4,2003,254,09,32,03.03,1.983,15.730,5 2003.254.09:32:03.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:33:39.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:33:39.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:33:39.49:disc_pos 2003.254.09:33:39.50/disc_pos/792017290824,788562543392, 2003.254.09:33:39.50:disc_check 2003.254.09:33:39.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h33m39.248s,52088,0.00250s,80000,4257590148, 2003.254.09:33:39.89:postob 2003.254.09:33:39.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1507288 : 3866 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1507344 : 3821 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1507817 : 3328 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1507714 : 3445 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1507291 : 3872 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1507778 : 3364 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1507412 : 3732 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:39.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1507532 : 3611 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:40.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.09:33:40.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.09:33:40.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.33 2003.254.09:33:40.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:33:40.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.254.09:33:40.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.09:33:40.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:33:40.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.37 2003.254.09:33:40.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.09:33:40.99:scan_name=254-0935,rd0308,98 2003.254.09:33:40.99:source=1357+769,135742.17,765753.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:33:44.01:setup4f 2003.254.09:33:47.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:47.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:33:48.01:!2003.254.09:35:28 2003.254.09:35:28.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:35:28.01/disc_pos/792017290824,792016290824, 2003.254.09:35:28.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:35:28.25:!2003.254.09:35:28 2003.254.09:35:28.25:preob 2003.254.09:35:28.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:35:28.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:35:31.84/tpical/1d,8145,2u,12572,3u,16065,4u,24606,i1,16130 2003.254.09:35:31.84/tpical/9u,6627,au,15586,bu,14075,cu,7588,du,6148,eu,9321,i2,6256 2003.254.09:35:31.84/tpical/5u,21858,6u,19417,7u,18013,8d,8565,i3,49387 2003.254.09:35:34.49/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.09:35:34.49/tpzero/9u,72,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,610,eu,863,i2,69 2003.254.09:35:34.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.09:35:37.58:!2003.254.09:35:38 2003.254.09:35:38.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:35:38.00/disc_pos/792273272832,792016290824, 2003.254.09:35:38.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:35:38.01:midob 2003.254.09:35:38.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:35:38.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:35:38.26/cable/+3.5897933E-02 2003.254.09:35:38.33/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10592,4228 2003.254.09:35:38.40/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31789 2003.254.09:35:38.47/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8813 2003.254.09:35:38.54/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13344 2003.254.09:35:38.61/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9434 2003.254.09:35:39.17/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:35:39.70/tpi/1d,5510,2u,8816,3u,10768,4u,16596,i1,10590 2003.254.09:35:39.70/tpi/9u,4489,au,10445,bu,9429,cu,5832,du,4471,eu,6778,i2,4228 2003.254.09:35:39.71/tpi/5u,14016,6u,13337,7u,12062,8d,5758,i3,31784 2003.254.09:35:39.72/tpdiff/1d,2635,2u,3756,3u,5297,4u,8010,i1,5540 2003.254.09:35:39.72/tpdiff/9u,2138,au,5141,bu,4646,cu,1756,du,1677,eu,2543,i2,2028 2003.254.09:35:39.73/tpdiff/5u,7842,6u,6080,7u,5951,8d,2807,i3,17603 2003.254.09:35:39.74/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:35:39.75/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:35:39.75/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:35:39.76/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:35:39.77/tsys/1d,52.0,2u,52.2,3u,49.1,4u,52.4,i1,49.3 2003.254.09:35:39.77/tsys/9u,62.0,au,58.6,bu,56.2,cu,90.7,du,69.1,eu,69.8,i2,61.5 2003.254.09:35:39.78/tsys/5u,45.2,6u,53.3,7u,47.7,8d,44.0,i3,46.7 2003.254.09:35:39.93/fmout-gps/+7.7594E-006 2003.254.09:35:39.95:!2003.254.09:37:16 2003.254.09:35:40.02#setcl#time/316256290,3,2003,254,09,35,40.03,1.991,15.790,6 2003.254.09:35:40.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:37:16.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:37:16.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:37:16.49:disc_pos 2003.254.09:37:16.49/disc_pos/795471430544,792017290824, 2003.254.09:37:16.49:disc_check 2003.254.09:37:16.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h37m16.235s,6128,0.00250s,80000,3489506240, 2003.254.09:37:16.89:postob 2003.254.09:37:16.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1513863 : 3882 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1513921 : 3837 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1514390 : 3346 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1514288 : 3462 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1513868 : 3886 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1514354 : 3379 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1513987 : 3750 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:16.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1514101 : 3633 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:17.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.09:37:17.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.09:37:17.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.09:37:17.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:37:17.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.25 2003.254.09:37:17.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.09:37:17.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:37:17.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.19 2003.254.09:37:17.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.09:37:17.96:scan_name=254-0939,rd0308,141 2003.254.09:37:17.96:source=0743+259,074323.03,255625.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:37:20.98:setup4f 2003.254.09:37:24.98/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:24.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:37:25.01:!2003.254.09:39:05 2003.254.09:39:05.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:39:05.01/disc_pos/795471430544,795470430544, 2003.254.09:39:05.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:39:05.25:!2003.254.09:39:05 2003.254.09:39:05.25:preob 2003.254.09:39:05.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:39:05.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:39:08.83/tpical/1d,8035,2u,12379,3u,15822,4u,24240,i1,15892 2003.254.09:39:08.83/tpical/9u,6612,au,15547,bu,14000,cu,7518,du,6482,eu,9326,i2,6210 2003.254.09:39:08.83/tpical/5u,21609,6u,19254,7u,17835,8d,8465,i3,48787 2003.254.09:39:11.48/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,74 2003.254.09:39:11.48/tpzero/9u,72,au,408,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,69 2003.254.09:39:11.48/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.09:39:14.57:!2003.254.09:39:15 2003.254.09:39:15.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:39:15.00/disc_pos/795727335424,795470430544, 2003.254.09:39:15.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:39:15.01:midob 2003.254.09:39:15.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:39:15.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:39:15.35/cable/+3.5897056E-02 2003.254.09:39:15.42/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10333,4170 2003.254.09:39:15.49/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31111 2003.254.09:39:15.56/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8633 2003.254.09:39:15.63/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13124 2003.254.09:39:15.70/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9347 2003.254.09:39:16.26/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:39:16.79/tpi/1d,5387,2u,8626,3u,10512,4u,16204,i1,10334 2003.254.09:39:16.79/tpi/9u,4464,au,10396,bu,9347,cu,5590,du,4805,eu,6747,i2,4171 2003.254.09:39:16.80/tpi/5u,13718,6u,13124,7u,11848,8d,5647,i3,31110 2003.254.09:39:16.81/tpdiff/1d,2648,2u,3753,3u,5310,4u,8036,i1,5558 2003.254.09:39:16.81/tpdiff/9u,2148,au,5151,bu,4653,cu,1928,du,1677,eu,2579,i2,2039 2003.254.09:39:16.82/tpdiff/5u,7891,6u,6130,7u,5987,8d,2818,i3,17677 2003.254.09:39:16.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:39:16.84/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:39:16.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:39:16.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:39:16.86/tsys/1d,50.5,2u,50.9,3u,47.8,4u,50.9,i1,48.0 2003.254.09:39:16.86/tsys/9u,61.3,au,58.2,bu,55.6,cu,78.9,du,75.1,eu,68.4,i2,60.4 2003.254.09:39:16.87/tsys/5u,43.9,6u,52.0,7u,46.5,8d,42.8,i3,45.5 2003.254.09:39:16.95/fmout-gps/+7.7429E-006 2003.254.09:39:16.96:!2003.254.09:41:36 2003.254.09:39:17.03#setcl#time/316277990,3,2003,254,09,39,17.04,1.999,15.851,6 2003.254.09:39:17.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:41:36.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:41:36.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:41:36.48:disc_pos 2003.254.09:41:36.50/disc_pos/800301944528,795471430544, 2003.254.09:41:36.51:disc_check 2003.254.09:41:36.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h41m36.240s,69696,0.00250s,80000,3489582448, 2003.254.09:41:36.90:postob 2003.254.09:41:36.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1523057 : 3907 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1523115 : 3861 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1523579 : 3374 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1523484 : 3483 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1523055 : 3915 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1523549 : 3401 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1523181 : 3772 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:36.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1523291 : 3660 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:37.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.09:41:37.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.09:41:37.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.09:41:37.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.09:41:37.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.25 2003.254.09:41:37.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.09:41:37.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:41:37.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.19 2003.254.09:41:37.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.09:41:37.99:scan_name=254-0945,rd0308,98 2003.254.09:41:37.99:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:41:41.01:setup4f 2003.254.09:41:44.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:44.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:41:45.02:!2003.254.09:44:53 2003.254.09:44:53.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:44:53.01/disc_pos/800301944528,800300944528, 2003.254.09:44:53.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:44:53.25:!2003.254.09:44:53 2003.254.09:44:53.25:preob 2003.254.09:44:53.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:44:53.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:44:56.83/tpical/1d,8017,2u,12340,3u,15781,4u,24052,i1,15797 2003.254.09:44:56.83/tpical/9u,6587,au,15445,bu,13930,cu,7256,du,7840,eu,9459,i2,6207 2003.254.09:44:56.83/tpical/5u,21400,6u,18908,7u,17539,8d,8344,i3,48149 2003.254.09:44:59.48/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,459,i1,77 2003.254.09:44:59.48/tpzero/9u,74,au,409,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,863,i2,73 2003.254.09:44:59.48/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.09:45:02.57:!2003.254.09:45:03 2003.254.09:45:03.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:45:03.00/disc_pos/800557850624,800300944528, 2003.254.09:45:03.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:45:03.03:midob 2003.254.09:45:03.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:45:03.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:45:03.11/cable/+3.5896320E-02 2003.254.09:45:03.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10254,4176 2003.254.09:45:03.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30674 2003.254.09:45:03.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8587 2003.254.09:45:03.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12878 2003.254.09:45:03.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9302 2003.254.09:45:04.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:45:04.55/tpi/1d,5373,2u,8585,3u,10487,4u,16079,i1,10257 2003.254.09:45:04.56/tpi/9u,4450,au,10339,bu,9311,cu,5347,du,6028,eu,6956,i2,4173 2003.254.09:45:04.56/tpi/5u,13557,6u,12886,7u,11648,8d,5567,i3,30673 2003.254.09:45:04.57/tpdiff/1d,2644,2u,3755,3u,5294,4u,7973,i1,5540 2003.254.09:45:04.58/tpdiff/9u,2137,au,5106,bu,4619,cu,1909,du,1812,eu,2503,i2,2034 2003.254.09:45:04.58/tpdiff/5u,7843,6u,6022,7u,5891,8d,2777,i3,17476 2003.254.09:45:04.59/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:45:04.60/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:45:04.60/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:45:04.61/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:45:04.62/tsys/1d,50.5,2u,50.6,3u,47.8,4u,50.9,i1,47.8 2003.254.09:45:04.63/tsys/9u,61.4,au,58.3,bu,55.8,cu,75.8,du,89.7,eu,73.0,i2,60.5 2003.254.09:45:04.63/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.9,7u,46.4,8d,42.7,i3,45.3 2003.254.09:45:04.94/fmout-gps/+7.7619E-006 2003.254.09:45:04.96:!2003.254.09:46:41 2003.254.09:45:05.03#setcl#time/316312790,4,2003,254,09,45,05.04,1.987,15.947,5 2003.254.09:45:05.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:46:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:46:41.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:46:41.49:disc_pos 2003.254.09:46:41.50/disc_pos/803756648216,800301944528, 2003.254.09:46:41.50:disc_check 2003.254.09:46:41.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h46m41.245s,55152,0.00250s,80000,6305470856, 2003.254.09:46:41.89:postob 2003.254.09:46:41.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1529630 : 3926 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1529686 : 3882 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1530152 : 3397 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1530059 : 3500 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1529629 : 3934 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1530125 : 3417 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1529751 : 3794 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:41.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1529863 : 3680 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:42.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.09:46:42.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.09:46:42.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.09:46:42.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:46:42.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.254.09:46:42.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.09:46:42.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.27 2003.254.09:46:42.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.25 2003.254.09:46:42.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,49.32 2003.254.09:46:42.98:scan_name=254-0951,rd0308,98 2003.254.09:46:42.98:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:46:45.99:setup4f 2003.254.09:46:49.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:49.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:46:50.00:!2003.254.09:51:27 2003.254.09:51:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:51:27.01/disc_pos/803756648216,803755648216, 2003.254.09:51:27.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.09:51:27.27:!2003.254.09:51:27 2003.254.09:51:27.27:preob 2003.254.09:51:27.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:51:27.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:51:30.85/tpical/1d,8520,2u,13098,3u,16678,4u,25556,i1,16832 2003.254.09:51:30.85/tpical/9u,6829,au,16070,bu,14432,cu,9105,du,6472,eu,9563,i2,6441 2003.254.09:51:30.85/tpical/5u,22578,6u,19862,7u,18541,8d,8776,i3,51036 2003.254.09:51:33.51/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.09:51:33.51/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,73 2003.254.09:51:33.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.09:51:36.60:!2003.254.09:51:37 2003.254.09:51:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.09:51:37.00/disc_pos/804012478464,803755648216, 2003.254.09:51:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.09:51:37.01:midob 2003.254.09:51:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.09:51:37.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.09:51:37.31/cable/+3.5899340E-02 2003.254.09:51:37.38/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11331,4395 2003.254.09:51:37.45/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33703 2003.254.09:51:37.52/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9364 2003.254.09:51:37.59/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13945 2003.254.09:51:37.66/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9794 2003.254.09:51:38.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.09:51:38.74/tpi/1d,5901,2u,9358,3u,11432,4u,17677,i1,11333 2003.254.09:51:38.74/tpi/9u,4682,au,10900,bu,9797,cu,7157,du,4795,eu,6998,i2,4396 2003.254.09:51:38.75/tpi/5u,14849,6u,13936,7u,12705,8d,6024,i3,33699 2003.254.09:51:38.76/tpdiff/1d,2619,2u,3740,3u,5246,4u,7879,i1,5499 2003.254.09:51:38.77/tpdiff/9u,2147,au,5170,bu,4635,cu,1948,du,1677,eu,2565,i2,2045 2003.254.09:51:38.77/tpdiff/5u,7729,6u,5926,7u,5836,8d,2752,i3,17337 2003.254.09:51:38.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.09:51:38.79/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.09:51:38.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.09:51:38.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.09:51:38.81/tsys/1d,56.2,2u,56.2,3u,52.9,4u,56.8,i1,53.2 2003.254.09:51:38.82/tsys/9u,64.4,au,60.9,bu,58.7,cu,102.2,du,74.9,eu,71.8,i2,63.4 2003.254.09:51:38.82/tsys/5u,48.6,6u,57.3,7u,51.5,8d,47.4,i3,50.2 2003.254.09:51:38.94/fmout-gps/+7.7249E-006 2003.254.09:51:38.95:!2003.254.09:53:15 2003.254.09:51:39.02#setcl#time/316352188,4,2003,254,09,51,39.03,1.988,16.057,5 2003.254.09:51:39.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.09:53:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.09:53:15.00:disc_end 2003.254.09:53:15.48:disc_pos 2003.254.09:53:15.49/disc_pos/807210632920,803756648216, 2003.254.09:53:15.49:disc_check 2003.254.09:53:15.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d09h53m15.238s,67228,0.00250s,80000,9153763220, 2003.254.09:53:15.88:postob 2003.254.09:53:15.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1536203 : 3944 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1536255 : 3904 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1536717 : 3422 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1536634 : 3516 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1536200 : 3955 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1536697 : 3436 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1536330 : 3806 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:15.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1536436 : 3700 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:16.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.09:53:16.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.09:53:16.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.09:53:16.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.09:53:16.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.10 2003.254.09:53:16.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.09:53:16.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.09:53:16.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.14 2003.254.09:53:16.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.09:53:16.94:scan_name=254-1005,rd0308,200 2003.254.09:53:16.94:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.09:53:19.95:setup4f 2003.254.09:53:23.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:23.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.09:53:24.00:!2003.254.10:05:13 2003.254.10:01:18.14;"weather: clear 2003.254.10:05:13.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:05:13.02/disc_pos/807210632920,807209632920, 2003.254.10:05:13.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:05:13.24:!2003.254.10:05:13 2003.254.10:05:13.24:preob 2003.254.10:05:13.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:05:13.25/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:05:16.82/tpical/1d,7945,2u,12221,3u,15597,4u,23754,i1,15590 2003.254.10:05:16.82/tpical/9u,6574,au,15279,bu,13663,cu,10375,du,10743,eu,10008 2003.254.10:05:16.82/tpical/i2,6176 2003.254.10:05:16.82/tpical/5u,21006,6u,18647,7u,17331,8d,8234,i3,47376 2003.254.10:05:19.47/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.10:05:19.47/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,864,i2,79 2003.254.10:05:19.47/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.10:05:22.56:!2003.254.10:05:23 2003.254.10:05:23.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:05:23.00/disc_pos/807466504192,807209632920, 2003.254.10:05:23.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:05:23.01:midob 2003.254.10:05:23.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:05:23.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:05:23.15/cable/+3.5898536E-02 2003.254.10:05:23.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10070,4156 2003.254.10:05:23.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29999 2003.254.10:05:23.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8473 2003.254.10:05:23.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12645 2003.254.10:05:23.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9123 2003.254.10:05:24.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:05:24.58/tpi/1d,5296,2u,8475,3u,10311,4u,15792,i1,10068 2003.254.10:05:24.58/tpi/9u,4436,au,10210,bu,9135,cu,8340,du,9185,eu,7608,i2,4159 2003.254.10:05:24.59/tpi/5u,13242,6u,12638,7u,11435,8d,5471,i3,29996 2003.254.10:05:24.60/tpdiff/1d,2649,2u,3746,3u,5286,4u,7962,i1,5522 2003.254.10:05:24.60/tpdiff/9u,2138,au,5069,bu,4528,cu,2035,du,1558,eu,2400,i2,2017 2003.254.10:05:24.61/tpdiff/5u,7764,6u,6009,7u,5896,8d,2763,i3,17380 2003.254.10:05:24.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:05:24.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:05:24.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:05:24.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:05:24.65/tsys/1d,49.6,2u,49.9,3u,47.0,4u,50.1,i1,47.0 2003.254.10:05:24.65/tsys/9u,61.2,au,58.0,bu,55.7,cu,115.3,du,165.1,eu,84.3,i2,60.7 2003.254.10:05:24.66/tsys/5u,43.0,6u,50.9,7u,45.4,8d,42.0,i3,44.6 2003.254.10:05:24.93/fmout-gps/+7.7929E-006 2003.254.10:05:24.95:!2003.254.10:08:43 2003.254.10:05:25.02#setcl#time/316434786,3,2003,254,10,05,25.03,1.989,16.286,6 2003.254.10:05:25.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:08:43.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:08:43.00:disc_end 2003.254.10:08:43.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:08:43.49/disc_pos/813929296184,807210632920, 2003.254.10:08:43.50:disc_check 2003.254.10:08:43.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h08m43.240s,7828,0.00250s,80000,22977476136, 2003.254.10:08:43.89:postob 2003.254.10:08:43.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1548988 : 3979 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1549046 : 3931 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1549507 : 3451 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1549419 : 3549 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1548990 : 3986 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1549492 : 3459 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1549108 : 3847 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:43.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1549223 : 3731 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:44.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.10:08:44.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.10:08:44.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.57 2003.254.10:08:44.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.10:08:44.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.10:08:44.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.10:08:44.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.10:08:44.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.89 2003.254.10:08:44.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.10:08:44.96:scan_name=254-1023,rd0308,774 2003.254.10:08:44.96:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:08:47.98:setup4f 2003.254.10:08:51.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:51.99/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:08:52.01:!2003.254.10:23:08 2003.254.10:23:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:23:08.03/disc_pos/813929296184,813928296184, 2003.254.10:23:08.03:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:23:08.25:!2003.254.10:23:08 2003.254.10:23:08.25:preob 2003.254.10:23:08.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:23:08.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:23:11.83/tpical/1d,8050,2u,12409,3u,15840,4u,24323,i1,15930 2003.254.10:23:11.83/tpical/9u,6629,au,15504,bu,13961,cu,7184,du,33929,eu,17926 2003.254.10:23:11.83/tpical/i2,6345 2003.254.10:23:11.83/tpical/5u,21578,6u,19196,7u,17803,8d,8441,i3,48721 2003.254.10:23:14.50/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.10:23:14.50/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,612,eu,865,i2,76 2003.254.10:23:14.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.10:23:17.59:!2003.254.10:23:18 2003.254.10:23:18.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:23:18.00/disc_pos/814185136128,813928296184, 2003.254.10:23:18.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:23:18.01:midob 2003.254.10:23:18.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:23:18.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:23:18.11/cable/+3.5897340E-02 2003.254.10:23:18.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10395,4290 2003.254.10:23:18.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31175 2003.254.10:23:18.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8673 2003.254.10:23:18.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13131 2003.254.10:23:18.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9330 2003.254.10:23:19.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:23:19.56/tpi/1d,5417,2u,8676,3u,10569,4u,16322,i1,10396 2003.254.10:23:19.57/tpi/9u,4485,au,10357,bu,9323,cu,5269,du,28893,eu,14939,i2,4305 2003.254.10:23:19.57/tpi/5u,13760,6u,13136,7u,11845,8d,5649,i3,31175 2003.254.10:23:19.58/tpdiff/1d,2633,2u,3733,3u,5271,4u,8001,i1,5534 2003.254.10:23:19.59/tpdiff/9u,2144,au,5147,bu,4638,cu,1915,du,5036,eu,2987,i2,2040 2003.254.10:23:19.59/tpdiff/5u,7818,6u,6060,7u,5958,8d,2792,i3,17546 2003.254.10:23:19.60/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:23:19.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:23:19.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:23:19.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:23:19.63/tsys/1d,51.1,2u,51.5,3u,48.4,4u,51.5,i1,48.5 2003.254.10:23:19.64/tsys/9u,61.7,au,58.0,bu,55.6,cu,74.4,du,168.5,eu,141.4,i2,62.2 2003.254.10:23:19.64/tsys/5u,44.5,6u,52.6,7u,46.7,8d,43.2,i3,45.9 2003.254.10:23:19.94/fmout-gps/+7.8154E-006 2003.254.10:23:19.95:!2003.254.10:36:12 2003.254.10:23:20.02#setcl#time/316542284,4,2003,254,10,23,20.03,1.983,16.585,5 2003.254.10:23:20.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:36:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:36:12.01:disc_end 2003.254.10:36:12.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:36:12.50/disc_pos/839016104920,813929296184, 2003.254.10:36:12.50:disc_check 2003.254.10:36:12.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h36m12.252s,55852,0.00250s,80000,27681543240, 2003.254.10:36:12.89:postob 2003.254.10:36:12.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1596720 : 4104 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:12.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1596782 : 4053 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:12.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1597284 : 3531 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:12.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1597176 : 3649 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:12.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1596732 : 4101 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:12.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1597224 : 3584 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:13.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1596850 : 3966 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:13.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1596960 : 3851 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:13.13/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.20 2003.254.10:36:13.24/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.10:36:13.35/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.10:36:13.46/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.10:36:13.57/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.47 2003.254.10:36:13.68/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.10:36:13.79/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.10:36:13.90/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.10:36:14.01/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.10:36:14.01:scan_name=254-1038b,rd0308,98 2003.254.10:36:14.01:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:36:17.03:setup4f 2003.254.10:36:20.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:20.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:36:20.99:!2003.254.10:38:25 2003.254.10:38:25.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:38:25.01/disc_pos/839016104920,839015104920, 2003.254.10:38:25.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:38:25.26:!2003.254.10:38:25 2003.254.10:38:25.26:preob 2003.254.10:38:25.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:38:25.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:38:28.85/tpical/1d,8004,2u,12304,3u,15642,4u,23847,i1,15658 2003.254.10:38:28.85/tpical/9u,6627,au,15511,bu,13957,cu,7372,du,12317,eu,9815,i2,6214 2003.254.10:38:28.85/tpical/5u,21021,6u,18581,7u,17290,8d,8201,i3,47297 2003.254.10:38:31.51/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,80 2003.254.10:38:31.51/tpzero/9u,77,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,610,eu,865,i2,75 2003.254.10:38:31.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.10:38:34.60:!2003.254.10:38:35 2003.254.10:38:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:38:35.00/disc_pos/839271997440,839015104920, 2003.254.10:38:35.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:38:35.02:midob 2003.254.10:38:35.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:38:35.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:38:35.39/cable/+3.5900572E-02 2003.254.10:38:35.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10228,4204 2003.254.10:38:35.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30351 2003.254.10:38:35.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8601 2003.254.10:38:35.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12748 2003.254.10:38:35.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9331 2003.254.10:38:36.31/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:38:36.83/tpi/1d,5371,2u,8603,3u,10413,4u,15993,i1,10221 2003.254.10:38:36.83/tpi/9u,4480,au,10370,bu,9334,cu,5479,du,11294,eu,7409,i2,4209 2003.254.10:38:36.84/tpi/5u,13402,6u,12736,7u,11548,8d,5511,i3,30321 2003.254.10:38:36.85/tpdiff/1d,2633,2u,3701,3u,5229,4u,7854,i1,5437 2003.254.10:38:36.85/tpdiff/9u,2147,au,5141,bu,4623,cu,1893,du,1023,eu,2406,i2,2005 2003.254.10:38:36.87/tpdiff/5u,7619,6u,5845,7u,5742,8d,2690,i3,16976 2003.254.10:38:36.88/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:38:36.88/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:38:36.89/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:38:36.89/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:38:36.90/tsys/1d,50.6,2u,51.5,3u,48.0,4u,51.4,i1,48.5 2003.254.10:38:36.91/tsys/9u,61.5,au,58.1,bu,55.9,cu,78.6,du,313.3,eu,81.6,i2,61.9 2003.254.10:38:36.92/tsys/5u,44.4,6u,52.8,7u,47.1,8d,43.5,i3,46.1 2003.254.10:38:36.94/fmout-gps/+7.7434E-006 2003.254.10:38:36.96:!2003.254.10:40:13 2003.254.10:38:37.03#setcl#time/316633983,4,2003,254,10,38,37.04,1.981,16.840,5 2003.254.10:38:37.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:40:13.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:40:13.00:disc_end 2003.254.10:40:13.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:40:13.50/disc_pos/842470470688,839016104920, 2003.254.10:40:13.50:disc_check 2003.254.10:40:13.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h40m13.242s,36744,0.00250s,80000,4257333340, 2003.254.10:40:13.89:postob 2003.254.10:40:13.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1603284 : 4132 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1603350 : 4078 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1603855 : 3551 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1603766 : 3651 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1603292 : 4132 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1603789 : 3611 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1603412 : 3995 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:13.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1603527 : 3878 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:14.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.44 2003.254.10:40:14.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.10:40:14.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.10:40:14.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.10:40:14.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.10:40:14.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.10:40:14.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.10:40:14.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.10:40:14.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.10:40:14.95:scan_name=254-1044,rd0308,98 2003.254.10:40:14.96:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:40:17.97:setup4f 2003.254.10:40:21.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:21.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:40:22.00:!2003.254.10:44:04 2003.254.10:44:04.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:44:04.01/disc_pos/842470470688,842469470688, 2003.254.10:44:04.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:44:04.26:!2003.254.10:44:04 2003.254.10:44:04.26:preob 2003.254.10:44:04.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:44:04.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:44:07.85/tpical/1d,7927,2u,12232,3u,15519,4u,23715,i1,15559 2003.254.10:44:07.85/tpical/9u,6607,au,15470,bu,13861,cu,7611,du,6363,eu,9340,i2,6170 2003.254.10:44:07.85/tpical/5u,21011,6u,18623,7u,17271,8d,8226,i3,47259 2003.254.10:44:10.50/tpzero/1d,243,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,459,i1,78 2003.254.10:44:10.50/tpzero/9u,77,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,74 2003.254.10:44:10.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.10:44:13.59:!2003.254.10:44:14 2003.254.10:44:14.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:44:14.00/disc_pos/842726252544,842469470688, 2003.254.10:44:14.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:44:14.01:midob 2003.254.10:44:14.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:44:14.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:44:14.14/cable/+3.5899120E-02 2003.254.10:44:14.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10031,4119 2003.254.10:44:14.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29856 2003.254.10:44:14.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8472 2003.254.10:44:14.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12598 2003.254.10:44:14.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9210 2003.254.10:44:15.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:44:15.57/tpi/1d,5281,2u,8472,3u,10237,4u,15731,i1,10033 2003.254.10:44:15.57/tpi/9u,4438,au,10271,bu,9204,cu,5616,du,4666,eu,6745,i2,4117 2003.254.10:44:15.58/tpi/5u,13233,6u,12598,7u,11380,8d,5454,i3,29857 2003.254.10:44:15.59/tpdiff/1d,2646,2u,3760,3u,5282,4u,7984,i1,5526 2003.254.10:44:15.59/tpdiff/9u,2169,au,5199,bu,4657,cu,1995,du,1697,eu,2595,i2,2053 2003.254.10:44:15.60/tpdiff/5u,7778,6u,6025,7u,5891,8d,2772,i3,17402 2003.254.10:44:15.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:44:15.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:44:15.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:44:15.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:44:15.64/tsys/1d,49.5,2u,49.7,3u,46.7,4u,49.7,i1,46.8 2003.254.10:44:15.64/tsys/9u,60.3,au,56.9,bu,54.7,cu,76.6,du,71.7,eu,68.0,i2,59.1 2003.254.10:44:15.65/tsys/5u,42.9,6u,50.6,7u,45.2,8d,41.7,i3,44.3 2003.254.10:44:15.93/fmout-gps/+7.8164E-006 2003.254.10:44:15.94:!2003.254.10:45:52 2003.254.10:44:16.01#setcl#time/316667881,4,2003,254,10,44,16.03,1.984,16.934,6 2003.254.10:44:16.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:45:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:45:52.00:disc_end 2003.254.10:45:52.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:45:52.49/disc_pos/845924406112,842470470688, 2003.254.10:45:52.50:disc_check 2003.254.10:45:52.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h45m52.240s,21700,0.00250s,80000,7393999620, 2003.254.10:45:52.89:postob 2003.254.10:45:52.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1609847 : 4161 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1609916 : 4105 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1610426 : 3571 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1610355 : 3653 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1609849 : 4166 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1610354 : 3636 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1609982 : 4016 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:52.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1610088 : 3907 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:45:53.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.32 2003.254.10:45:53.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.10:45:53.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.45 2003.254.10:45:53.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.10:45:53.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.10:45:53.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.10:45:53.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.10:45:53.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.29 2003.254.10:45:53.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.10:45:53.97:scan_name=254-1052b,rd0308,98 2003.254.10:45:53.97:source=0727-115,072758.08,-113452.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:45:56.98:setup4f 2003.254.10:46:00.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:46:00.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:46:01.00:!2003.254.10:52:49 2003.254.10:52:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:52:49.01/disc_pos/845924406112,845923406112, 2003.254.10:52:49.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:52:49.26:!2003.254.10:52:49 2003.254.10:52:49.26:preob 2003.254.10:52:49.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:52:49.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:52:52.84/tpical/1d,8340,2u,12821,3u,16365,4u,25047,i1,16458 2003.254.10:52:52.84/tpical/9u,6794,au,15847,bu,14291,cu,7345,du,8521,eu,9786,i2,6363 2003.254.10:52:52.84/tpical/5u,22142,6u,19687,7u,18239,8d,8649,i3,50116 2003.254.10:52:55.49/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,75 2003.254.10:52:55.49/tpzero/9u,72,au,407,bu,720,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,68 2003.254.10:52:55.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.10:52:58.58:!2003.254.10:52:59 2003.254.10:52:59.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:52:59.00/disc_pos/846180134912,845923406112, 2003.254.10:52:59.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:52:59.01:midob 2003.254.10:52:59.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:52:59.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:52:59.39/cable/+3.5900249E-02 2003.254.10:52:59.46/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10972,4349 2003.254.10:52:59.53/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32796 2003.254.10:52:59.60/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9106 2003.254.10:52:59.67/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13698 2003.254.10:52:59.74/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9665 2003.254.10:53:00.30/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:53:00.82/tpi/1d,5713,2u,9101,3u,11117,4u,17196,i1,10975 2003.254.10:53:00.82/tpi/9u,4665,au,10728,bu,9662,cu,5423,du,7019,eu,7223,i2,4350 2003.254.10:53:00.83/tpi/5u,14429,6u,13709,7u,12394,8d,5900,i3,32804 2003.254.10:53:00.84/tpdiff/1d,2627,2u,3720,3u,5248,4u,7851,i1,5483 2003.254.10:53:00.84/tpdiff/9u,2129,au,5119,bu,4629,cu,1922,du,1502,eu,2563,i2,2013 2003.254.10:53:00.85/tpdiff/5u,7713,6u,5978,7u,5845,8d,2749,i3,17312 2003.254.10:53:00.86/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:53:00.87/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:53:00.87/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:53:00.88/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:53:00.89/tsys/1d,54.2,2u,54.7,3u,51.3,4u,55.4,i1,51.7 2003.254.10:53:00.89/tsys/9u,64.7,au,60.5,bu,58.0,cu,76.5,du,128.0,eu,74.4,i2,63.8 2003.254.10:53:00.90/tsys/5u,47.3,6u,55.9,7u,50.1,8d,46.3,i3,49.0 2003.254.10:53:00.95/fmout-gps/+7.8224E-006 2003.254.10:53:00.96:!2003.254.10:54:37 2003.254.10:53:01.03#setcl#time/316720381,4,2003,254,10,53,01.04,1.981,17.080,5 2003.254.10:53:01.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:54:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:54:37.00:disc_end 2003.254.10:54:37.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:54:37.49/disc_pos/849378609200,845924406112, 2003.254.10:54:37.49:disc_check 2003.254.10:54:37.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h54m37.242s,39776,0.00250s,80000,13345858836, 2003.254.10:54:37.89:postob 2003.254.10:54:37.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1616403 : 4196 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1616484 : 4128 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1616992 : 3596 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1616943 : 3658 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1616412 : 4194 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1616923 : 3661 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1616548 : 4041 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:37.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1616650 : 3937 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:38.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.56 2003.254.10:54:38.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.10:54:38.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.10:54:38.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.10:54:38.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.59 2003.254.10:54:38.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.10:54:38.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.10:54:38.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.62 2003.254.10:54:38.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.10:54:38.98:scan_name=254-1056,rd0308,98 2003.254.10:54:38.98:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:54:41.99:setup4f 2003.254.10:54:45.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:45.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:54:45.99:!2003.254.10:56:32 2003.254.10:56:32.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:56:32.01/disc_pos/849378609200,849377609200, 2003.254.10:56:32.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.10:56:32.25:!2003.254.10:56:32 2003.254.10:56:32.25:preob 2003.254.10:56:32.25#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:56:32.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:56:35.83/tpical/1d,8478,2u,13020,3u,16550,4u,25361,i1,16681 2003.254.10:56:35.83/tpical/9u,6818,au,16054,bu,14460,cu,7546,du,6866,eu,9759,i2,6428 2003.254.10:56:35.83/tpical/5u,22301,6u,19678,7u,18298,8d,8650,i3,50412 2003.254.10:56:38.48/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,76 2003.254.10:56:38.48/tpzero/9u,73,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,611,eu,863,i2,72 2003.254.10:56:38.48/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.10:56:41.57:!2003.254.10:56:42 2003.254.10:56:42.00:disc_pos 2003.254.10:56:42.00/disc_pos/849634545664,849377609200, 2003.254.10:56:42.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.10:56:42.01:midob 2003.254.10:56:42.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.10:56:42.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.10:56:42.22/cable/+3.5899086E-02 2003.254.10:56:42.29/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11211,4389 2003.254.10:56:42.36/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33255 2003.254.10:56:42.43/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9299 2003.254.10:56:42.50/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13791 2003.254.10:56:42.57/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9817 2003.254.10:56:43.13/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.10:56:43.65/tpi/1d,5857,2u,9300,3u,11340,4u,17526,i1,11227 2003.254.10:56:43.65/tpi/9u,4677,au,10913,bu,9820,cu,5577,du,5255,eu,7197,i2,4388 2003.254.10:56:43.66/tpi/5u,14668,6u,13811,7u,12537,8d,5942,i3,33296 2003.254.10:56:43.67/tpdiff/1d,2621,2u,3720,3u,5210,4u,7835,i1,5454 2003.254.10:56:43.67/tpdiff/9u,2141,au,5141,bu,4640,cu,1969,du,1611,eu,2562,i2,2040 2003.254.10:56:43.68/tpdiff/5u,7633,6u,5867,7u,5761,8d,2708,i3,17116 2003.254.10:56:43.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.10:56:43.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.10:56:43.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.10:56:43.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.10:56:43.72/tsys/1d,55.7,2u,56.1,3u,52.8,4u,56.6,i1,53.2 2003.254.10:56:43.72/tsys/9u,64.5,au,61.3,bu,58.8,cu,77.0,du,86.5,eu,74.2,i2,63.5 2003.254.10:56:43.73/tsys/5u,48.6,6u,57.4,7u,51.4,8d,47.4,i3,50.3 2003.254.10:56:43.93/fmout-gps/+7.7464E-006 2003.254.10:56:43.95:!2003.254.10:58:20 2003.254.10:56:44.01#setcl#time/316742679,4,2003,254,10,56,44.03,1.988,17.141,6 2003.254.10:56:44.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.10:58:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.10:58:20.00:disc_end 2003.254.10:58:20.49:disc_pos 2003.254.10:58:20.50/disc_pos/852833338752,849378609200, 2003.254.10:58:20.50:disc_check 2003.254.10:58:20.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d10h58m20.253s,62428,0.00250s,80000,3681567796, 2003.254.10:58:20.89:postob 2003.254.10:58:20.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1622960 : 4232 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1623046 : 4158 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:20.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1623562 : 3618 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:20.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1623532 : 3661 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:20.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1622975 : 4223 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:20.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1623488 : 3688 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:21.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1623115 : 4066 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:21.01/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1623221 : 3962 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:21.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.81 2003.254.10:58:21.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.10:58:21.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.10:58:21.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.10:58:21.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.10:58:21.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.10:58:21.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.44 2003.254.10:58:21.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.08 2003.254.10:58:22.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.10:58:22.00:scan_name=254-1108,rd0308,204 2003.254.10:58:22.00:source=0202+149,020207.39,145950.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.10:58:25.01:setup4f 2003.254.10:58:28.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:28.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.10:58:28.99:!2003.254.11:08:00 2003.254.11:02:32.95;"weather: clear 2003.254.11:08:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:08:00.02/disc_pos/852833338752,852832338752, 2003.254.11:08:00.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:08:00.26:!2003.254.11:08:00 2003.254.11:08:00.26:preob 2003.254.11:08:00.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:08:00.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:08:03.84/tpical/1d,8021,2u,12348,3u,15687,4u,23895,i1,15738 2003.254.11:08:03.84/tpical/9u,6659,au,15659,bu,14044,cu,7497,du,10797,eu,11645 2003.254.11:08:03.84/tpical/i2,6280 2003.254.11:08:03.84/tpical/5u,20941,6u,18522,7u,17137,8d,8148,i3,47167 2003.254.11:08:06.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,460,i1,80 2003.254.11:08:06.49/tpzero/9u,75,au,407,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,75 2003.254.11:08:06.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.11:08:09.58:!2003.254.11:08:10 2003.254.11:08:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:08:10.00/disc_pos/853089218560,852832338752, 2003.254.11:08:10.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:08:10.01:midob 2003.254.11:08:10.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:08:10.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:08:10.20/cable/+3.5898901E-02 2003.254.11:08:10.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10297,4229 2003.254.11:08:10.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30216 2003.254.11:08:10.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8659 2003.254.11:08:10.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12671 2003.254.11:08:10.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9378 2003.254.11:08:11.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:08:11.63/tpi/1d,5403,2u,8648,3u,10445,4u,15998,i1,10272 2003.254.11:08:11.63/tpi/9u,4498,au,10464,bu,9372,cu,5521,du,8859,eu,9176,i2,4228 2003.254.11:08:11.64/tpi/5u,13337,6u,12691,7u,11469,8d,5485,i3,30203 2003.254.11:08:11.65/tpdiff/1d,2618,2u,3700,3u,5242,4u,7897,i1,5466 2003.254.11:08:11.65/tpdiff/9u,2161,au,5195,bu,4672,cu,1976,du,1938,eu,2469,i2,2052 2003.254.11:08:11.66/tpdiff/5u,7604,6u,5831,7u,5668,8d,2663,i3,16964 2003.254.11:08:11.67/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:08:11.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:08:11.68/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:08:11.69/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:08:11.70/tsys/1d,51.3,2u,51.8,3u,48.1,4u,51.2,i1,48.5 2003.254.11:08:11.70/tsys/9u,61.4,au,58.1,bu,55.6,cu,75.9,du,127.7,eu,101.0,i2,60.7 2003.254.11:08:11.71/tsys/5u,44.3,6u,52.7,7u,47.4,8d,43.7,i3,46.0 2003.254.11:08:11.94/fmout-gps/+7.7099E-006 2003.254.11:08:11.96:!2003.254.11:11:34 2003.254.11:08:12.03#setcl#time/316811479,4,2003,254,11,08,12.04,1.980,17.333,5 2003.254.11:08:12.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:11:34.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:11:34.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:11:34.49:disc_pos 2003.254.11:11:34.49/disc_pos/859679701496,852833338752, 2003.254.11:11:34.50:disc_check 2003.254.11:11:34.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h11m34.245s,460,0.00250s,80000,18561459224, 2003.254.11:11:34.89:postob 2003.254.11:11:34.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1635957 : 4299 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1636095 : 4171 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1636578 : 3664 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1636589 : 3666 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1636017 : 4243 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1636503 : 3735 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1636127 : 4116 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:34.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1636271 : 3976 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:35.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,15.69 2003.254.11:11:35.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.11:11:35.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.81 2003.254.11:11:35.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.11:11:35.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.35 2003.254.11:11:35.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.11:11:35.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:11:35.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.11:11:35.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.11:11:35.96:scan_name=254-1115,rd0308,141 2003.254.11:11:35.96:source=0743+259,074323.03,255625.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:11:38.98:setup4f 2003.254.11:11:42.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:42.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:11:43.00:!2003.254.11:15:35 2003.254.11:15:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:15:35.01/disc_pos/859679701496,859678701496, 2003.254.11:15:35.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:15:35.27:!2003.254.11:15:35 2003.254.11:15:35.27:preob 2003.254.11:15:35.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:15:35.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:15:38.87/tpical/1d,7863,2u,12128,3u,15397,4u,23615,i1,15497 2003.254.11:15:38.87/tpical/9u,6514,au,15275,bu,13740,cu,7552,du,17983,eu,15709 2003.254.11:15:38.87/tpical/i2,6149 2003.254.11:15:38.87/tpical/5u,21009,6u,18665,7u,17253,8d,8200,i3,47236 2003.254.11:15:41.52/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.11:15:41.52/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,611,eu,865,i2,77 2003.254.11:15:41.52/tpzero/5u,393,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.11:15:44.61:!2003.254.11:15:45 2003.254.11:15:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:15:45.00/disc_pos/859935535104,859678701496, 2003.254.11:15:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:15:45.01:midob 2003.254.11:15:45.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:15:45.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:15:45.23/cable/+3.5902146E-02 2003.254.11:15:45.30/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9962,4138 2003.254.11:15:45.37/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29744 2003.254.11:15:45.44/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8394 2003.254.11:15:45.51/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12606 2003.254.11:15:45.58/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9137 2003.254.11:15:46.14/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:15:46.68/tpi/1d,5221,2u,8397,3u,10124,4u,15616,i1,9963 2003.254.11:15:46.68/tpi/9u,4387,au,10170,bu,9135,cu,5622,du,17596,eu,14719,i2,4138 2003.254.11:15:46.69/tpi/5u,13149,6u,12613,7u,11341,8d,5426,i3,29740 2003.254.11:15:46.70/tpdiff/1d,2642,2u,3731,3u,5273,4u,7999,i1,5534 2003.254.11:15:46.70/tpdiff/9u,2127,au,5105,bu,4605,cu,1930,du,387,eu,990,i2,2011 2003.254.11:15:46.71/tpdiff/5u,7860,6u,6052,7u,5912,8d,2774,i3,17496 2003.254.11:15:46.72/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:15:46.72/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:15:46.73/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:15:46.74/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:15:46.75/tsys/1d,49.0,2u,49.6,3u,46.2,4u,49.3,i1,46.4 2003.254.11:15:46.76/tsys/9u,60.8,au,57.4,bu,54.8,cu,79.3,du,1316.7,eu,419.8,i2,60.6 2003.254.11:15:46.76/tsys/5u,42.2,6u,50.5,7u,44.9,8d,41.4,i3,43.9 2003.254.11:15:46.94/fmout-gps/+7.8044E-006 2003.254.11:15:46.94:!2003.254.11:18:06 2003.254.11:15:47.02#setcl#time/316856977,4,2003,254,11,15,47.03,1.980,17.459,5 2003.254.11:15:47.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:18:06.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:18:06.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:18:06.49:disc_pos 2003.254.11:18:06.50/disc_pos/864509821568,859679701496, 2003.254.11:18:06.50:disc_check 2003.254.11:18:06.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h18m06.250s,68076,0.00250s,80000,7713972312, 2003.254.11:18:06.89:postob 2003.254.11:18:06.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1645149 : 4324 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1645282 : 4200 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1645768 : 3690 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1645791 : 3680 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1645221 : 4255 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1645694 : 3762 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:06.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1645313 : 4146 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:07.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1645454 : 4009 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:07.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.11:18:07.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.11:18:07.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.11:18:07.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.11:18:07.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.20 2003.254.11:18:07.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.11:18:07.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:18:07.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.11:18:08.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.11:18:08.00:scan_name=254-1120,rd0308,98 2003.254.11:18:08.00:source=0955+476,095508.50,473928.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:18:11.02:setup4f 2003.254.11:18:14.97/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:14.98/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:18:15.01:!2003.254.11:20:00 2003.254.11:20:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:20:00.01/disc_pos/864509821568,864508821568, 2003.254.11:20:00.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:20:00.26:!2003.254.11:20:00 2003.254.11:20:00.27:preob 2003.254.11:20:00.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:20:00.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:20:03.84/tpical/1d,7948,2u,12248,3u,15638,4u,23957,i1,15708 2003.254.11:20:03.84/tpical/9u,6571,au,15415,bu,13877,cu,7276,du,6879,eu,9300,i2,6172 2003.254.11:20:03.84/tpical/5u,21248,6u,18939,7u,17478,8d,8302,i3,47892 2003.254.11:20:06.49/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.11:20:06.49/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,78 2003.254.11:20:06.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.11:20:09.58:!2003.254.11:20:10 2003.254.11:20:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:20:10.00/disc_pos/864765693952,864508821568, 2003.254.11:20:10.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:20:10.01:midob 2003.254.11:20:10.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:20:10.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:20:10.20/cable/+3.5897835E-02 2003.254.11:20:10.27/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10164,4161 2003.254.11:20:10.34/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30381 2003.254.11:20:10.41/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8512 2003.254.11:20:10.48/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12832 2003.254.11:20:10.55/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9253 2003.254.11:20:11.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:20:11.64/tpi/1d,5305,2u,8518,3u,10342,4u,15961,i1,10163 2003.254.11:20:11.64/tpi/9u,4425,au,10281,bu,9254,cu,5363,du,5209,eu,6731,i2,4163 2003.254.11:20:11.65/tpi/5u,13415,6u,12819,7u,11574,8d,5524,i3,30370 2003.254.11:20:11.66/tpdiff/1d,2643,2u,3730,3u,5296,4u,7996,i1,5545 2003.254.11:20:11.66/tpdiff/9u,2146,au,5134,bu,4623,cu,1913,du,1670,eu,2569,i2,2009 2003.254.11:20:11.67/tpdiff/5u,7833,6u,6120,7u,5904,8d,2778,i3,17522 2003.254.11:20:11.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:20:11.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:20:11.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:20:11.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:20:11.71/tsys/1d,49.8,2u,50.5,3u,47.1,4u,50.4,i1,47.3 2003.254.11:20:11.71/tsys/9u,60.8,au,57.7,bu,55.4,cu,75.9,du,82.6,eu,68.5,i2,61.0 2003.254.11:20:11.72/tsys/5u,43.2,6u,50.8,7u,45.9,8d,42.3,i3,44.8 2003.254.11:20:11.93/fmout-gps/+7.7574E-006 2003.254.11:20:11.94:!2003.254.11:21:48 2003.254.11:20:12.01#setcl#time/316883476,4,2003,254,11,20,12.03,1.985,17.533,6 2003.254.11:20:12.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:21:48.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:21:48.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:21:48.48:disc_pos 2003.254.11:21:48.49/disc_pos/867963848832,864509821568, 2003.254.11:21:48.49:disc_check 2003.254.11:21:48.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h21m48.248s,14240,0.00250s,80000,3649946572, 2003.254.11:21:48.89:postob 2003.254.11:21:48.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1651724 : 4340 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1651863 : 4211 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1652337 : 3712 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1652368 : 3694 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1651786 : 4281 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1652268 : 3780 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1651892 : 4158 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:48.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1652026 : 4029 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:49.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.05 2003.254.11:21:49.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.55 2003.254.11:21:49.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.11:21:49.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.11:21:49.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.84 2003.254.11:21:49.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.11:21:49.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:21:49.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.69 2003.254.11:21:49.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.11:21:49.97:scan_name=254-1128,rd0308,268 2003.254.11:21:49.97:source=0642+449,064252.98,445430.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:21:52.98:setup4f 2003.254.11:21:56.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:56.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:21:56.99:!2003.254.11:28:27 2003.254.11:28:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:28:27.01/disc_pos/867963848832,867962848832, 2003.254.11:28:27.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:28:27.26:!2003.254.11:28:27 2003.254.11:28:27.27:preob 2003.254.11:28:27.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:28:27.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:28:30.84/tpical/1d,7953,2u,12361,3u,15602,4u,24076,i1,15725 2003.254.11:28:30.84/tpical/9u,6409,au,14882,bu,13293,cu,14506,du,$$$$$,eu,42077 2003.254.11:28:30.84/tpical/i2,6127 2003.254.11:28:30.84/tpical/5u,21355,6u,18877,7u,17406,8d,8254,i3,47791 2003.254.11:28:33.49/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,460,i1,76 2003.254.11:28:33.49/tpzero/9u,71,au,408,bu,721,cu,522,du,619,eu,868,i2,70 2003.254.11:28:33.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1010,i3,193 2003.254.11:28:36.58:!2003.254.11:28:37 2003.254.11:28:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:28:37.00/disc_pos/868219678720,867962848832, 2003.254.11:28:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:28:37.01:midob 2003.254.11:28:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:28:37.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:28:37.08/cable/+3.5897273E-02 2003.254.11:28:37.15/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10195,4131 2003.254.11:28:37.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30351 2003.254.11:28:37.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8597 2003.254.11:28:37.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12806 2003.254.11:28:37.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8850 2003.254.11:28:38.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:28:38.52/tpi/1d,5316,2u,8602,3u,10342,4u,16083,i1,10198 2003.254.11:28:38.52/tpi/9u,4285,au,9865,bu,8839,cu,12749,du,$$$$$,eu,43407,i2,4143 2003.254.11:28:38.53/tpi/5u,13526,6u,12819,7u,11544,8d,5504,i3,30361 2003.254.11:28:38.54/tpdiff/1d,2637,2u,3759,3u,5260,4u,7993,i1,5527 2003.254.11:28:38.55/tpdiff/9u,2124,au,5017,bu,4454,cu,1757,du,$$$$$,eu,-1330,i2,1984 2003.254.11:28:38.55/tpdiff/5u,7829,6u,6058,7u,5862,8d,2750,i3,17430 2003.254.11:28:38.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:28:38.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:28:38.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:28:38.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:28:38.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.11:28:38.59?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.11:28:38.60/tsys/1d,50.0,2u,50.7,3u,47.4,4u,50.8,i1,47.6 2003.254.11:28:38.61/tsys/9u,59.5,au,56.5,bu,54.7,cu,208.8,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.11:28:38.61/tsys/i2,61.6 2003.254.11:28:38.62/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.3,7u,46.1,8d,42.5,i3,45.0 2003.254.11:28:38.93/fmout-gps/+7.7099E-006 2003.254.11:28:38.95:!2003.254.11:33:05 2003.254.11:28:39.02#setcl#time/316934175,4,2003,254,11,28,39.04,1.996,17.673,7 2003.254.11:28:39.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:33:05.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:33:05.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:33:05.49:disc_pos 2003.254.11:33:05.49/disc_pos/876857713320,867963848832, 2003.254.11:33:05.49:disc_check 2003.254.11:33:05.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h33m05.245s,35308,0.00250s,80000,12770034444, 2003.254.11:33:05.89:postob 2003.254.11:33:05.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1668651 : 4381 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1668791 : 4251 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1669269 : 3748 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1669288 : 3741 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1668709 : 4326 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1669189 : 3828 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1668816 : 4204 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:05.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1668951 : 4072 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:06.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.54 2003.254.11:33:06.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.79 2003.254.11:33:06.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.11:33:06.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.31 2003.254.11:33:06.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.08 2003.254.11:33:06.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.11:33:06.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:33:06.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.35 2003.254.11:33:06.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.11:33:06.96:scan_name=254-1139,rd0308,98 2003.254.11:33:06.96:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:33:09.98:setup4f 2003.254.11:33:13.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:13.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:33:13.99:!2003.254.11:39:07 2003.254.11:39:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:39:07.01/disc_pos/876857713320,876856713320, 2003.254.11:39:07.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:39:07.26:!2003.254.11:39:07 2003.254.11:39:07.27:preob 2003.254.11:39:07.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:39:07.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:39:10.86/tpical/1d,8113,2u,12549,3u,15868,4u,24296,i1,15981 2003.254.11:39:10.86/tpical/9u,6637,au,15567,bu,13946,cu,7264,du,10618,eu,11747 2003.254.11:39:10.86/tpical/i2,6263 2003.254.11:39:10.86/tpical/5u,21554,6u,19089,7u,17624,8d,8368,i3,48525 2003.254.11:39:13.51/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.11:39:13.51/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,720,cu,521,du,611,eu,864,i2,77 2003.254.11:39:13.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.11:39:16.60:!2003.254.11:39:17 2003.254.11:39:17.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:39:17.00/disc_pos/877113544704,876856713320, 2003.254.11:39:17.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:39:17.01:midob 2003.254.11:39:17.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:39:17.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:39:17.14/cable/+3.5898069E-02 2003.254.11:39:17.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10488,4247 2003.254.11:39:17.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31261 2003.254.11:39:17.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8804 2003.254.11:39:17.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13123 2003.254.11:39:17.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9348 2003.254.11:39:18.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:39:18.59/tpi/1d,5482,2u,8798,3u,10625,4u,16399,i1,10488 2003.254.11:39:18.59/tpi/9u,4502,au,10455,bu,9343,cu,5342,du,9417,eu,9358,i2,4247 2003.254.11:39:18.60/tpi/5u,13836,6u,13124,7u,11825,8d,5645,i3,31268 2003.254.11:39:18.61/tpdiff/1d,2631,2u,3751,3u,5243,4u,7897,i1,5493 2003.254.11:39:18.61/tpdiff/9u,2135,au,5112,bu,4603,cu,1922,du,1201,eu,2389,i2,2016 2003.254.11:39:18.62/tpdiff/5u,7718,6u,5965,7u,5799,8d,2723,i3,17257 2003.254.11:39:18.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:39:18.64/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:39:18.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:39:18.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:39:18.66/tsys/1d,51.8,2u,52.1,3u,48.9,4u,52.5,i1,49.3 2003.254.11:39:18.66/tsys/9u,62.2,au,59.0,bu,56.2,cu,75.2,du,220.0,eu,106.7,i2,62.1 2003.254.11:39:18.67/tsys/5u,45.3,6u,53.4,7u,47.9,8d,44.3,i3,46.8 2003.254.11:39:18.93/fmout-gps/+7.7244E-006 2003.254.11:39:18.96:!2003.254.11:40:55 2003.254.11:39:19.02#setcl#time/316998174,4,2003,254,11,39,19.04,1.990,17.851,6 2003.254.11:39:19.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:40:55.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:40:55.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:40:55.48:disc_pos 2003.254.11:40:55.49/disc_pos/880311696768,876857713320, 2003.254.11:40:55.49:disc_check 2003.254.11:40:55.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h40m55.242s,27844,0.00250s,80000,11585944016, 2003.254.11:40:55.88:postob 2003.254.11:40:55.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1675203 : 4420 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1675375 : 4259 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1675846 : 3764 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1675858 : 3762 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1675283 : 4343 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1675756 : 3852 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1675386 : 4224 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:55.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1675525 : 4089 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:40:56.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,16.42 2003.254.11:40:56.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.11:40:56.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.11:40:56.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.11:40:56.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.08 2003.254.11:40:56.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.11:40:56.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:40:56.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.11:40:56.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.11:40:56.97:scan_name=254-1144,rd0308,774 2003.254.11:40:56.97:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:40:59.98:setup4f 2003.254.11:41:03.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:41:03.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:41:04.00:!2003.254.11:44:41 2003.254.11:44:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:44:41.01/disc_pos/880311696768,880310696768, 2003.254.11:44:41.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:44:41.26:!2003.254.11:44:41 2003.254.11:44:41.26:preob 2003.254.11:44:41.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:44:41.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:44:44.84/tpical/1d,7899,2u,12210,3u,15495,4u,23760,i1,15580 2003.254.11:44:44.84/tpical/9u,6615,au,15486,bu,13913,cu,8149,du,6691,eu,9402,i2,6209 2003.254.11:44:44.84/tpical/5u,21077,6u,18770,7u,17292,8d,8213,i3,47413 2003.254.11:44:47.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,458,i1,78 2003.254.11:44:47.49/tpzero/9u,77,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,77 2003.254.11:44:47.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.11:44:50.58:!2003.254.11:44:51 2003.254.11:44:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:44:51.00/disc_pos/880567422976,880310696768, 2003.254.11:44:51.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.11:44:51.01:midob 2003.254.11:44:51.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:44:51.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.11:44:51.22/cable/+3.5897192E-02 2003.254.11:44:51.29/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10080,4154 2003.254.11:44:51.36/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30068 2003.254.11:44:51.43/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8493 2003.254.11:44:51.50/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12735 2003.254.11:44:51.57/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9220 2003.254.11:44:52.13/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.11:44:52.66/tpi/1d,5278,2u,8495,3u,10261,4u,15829,i1,10081 2003.254.11:44:52.66/tpi/9u,4436,au,10285,bu,9225,cu,6083,du,4936,eu,6761,i2,4152 2003.254.11:44:52.67/tpi/5u,13328,6u,12724,7u,11445,8d,5468,i3,30060 2003.254.11:44:52.68/tpdiff/1d,2621,2u,3715,3u,5234,4u,7931,i1,5499 2003.254.11:44:52.68/tpdiff/9u,2179,au,5201,bu,4688,cu,2066,du,1755,eu,2641,i2,2057 2003.254.11:44:52.69/tpdiff/5u,7749,6u,6046,7u,5847,8d,2745,i3,17353 2003.254.11:44:52.70/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.11:44:52.71/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.11:44:52.71/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.11:44:52.72/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.11:44:52.73/tsys/1d,50.0,2u,50.5,3u,47.2,4u,50.4,i1,47.3 2003.254.11:44:52.74/tsys/9u,60.0,au,57.0,bu,54.4,cu,80.8,du,73.9,eu,67.0,i2,59.4 2003.254.11:44:52.75/tsys/5u,43.4,6u,51.0,7u,45.8,8d,42.2,i3,44.7 2003.254.11:44:52.94/fmout-gps/+7.7919E-006 2003.254.11:44:52.95:!2003.254.11:57:45 2003.254.11:44:53.02#setcl#time/317031573,3,2003,254,11,44,53.04,1.993,17.944,7 2003.254.11:44:53.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.11:57:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.11:57:45.00:disc_end 2003.254.11:57:45.48:disc_pos 2003.254.11:57:45.49/disc_pos/905397755440,880311696768, 2003.254.11:57:45.49:disc_check 2003.254.11:57:45.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d11h57m45.245s,8768,0.00250s,80000,7234040404, 2003.254.11:57:45.90:postob 2003.254.11:57:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1722885 : 4595 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1723118 : 4372 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1723600 : 3865 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1723586 : 3890 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1723020 : 4463 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1723518 : 3948 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1723128 : 4338 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1723265 : 4205 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:46.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.76 2003.254.11:57:46.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.254.11:57:46.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.16 2003.254.11:57:46.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.11:57:46.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.94 2003.254.11:57:46.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.11:57:46.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.11:57:46.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.83 2003.254.11:57:46.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.11:57:46.98:scan_name=254-1200,rd0308,98 2003.254.11:57:46.98:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.11:57:49.99:setup4f 2003.254.11:57:53.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:53.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.11:57:53.99:!2003.254.11:59:58 2003.254.11:59:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.11:59:58.01/disc_pos/905397755440,905396755440, 2003.254.11:59:58.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.11:59:58.25:!2003.254.11:59:58 2003.254.11:59:58.25:preob 2003.254.11:59:58.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.11:59:58.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:00:01.83/tpical/1d,8468,2u,13006,3u,16541,4u,25447,i1,16684 2003.254.12:00:01.83/tpical/9u,6800,au,15953,bu,14238,cu,7759,du,8543,eu,10336,i2,6424 2003.254.12:00:01.83/tpical/5u,22173,6u,19568,7u,18082,8d,8514,i3,50148 2003.254.12:00:04.48/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,77 2003.254.12:00:04.48/tpzero/9u,72,au,407,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,863,i2,70 2003.254.12:00:04.48/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.12:00:07.57:!2003.254.12:00:08 2003.254.12:00:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:00:08.00/disc_pos/905653547008,905396755440, 2003.254.12:00:08.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:00:08.01:midob 2003.254.12:00:08.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:00:08.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:00:08.14/cable/+3.5897772E-02 2003.254.12:00:08.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11288,4413 2003.254.12:00:08.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33328 2003.254.12:00:08.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9358 2003.254.12:00:08.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13748 2003.254.12:00:08.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9677 2003.254.12:00:09.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:00:09.57/tpi/1d,5900,2u,9364,3u,11432,4u,17658,i1,11287 2003.254.12:00:09.57/tpi/9u,4682,au,10875,bu,9673,cu,5786,du,6674,eu,7575,i2,4409 2003.254.12:00:09.58/tpi/5u,14664,6u,13726,7u,12463,8d,5902,i3,33344 2003.254.12:00:09.59/tpdiff/1d,2568,2u,3642,3u,5109,4u,7789,i1,5397 2003.254.12:00:09.59/tpdiff/9u,2118,au,5078,bu,4565,cu,1973,du,1869,eu,2761,i2,2015 2003.254.12:00:09.60/tpdiff/5u,7509,6u,5842,7u,5619,8d,2612,i3,16804 2003.254.12:00:09.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:00:09.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:00:09.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:00:09.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:00:09.64/tsys/1d,57.3,2u,57.7,3u,54.3,4u,57.4,i1,54.0 2003.254.12:00:09.64/tsys/9u,65.3,au,61.8,bu,58.8,cu,80.1,du,97.3,eu,72.9,i2,64.6 2003.254.12:00:09.65/tsys/5u,49.4,6u,57.2,7u,52.4,8d,48.7,i3,51.3 2003.254.12:00:09.95/fmout-gps/+7.8104E-006 2003.254.12:00:09.95:!2003.254.12:01:46 2003.254.12:00:10.02#setcl#time/317123272,4,2003,254,12,00,10.04,1.978,18.199,6 2003.254.12:00:10.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:01:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:01:46.01:disc_end 2003.254.12:01:46.50:disc_pos 2003.254.12:01:46.50/disc_pos/908852341776,905397755440, 2003.254.12:01:46.51:disc_check 2003.254.12:01:46.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h01m46.258s,67432,0.00250s,80000,4257755000, 2003.254.12:01:46.90:postob 2003.254.12:01:46.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1729451 : 4622 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1729690 : 4392 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1730178 : 3879 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1730161 : 3909 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1729593 : 4482 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1730089 : 3969 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1729702 : 4356 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:46.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1729837 : 4226 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:47.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.12:01:47.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.254.12:01:47.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.254.12:01:47.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.12:01:47.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.12:01:47.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.12:01:47.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.60 2003.254.12:01:47.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.29 2003.254.12:01:47.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.12:01:47.97:scan_name=254-1207,rd0308,231 2003.254.12:01:47.97:source=0119+115,011903.08,113409.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:01:50.99:setup4f 2003.254.12:01:54.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:54.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:01:55.00:!2003.254.12:06:52 2003.254.12:02:55.46;"weather: clear 2003.254.12:06:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:06:52.01/disc_pos/908852341776,908851341776, 2003.254.12:06:52.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:06:52.25:!2003.254.12:06:52 2003.254.12:06:52.26:preob 2003.254.12:06:52.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:06:52.28/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:06:55.85/tpical/1d,8763,2u,13426,3u,17090,4u,26181,i1,17223 2003.254.12:06:55.85/tpical/9u,6895,au,16190,bu,14452,cu,7706,du,8200,eu,10142,i2,6474 2003.254.12:06:55.85/tpical/5u,22747,6u,19854,7u,18471,8d,8758,i3,51502 2003.254.12:06:58.51/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,759,4u,459,i1,81 2003.254.12:06:58.51/tpzero/9u,75,au,408,bu,720,cu,522,du,610,eu,864,i2,72 2003.254.12:06:58.51/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.12:07:01.60:!2003.254.12:07:02 2003.254.12:07:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:07:02.00/disc_pos/909108158464,908851341776, 2003.254.12:07:02.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:07:02.01:midob 2003.254.12:07:02.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:07:02.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:07:02.14/cable/+3.5894539E-02 2003.254.12:07:02.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11823,4470 2003.254.12:07:02.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34718 2003.254.12:07:02.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9760 2003.254.12:07:02.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14142 2003.254.12:07:02.49/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9877 2003.254.12:07:03.05/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:07:03.57/tpi/1d,6175,2u,9762,3u,11969,4u,18465,i1,11833 2003.254.12:07:03.57/tpi/9u,4786,au,11099,bu,9874,cu,5801,du,6514,eu,7544,i2,4470 2003.254.12:07:03.58/tpi/5u,15257,6u,14153,7u,12918,8d,6129,i3,34754 2003.254.12:07:03.59/tpdiff/1d,2588,2u,3664,3u,5121,4u,7716,i1,5390 2003.254.12:07:03.59/tpdiff/9u,2109,au,5091,bu,4578,cu,1905,du,1686,eu,2598,i2,2004 2003.254.12:07:03.60/tpdiff/5u,7490,6u,5701,7u,5553,8d,2629,i3,16748 2003.254.12:07:03.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:07:03.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:07:03.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:07:03.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:07:03.64/tsys/1d,59.6,2u,60.2,3u,56.9,4u,60.7,i1,56.7 2003.254.12:07:03.64/tsys/9u,67.0,au,63.0,bu,60.0,cu,83.1,du,105.1,eu,77.1,i2,65.8 2003.254.12:07:03.65/tsys/5u,51.6,6u,60.6,7u,55.1,8d,50.6,i3,53.7 2003.254.12:07:03.94/fmout-gps/+7.7609E-006 2003.254.12:07:03.95:!2003.254.12:10:53 2003.254.12:07:04.01#setcl#time/317164670,4,2003,254,12,07,04.04,1.992,18.314,7 2003.254.12:07:04.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:10:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:10:53.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:10:53.48:disc_pos 2003.254.12:10:53.49/disc_pos/916562726216,908852341776, 2003.254.12:10:53.49:disc_check 2003.254.12:10:53.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h10m53.252s,18248,0.00250s,80000,9793504744, 2003.254.12:10:53.88:postob 2003.254.12:10:53.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1744069 : 4715 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1744397 : 4395 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1744884 : 3883 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1744865 : 3915 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1744301 : 4484 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1744662 : 4106 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:53.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1744409 : 4359 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:54.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1744481 : 4296 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:10:54.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.12:10:54.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.65 2003.254.12:10:54.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.254.12:10:54.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.12:10:54.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.12:10:54.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.12:10:54.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.12:10:54.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.12:10:54.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.12:10:54.99:scan_name=254-1213,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:10:54.99:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:10:58.01:setup4f 2003.254.12:11:01.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:11:01.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:11:02.00:!2003.254.12:13:27 2003.254.12:13:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:13:27.01/disc_pos/916562726216,916561726216, 2003.254.12:13:27.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:13:27.26:!2003.254.12:13:27 2003.254.12:13:27.26:preob 2003.254.12:13:27.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:13:27.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:13:30.85/tpical/1d,14273,2u,21280,3u,27020,4u,42062,i1,27993 2003.254.12:13:30.85/tpical/9u,10686,au,19863,bu,17322,cu,9830,du,8099,eu,11627 2003.254.12:13:30.85/tpical/i2,10163 2003.254.12:13:30.85/tpical/5u,35823,6u,30180,7u,27869,8d,13147,i3,65535 2003.254.12:13:33.50/tpzero/1d,242,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,83 2003.254.12:13:33.50/tpzero/9u,78,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,73 2003.254.12:13:33.50/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.12:13:36.59:!2003.254.12:13:37 2003.254.12:13:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:13:37.00/disc_pos/916818522112,916561726216, 2003.254.12:13:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:13:37.01:midob 2003.254.12:13:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:13:37.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:13:37.06/cable/+3.5896354E-02 2003.254.12:13:37.13/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,22529,8939 2003.254.12:13:37.20/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,65501 2003.254.12:13:37.28/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,17564 2003.254.12:13:37.35/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,24611 2003.254.12:13:37.42/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13038 2003.254.12:13:37.98/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:13:38.50/tpi/1d,11674,2u,17575,3u,21919,4u,34504,i1,22542 2003.254.12:13:38.50/tpi/9u,11368,au,15115,bu,13048,cu,8098,du,6635,eu,9268,i2,8420 2003.254.12:13:38.51/tpi/5u,28340,6u,24624,7u,22602,8d,10536,i3,65529 2003.254.12:13:38.52/tpdiff/1d,2599,2u,3705,3u,5101,4u,7558,i1,5451 2003.254.12:13:38.52/tpdiff/9u,-682,au,4748,bu,4274,cu,1732,du,1464,eu,2359,i2,1743 2003.254.12:13:38.53/tpdiff/5u,7483,6u,5556,7u,5267,8d,2611,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.12:13:38.54/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:13:38.55/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:13:38.55/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:13:38.57/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:13:38.58?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device v9 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.12:13:38.58?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.12:13:38.59/tsys/1d,114.4,2u,114.4,3u,107.9,4u,117.1,i1,107.1 2003.254.12:13:38.60/tsys/9u,$$$$$$$$,au,92.9,bu,86.5,cu,131.2,du,123.5,eu,106.9 2003.254.12:13:38.60/tsys/i2,143.7 2003.254.12:13:38.61/tsys/5u,97.1,6u,111.2,7u,105.9,8d,94.9,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.12:13:38.93/fmout-gps/+7.7659E-006 2003.254.12:13:38.93:!2003.254.12:15:15 2003.254.12:13:39.02#setcl#time/317204169,3,2003,254,12,13,39.04,1.993,18.423,7 2003.254.12:13:39.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:15:15.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:15:15.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:15:15.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:15:15.49/disc_pos/920016997128,916562726216, 2003.254.12:15:15.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:15:15.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h15m15.255s,26624,0.00250s,80000,4929800712, 2003.254.12:15:15.89:postob 2003.254.12:15:15.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1750654 : 4723 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1750986 : 4397 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1751475 : 3886 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1751453 : 3918 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1750890 : 4487 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1751193 : 4166 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1750999 : 4362 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:15.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1751018 : 4350 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:16.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.12:15:16.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.77 2003.254.12:15:16.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.254.12:15:16.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.12:15:16.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.30 2003.254.12:15:16.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.12:15:16.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.12:15:16.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.29 2003.254.12:15:16.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.12:15:16.98:scan_name=254-1216,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:15:16.98:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:15:19.99:setup4f 2003.254.12:15:23.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:23.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:15:23.98:!2003.254.12:16:39 2003.254.12:16:39.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:16:39.01/disc_pos/920016997128,920015997128, 2003.254.12:16:39.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:16:39.27:!2003.254.12:16:39 2003.254.12:16:39.27:preob 2003.254.12:16:39.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:16:39.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:16:42.84/tpical/1d,7982,2u,12327,3u,15666,4u,23964,i1,15734 2003.254.12:16:42.84/tpical/9u,8823,au,14549,bu,12849,cu,8004,du,5893,eu,8832,i2,7645 2003.254.12:16:42.84/tpical/5u,20926,6u,18575,7u,17155,8d,8169,i3,47479 2003.254.12:16:45.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,459,i1,83 2003.254.12:16:45.49/tpzero/9u,76,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,76 2003.254.12:16:45.49/tpzero/5u,391,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.12:16:48.58:!2003.254.12:16:49 2003.254.12:16:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:16:49.00/disc_pos/920272994304,920015997128, 2003.254.12:16:49.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:16:49.01:midob 2003.254.12:16:49.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:16:49.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:16:49.30/cable/+3.5897600E-02 2003.254.12:16:49.37/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10292,5497 2003.254.12:16:49.44/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30477 2003.254.12:16:49.51/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8642 2003.254.12:16:49.58/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12734 2003.254.12:16:49.65/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8598 2003.254.12:16:50.21/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:16:50.73/tpi/1d,5383,2u,8642,3u,10469,4u,16110,i1,10290 2003.254.12:16:50.73/tpi/9u,7067,au,9828,bu,8598,cu,6197,du,4338,eu,6438,i2,5437 2003.254.12:16:50.74/tpi/5u,13357,6u,12737,7u,11490,8d,5495,i3,30478 2003.254.12:16:50.75/tpdiff/1d,2599,2u,3685,3u,5197,4u,7854,i1,5444 2003.254.12:16:50.76/tpdiff/9u,1756,au,4721,bu,4251,cu,1807,du,1555,eu,2394,i2,2208 2003.254.12:16:50.76/tpdiff/5u,7569,6u,5838,7u,5665,8d,2674,i3,17001 2003.254.12:16:50.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:16:50.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:16:50.78/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:16:50.79/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:16:50.80/tsys/1d,51.4,2u,52.0,3u,48.6,4u,51.8,i1,48.7 2003.254.12:16:50.80/tsys/9u,119.4,au,59.9,bu,55.6,cu,94.2,du,71.9,eu,69.9,i2,72.8 2003.254.12:16:50.81/tsys/5u,44.5,6u,52.9,7u,47.5,8d,43.6,i3,46.3 2003.254.12:16:50.93/fmout-gps/+7.7234E-006 2003.254.12:16:50.95:!2003.254.12:18:27 2003.254.12:16:51.02#setcl#time/317223368,3,2003,254,12,16,51.03,1.987,18.477,6 2003.254.12:16:51.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:18:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:18:27.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:18:27.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:18:27.50/disc_pos/923471147984,920016997128, 2003.254.12:18:27.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:18:27.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h18m27.253s,45096,0.00250s,80000,2689750672, 2003.254.12:18:27.89:postob 2003.254.12:18:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1757241 : 4727 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1757575 : 4399 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1758055 : 3897 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1758041 : 3921 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1757480 : 4490 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1757749 : 4201 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1757588 : 4366 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:27.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1757590 : 4369 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:28.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,17.52 2003.254.12:18:28.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.77 2003.254.12:18:28.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.40 2003.254.12:18:28.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.12:18:28.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.12:18:28.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.12:18:28.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.12:18:28.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.35 2003.254.12:18:28.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.12:18:28.97:scan_name=254-1223b,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:18:28.97:source=1308+326,130807.57,323640.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:18:31.98:setup4f 2003.254.12:18:35.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:35.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:18:35.99:!2003.254.12:23:49 2003.254.12:23:49.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:23:49.01/disc_pos/923471147984,923470147984, 2003.254.12:23:49.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:23:49.25:!2003.254.12:23:49 2003.254.12:23:49.25:preob 2003.254.12:23:49.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:23:49.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:23:52.83/tpical/1d,8509,2u,13094,3u,16684,4u,25711,i1,16846 2003.254.12:23:52.83/tpical/9u,12081,au,14963,bu,13001,cu,8420,du,6262,eu,9175,i2,9685 2003.254.12:23:52.83/tpical/5u,22314,6u,19670,7u,18259,8d,8654,i3,50789 2003.254.12:23:55.48/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,460,i1,83 2003.254.12:23:55.48/tpzero/9u,80,au,409,bu,720,cu,522,du,609,eu,863,i2,71 2003.254.12:23:55.48/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1140,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.12:23:58.57:!2003.254.12:23:59 2003.254.12:23:59.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:23:59.00/disc_pos/923727110144,923470147984, 2003.254.12:23:59.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:23:59.01:midob 2003.254.12:23:59.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:23:59.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:23:59.15/cable/+3.5897193E-02 2003.254.12:23:59.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11424,7105 2003.254.12:23:59.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33768 2003.254.12:23:59.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9423 2003.254.12:23:59.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13849 2003.254.12:23:59.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8860 2003.254.12:24:00.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:24:00.58/tpi/1d,5927,2u,9422,3u,11512,4u,17860,i1,11423 2003.254.12:24:00.58/tpi/9u,8900,au,10273,bu,8849,cu,6814,du,4864,eu,6919,i2,7502 2003.254.12:24:00.59/tpi/5u,14735,6u,13841,7u,12600,8d,5985,i3,33759 2003.254.12:24:00.60/tpdiff/1d,2582,2u,3672,3u,5172,4u,7851,i1,5423 2003.254.12:24:00.61/tpdiff/9u,3181,au,4690,bu,4152,cu,1606,du,1398,eu,2256,i2,2183 2003.254.12:24:00.61/tpdiff/5u,7579,6u,5829,7u,5659,8d,2669,i3,17030 2003.254.12:24:00.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:24:00.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:24:00.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:24:00.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:24:00.65/tsys/1d,57.3,2u,57.7,3u,54.1,4u,57.6,i1,54.4 2003.254.12:24:00.66/tsys/9u,83.2,au,63.1,bu,58.7,cu,117.5,du,91.3,eu,80.5,i2,102.1 2003.254.12:24:00.66/tsys/5u,49.2,6u,57.9,7u,52.7,8d,48.5,i3,51.2 2003.254.12:24:00.93/fmout-gps/+7.7624E-006 2003.254.12:24:00.96:!2003.254.12:25:37 2003.254.12:24:01.03#setcl#time/317266369,4,2003,254,12,24,01.05,1.988,18.596,6 2003.254.12:24:01.03#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:25:37.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:25:37.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:25:37.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:25:37.49/disc_pos/926925586720,923471147984, 2003.254.12:25:37.49:disc_check 2003.254.12:25:37.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h25m37.248s,50160,0.00250s,80000,10305396200, 2003.254.12:25:37.89:postob 2003.254.12:25:37.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1763788 : 4772 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1764165 : 4401 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1764627 : 3916 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1764628 : 3926 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1764069 : 4492 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1764339 : 4203 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1764175 : 4372 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:37.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1764181 : 4372 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:38.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.37 2003.254.12:25:38.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.13 2003.254.12:25:38.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.26 2003.254.12:25:38.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.12:25:38.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.28 2003.254.12:25:38.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.12:25:38.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.12:25:38.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.62 2003.254.12:25:38.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.01 2003.254.12:25:38.97:scan_name=254-1228,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:25:38.97:source=1156+295,115657.78,293126.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:25:41.99:setup4f 2003.254.12:25:45.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:45.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:25:45.99:!2003.254.12:27:50 2003.254.12:27:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:27:50.01/disc_pos/926925586720,926924586720, 2003.254.12:27:50.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:27:50.25:!2003.254.12:27:50 2003.254.12:27:50.26:preob 2003.254.12:27:50.26#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:27:50.26/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:27:53.84/tpical/1d,8610,2u,13221,3u,16788,4u,25663,i1,16926 2003.254.12:27:53.84/tpical/9u,11630,au,14045,bu,11119,cu,$$$$$,du,13749,eu,10011 2003.254.12:27:53.84/tpical/i2,15112 2003.254.12:27:53.84/tpical/5u,22158,6u,19664,7u,18201,8d,8646,i3,50531 2003.254.12:27:56.49/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,459,i1,82 2003.254.12:27:56.49/tpzero/9u,80,au,408,bu,720,cu,523,du,609,eu,864,i2,69 2003.254.12:27:56.49/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1141,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.12:27:59.58:!2003.254.12:28:00 2003.254.12:28:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:28:00.00/disc_pos/927181398016,926924586720, 2003.254.12:28:00.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:28:00.01:midob 2003.254.12:28:00.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:28:00.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:28:00.34/cable/+3.5898109E-02 2003.254.12:28:00.41/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11481,14017 2003.254.12:28:00.48/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33506 2003.254.12:28:00.55/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9531 2003.254.12:28:00.62/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13831 2003.254.12:28:00.69/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7751 2003.254.12:28:01.25/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:28:01.78/tpi/1d,6002,2u,9531,3u,11583,4u,17842,i1,11474 2003.254.12:28:01.78/tpi/9u,9751,au,10254,bu,7776,cu,$$$$$,du,11275,eu,7602,i2,15076 2003.254.12:28:01.79/tpi/5u,14619,6u,13837,7u,12535,8d,5977,i3,33492 2003.254.12:28:01.80/tpdiff/1d,2608,2u,3690,3u,5205,4u,7821,i1,5452 2003.254.12:28:01.80/tpdiff/9u,1879,au,3791,bu,3343,cu,$$$$$,du,2474,eu,2409,i2,36 2003.254.12:28:01.81/tpdiff/5u,7539,6u,5827,7u,5666,8d,2669,i3,17039 2003.254.12:28:01.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:28:01.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:28:01.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:28:01.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:28:01.85?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.12:28:01.85/tsys/1d,57.4,2u,58.2,3u,54.1,4u,57.8,i1,54.3 2003.254.12:28:01.86/tsys/9u,154.4,au,77.9,bu,63.3,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,129.3,eu,83.9 2003.254.12:28:01.87/tsys/i2,12505.8 2003.254.12:28:01.87/tsys/5u,49.1,6u,57.9,7u,52.3,8d,48.4,i3,50.8 2003.254.12:28:01.94/fmout-gps/+7.7559E-006 2003.254.12:28:01.94:!2003.254.12:29:38 2003.254.12:28:02.01#setcl#time/317290467,4,2003,254,12,28,02.03,1.980,18.663,6 2003.254.12:28:02.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:29:38.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:29:38.01:disc_end 2003.254.12:29:38.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:29:38.50/disc_pos/930380195008,926925586720, 2003.254.12:29:38.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:29:38.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h29m38.258s,29280,0.00250s,80000,4257732592, 2003.254.12:29:38.89:postob 2003.254.12:29:38.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1770368 : 4786 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1770755 : 4403 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1771204 : 3931 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1771194 : 3952 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1770659 : 4494 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1770929 : 4205 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:38.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1770731 : 4408 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:39.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1770755 : 4392 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:39.12/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.49 2003.254.12:29:39.23/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.254.12:29:39.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.26 2003.254.12:29:39.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.55 2003.254.12:29:39.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.254.12:29:39.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.12:29:39.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.12:29:39.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.69 2003.254.12:29:40.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.12:29:40.00:scan_name=254-1230,rd0308,137 2003.254.12:29:40.01:source=1307+121,130704.35,121022.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:29:43.03:setup4f 2003.254.12:29:46.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:46.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:29:47.01:!2003.254.12:30:12 2003.254.12:30:12.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:30:12.01/disc_pos/930380195008,930379195008, 2003.254.12:30:12.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:30:12.15:!2003.254.12:30:12 2003.254.12:30:12.15:preob 2003.254.12:30:12.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:30:12.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:30:15.73/tpical/1d,12381,2u,18664,3u,23638,4u,36950,i1,24443 2003.254.12:30:15.73/tpical/9u,13033,au,18820,bu,16589,cu,9595,du,8148,eu,11707 2003.254.12:30:15.73/tpical/i2,10444 2003.254.12:30:15.73/tpical/5u,31654,6u,27069,7u,24926,8d,11702,i3,65535 2003.254.12:30:18.38/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,78 2003.254.12:30:18.38/tpzero/9u,77,au,409,bu,721,cu,523,du,609,eu,864,i2,68 2003.254.12:30:18.38/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1140,8d,1010,i3,193 2003.254.12:30:21.47:!2003.254.12:30:22 2003.254.12:30:22.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:30:22.00/disc_pos/930636021760,930379195008, 2003.254.12:30:22.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:30:22.01:midob 2003.254.12:30:22.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:30:22.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:30:22.17/cable/+3.5895766E-02 2003.254.12:30:22.24/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,18927,9882 2003.254.12:30:22.31/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,55439 2003.254.12:30:22.38/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14928 2003.254.12:30:22.45/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,21305 2003.254.12:30:22.52/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11988 2003.254.12:30:23.08/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:30:23.61/tpi/1d,9759,2u,14914,3u,18505,4u,29131,i1,18912 2003.254.12:30:23.61/tpi/9u,11013,au,13728,bu,11969,cu,8434,du,6339,eu,8964,i2,9483 2003.254.12:30:23.62/tpi/5u,24083,6u,21321,7u,19439,8d,9059,i3,55402 2003.254.12:30:23.63/tpdiff/1d,2622,2u,3750,3u,5133,4u,7819,i1,5531 2003.254.12:30:23.63/tpdiff/9u,2020,au,5092,bu,4620,cu,1161,du,1809,eu,2743,i2,961 2003.254.12:30:23.64/tpdiff/5u,7571,6u,5748,7u,5487,8d,2643,i3,$$$$$ 2003.254.12:30:23.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:30:23.66/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:30:23.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:30:23.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:30:23.68?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i3 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.12:30:23.69/tsys/1d,94.4,2u,94.5,3u,89.9,4u,95.3,i1,88.5 2003.254.12:30:23.70/tsys/9u,162.4,au,78.5,bu,73.0,cu,204.4,du,95.0,eu,88.6,i2,293.9 2003.254.12:30:23.70/tsys/5u,81.4,6u,92.5,7u,86.7,8d,79.2,i3,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.12:30:23.92/fmout-gps/+7.8134E-006 2003.254.12:30:23.93:!2003.254.12:32:39 2003.254.12:30:24.01#setcl#time/317304666,3,2003,254,12,30,24.03,1.989,18.703,7 2003.254.12:30:24.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:32:39.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:32:39.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:32:39.48:disc_pos 2003.254.12:32:39.49/disc_pos/935085498472,930380195008, 2003.254.12:32:39.49:disc_check 2003.254.12:32:39.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h32m39.245s,47424,0.00250s,80000,1086278392, 2003.254.12:32:39.89:postob 2003.254.12:32:39.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1779312 : 4821 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1779710 : 4426 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1780159 : 3954 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1780147 : 3979 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1779611 : 4520 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1779877 : 4235 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1779684 : 4433 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:39.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1779712 : 4412 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:40.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.74 2003.254.12:32:40.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.38 2003.254.12:32:40.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.254.12:32:40.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.12:32:40.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.89 2003.254.12:32:40.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.12:32:40.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.12:32:40.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.96 2003.254.12:32:40.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.12:32:40.94:scan_name=254-1233,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:32:40.94:source=1357+769,135742.17,765753.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:32:43.96:setup4f 2003.254.12:32:47.96/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:47.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:32:47.99:!2003.254.12:33:33 2003.254.12:33:33.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:33:33.01/disc_pos/935085498472,935084498472, 2003.254.12:33:33.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:33:33.14:!2003.254.12:33:33 2003.254.12:33:33.14:preob 2003.254.12:33:33.14#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:33:33.14/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:33:36.72/tpical/1d,7816,2u,12122,3u,15355,4u,23548,i1,15471 2003.254.12:33:36.72/tpical/9u,6849,au,14185,bu,12568,cu,10534,du,5855,eu,8710,i2,5850 2003.254.12:33:36.72/tpical/5u,20473,6u,18241,7u,16819,8d,8012,i3,46565 2003.254.12:33:39.37/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1277,3u,757,4u,459,i1,82 2003.254.12:33:39.37/tpzero/9u,74,au,407,bu,721,cu,522,du,609,eu,864,i2,65 2003.254.12:33:39.37/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1141,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.12:33:42.46:!2003.254.12:33:43 2003.254.12:33:43.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:33:43.00/disc_pos/935341473792,935084498472, 2003.254.12:33:43.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:33:43.02:midob 2003.254.12:33:43.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:33:43.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:33:43.42/cable/+3.5895221E-02 2003.254.12:33:43.49/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10077,4114 2003.254.12:33:43.56/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29739 2003.254.12:33:43.63/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8470 2003.254.12:33:43.70/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12442 2003.254.12:33:43.78/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8369 2003.254.12:33:44.34/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:33:44.87/tpi/1d,5244,2u,8475,3u,10215,4u,15767,i1,10081 2003.254.12:33:44.87/tpi/9u,5824,au,9520,bu,8378,cu,9002,du,4310,eu,6326,i2,4048 2003.254.12:33:44.88/tpi/5u,13021,6u,12452,7u,11216,8d,5383,i3,29737 2003.254.12:33:44.89/tpdiff/1d,2572,2u,3647,3u,5140,4u,7781,i1,5390 2003.254.12:33:44.89/tpdiff/9u,1025,au,4665,bu,4190,cu,1532,du,1545,eu,2384,i2,1802 2003.254.12:33:44.90/tpdiff/5u,7452,6u,5789,7u,5603,8d,2629,i3,16828 2003.254.12:33:44.91/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:33:44.91/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:33:44.92/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:33:44.93/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:33:44.95/tsys/1d,50.6,2u,51.3,3u,47.8,4u,51.2,i1,48.2 2003.254.12:33:44.96/tsys/9u,168.3,au,58.6,bu,54.8,cu,166.1,du,71.9,eu,68.7,i2,66.3 2003.254.12:33:44.96/tsys/5u,44.1,6u,52.0,7u,46.8,8d,43.2,i3,45.6 2003.254.12:33:45.93/fmout-gps/+7.7274E-006 2003.254.12:33:45.95:!2003.254.12:35:21 2003.254.12:33:46.02#setcl#time/317324866,4,2003,254,12,33,46.03,1.983,18.759,6 2003.254.12:33:46.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:35:21.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:35:21.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:35:21.48:disc_pos 2003.254.12:35:21.50/disc_pos/938543787720,935085498472, 2003.254.12:35:21.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:35:21.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h35m21.250s,58404,0.00250s,80000,1725859772, 2003.254.12:35:21.89:postob 2003.254.12:35:21.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1785895 : 4837 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1786291 : 4446 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1786742 : 3970 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1786729 : 3996 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1786193 : 4537 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1786453 : 4261 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1786267 : 4449 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:21.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1786287 : 4436 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:22.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.86 2003.254.12:35:22.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.62 2003.254.12:35:22.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.38 2003.254.12:35:22.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.12:35:22.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.40 2003.254.12:35:22.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.12:35:22.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.77 2003.254.12:35:22.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.83 2003.254.12:35:22.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.12:35:22.96:scan_name=254-1241,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:35:22.96:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:35:25.97:setup4f 2003.254.12:35:29.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:29.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:35:29.99:!2003.254.12:41:21 2003.254.12:41:21.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:41:21.01/disc_pos/938543787720,938542787720, 2003.254.12:41:21.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:41:21.13:!2003.254.12:41:21 2003.254.12:41:21.14:preob 2003.254.12:41:21.14#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:41:21.14/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:41:24.71/tpical/1d,8227,2u,12682,3u,16056,4u,24664,i1,16239 2003.254.12:41:24.71/tpical/9u,9956,au,15592,bu,13744,cu,7691,du,10621,eu,11429 2003.254.12:41:24.71/tpical/i2,6671 2003.254.12:41:24.71/tpical/5u,21389,6u,18860,7u,17348,8d,8265,i3,48618 2003.254.12:41:27.36/tpzero/1d,238,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,460,i1,77 2003.254.12:41:27.36/tpzero/9u,73,au,407,bu,721,cu,520,du,611,eu,862,i2,68 2003.254.12:41:27.36/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1142,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.12:41:30.45:!2003.254.12:41:31 2003.254.12:41:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:41:31.00/disc_pos/938799558656,938542787720, 2003.254.12:41:31.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:41:31.01:midob 2003.254.12:41:31.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:41:31.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:41:31.06/cable/+3.5893138E-02 2003.254.12:41:31.13/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10870,5778 2003.254.12:41:31.20/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,31933 2003.254.12:41:31.27/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9036 2003.254.12:41:31.34/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13179 2003.254.12:41:31.41/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9210 2003.254.12:41:31.97/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:41:32.49/tpi/1d,5660,2u,9045,3u,10963,4u,16934,i1,10869 2003.254.12:41:32.49/tpi/9u,8191,au,10622,bu,9208,cu,6120,du,9006,eu,8799,i2,5260 2003.254.12:41:32.50/tpi/5u,13989,6u,13171,7u,11862,8d,5677,i3,31938 2003.254.12:41:32.51/tpdiff/1d,2567,2u,3637,3u,5093,4u,7730,i1,5370 2003.254.12:41:32.51/tpdiff/9u,1765,au,4970,bu,4536,cu,1571,du,1615,eu,2630,i2,1411 2003.254.12:41:32.52/tpdiff/5u,7400,6u,5689,7u,5486,8d,2588,i3,16680 2003.254.12:41:32.53/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:41:32.53/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:41:32.54/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:41:32.55/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:41:32.56/tsys/1d,54.9,2u,55.5,3u,52.1,4u,55.4,i1,52.3 2003.254.12:41:32.56/tsys/9u,138.0,au,61.7,bu,56.1,cu,106.9,du,155.9,eu,90.5,i2,110.4 2003.254.12:41:32.57/tsys/5u,47.8,6u,56.2,7u,50.8,8d,46.9,i3,49.5 2003.254.12:41:32.93/fmout-gps/+7.7869E-006 2003.254.12:41:32.94:!2003.254.12:43:09 2003.254.12:41:33.01#setcl#time/317371565,4,2003,254,12,41,33.03,1.982,18.888,6 2003.254.12:41:33.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:43:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:43:09.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:43:09.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:43:09.50/disc_pos/942002194848,938543787720, 2003.254.12:43:09.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:43:09.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h43m09.258s,52212,0.00250s,80000,11517839064, 2003.254.12:43:09.89:postob 2003.254.12:43:09.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1792474 : 4857 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1792875 : 4461 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1793322 : 3989 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1793301 : 4023 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1792776 : 4553 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1793034 : 4283 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1792851 : 4464 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:09.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1792867 : 4456 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:10.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,18.62 2003.254.12:43:10.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.62 2003.254.12:43:10.33/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.50 2003.254.12:43:10.44/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.12:43:10.55/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.03 2003.254.12:43:10.66/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.12:43:10.77/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.12:43:10.88/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.62 2003.254.12:43:10.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.12:43:10.99:scan_name=254-1256,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:43:10.99:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:43:14.00:setup4f 2003.254.12:43:17.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:17.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:43:17.98:!2003.254.12:55:53 2003.254.12:55:53.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:55:53.03/disc_pos/942002194848,942001194848, 2003.254.12:55:53.03:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:55:53.15:!2003.254.12:55:53 2003.254.12:55:53.15:preob 2003.254.12:55:53.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:55:53.15/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:55:56.72/tpical/1d,7611,2u,11792,3u,14837,4u,22896,i1,14967 2003.254.12:55:56.72/tpical/9u,9608,au,13087,bu,11499,cu,7526,du,6154,eu,8065,i2,6598 2003.254.12:55:56.72/tpical/5u,19918,6u,17502,7u,15994,8d,7602,i3,44434 2003.254.12:55:59.38/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.12:55:59.38/tpzero/9u,75,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,862,i2,70 2003.254.12:55:59.38/tpzero/5u,392,6u,866,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.12:56:02.47:!2003.254.12:56:03 2003.254.12:56:03.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:56:03.00/disc_pos/942258200576,942001194848, 2003.254.12:56:03.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:56:03.01:midob 2003.254.12:56:03.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:56:03.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:56:03.35/cable/+3.5893195E-02 2003.254.12:56:03.42/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9595,4683 2003.254.12:56:03.49/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27867 2003.254.12:56:03.56/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8162 2003.254.12:56:03.63/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11747 2003.254.12:56:03.70/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7647 2003.254.12:56:04.26/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:56:04.78/tpi/1d,5042,2u,8162,3u,9757,4u,15041,i1,9594 2003.254.12:56:04.78/tpi/9u,6205,au,8736,bu,7651,cu,5777,du,4716,eu,5868,i2,4380 2003.254.12:56:04.79/tpi/5u,12421,6u,11772,7u,10499,8d,5042,i3,27884 2003.254.12:56:04.80/tpdiff/1d,2569,2u,3630,3u,5080,4u,7855,i1,5373 2003.254.12:56:04.81/tpdiff/9u,3403,au,4351,bu,3848,cu,1749,du,1438,eu,2197,i2,2218 2003.254.12:56:04.81/tpdiff/5u,7497,6u,5730,7u,5495,8d,2560,i3,16550 2003.254.12:56:04.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:56:04.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:56:04.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:56:04.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:56:04.85/tsys/1d,48.6,2u,49.3,3u,46.1,4u,48.3,i1,46.0 2003.254.12:56:04.86/tsys/9u,54.0,au,57.4,bu,54.0,cu,90.2,du,85.7,eu,68.4,i2,58.3 2003.254.12:56:04.86/tsys/5u,41.7,6u,49.5,7u,44.3,8d,41.0,i3,43.5 2003.254.12:56:04.93/fmout-gps/+7.8044E-006 2003.254.12:56:04.93:!2003.254.12:57:41 2003.254.12:56:04.99#setcl#time/317458761,4,2003,254,12,56,05.01,1.982,19.131,6 2003.254.12:56:04.99#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.12:57:41.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.12:57:41.00:disc_end 2003.254.12:57:41.49:disc_pos 2003.254.12:57:41.50/disc_pos/945460197320,942002194848, 2003.254.12:57:41.50:disc_check 2003.254.12:57:41.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d12h57m41.255s,35264,0.00250s,80000,24445934476, 2003.254.12:57:41.89:postob 2003.254.12:57:41.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1799049 : 4881 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1799446 : 4488 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1799906 : 4006 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1799882 : 4040 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1799350 : 4578 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1799613 : 4302 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1799430 : 4483 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:41.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1799444 : 4479 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:42.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.12:57:42.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.254.12:57:42.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.87 2003.254.12:57:42.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.43 2003.254.12:57:42.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.254.12:57:42.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.12:57:42.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.12:57:42.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.22 2003.254.12:57:42.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.12:57:42.97:scan_name=254-1259,rd0308,98 2003.254.12:57:42.97:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.12:57:45.98:setup4f 2003.254.12:57:49.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:49.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.12:57:49.98:!2003.254.12:58:57 2003.254.12:58:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:58:57.01/disc_pos/945460197320,945459197320, 2003.254.12:58:57.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.12:58:57.13:!2003.254.12:58:57 2003.254.12:58:57.13:preob 2003.254.12:58:57.14#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:58:57.14/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:59:00.72/tpical/1d,8763,2u,13440,3u,17014,4u,26304,i1,17302 2003.254.12:59:00.72/tpical/9u,11612,au,15884,bu,13916,cu,7439,du,6653,eu,9496,i2,7808 2003.254.12:59:00.72/tpical/5u,22688,6u,19861,7u,18260,8d,8613,i3,51389 2003.254.12:59:03.37/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,460,i1,79 2003.254.12:59:03.37/tpzero/9u,74,au,408,bu,721,cu,520,du,611,eu,864,i2,68 2003.254.12:59:03.37/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.12:59:06.46:!2003.254.12:59:07 2003.254.12:59:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.12:59:07.00/disc_pos/945716121600,945459197320, 2003.254.12:59:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.12:59:07.01:midob 2003.254.12:59:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.12:59:07.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.12:59:07.29/cable/+3.5893138E-02 2003.254.12:59:07.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11948,4565 2003.254.12:59:07.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,34903 2003.254.12:59:07.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9817 2003.254.12:59:07.58/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14169 2003.254.12:59:07.65/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9667 2003.254.12:59:08.22/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.12:59:08.74/tpi/1d,6208,2u,9812,3u,11959,4u,18590,i1,11945 2003.254.12:59:08.75/tpi/9u,5186,au,11014,bu,9677,cu,5589,du,5108,eu,7148,i2,4502 2003.254.12:59:08.75/tpi/5u,15334,6u,14190,7u,12851,8d,6080,i3,34904 2003.254.12:59:08.76/tpdiff/1d,2555,2u,3628,3u,5055,4u,7714,i1,5357 2003.254.12:59:08.77/tpdiff/9u,6426,au,4870,bu,4239,cu,1850,du,1545,eu,2348,i2,3306 2003.254.12:59:08.77/tpdiff/5u,7354,6u,5671,7u,5409,8d,2533,i3,16485 2003.254.12:59:08.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.12:59:08.79/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.12:59:08.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.12:59:08.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.12:59:08.81/tsys/1d,60.7,2u,61.2,3u,57.6,4u,61.1,i1,57.6 2003.254.12:59:08.81/tsys/9u,23.9,au,65.3,bu,63.4,cu,82.2,du,87.3,eu,80.3,i2,40.2 2003.254.12:59:08.82/tsys/5u,52.8,6u,61.1,7u,56.3,8d,52.1,i3,54.7 2003.254.12:59:08.92/fmout-gps/+7.8109E-006 2003.254.12:59:08.93:!2003.254.13:00:45 2003.254.12:59:09.01#setcl#time/317477162,3,2003,254,12,59,09.03,1.989,19.182,7 2003.254.12:59:09.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:00:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:00:45.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:00:45.49:disc_pos 2003.254.13:00:45.50/disc_pos/948918756960,945460197320, 2003.254.13:00:45.50:disc_check 2003.254.13:00:45.88/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h00m45.263s,72304,0.00250s,80000,2429643320, 2003.254.13:00:45.89:postob 2003.254.13:00:45.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1805625 : 4904 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1806024 : 4510 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1806487 : 4024 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1806464 : 4060 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1805933 : 4596 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1806196 : 4319 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1806016 : 4497 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1806027 : 4495 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:46.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,19.71 2003.254.13:00:46.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.35 2003.254.13:00:46.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.99 2003.254.13:00:46.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.13:00:46.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.01 2003.254.13:00:46.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.13:00:46.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.94 2003.254.13:00:46.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.13:00:46.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,50.71 2003.254.13:00:46.97:scan_name=254-1311,rd0308,137 2003.254.13:00:46.97:source=0743+259,074323.03,255625.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:00:49.99:setup4f 2003.254.13:00:53.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:53.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:00:53.98:!2003.254.13:11:00 2003.254.13:03:52.97;"weather: clear 2003.254.13:11:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:11:00.02/disc_pos/948918756960,948917756960, 2003.254.13:11:00.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:11:00.15:!2003.254.13:11:00 2003.254.13:11:00.15:preob 2003.254.13:11:00.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:11:00.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:11:03.73/tpical/1d,7576,2u,11779,3u,14813,4u,22836,i1,14915 2003.254.13:11:03.73/tpical/9u,12048,au,18737,bu,12479,cu,7595,du,7857,eu,9181,i2,20742 2003.254.13:11:03.73/tpical/5u,19725,6u,17422,7u,15957,8d,7564,i3,44175 2003.254.13:11:06.38/tpzero/1d,241,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,459,i1,82 2003.254.13:11:06.38/tpzero/9u,103,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,864,i2,72 2003.254.13:11:06.38/tpzero/5u,392,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.13:11:09.47:!2003.254.13:11:10 2003.254.13:11:10.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:11:10.00/disc_pos/949174743040,948917756960, 2003.254.13:11:10.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.13:11:10.02:midob 2003.254.13:11:10.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:11:10.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:11:10.18/cable/+3.5892373E-02 2003.254.13:11:10.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9592,19250 2003.254.13:11:10.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27810 2003.254.13:11:10.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8164 2003.254.13:11:10.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11747 2003.254.13:11:10.53/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8378 2003.254.13:11:11.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.13:11:11.61/tpi/1d,5043,2u,8175,3u,9797,4u,15094,i1,9596 2003.254.13:11:11.61/tpi/9u,10146,au,14254,bu,8401,cu,6178,du,6087,eu,6906,i2,19114 2003.254.13:11:11.62/tpi/5u,12365,6u,11742,7u,10507,8d,5037,i3,27817 2003.254.13:11:11.63/tpdiff/1d,2533,2u,3604,3u,5016,4u,7742,i1,5319 2003.254.13:11:11.63/tpdiff/9u,1902,au,4483,bu,4078,cu,1417,du,1770,eu,2275,i2,1628 2003.254.13:11:11.64/tpdiff/5u,7360,6u,5680,7u,5450,8d,2527,i3,16358 2003.254.13:11:11.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.13:11:11.65/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.13:11:11.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.13:11:11.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.13:11:11.68/tsys/1d,49.3,2u,49.8,3u,46.9,4u,49.1,i1,46.5 2003.254.13:11:11.68/tsys/9u,158.4,au,92.7,bu,56.5,cu,119.8,du,92.8,eu,79.7,i2,350.9 2003.254.13:11:11.69/tsys/5u,42.3,6u,49.8,7u,44.7,8d,41.4,i3,43.9 2003.254.13:11:11.93/fmout-gps/+7.7094E-006 2003.254.13:11:11.94:!2003.254.13:13:27 2003.254.13:11:12.01#setcl#time/317549461,4,2003,254,13,11,12.03,1.981,19.382,6 2003.254.13:11:12.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:13:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:13:27.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:13:27.49:disc_pos 2003.254.13:13:27.50/disc_pos/953624860408,948918756960, 2003.254.13:13:27.50:disc_check 2003.254.13:13:27.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h13m27.262s,53720,0.00250s,80000,19677915136, 2003.254.13:13:27.89:postob 2003.254.13:13:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1814565 : 4944 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1814980 : 4533 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1815448 : 4044 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1815419 : 4084 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1814887 : 4621 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1815149 : 4347 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1814974 : 4518 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1814982 : 4522 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:28.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,20.69 2003.254.13:13:28.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.09 2003.254.13:13:28.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.60 2003.254.13:13:28.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.13:13:28.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.254.13:13:28.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.13:13:28.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.13:13:28.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.56 2003.254.13:13:28.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.13:13:28.95:scan_name=254-1318,rd0308,774 2003.254.13:13:28.95:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:13:31.96:setup4f 2003.254.13:13:35.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:35.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:13:35.99:!2003.254.13:18:41 2003.254.13:18:41.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:18:41.02/disc_pos/953624860408,953623860408, 2003.254.13:18:41.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:18:41.13:!2003.254.13:18:41 2003.254.13:18:41.13:preob 2003.254.13:18:41.13#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:18:41.13/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:18:44.70/tpical/1d,7583,2u,11757,3u,14839,4u,22805,i1,14945 2003.254.13:18:44.70/tpical/9u,11935,au,15870,bu,12714,cu,7427,du,7989,eu,9432,i2,19150 2003.254.13:18:44.70/tpical/5u,19736,6u,17369,7u,15949,8d,7543,i3,44212 2003.254.13:18:47.35/tpzero/1d,240,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,80 2003.254.13:18:47.35/tpzero/9u,78,au,408,bu,721,cu,521,du,610,eu,863,i2,68 2003.254.13:18:47.35/tpzero/5u,392,6u,868,7u,1142,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.13:18:50.44:!2003.254.13:18:51 2003.254.13:18:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:18:51.00/disc_pos/953880592384,953623860408, 2003.254.13:18:51.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.13:18:51.01:midob 2003.254.13:18:51.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:18:51.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:18:51.35/cable/+3.5893270E-02 2003.254.13:18:51.42/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9665,13451 2003.254.13:18:51.49/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28005 2003.254.13:18:51.56/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8189 2003.254.13:18:51.63/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11792 2003.254.13:18:51.70/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8484 2003.254.13:18:52.26/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.13:18:52.78/tpi/1d,5065,2u,8194,3u,9833,4u,15203,i1,9671 2003.254.13:18:52.78/tpi/9u,10242,au,12844,bu,8436,cu,5470,du,5756,eu,6899,i2,18516 2003.254.13:18:52.79/tpi/5u,12443,6u,11784,7u,10585,8d,5046,i3,28009 2003.254.13:18:52.80/tpdiff/1d,2518,2u,3563,3u,5006,4u,7602,i1,5274 2003.254.13:18:52.80/tpdiff/9u,1693,au,3026,bu,4278,cu,1957,du,2233,eu,2533,i2,634 2003.254.13:18:52.81/tpdiff/5u,7293,6u,5585,7u,5364,8d,2497,i3,16203 2003.254.13:18:52.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.13:18:52.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.13:18:52.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.13:18:52.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.13:18:52.85/tsys/1d,49.8,2u,50.5,3u,47.1,4u,50.4,i1,47.3 2003.254.13:18:52.85/tsys/9u,180.1,au,123.3,bu,54.1,cu,75.9,du,69.1,eu,71.5,i2,872.9 2003.254.13:18:52.86/tsys/5u,43.0,6u,50.8,7u,45.8,8d,42.0,i3,44.6 2003.254.13:18:52.94/fmout-gps/+7.7299E-006 2003.254.13:18:52.94:!2003.254.13:31:45 2003.254.13:18:53.01#setcl#time/317595560,4,2003,254,13,18,53.03,1.980,19.511,6 2003.254.13:18:53.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:31:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:31:45.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:31:45.49:disc_pos 2003.254.13:31:45.50/disc_pos/978715728320,953624860408, 2003.254.13:31:45.50:disc_check 2003.254.13:31:45.90/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h31m45.263s,60308,0.00250s,80000,10045125500, 2003.254.13:31:45.90:postob 2003.254.13:31:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1862259 : 5116 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1862746 : 4632 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1863172 : 4186 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1863132 : 4236 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1862631 : 4742 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1862891 : 4472 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1862754 : 4603 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:45.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1862745 : 4624 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:46.10/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.42 2003.254.13:31:46.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.254.13:31:46.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.254.13:31:46.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.254.13:31:46.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.70 2003.254.13:31:46.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.13:31:46.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.13:31:46.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.49 2003.254.13:31:46.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.13:31:46.99:scan_name=254-1340,rd0308,98 2003.254.13:31:46.99:source=cta26,033658.94,-015616.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:31:50.00:setup4f 2003.254.13:31:53.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:53.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:31:53.99:!2003.254.13:39:50 2003.254.13:39:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:39:50.01/disc_pos/978715728320,978714728320, 2003.254.13:39:50.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:39:50.22:!2003.254.13:39:50 2003.254.13:39:50.22:preob 2003.254.13:39:50.22#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:39:50.23/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:39:53.80/tpical/1d,8851,2u,13582,3u,17126,4u,26410,i1,17388 2003.254.13:39:53.80/tpical/9u,9294,au,16100,bu,14345,cu,7630,du,6763,eu,9889,i2,6819 2003.254.13:39:53.80/tpical/5u,22454,6u,19550,7u,17941,8d,8467,i3,50954 2003.254.13:39:56.45/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,460,i1,77 2003.254.13:39:56.45/tpzero/9u,75,au,407,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,68 2003.254.13:39:56.45/tpzero/5u,391,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,193 2003.254.13:39:59.54:!2003.254.13:40:00 2003.254.13:40:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:40:00.00/disc_pos/978971754496,978714728320, 2003.254.13:40:00.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.13:40:00.01:midob 2003.254.13:40:00.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:40:00.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:40:00.34/cable/+3.5890607E-02 2003.254.13:40:00.41/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12135,4680 2003.254.13:40:00.48/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,35009 2003.254.13:40:00.55/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10008 2003.254.13:40:00.62/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14144 2003.254.13:40:00.69/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9980 2003.254.13:40:01.25/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.13:40:01.78/tpi/1d,6332,2u,10007,3u,12187,4u,18887,i1,12144 2003.254.13:40:01.78/tpi/9u,7006,au,11255,bu,9967,cu,5756,du,5142,eu,7396,i2,4877 2003.254.13:40:01.79/tpi/5u,15376,6u,14144,7u,12765,8d,6034,i3,35023 2003.254.13:40:01.80/tpdiff/1d,2519,2u,3575,3u,4939,4u,7523,i1,5244 2003.254.13:40:01.80/tpdiff/9u,2288,au,4845,bu,4378,cu,1874,du,1621,eu,2493,i2,1942 2003.254.13:40:01.81/tpdiff/5u,7078,6u,5406,7u,5176,8d,2433,i3,15931 2003.254.13:40:01.82/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.13:40:01.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.13:40:01.83/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.13:40:01.84/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.13:40:01.85/tsys/1d,62.9,2u,63.5,3u,60.2,4u,63.7,i1,59.8 2003.254.13:40:01.85/tsys/9u,90.9,au,67.2,bu,63.4,cu,83.8,du,83.9,eu,78.6,i2,74.3 2003.254.13:40:01.86/tsys/5u,55.0,6u,63.9,7u,58.4,8d,53.7,i3,56.8 2003.254.13:40:01.93/fmout-gps/+7.7624E-006 2003.254.13:40:01.94:!2003.254.13:41:38 2003.254.13:40:02.01#setcl#time/317722457,4,2003,254,13,40,02.03,1.982,19.863,6 2003.254.13:40:02.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:41:38.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:41:38.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:41:38.49:disc_pos 2003.254.13:41:38.50/disc_pos/982171509448,978715728320, 2003.254.13:41:38.50:disc_check 2003.254.13:41:38.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h41m38.260s,74564,0.00250s,80000,15520124616, 2003.254.13:41:38.89:postob 2003.254.13:41:38.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1868845 : 5128 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1869312 : 4660 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1869736 : 4217 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1869696 : 4266 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1869191 : 4776 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1869465 : 4492 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1869345 : 4606 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:38.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1869308 : 4655 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:39.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.18 2003.254.13:41:39.21/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.254.13:41:39.32/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.06 2003.254.13:41:39.43/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.254.13:41:39.54/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.254.13:41:39.65/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.13:41:39.76/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.13:41:39.87/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.76 2003.254.13:41:39.99/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.13:41:39.99:scan_name=254-1344,rd0308,98 2003.254.13:41:39.99:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:41:43.00:setup4f 2003.254.13:41:46.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:46.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:41:46.98:!2003.254.13:44:24 2003.254.13:44:24.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:44:24.01/disc_pos/982171509448,982170509448, 2003.254.13:44:24.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:44:24.27:!2003.254.13:44:24 2003.254.13:44:24.27:preob 2003.254.13:44:24.27#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:44:24.27/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:44:27.86/tpical/1d,8006,2u,12372,3u,15567,4u,23854,i1,15689 2003.254.13:44:27.86/tpical/9u,12260,au,17157,bu,13279,cu,7617,du,6268,eu,9132,i2,12064 2003.254.13:44:27.86/tpical/5u,20382,6u,17963,7u,16503,8d,7809,i3,46211 2003.254.13:44:30.51/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,461,i1,78 2003.254.13:44:30.51/tpzero/9u,75,au,407,bu,721,cu,521,du,609,eu,863,i2,68 2003.254.13:44:30.51/tpzero/5u,393,6u,867,7u,1143,8d,1008,i3,193 2003.254.13:44:33.60:!2003.254.13:44:34 2003.254.13:44:34.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:44:34.00/disc_pos/982427492352,982170509448, 2003.254.13:44:34.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.13:44:34.01:midob 2003.254.13:44:34.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:44:34.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:44:34.29/cable/+3.5889934E-02 2003.254.13:44:34.36/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10451,10239 2003.254.13:44:34.43/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30241 2003.254.13:44:34.50/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8800 2003.254.13:44:34.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12512 2003.254.13:44:34.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9031 2003.254.13:44:35.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.13:44:35.72/tpi/1d,5482,2u,8804,3u,10596,4u,16304,i1,10452 2003.254.13:44:35.72/tpi/9u,10313,au,12503,bu,9020,cu,5848,du,4673,eu,6708,i2,12676 2003.254.13:44:35.74/tpi/5u,13270,6u,12506,7u,11259,8d,5365,i3,30229 2003.254.13:44:35.75/tpdiff/1d,2524,2u,3568,3u,4971,4u,7550,i1,5237 2003.254.13:44:35.75/tpdiff/9u,1947,au,4654,bu,4259,cu,1769,du,1595,eu,2424,i2,-612 2003.254.13:44:35.76/tpdiff/5u,7112,6u,5457,7u,5244,8d,2444,i3,15982 2003.254.13:44:35.77/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.13:44:35.77/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.13:44:35.78/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.13:44:35.78/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.13:44:35.80?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device i2 overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.13:44:35.81/tsys/1d,54.0,2u,54.8,3u,51.5,4u,54.6,i1,51.5 2003.254.13:44:35.82/tsys/9u,157.8,au,78.0,bu,58.5,cu,90.3,du,76.4,eu,72.3,i2,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.13:44:35.82/tsys/5u,47.1,6u,55.5,7u,50.2,8d,46.4,i3,48.9 2003.254.13:44:35.92/fmout-gps/+7.7944E-006 2003.254.13:44:35.94:!2003.254.13:46:12 2003.254.13:44:36.01#setcl#time/317749857,4,2003,254,13,44,36.04,1.986,19.939,7 2003.254.13:44:36.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:46:12.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:46:12.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:46:12.49:disc_pos 2003.254.13:46:12.50/disc_pos/985625647808,982171509448, 2003.254.13:46:12.50:disc_check 2003.254.13:46:12.89/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h46m12.262s,55044,0.00250s,80000,5313961160, 2003.254.13:46:12.89:postob 2003.254.13:46:12.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 1875429 : 5137 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 1 : 1875899 : 4664 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 1876286 : 4258 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 1 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 3 : 1876252 : 4301 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 1875749 : 4809 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.98/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 5 : 1876033 : 4515 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:12.99/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 1875910 : 4632 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:13.00/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 7 : 1875881 : 4673 : 1 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:13.11/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.06 2003.254.13:46:13.22/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.254.13:46:13.34/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.254.13:46:13.45/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.92 2003.254.13:46:13.56/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.60 2003.254.13:46:13.67/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.13:46:13.78/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.13:46:13.89/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.76 2003.254.13:46:14.00/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.13:46:14.00:scan_name=254-1351,rd0308,98 2003.254.13:46:14.00:source=0454-234,045457.28,-232928.3,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:46:17.01:setup4f 2003.254.13:46:20.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:20.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:46:24.99/bank_check/htmp-004,VNC600A6C06TZA,VNC600A6G02ZAA,VNC600A6C0UE6A,VNC600A6C1A5SA 2003.254.13:46:25.00:!2003.254.13:51:16 2003.254.13:51:16.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:51:16.02/disc_pos/81952,0, 2003.254.13:51:16.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:51:16.10:!2003.254.13:51:16 2003.254.13:51:16.10:preob 2003.254.13:51:16.11#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:51:16.11/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:51:19.69/tpical/1d,10584,2u,16033,3u,20300,4u,31531,i1,20799 2003.254.13:51:19.69/tpical/9u,12636,au,19864,bu,14779,cu,12269,du,16662,eu,21336 2003.254.13:51:19.69/tpical/i2,19215 2003.254.13:51:19.69/tpical/5u,26557,6u,22779,7u,20814,8d,9804,i3,60606 2003.254.13:51:22.37/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,78 2003.254.13:51:22.37/tpzero/9u,84,au,407,bu,722,cu,520,du,611,eu,864,i2,69 2003.254.13:51:22.37/tpzero/5u,392,6u,868,7u,1144,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.13:51:25.46:!2003.254.13:51:26 2003.254.13:51:26.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:51:26.00/disc_pos/256110592,0, 2003.254.13:51:26.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.13:51:26.01:midob 2003.254.13:51:26.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:51:26.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:51:26.14/cable/+3.5893449E-02 2003.254.13:51:26.21/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,15596,12785 2003.254.13:51:26.28/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,44770 2003.254.13:51:26.35/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12496 2003.254.13:51:26.42/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,17502 2003.254.13:51:26.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10584 2003.254.13:51:27.07/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.13:51:27.59/tpi/1d,8084,2u,12496,3u,15395,4u,24153,i1,15596 2003.254.13:51:27.59/tpi/9u,10615,au,13855,bu,10603,cu,9595,du,10728,eu,13517,i2,11359 2003.254.13:51:27.60/tpi/5u,19558,6u,17499,7u,15776,8d,7393,i3,44780 2003.254.13:51:27.61/tpdiff/1d,2500,2u,3537,3u,4905,4u,7378,i1,5203 2003.254.13:51:27.61/tpdiff/9u,2021,au,6009,bu,4176,cu,2674,du,5934,eu,7819,i2,7856 2003.254.13:51:27.62/tpdiff/5u,6999,6u,5280,7u,5038,8d,2411,i3,15826 2003.254.13:51:27.63/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.13:51:27.63/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.13:51:27.64/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.13:51:27.65/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.13:51:27.66/tsys/1d,81.6,2u,82.5,3u,77.6,4u,83.5,i1,77.5 2003.254.13:51:27.66/tsys/9u,156.3,au,67.1,bu,71.0,cu,101.8,du,51.1,eu,48.5,i2,43.1 2003.254.13:51:27.67/tsys/5u,71.2,6u,81.9,7u,75.5,8d,68.8,i3,73.3 2003.254.13:51:27.92/fmout-gps/+7.7449E-006 2003.254.13:51:27.94:!2003.254.13:53:04 2003.254.13:51:28.01#setcl#time/317791055,4,2003,254,13,51,28.03,1.987,20.054,7 2003.254.13:51:28.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.13:53:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.13:53:04.00:disc_end 2003.254.13:53:04.46:disc_pos 2003.254.13:53:04.47/disc_pos/3459419480,81952, 2003.254.13:53:04.47:disc_check 2003.254.13:53:04.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d13h53m04.258s,65832,0.00250s,80000,995350057540, 2003.254.13:53:04.84:postob 2003.254.13:53:04.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 13129 : 73 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:04.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.13:53:04.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 13124 : 79 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:04.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.13:53:04.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 13124 : 78 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:04.92/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.13:53:04.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 13118 : 86 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:04.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.13:53:05.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.67 2003.254.13:53:05.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.43 2003.254.13:53:05.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.254.13:53:05.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.254.13:53:05.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.96 2003.254.13:53:05.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.13:53:05.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.10 2003.254.13:53:05.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.02 2003.254.13:53:05.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.13:53:05.94:scan_name=254-1400,rd0308,98 2003.254.13:53:05.94:source=1739+522,173929.05,521310.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.13:53:08.96:setup4f 2003.254.13:53:12.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:12.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.13:53:12.98:!2003.254.13:59:50 2003.254.13:59:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.13:59:50.01/disc_pos/3459419480,3458419480, 2003.254.13:59:50.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.13:59:50.15:!2003.254.13:59:50 2003.254.13:59:50.15:preob 2003.254.13:59:50.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.13:59:50.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.13:59:53.73/tpical/1d,9081,2u,13942,3u,17651,4u,27380,i1,18020 2003.254.13:59:53.73/tpical/9u,5795,au,13726,bu,12213,cu,6599,du,5511,eu,8439,i2,5386 2003.254.13:59:53.73/tpical/5u,23208,6u,20130,7u,18566,8d,8771,i3,53021 2003.254.13:59:56.38/tpzero/1d,239,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,461,i1,76 2003.254.13:59:56.38/tpzero/9u,73,au,406,bu,721,cu,520,du,610,eu,863,i2,73 2003.254.13:59:56.38/tpzero/5u,392,6u,868,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.13:59:59.48:!2003.254.14:00:00 2003.254.14:00:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:00:00.00/disc_pos/3715448832,3458419480, 2003.254.14:00:00.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.14:00:00.03:midob 2003.254.14:00:00.04#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:00:00.05/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:00:00.21/cable/+3.5885254E-02 2003.254.14:00:00.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,12794,3767 2003.254.14:00:00.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,37004 2003.254.14:00:00.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10388 2003.254.14:00:00.50/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,14747 2003.254.14:00:00.57/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8532 2003.254.14:00:01.13/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.14:00:01.66/tpi/1d,6585,2u,10385,3u,12735,4u,19842,i1,12774 2003.254.14:00:01.66/tpi/9u,4089,au,9586,bu,8536,cu,5009,du,4149,eu,6317,i2,3764 2003.254.14:00:01.67/tpi/5u,16128,6u,14720,7u,13388,8d,6324,i3,36959 2003.254.14:00:01.68/tpdiff/1d,2496,2u,3557,3u,4916,4u,7538,i1,5246 2003.254.14:00:01.68/tpdiff/9u,1706,au,4140,bu,3677,cu,1590,du,1362,eu,2122,i2,1622 2003.254.14:00:01.69/tpdiff/5u,7080,6u,5410,7u,5178,8d,2447,i3,16062 2003.254.14:00:01.70/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.14:00:01.70/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.14:00:01.71/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.14:00:01.72/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.14:00:01.74/tsys/1d,66.1,2u,66.6,3u,63.3,4u,66.8,i1,62.9 2003.254.14:00:01.75/tsys/9u,70.6,au,66.5,bu,63.8,cu,84.7,du,78.0,eu,77.1,i2,68.3 2003.254.14:00:01.75/tsys/5u,57.8,6u,66.6,7u,61.5,8d,56.5,i3,59.5 2003.254.14:00:01.92/fmout-gps/+7.7959E-006 2003.254.14:00:01.95:!2003.254.14:01:38 2003.254.14:00:02.02#setcl#time/317842455,4,2003,254,14,00,02.04,1.985,20.196,7 2003.254.14:00:02.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.14:01:38.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.14:01:38.00:disc_end 2003.254.14:01:38.46:disc_pos 2003.254.14:01:38.47/disc_pos/6917158112,3459419480, 2003.254.14:01:38.47:disc_check 2003.254.14:01:38.83/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d14h01m38.260s,73200,0.00250s,80000,12990334000, 2003.254.14:01:38.84:postob 2003.254.14:01:38.84/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 26255 : 145 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:38.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:01:38.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 26247 : 152 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:38.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:01:38.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 26243 : 155 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:38.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:01:38.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 26243 : 159 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:38.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:01:39.02/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.79 2003.254.14:01:39.13/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.67 2003.254.14:01:39.24/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.55 2003.254.14:01:39.35/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.68 2003.254.14:01:39.46/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.70 2003.254.14:01:39.57/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.14:01:39.68/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.14:01:39.79/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.76 2003.254.14:01:39.90/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.14:01:39.90:scan_name=254-1408,rd0308,209 2003.254.14:01:39.90:source=1156+295,115657.78,293126.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.14:01:42.92:setup4f 2003.254.14:01:46.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:46.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.14:01:46.98:!2003.254.14:07:56 2003.254.14:07:56.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:07:56.02/disc_pos/6917158112,6916158112, 2003.254.14:07:56.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.14:07:56.17:!2003.254.14:07:56 2003.254.14:07:56.17:preob 2003.254.14:07:56.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:07:56.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:07:59.75/tpical/1d,7549,2u,11718,3u,14721,4u,22633,i1,14880 2003.254.14:07:59.75/tpical/9u,9946,au,14034,bu,12237,cu,6599,du,5804,eu,8514,i2,8625 2003.254.14:07:59.75/tpical/5u,19355,6u,17156,7u,15697,8d,7461,i3,43989 2003.254.14:08:02.40/tpzero/1d,238,2u,1278,3u,758,4u,460,i1,77 2003.254.14:08:02.40/tpzero/9u,77,au,406,bu,721,cu,520,du,610,eu,863,i2,69 2003.254.14:08:02.40/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1143,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.14:08:05.49:!2003.254.14:08:06 2003.254.14:08:06.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:08:06.00/disc_pos/7172902912,6916158112, 2003.254.14:08:06.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.14:08:06.01:midob 2003.254.14:08:06.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:08:06.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:08:06.21/cable/+3.5891170E-02 2003.254.14:08:06.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9665,5104 2003.254.14:08:06.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28016 2003.254.14:08:06.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8189 2003.254.14:08:06.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11681 2003.254.14:08:06.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8298 2003.254.14:08:07.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.14:08:07.64/tpi/1d,5052,2u,8187,3u,9787,4u,15087,i1,9666 2003.254.14:08:07.64/tpi/9u,9024,au,9649,bu,8297,cu,4953,du,4340,eu,6253,i2,7763 2003.254.14:08:07.65/tpi/5u,12265,6u,11679,7u,10473,8d,5023,i3,28021 2003.254.14:08:07.66/tpdiff/1d,2497,2u,3531,3u,4934,4u,7546,i1,5214 2003.254.14:08:07.66/tpdiff/9u,922,au,4385,bu,3940,cu,1646,du,1464,eu,2261,i2,862 2003.254.14:08:07.68/tpdiff/5u,7090,6u,5477,7u,5224,8d,2438,i3,15968 2003.254.14:08:07.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.14:08:07.70/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.14:08:07.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.14:08:07.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.14:08:07.72/tsys/1d,50.1,2u,50.9,3u,47.6,4u,50.4,i1,47.8 2003.254.14:08:07.73/tsys/9u,291.1,au,63.2,bu,57.7,cu,80.8,du,76.4,eu,71.5,i2,267.8 2003.254.14:08:07.73/tsys/5u,43.5,6u,51.3,7u,46.4,8d,42.8,i3,45.3 2003.254.14:08:07.92/fmout-gps/+7.7199E-006 2003.254.14:08:07.93:!2003.254.14:11:35 2003.254.14:08:08.00#setcl#time/317891053,4,2003,254,14,08,08.03,1.983,20.331,7 2003.254.14:08:08.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.14:11:35.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.14:11:35.00:disc_end 2003.254.14:11:35.46:disc_pos 2003.254.14:11:35.47/disc_pos/13926031888,6917158112, 2003.254.14:11:35.47:disc_check 2003.254.14:11:35.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d14h11m35.250s,8596,0.00250s,80000,12094870828, 2003.254.14:11:35.84:postob 2003.254.14:11:35.84/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 52844 : 302 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:35.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:11:35.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 52851 : 292 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:35.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:11:35.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 52828 : 314 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:35.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:11:35.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 52847 : 301 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:35.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:11:36.01/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.52 2003.254.14:11:36.12/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.41 2003.254.14:11:36.23/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.41 2003.254.14:11:36.34/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,47.80 2003.254.14:11:36.45/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.80 2003.254.14:11:36.56/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.14:11:36.67/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.14:11:36.78/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.02 2003.254.14:11:36.89/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.14:11:36.89:scan_name=254-1427,rd0308,774 2003.254.14:11:36.89:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.14:11:39.90:setup4f 2003.254.14:11:43.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:43.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.14:11:44.00:!2003.254.14:27:04 2003.254.14:27:04.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:27:04.02/disc_pos/13926031888,13925031888, 2003.254.14:27:04.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.14:27:04.16:!2003.254.14:27:04 2003.254.14:27:04.16:preob 2003.254.14:27:04.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:27:04.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:27:07.76/tpical/1d,7357,2u,11402,3u,14292,4u,22022,i1,14474 2003.254.14:27:07.76/tpical/9u,11758,au,16356,bu,12772,cu,9240,du,45670,eu,28467 2003.254.14:27:07.76/tpical/i2,18429 2003.254.14:27:07.76/tpical/5u,18523,6u,16321,7u,14913,8d,7100,i3,41984 2003.254.14:27:10.42/tpzero/1d,237,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,461,i1,81 2003.254.14:27:10.42/tpzero/9u,80,au,406,bu,721,cu,521,du,614,eu,863,i2,70 2003.254.14:27:10.42/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1146,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.14:27:13.51:!2003.254.14:27:14 2003.254.14:27:14.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:27:14.00/disc_pos/14181892096,13925031888, 2003.254.14:27:14.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.14:27:14.02:midob 2003.254.14:27:14.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:27:14.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:27:14.25/cable/+3.5888190E-02 2003.254.14:27:14.32/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9343,15978 2003.254.14:27:14.39/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26575 2003.254.14:27:14.46/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7943 2003.254.14:27:14.53/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11078 2003.254.14:27:14.60/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8626 2003.254.14:27:15.16/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.14:27:15.68/tpi/1d,4893,2u,7935,3u,9468,4u,14597,i1,9341 2003.254.14:27:15.68/tpi/9u,9664,au,10809,bu,8642,cu,9511,du,57124,eu,34859,i2,13637 2003.254.14:27:15.69/tpi/5u,11688,6u,11082,7u,9927,8d,4780,i3,26570 2003.254.14:27:15.70/tpdiff/1d,2464,2u,3467,3u,4824,4u,7425,i1,5133 2003.254.14:27:15.70/tpdiff/9u,2094,au,5547,bu,4130,cu,-271,du,$$$$$,eu,-6392,i2,4792 2003.254.14:27:15.71/tpdiff/5u,6835,6u,5239,7u,4986,8d,2320,i3,15414 2003.254.14:27:15.72/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.14:27:15.72/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.14:27:15.74/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.14:27:15.75/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.14:27:15.76?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.14:27:15.76?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.14:27:15.76?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.14:27:15.77/tsys/1d,49.1,2u,49.9,3u,46.9,4u,49.5,i1,46.9 2003.254.14:27:15.77/tsys/9u,137.3,au,56.3,bu,57.5,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.14:27:15.78/tsys/i2,84.9 2003.254.14:27:15.79/tsys/5u,43.0,6u,50.7,7u,45.8,8d,42.3,i3,44.5 2003.254.14:27:15.92/fmout-gps/+7.7234E-006 2003.254.14:27:15.95:!2003.254.14:40:08 2003.254.14:27:16.02#setcl#time/318005852,4,2003,254,14,27,16.05,1.987,20.650,7 2003.254.14:27:16.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.14:40:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.14:40:08.00:disc_end 2003.254.14:40:08.47:disc_pos 2003.254.14:40:08.47/disc_pos/39015682152,13926031888, 2003.254.14:40:08.47:disc_check 2003.254.14:40:08.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d14h40m08.265s,35572,0.00250s,80000,29726802760, 2003.254.14:40:08.84:postob 2003.254.14:40:08.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 148008 : 865 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:08.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:40:08.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 148078 : 790 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:08.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:40:08.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 147985 : 882 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:08.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:40:08.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 148062 : 813 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:08.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:40:09.01/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.254.14:40:09.12/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.87 2003.254.14:40:09.23/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.254.14:40:09.34/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.04 2003.254.14:40:09.45/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.254.14:40:09.56/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.14:40:09.67/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.14:40:09.78/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,21.76 2003.254.14:40:09.89/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.14:40:09.89:scan_name=254-1442,rd0308,150 2003.254.14:40:09.89:source=0743+259,074323.03,255625.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.14:40:12.91:setup4f 2003.254.14:40:16.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:16.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.14:40:16.99:!2003.254.14:42:21 2003.254.14:42:21.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:42:21.01/disc_pos/39015682152,39014682152, 2003.254.14:42:21.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.14:42:21.15:!2003.254.14:42:21 2003.254.14:42:21.15:preob 2003.254.14:42:21.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:42:21.15/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:42:24.73/tpical/1d,7231,2u,11176,3u,14084,4u,21658,i1,14263 2003.254.14:42:24.73/tpical/9u,11033,au,14303,bu,11667,cu,9429,du,6702,eu,8220,i2,18512 2003.254.14:42:24.73/tpical/5u,18068,6u,15885,7u,14541,8d,6923,i3,40975 2003.254.14:42:27.38/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,461,i1,85 2003.254.14:42:27.38/tpzero/9u,78,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,613,eu,860,i2,65 2003.254.14:42:27.38/tpzero/5u,391,6u,870,7u,1147,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.14:42:30.47:!2003.254.14:42:31 2003.254.14:42:31.01:disc_pos 2003.254.14:42:31.01/disc_pos/39271432192,39014682152, 2003.254.14:42:31.02:data_valid=on 2003.254.14:42:31.03:midob 2003.254.14:42:31.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:42:31.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:42:31.17/cable/+3.5882470E-02 2003.254.14:42:31.25/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9159,16871 2003.254.14:42:31.32/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25790 2003.254.14:42:31.39/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7774 2003.254.14:42:31.46/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10741 2003.254.14:42:31.54/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7911 2003.254.14:42:32.11/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.14:42:32.64/tpi/1d,4797,2u,7769,3u,9308,4u,14289,i1,9159 2003.254.14:42:32.64/tpi/9u,5777,au,9208,bu,7889,cu,7679,du,5297,eu,6075,i2,11352 2003.254.14:42:32.65/tpi/5u,11320,6u,10732,7u,9629,8d,4642,i3,25790 2003.254.14:42:32.66/tpdiff/1d,2434,2u,3407,3u,4776,4u,7369,i1,5104 2003.254.14:42:32.66/tpdiff/9u,5256,au,5095,bu,3778,cu,1750,du,1405,eu,2145,i2,7160 2003.254.14:42:32.67/tpdiff/5u,6748,6u,5153,7u,4912,8d,2281,i3,15185 2003.254.14:42:32.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.14:42:32.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.14:42:32.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.14:42:32.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.14:42:32.71/tsys/1d,48.7,2u,49.5,3u,46.5,4u,48.8,i1,46.2 2003.254.14:42:32.71/tsys/9u,32.5,au,51.8,bu,56.9,cu,122.8,du,100.0,eu,72.9,i2,47.3 2003.254.14:42:32.72/tsys/5u,42.1,6u,49.8,7u,44.9,8d,41.4,i3,43.8 2003.254.14:42:32.92/fmout-gps/+7.7939E-006 2003.254.14:42:32.95:!2003.254.14:45:01 2003.254.14:42:33.01#setcl#time/318097549,4,2003,254,14,42,33.04,1.986,20.905,7 2003.254.14:42:33.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.14:45:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.14:45:01.00:disc_end 2003.254.14:45:01.47:disc_pos 2003.254.14:45:01.47/disc_pos/44137637944,39015682152, 2003.254.14:45:01.48:disc_check 2003.254.14:45:01.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d14h45m01.262s,41132,0.00250s,80000,4253958648, 2003.254.14:45:01.85:postob 2003.254.14:45:01.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 167447 : 973 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:01.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:45:01.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 167518 : 897 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:01.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:45:01.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 167414 : 998 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:01.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:45:01.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 167494 : 928 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:01.92/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:45:02.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.60 2003.254.14:45:02.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.99 2003.254.14:45:02.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.87 2003.254.14:45:02.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.04 2003.254.14:45:02.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.65 2003.254.14:45:02.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.14:45:02.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.254.14:45:02.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.42 2003.254.14:45:02.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.14:45:02.95:scan_name=254-1451,rd0308,98 2003.254.14:45:02.95:source=0552+398,055201.37,394821.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.14:45:05.97:setup4f 2003.254.14:45:09.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:09.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.14:45:09.98:!2003.254.14:50:57 2003.254.14:50:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:50:57.01/disc_pos/44137637944,44136637944, 2003.254.14:50:57.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.14:50:57.16:!2003.254.14:50:57 2003.254.14:50:57.16:preob 2003.254.14:50:57.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:50:57.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:51:00.74/tpical/1d,7318,2u,11297,3u,14295,4u,21994,i1,14478 2003.254.14:51:00.74/tpical/9u,6332,au,13181,bu,11711,cu,7040,du,6613,eu,8747,i2,6269 2003.254.14:51:00.74/tpical/5u,18208,6u,15964,7u,14634,8d,6963,i3,41389 2003.254.14:51:03.39/tpzero/1d,234,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,462,i1,84 2003.254.14:51:03.39/tpzero/9u,68,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,860,i2,67 2003.254.14:51:03.39/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1147,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.14:51:06.48:!2003.254.14:51:07 2003.254.14:51:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.14:51:07.00/disc_pos/44393517056,44136637944, 2003.254.14:51:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.14:51:07.01:midob 2003.254.14:51:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.14:51:07.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.14:51:07.05/cable/+3.5883137E-02 2003.254.14:51:07.12/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9415,5018 2003.254.14:51:07.19/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26382 2003.254.14:51:07.27/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7914 2003.254.14:51:07.34/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10895 2003.254.14:51:07.41/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7961 2003.254.14:51:07.97/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.14:51:08.49/tpi/1d,4908,2u,7913,3u,9550,4u,14645,i1,9416 2003.254.14:51:08.49/tpi/9u,5899,au,8986,bu,7966,cu,5337,du,4767,eu,6378,i2,4401 2003.254.14:51:08.50/tpi/5u,11544,6u,10887,7u,9791,8d,4709,i3,26362 2003.254.14:51:08.51/tpdiff/1d,2410,2u,3384,3u,4745,4u,7349,i1,5062 2003.254.14:51:08.51/tpdiff/9u,433,au,4195,bu,3745,cu,1703,du,1846,eu,2369,i2,1868 2003.254.14:51:08.52/tpdiff/5u,6664,6u,5077,7u,4843,8d,2254,i3,15027 2003.254.14:51:08.53/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.14:51:08.54/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.14:51:08.54/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.14:51:08.55/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.14:51:08.56/tsys/1d,50.4,2u,51.0,3u,48.2,4u,50.2,i1,47.9 2003.254.14:51:08.56/tsys/9u,404.0,au,61.4,bu,58.0,cu,84.9,du,67.5,eu,69.9,i2,69.6 2003.254.14:51:08.57/tsys/5u,43.5,6u,51.3,7u,46.4,8d,42.7,i3,45.3 2003.254.14:51:08.92/fmout-gps/+7.7809E-006 2003.254.14:51:08.94:!2003.254.14:52:45 2003.254.14:51:09.01#setcl#time/318149147,3,2003,254,14,51,09.03,1.984,21.048,7 2003.254.14:51:09.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.14:52:45.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.14:52:45.00:disc_end 2003.254.14:52:45.46:disc_pos 2003.254.14:52:45.47/disc_pos/47595224656,44137637944, 2003.254.14:52:45.47:disc_check 2003.254.14:52:45.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d14h52m45.260s,9236,0.00250s,80000,11390365184, 2003.254.14:52:45.84:postob 2003.254.14:52:45.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 180574 : 1043 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:45.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:52:45.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 180644 : 968 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:45.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:52:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 180514 : 1095 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:45.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:52:45.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 180612 : 1005 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:45.94/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.14:52:46.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.23 2003.254.14:52:46.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.254.14:52:46.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.254.14:52:46.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.04 2003.254.14:52:46.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.90 2003.254.14:52:46.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.14:52:46.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.14:52:46.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.93 2003.254.14:52:46.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,53.49 2003.254.14:52:46.95:scan_name=254-1501a,rd0308,222 2003.254.14:52:46.95:source=3c274,122817.57,124002.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.14:52:49.96:setup4f 2003.254.14:52:53.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:53.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.14:52:53.98:!2003.254.15:00:52 2003.254.15:00:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:00:52.02/disc_pos/47595224656,47594224656, 2003.254.15:00:52.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:00:52.14:!2003.254.15:00:52 2003.254.15:00:52.14:preob 2003.254.15:00:52.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:00:52.15/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:00:55.72/tpical/1d,7558,2u,11696,3u,14867,4u,22762,i1,15058 2003.254.15:00:55.72/tpical/9u,8441,au,14328,bu,12717,cu,8309,du,32449,eu,15973 2003.254.15:00:55.72/tpical/i2,6536 2003.254.15:00:55.72/tpical/5u,18630,6u,16516,7u,15181,8d,7188,i3,42653 2003.254.15:00:58.37/tpzero/1d,237,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,461,i1,84 2003.254.15:00:58.37/tpzero/9u,72,au,406,bu,721,cu,517,du,615,eu,861,i2,72 2003.254.15:00:58.37/tpzero/5u,391,6u,870,7u,1148,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.15:01:01.46:!2003.254.15:01:02 2003.254.15:01:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:01:02.00/disc_pos/47851057152,47594224656, 2003.254.15:01:02.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:01:02.03:midob 2003.254.15:01:02.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:01:02.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:01:02.13/cable/+3.5879055E-02 2003.254.15:01:02.20/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10006,5467 2003.254.15:01:02.27/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27804 2003.254.15:01:02.34/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8329 2003.254.15:01:02.41/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11469 2003.254.15:01:02.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8821 2003.254.15:01:03.04/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:01:03.57/tpi/1d,5163,2u,8333,3u,10119,4u,15513,i1,10015 2003.254.15:01:03.57/tpi/9u,7573,au,9978,bu,8819,cu,6955,du,30852,eu,13484,i2,5533 2003.254.15:01:03.58/tpi/5u,12119,6u,11475,7u,10357,8d,4952,i3,27825 2003.254.15:01:03.59/tpdiff/1d,2395,2u,3363,3u,4748,4u,7249,i1,5043 2003.254.15:01:03.59/tpdiff/9u,868,au,4350,bu,3898,cu,1354,du,1597,eu,2489,i2,1003 2003.254.15:01:03.60/tpdiff/5u,6511,6u,5041,7u,4824,8d,2236,i3,14828 2003.254.15:01:03.61/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:01:03.61/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:01:03.62/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:01:03.63/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:01:03.64/tsys/1d,53.5,2u,54.5,3u,51.3,4u,54.0,i1,51.2 2003.254.15:01:03.64/tsys/9u,259.3,au,66.0,bu,62.3,cu,142.6,du,568.0,eu,152.1,i2,163.3 2003.254.15:01:03.65/tsys/5u,46.8,6u,54.7,7u,49.6,8d,45.8,i3,48.5 2003.254.15:01:03.92/fmout-gps/+7.7834E-006 2003.254.15:01:03.92:!2003.254.15:04:44 2003.254.15:01:04.00#setcl#time/318208646,4,2003,254,15,01,04.03,1.980,21.214,7 2003.254.15:01:04.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:04:44.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:04:44.00:disc_end 2003.254.15:04:44.47:disc_pos 2003.254.15:04:44.48/disc_pos/55021195256,47595224656, 2003.254.15:04:44.48:disc_check 2003.254.15:04:44.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h04m44.263s,29236,0.00250s,80000,15582089400, 2003.254.15:04:44.85:postob 2003.254.15:04:44.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 208751 : 1201 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:44.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:04:44.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 208826 : 1121 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:44.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:04:44.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 208671 : 1277 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:44.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:04:44.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 208798 : 1155 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:44.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:04:45.02/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.84 2003.254.15:04:45.13/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.48 2003.254.15:04:45.24/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.85 2003.254.15:04:45.35/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.15:04:45.46/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.254.15:04:45.57/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:04:45.68/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.15:04:45.79/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.93 2003.254.15:04:45.90/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.15:04:45.90:scan_name=254-1507,rd0308,285 2003.254.15:04:45.90:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:04:48.92:setup4f 2003.254.15:04:52.95/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:52.97/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:04:53.00:!2003.254.15:06:57 2003.254.15:06:57.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:06:57.01/disc_pos/55021195256,55020195256, 2003.254.15:06:57.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:06:57.15:!2003.254.15:06:57 2003.254.15:06:57.15:preob 2003.254.15:06:57.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:06:57.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:07:00.73/tpical/1d,8515,2u,13078,3u,16649,4u,25774,i1,17055 2003.254.15:07:00.73/tpical/9u,8192,au,14672,bu,12728,cu,10583,du,34263,eu,30556 2003.254.15:07:00.73/tpical/i2,6403 2003.254.15:07:00.73/tpical/5u,21035,6u,18355,7u,16995,8d,8005,i3,48282 2003.254.15:07:03.40/tpzero/1d,237,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,462,i1,82 2003.254.15:07:03.40/tpzero/9u,73,au,407,bu,721,cu,519,du,615,eu,863,i2,73 2003.254.15:07:03.40/tpzero/5u,392,6u,869,7u,1148,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.15:07:06.50:!2003.254.15:07:07 2003.254.15:07:07.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:07:07.00/disc_pos/55276953600,55020195256, 2003.254.15:07:07.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:07:07.01:midob 2003.254.15:07:07.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:07:07.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:07:07.17/cable/+3.5880041E-02 2003.254.15:07:07.24/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11989,5383 2003.254.15:07:07.31/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33382 2003.254.15:07:07.38/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9706 2003.254.15:07:07.45/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13341 2003.254.15:07:07.52/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8955 2003.254.15:07:08.09/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:07:08.61/tpi/1d,6114,2u,9710,3u,11917,4u,18496,i1,11989 2003.254.15:07:08.61/tpi/9u,7783,au,10456,bu,8957,cu,9004,du,36976,eu,30471,i2,5105 2003.254.15:07:08.62/tpi/5u,14494,6u,13350,7u,12195,8d,5764,i3,33365 2003.254.15:07:08.63/tpdiff/1d,2401,2u,3368,3u,4732,4u,7278,i1,5066 2003.254.15:07:08.63/tpdiff/9u,409,au,4216,bu,3771,cu,1579,du,-2713,eu,85,i2,1298 2003.254.15:07:08.64/tpdiff/5u,6541,6u,5005,7u,4800,8d,2241,i3,14917 2003.254.15:07:08.65/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:07:08.66/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:07:08.66/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:07:08.67/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:07:08.68?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.15:07:08.68/tsys/1d,63.6,2u,65.1,3u,61.3,4u,64.4,i1,61.1 2003.254.15:07:08.69/tsys/9u,565.5,au,71.5,bu,65.5,cu,161.2,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,10449.9 2003.254.15:07:08.70/tsys/i2,116.3 2003.254.15:07:08.70/tsys/5u,56.1,6u,64.8,7u,59.8,8d,55.2,i3,57.8 2003.254.15:07:08.92/fmout-gps/+7.7914E-006 2003.254.15:07:08.93:!2003.254.15:11:52 2003.254.15:07:09.00#setcl#time/318245145,4,2003,254,15,07,09.03,1.982,21.315,7 2003.254.15:07:09.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:11:52.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:11:52.00:disc_end 2003.254.15:11:52.46:disc_pos 2003.254.15:11:52.47/disc_pos/64462667120,55021195256, 2003.254.15:11:52.47:disc_check 2003.254.15:11:52.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h11m52.255s,51092,0.00250s,80000,4254266280, 2003.254.15:11:52.84:postob 2003.254.15:11:52.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 244571 : 1406 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:11:52.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:11:52.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 244636 : 1338 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:11:52.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:11:52.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 244464 : 1509 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:11:52.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:11:52.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 244617 : 1362 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:11:52.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:11:53.01/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.21 2003.254.15:11:53.12/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.48 2003.254.15:11:53.23/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.254.15:11:53.34/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.15:11:53.45/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.254.15:11:53.56/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:11:53.67/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.15:11:53.78/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.42 2003.254.15:11:53.89/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.15:11:53.89:scan_name=254-1514,rd0308,98 2003.254.15:11:53.89:source=4c39.25,092355.29,391523.8,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:11:56.90:setup4f 2003.254.15:12:00.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:12:00.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:12:01.00:!2003.254.15:14:05 2003.254.15:14:05.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:14:05.02/disc_pos/64462667120,64461667120, 2003.254.15:14:05.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:14:05.16:!2003.254.15:14:05 2003.254.15:14:05.16:preob 2003.254.15:14:05.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:14:05.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:14:08.74/tpical/1d,7269,2u,11288,3u,14243,4u,21950,i1,14413 2003.254.15:14:08.74/tpical/9u,10502,au,14380,bu,11397,cu,26952,du,8942,eu,8322 2003.254.15:14:08.74/tpical/i2,19165 2003.254.15:14:08.74/tpical/5u,17838,6u,15665,7u,14420,8d,6868,i3,40405 2003.254.15:14:11.39/tpzero/1d,238,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,461,i1,82 2003.254.15:14:11.39/tpzero/9u,97,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,861,i2,78 2003.254.15:14:11.39/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1147,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.15:14:14.48:!2003.254.15:14:15 2003.254.15:14:15.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:14:15.00/disc_pos/64718487552,64461667120, 2003.254.15:14:15.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:14:15.01:midob 2003.254.15:14:15.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:14:15.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:14:15.21/cable/+3.5883113E-02 2003.254.15:14:15.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9473,18119 2003.254.15:14:15.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26039 2003.254.15:14:15.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7984 2003.254.15:14:15.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10783 2003.254.15:14:15.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7847 2003.254.15:14:16.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:14:16.65/tpi/1d,4918,2u,7989,3u,9611,4u,14784,i1,9480 2003.254.15:14:16.65/tpi/9u,8933,au,11175,bu,7859,cu,27436,du,7667,eu,6383,i2,18203 2003.254.15:14:16.66/tpi/5u,11468,6u,10778,7u,9772,8d,4701,i3,26048 2003.254.15:14:16.67/tpdiff/1d,2351,2u,3299,3u,4632,4u,7166,i1,4933 2003.254.15:14:16.67/tpdiff/9u,1569,au,3205,bu,3538,cu,-484,du,1275,eu,1939,i2,962 2003.254.15:14:16.68/tpdiff/5u,6370,6u,4887,7u,4648,8d,2167,i3,14357 2003.254.15:14:16.69/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:14:16.69/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:14:16.70/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:14:16.71/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:14:16.72?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.15:14:16.73/tsys/1d,51.8,2u,52.9,3u,49.7,4u,52.0,i1,49.5 2003.254.15:14:16.73/tsys/9u,168.9,au,100.8,bu,60.5,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,166.0,eu,85.4 2003.254.15:14:16.74/tsys/i2,565.2 2003.254.15:14:16.75/tsys/5u,45.2,6u,52.7,7u,48.2,8d,44.3,i3,46.8 2003.254.15:14:16.93/fmout-gps/+7.8419E-006 2003.254.15:14:16.94:!2003.254.15:15:53 2003.254.15:14:17.00#setcl#time/318287944,4,2003,254,15,14,17.03,1.982,21.434,7 2003.254.15:14:17.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:15:53.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:15:53.01:disc_end 2003.254.15:15:53.47:disc_pos 2003.254.15:15:53.48/disc_pos/67920198160,64462667120, 2003.254.15:15:53.48:disc_check 2003.254.15:15:53.86/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h15m53.267s,73532,0.00250s,80000,4254846520, 2003.254.15:15:53.86:postob 2003.254.15:15:53.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 257696 : 1476 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:15:53.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:15:53.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 257747 : 1424 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:15:53.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:15:53.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 257578 : 1592 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:15:53.93/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:15:53.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 257729 : 1445 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:15:53.96/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:15:54.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.45 2003.254.15:15:54.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.36 2003.254.15:15:54.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.254.15:15:54.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.15:15:54.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.63 2003.254.15:15:54.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:15:54.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.15:15:54.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.42 2003.254.15:15:54.98/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.15:15:54.98:scan_name=254-1529,rd0308,98 2003.254.15:15:54.98:source=1726+455,172601.24,453304.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:15:57.99:setup4f 2003.254.15:16:01.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:16:01.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:16:01.98:!2003.254.15:29:21 2003.254.15:29:21.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:29:21.03/disc_pos/67920198160,67919198160, 2003.254.15:29:21.03:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:29:21.15:!2003.254.15:29:21 2003.254.15:29:21.15:preob 2003.254.15:29:21.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:29:21.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:29:24.73/tpical/1d,7982,2u,12362,3u,15689,4u,24183,i1,15944 2003.254.15:29:24.73/tpical/9u,11149,au,14218,bu,12425,cu,6839,du,5774,eu,8752,i2,6591 2003.254.15:29:24.73/tpical/5u,19597,6u,17329,7u,15945,8d,7568,i3,45158 2003.254.15:29:27.38/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,461,i1,76 2003.254.15:29:27.38/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,861,i2,65 2003.254.15:29:27.38/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1146,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.15:29:30.47:!2003.254.15:29:31 2003.254.15:29:31.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:29:31.00/disc_pos/68176076800,67919198160, 2003.254.15:29:31.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:29:31.02:midob 2003.254.15:29:31.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:29:31.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:29:31.41/cable/+3.5875347E-02 2003.254.15:29:31.48/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10890,4254 2003.254.15:29:31.55/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30298 2003.254.15:29:31.62/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8971 2003.254.15:29:31.69/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12287 2003.254.15:29:31.76/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8581 2003.254.15:29:32.32/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:29:32.84/tpi/1d,5586,2u,8972,3u,10939,4u,16909,i1,10889 2003.254.15:29:32.84/tpi/9u,5118,au,9918,bu,8582,cu,5202,du,4341,eu,6532,i2,4112 2003.254.15:29:32.85/tpi/5u,13106,6u,12297,7u,11170,8d,5329,i3,30292 2003.254.15:29:32.86/tpdiff/1d,2396,2u,3390,3u,4750,4u,7274,i1,5055 2003.254.15:29:32.86/tpdiff/9u,6031,au,4300,bu,3843,cu,1637,du,1433,eu,2220,i2,2479 2003.254.15:29:32.87/tpdiff/5u,6491,6u,5032,7u,4775,8d,2239,i3,14866 2003.254.15:29:32.88/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:29:32.89/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:29:32.89/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:29:32.90/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:29:32.91/tsys/1d,58.1,2u,59.0,3u,55.7,4u,58.8,i1,55.6 2003.254.15:29:32.91/tsys/9u,25.1,au,66.4,bu,61.4,cu,85.8,du,78.1,eu,76.6,i2,49.0 2003.254.15:29:32.93/tsys/5u,50.9,6u,59.0,7u,54.6,8d,50.2,i3,52.6 2003.254.15:29:33.92/fmout-gps/+7.7689E-006 2003.254.15:29:33.95:!2003.254.15:31:09 2003.254.15:29:34.02#setcl#time/318379643,3,2003,254,15,29,34.05,1.992,21.689,8 2003.254.15:29:34.02#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:31:09.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:31:09.00:disc_end 2003.254.15:31:09.47:disc_pos 2003.254.15:31:09.48/disc_pos/71378109096,67920198160, 2003.254.15:31:09.48:disc_check 2003.254.15:31:09.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h31m09.270s,69936,0.00250s,80000,25854172660, 2003.254.15:31:09.85:postob 2003.254.15:31:09.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 270812 : 1557 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:09.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:31:09.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 270845 : 1522 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:09.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:31:09.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 270681 : 1687 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:09.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:31:09.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 270844 : 1529 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:09.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:31:10.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.48 2003.254.15:31:10.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.254.15:31:10.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.09 2003.254.15:31:10.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.15:31:10.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.12 2003.254.15:31:10.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.15:31:10.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.27 2003.254.15:31:10.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,22.37 2003.254.15:31:10.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.15:31:10.97:scan_name=254-1534,rd0308,98 2003.254.15:31:10.97:source=0133+476,013355.09,473612.5,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:31:13.99:setup4f 2003.254.15:31:17.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:17.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:31:17.97:!2003.254.15:34:32 2003.254.15:34:32.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:34:32.01/disc_pos/71378109096,71377109096, 2003.254.15:34:32.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:34:32.16:!2003.254.15:34:32 2003.254.15:34:32.16:preob 2003.254.15:34:32.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:34:32.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:34:35.74/tpical/1d,8538,2u,13151,3u,16704,4u,25657,i1,16994 2003.254.15:34:35.74/tpical/9u,10898,au,15893,bu,13572,cu,7867,du,6305,eu,9414,i2,7795 2003.254.15:34:35.74/tpical/5u,20830,6u,18139,7u,16793,8d,7957,i3,47987 2003.254.15:34:38.39/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,461,i1,80 2003.254.15:34:38.39/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,721,cu,519,du,612,eu,861,i2,66 2003.254.15:34:38.39/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1147,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.15:34:41.48:!2003.254.15:34:42 2003.254.15:34:42.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:34:42.00/disc_pos/71633862656,71377109096, 2003.254.15:34:42.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:34:42.01:midob 2003.254.15:34:42.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:34:42.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:34:42.09/cable/+3.5876898E-02 2003.254.15:34:42.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11975,5660 2003.254.15:34:42.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,33260 2003.254.15:34:42.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9786 2003.254.15:34:42.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13235 2003.254.15:34:42.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9490 2003.254.15:34:43.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:34:43.52/tpi/1d,6150,2u,9779,3u,11999,4u,18487,i1,11972 2003.254.15:34:43.52/tpi/9u,6612,au,11231,bu,9504,cu,6041,du,4789,eu,7083,i2,4967 2003.254.15:34:43.54/tpi/5u,14366,6u,13238,7u,12088,8d,5741,i3,33242 2003.254.15:34:43.55/tpdiff/1d,2388,2u,3372,3u,4705,4u,7170,i1,5022 2003.254.15:34:43.56/tpdiff/9u,4286,au,4662,bu,4068,cu,1826,du,1516,eu,2331,i2,2828 2003.254.15:34:43.56/tpdiff/5u,6464,6u,4901,7u,4705,8d,2216,i3,14745 2003.254.15:34:43.57/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:34:43.58/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:34:43.58/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:34:43.59/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:34:43.60/tsys/1d,64.4,2u,65.5,3u,62.1,4u,65.4,i1,61.6 2003.254.15:34:43.61/tsys/9u,45.8,au,69.7,bu,64.8,cu,90.7,du,82.7,eu,80.1,i2,52.0 2003.254.15:34:43.61/tsys/5u,56.2,6u,65.6,7u,60.5,8d,55.5,i3,58.3 2003.254.15:34:43.92/fmout-gps/+7.8114E-006 2003.254.15:34:43.95:!2003.254.15:36:20 2003.254.15:34:44.01#setcl#time/318410642,4,2003,254,15,34,44.04,1.984,21.775,7 2003.254.15:34:44.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:36:20.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:36:20.01:disc_end 2003.254.15:36:20.47:disc_pos 2003.254.15:36:20.48/disc_pos/74835889528,71378109096, 2003.254.15:36:20.48:disc_check 2003.254.15:36:20.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h36m20.265s,4560,0.00250s,80000,6494124944, 2003.254.15:36:20.85:postob 2003.254.15:36:20.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 283936 : 1631 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:20.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:36:20.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 283941 : 1622 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:20.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:36:20.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 283802 : 1762 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:36:20.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 283964 : 1607 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:20.93/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:36:21.04/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.60 2003.254.15:36:21.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.73 2003.254.15:36:21.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.97 2003.254.15:36:21.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.15:36:21.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.87 2003.254.15:36:21.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:36:21.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.15:36:21.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.09 2003.254.15:36:21.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.15:36:21.93:scan_name=254-1541,rd0308,584 2003.254.15:36:21.93:source=1255-316,125515.17,-313905.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:36:24.95:setup4f 2003.254.15:36:28.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:28.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:36:28.98:!2003.254.15:41:35 2003.254.15:41:35.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:41:35.01/disc_pos/74835889528,74834889528, 2003.254.15:41:35.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:41:35.15:!2003.254.15:41:35 2003.254.15:41:35.16:preob 2003.254.15:41:35.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:41:35.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:41:38.73/tpical/1d,9959,2u,15169,3u,19367,4u,30073,i1,19962 2003.254.15:41:38.73/tpical/9u,10849,au,16464,bu,14052,cu,10410,du,7008,eu,9633 2003.254.15:41:38.73/tpical/i2,10521 2003.254.15:41:38.73/tpical/5u,24133,6u,20556,7u,19048,8d,8955,i3,55902 2003.254.15:41:41.38/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1279,3u,758,4u,462,i1,78 2003.254.15:41:41.38/tpzero/9u,71,au,405,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,861,i2,62 2003.254.15:41:41.38/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1147,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.15:41:44.47:!2003.254.15:41:45 2003.254.15:41:45.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:41:45.00/disc_pos/75091746816,74834889528, 2003.254.15:41:45.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:41:45.01:midob 2003.254.15:41:45.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:41:45.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:41:45.09/cable/+3.5876214E-02 2003.254.15:41:45.16/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,14981,8448 2003.254.15:41:45.23/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,41371 2003.254.15:41:45.30/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11853 2003.254.15:41:45.37/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,15777 2003.254.15:41:45.44/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10217 2003.254.15:41:46.00/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:41:46.52/tpi/1d,7601,2u,11850,3u,14713,4u,22994,i1,14959 2003.254.15:41:46.52/tpi/9u,10159,au,12155,bu,10212,cu,7154,du,5431,eu,7455,i2,10209 2003.254.15:41:46.53/tpi/5u,17698,6u,15741,7u,14466,8d,6776,i3,41296 2003.254.15:41:46.54/tpdiff/1d,2358,2u,3319,3u,4654,4u,7079,i1,5003 2003.254.15:41:46.55/tpdiff/9u,690,au,4309,bu,3840,cu,3256,du,1577,eu,2178,i2,312 2003.254.15:41:46.55/tpdiff/5u,6435,6u,4815,7u,4582,8d,2179,i3,14606 2003.254.15:41:46.56/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:41:46.57/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:41:46.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:41:46.58/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:41:46.59/tsys/1d,81.2,2u,82.8,3u,78.0,4u,82.8,i1,77.3 2003.254.15:41:46.60/tsys/9u,438.6,au,81.8,bu,74.1,cu,61.1,du,91.7,eu,90.8,i2,975.7 2003.254.15:41:46.60/tsys/5u,69.9,6u,80.3,7u,75.6,8d,68.8,i3,73.2 2003.254.15:41:46.92/fmout-gps/+7.8004E-006 2003.254.15:41:46.94:!2003.254.15:51:29 2003.254.15:41:47.01#setcl#time/318452941,4,2003,254,15,41,47.04,1.984,21.892,7 2003.254.15:41:47.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:51:29.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:51:29.01:disc_end 2003.254.15:51:29.48:disc_pos 2003.254.15:51:29.48/disc_pos/93846162088,74835889528, 2003.254.15:51:29.49:disc_check 2003.254.15:51:29.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h51m29.273s,1452,0.00250s,80000,10077970548, 2003.254.15:51:29.86:postob 2003.254.15:51:29.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 356050 : 2052 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:29.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:51:29.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 356081 : 2014 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:29.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:51:29.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 355923 : 2172 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:29.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:51:29.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 356078 : 2024 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:29.96/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:51:30.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.82 2003.254.15:51:30.19/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.97 2003.254.15:51:30.30/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.254.15:51:30.41/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.15:51:30.52/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.85 2003.254.15:51:30.63/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:51:30.74/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.254.15:51:30.85/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.33 2003.254.15:51:30.96/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,53.49 2003.254.15:51:30.96:scan_name=254-1553,rd0308,210 2003.254.15:51:30.97:source=1156+295,115657.78,293126.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:51:33.98:setup4f 2003.254.15:51:37.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:37.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:51:37.99:!2003.254.15:53:42 2003.254.15:53:42.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:53:42.02/disc_pos/93846162088,93845162088, 2003.254.15:53:42.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.15:53:42.15:!2003.254.15:53:42 2003.254.15:53:42.16:preob 2003.254.15:53:42.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:53:42.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:53:45.76/tpical/1d,7163,2u,11135,3u,14114,4u,21654,i1,14290 2003.254.15:53:45.76/tpical/9u,8651,au,12960,bu,11312,cu,8126,du,43526,eu,37450 2003.254.15:53:45.76/tpical/i2,7662 2003.254.15:53:45.76/tpical/5u,17602,6u,15630,7u,14351,8d,6830,i3,40265 2003.254.15:53:48.41/tpzero/1d,234,2u,1278,3u,757,4u,462,i1,82 2003.254.15:53:48.41/tpzero/9u,69,au,405,bu,721,cu,518,du,615,eu,862,i2,61 2003.254.15:53:48.41/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1148,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.15:53:51.50:!2003.254.15:53:52 2003.254.15:53:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.15:53:52.00/disc_pos/94102016000,93845162088, 2003.254.15:53:52.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.15:53:52.01:midob 2003.254.15:53:52.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.15:53:52.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.15:53:52.28/cable/+3.5876534E-02 2003.254.15:53:52.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9277,7701 2003.254.15:53:52.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25609 2003.254.15:53:52.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7821 2003.254.15:53:52.56/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10669 2003.254.15:53:52.63/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7680 2003.254.15:53:53.19/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.15:53:53.71/tpi/1d,4812,2u,7825,3u,9452,4u,14419,i1,9279 2003.254.15:53:53.71/tpi/9u,6987,au,8929,bu,7682,cu,6463,du,52735,eu,41629,i2,6525 2003.254.15:53:53.73/tpi/5u,11155,6u,10679,7u,9578,8d,4618,i3,25618 2003.254.15:53:53.73/tpdiff/1d,2351,2u,3310,3u,4662,4u,7235,i1,5011 2003.254.15:53:53.74/tpdiff/9u,1664,au,4031,bu,3630,cu,1663,du,-9209,eu,-4179,i2,1137 2003.254.15:53:53.74/tpdiff/5u,6447,6u,4951,7u,4773,8d,2212,i3,14647 2003.254.15:53:53.75/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.15:53:53.76/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.15:53:53.77/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.15:53:53.77/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.15:53:53.78?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.15:53:53.78?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.15:53:53.80/tsys/1d,50.6,2u,51.4,3u,48.5,4u,50.2,i1,47.7 2003.254.15:53:53.80/tsys/9u,124.7,au,63.4,bu,57.5,cu,107.2,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.15:53:53.81/tsys/i2,170.6 2003.254.15:53:53.81/tsys/5u,43.4,6u,51.5,7u,45.9,8d,42.4,i3,45.1 2003.254.15:53:53.91/fmout-gps/+7.7624E-006 2003.254.15:53:53.93:!2003.254.15:57:22 2003.254.15:53:54.00#setcl#time/318525638,4,2003,254,15,53,54.03,1.988,22.094,8 2003.254.15:53:54.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.15:57:22.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.15:57:22.00:disc_end 2003.254.15:57:22.46:disc_pos 2003.254.15:57:22.47/disc_pos/100887468600,93846162088, 2003.254.15:57:22.47:disc_check 2003.254.15:57:22.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d15h57m22.258s,39452,0.00250s,80000,4254175488, 2003.254.15:57:22.84:postob 2003.254.15:57:22.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 382757 : 2213 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:22.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:57:22.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 382810 : 2154 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:22.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:57:22.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 382610 : 2353 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:57:22.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 382786 : 2186 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:22.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.15:57:23.03/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.254.15:57:23.14/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.46 2003.254.15:57:23.25/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.254.15:57:23.36/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.15:57:23.47/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.85 2003.254.15:57:23.58/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.15:57:23.69/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.15:57:23.80/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,23.74 2003.254.15:57:23.91/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.15:57:23.91:scan_name=254-1606,rd0308,266 2003.254.15:57:23.91:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.15:57:26.92:setup4f 2003.254.15:57:30.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:30.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.15:57:30.98:!2003.254.16:05:50 2003.254.16:05:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:05:50.02/disc_pos/100887468600,100886468600, 2003.254.16:05:50.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:05:50.16:!2003.254.16:05:50 2003.254.16:05:50.16:preob 2003.254.16:05:50.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:05:50.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:05:53.74/tpical/1d,7809,2u,12080,3u,15340,4u,23639,i1,15620 2003.254.16:05:53.74/tpical/9u,9498,au,14043,bu,12092,cu,7259,du,6381,eu,8553,i2,6693 2003.254.16:05:53.74/tpical/5u,19028,6u,16786,7u,15447,8d,7322,i3,43810 2003.254.16:05:56.39/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,463,i1,85 2003.254.16:05:56.39/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,722,cu,517,du,612,eu,859,i2,70 2003.254.16:05:56.39/tpzero/5u,391,6u,870,7u,1149,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.16:05:59.48:!2003.254.16:06:00 2003.254.16:06:00.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:06:00.00/disc_pos/101143441408,100886468600, 2003.254.16:06:00.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:06:00.01:midob 2003.254.16:06:00.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:06:00.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:06:00.21/cable/+3.5875413E-02 2003.254.16:06:00.28/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10652,4382 2003.254.16:06:00.35/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,29300 2003.254.16:06:00.42/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8763 2003.254.16:06:00.49/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11886 2003.254.16:06:00.56/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8327 2003.254.16:06:01.12/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:06:01.64/tpi/1d,5463,2u,8762,3u,10713,4u,16498,i1,10651 2003.254.16:06:01.64/tpi/9u,7853,au,9784,bu,8331,cu,5632,du,4913,eu,6406,i2,4543 2003.254.16:06:01.65/tpi/5u,12661,6u,11885,7u,10770,8d,5141,i3,29302 2003.254.16:06:01.66/tpdiff/1d,2346,2u,3318,3u,4627,4u,7141,i1,4969 2003.254.16:06:01.66/tpdiff/9u,1645,au,4259,bu,3761,cu,1627,du,1468,eu,2147,i2,2150 2003.254.16:06:01.67/tpdiff/5u,6367,6u,4901,7u,4677,8d,2181,i3,14508 2003.254.16:06:01.68/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:06:01.68/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:06:01.69/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:06:01.70/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:06:01.71/tsys/1d,57.9,2u,58.6,3u,55.9,4u,58.4,i1,55.3 2003.254.16:06:01.71/tsys/9u,141.9,au,66.1,bu,60.7,cu,94.3,du,87.9,eu,77.5,i2,62.4 2003.254.16:06:01.72/tsys/5u,50.1,6u,58.4,7u,53.5,8d,49.2,i3,52.2 2003.254.16:06:01.93/fmout-gps/+7.7259E-006 2003.254.16:06:01.94:!2003.254.16:10:26 2003.254.16:06:02.00#setcl#time/318598437,4,2003,254,16,06,02.04,1.991,22.296,8 2003.254.16:06:02.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:10:26.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:10:26.00:disc_end 2003.254.16:10:26.46:disc_pos 2003.254.16:10:26.47/disc_pos/109721088840,100887468600, 2003.254.16:10:26.47:disc_check 2003.254.16:10:26.83/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h10m26.265s,18708,0.00250s,80000,16254640504, 2003.254.16:10:26.84:postob 2003.254.16:10:26.84/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 416255 : 2422 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:26.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:10:26.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 416332 : 2338 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:26.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:10:26.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 416113 : 2558 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:26.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:10:26.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 416279 : 2399 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:26.94/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:10:27.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.06 2003.254.16:10:27.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.254.16:10:27.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.68 2003.254.16:10:27.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.16:10:27.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.70 2003.254.16:10:27.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.16:10:27.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:10:27.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.94 2003.254.16:10:27.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.16:10:27.93:scan_name=254-1613,rd0308,774 2003.254.16:10:27.93:source=0748+126,074805.04,123845.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:10:30.95:setup4f 2003.254.16:10:34.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:34.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:10:34.97:!2003.254.16:13:27 2003.254.16:13:27.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:13:27.01/disc_pos/109721088840,109720088840, 2003.254.16:13:27.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:13:27.15:!2003.254.16:13:27 2003.254.16:13:27.16:preob 2003.254.16:13:27.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:13:27.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:13:30.73/tpical/1d,7221,2u,11192,3u,14183,4u,21644,i1,14327 2003.254.16:13:30.73/tpical/9u,10432,au,14679,bu,12377,cu,6860,du,24275,eu,10545 2003.254.16:13:30.73/tpical/i2,12963 2003.254.16:13:30.73/tpical/5u,17382,6u,15312,7u,14084,8d,6718,i3,39819 2003.254.16:13:33.38/tpzero/1d,234,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,461,i1,86 2003.254.16:13:33.38/tpzero/9u,83,au,406,bu,722,cu,517,du,615,eu,860,i2,67 2003.254.16:13:33.38/tpzero/5u,390,6u,869,7u,1149,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.16:13:36.47:!2003.254.16:13:37 2003.254.16:13:37.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:13:37.00/disc_pos/109976915968,109720088840, 2003.254.16:13:37.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:13:37.01:midob 2003.254.16:13:37.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:13:37.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:13:37.05/cable/+3.5880394E-02 2003.254.16:13:37.12/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9383,13850 2003.254.16:13:37.19/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25467 2003.254.16:13:37.27/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7918 2003.254.16:13:37.34/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10480 2003.254.16:13:37.41/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8365 2003.254.16:13:37.97/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:13:38.08#setcl#time/318644043,4,2003,254,16,13,38.11,1.991,22.423,8 2003.254.16:13:38.08#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:13:38.58/tpi/1d,4901,2u,7920,3u,9569,4u,14496,i1,9378 2003.254.16:13:38.58/tpi/9u,8738,au,10106,bu,8404,cu,5210,du,21734,eu,8187,i2,9872 2003.254.16:13:38.59/tpi/5u,11008,6u,10421,7u,9410,8d,4544,i3,25355 2003.254.16:13:38.60/tpdiff/1d,2320,2u,3272,3u,4614,4u,7148,i1,4949 2003.254.16:13:38.60/tpdiff/9u,1694,au,4573,bu,3973,cu,1650,du,2541,eu,2358,i2,3091 2003.254.16:13:38.61/tpdiff/5u,6374,6u,4891,7u,4674,8d,2174,i3,14464 2003.254.16:13:38.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:13:38.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:13:38.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:13:38.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:13:38.65/tsys/1d,52.3,2u,52.8,3u,49.7,4u,51.1,i1,48.8 2003.254.16:13:38.65/tsys/9u,153.3,au,63.6,bu,58.0,cu,85.3,du,249.3,eu,93.2,i2,95.2 2003.254.16:13:38.66/tsys/5u,43.3,6u,50.8,7u,46.0,8d,42.3,i3,45.2 2003.254.16:13:38.93/fmout-gps/+7.8019E-006 2003.254.16:13:38.94:!2003.254.16:26:31 2003.254.16:23:02.73;rxmon 2003.254.16:23:02.84/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.67 2003.254.16:23:02.95/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.56 2003.254.16:23:03.06/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.68 2003.254.16:23:03.17/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.16:23:03.28/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.254.16:23:03.40/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.16:23:03.51/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:23:03.62/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,34.84 2003.254.16:23:03.73/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,55.57 2003.254.16:26:31.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:26:31.00:disc_end 2003.254.16:26:31.47:disc_pos 2003.254.16:26:31.48/disc_pos/134810968592,109721088840, 2003.254.16:26:31.48:disc_check 2003.254.16:26:31.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h26m31.273s,60972,0.00250s,80000,5790317984, 2003.254.16:26:31.85:postob 2003.254.16:26:31.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 511447 : 2956 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:31.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:26:31.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 511516 : 2880 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:31.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:26:31.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 511247 : 3152 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:31.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:26:31.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 511423 : 2983 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:31.96/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:26:32.07/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.80 2003.254.16:26:32.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.68 2003.254.16:26:32.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.80 2003.254.16:26:32.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.16:26:32.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.19 2003.254.16:26:32.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.685 2003.254.16:26:32.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:26:32.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.07 2003.254.16:26:32.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.16:26:32.95:scan_name=254-1628b,rd0308,98 2003.254.16:26:32.95:source=1611+343,161147.94,342020.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:26:35.97:setup4f 2003.254.16:26:39.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:39.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:26:39.98:!2003.254.16:28:44 2003.254.16:28:44.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:28:44.01/disc_pos/134810968592,134809968592, 2003.254.16:28:44.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:28:44.16:!2003.254.16:28:44 2003.254.16:28:44.17:preob 2003.254.16:28:44.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:28:44.18/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:28:47.75/tpical/1d,7493,2u,11613,3u,14723,4u,22610,i1,14954 2003.254.16:28:47.75/tpical/9u,6105,au,14465,bu,12744,cu,6878,du,6553,eu,9167,i2,5759 2003.254.16:28:47.75/tpical/5u,18160,6u,16034,7u,14741,8d,7011,i3,41830 2003.254.16:28:50.40/tpzero/1d,234,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,462,i1,86 2003.254.16:28:50.40/tpzero/9u,71,au,407,bu,722,cu,516,du,612,eu,860,i2,71 2003.254.16:28:50.40/tpzero/5u,391,6u,870,7u,1148,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.16:28:53.49:!2003.254.16:28:54 2003.254.16:28:54.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:28:54.00/disc_pos/135066923008,134809968592, 2003.254.16:28:54.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:28:54.03:midob 2003.254.16:28:54.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:28:54.04/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:28:54.34/cable/+3.5875619E-02 2003.254.16:28:54.41/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10014,3930 2003.254.16:28:54.48/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27464 2003.254.16:28:54.55/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8323 2003.254.16:28:54.62/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11231 2003.254.16:28:54.69/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8650 2003.254.16:28:55.25/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:28:55.77/tpi/1d,5148,2u,8322,3u,10078,4u,15478,i1,10007 2003.254.16:28:55.77/tpi/9u,4231,au,9913,bu,8647,cu,5123,du,4995,eu,6844,i2,3933 2003.254.16:28:55.78/tpi/5u,11857,6u,11203,7u,10144,8d,4868,i3,27506 2003.254.16:28:55.79/tpdiff/1d,2345,2u,3291,3u,4645,4u,7132,i1,4947 2003.254.16:28:55.79/tpdiff/9u,1874,au,4552,bu,4097,cu,1755,du,1558,eu,2323,i2,1826 2003.254.16:28:55.80/tpdiff/5u,6303,6u,4831,7u,4597,8d,2143,i3,14324 2003.254.16:28:55.81/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:28:55.82/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:28:55.82/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:28:55.83/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:28:55.84/tsys/1d,54.5,2u,55.6,3u,52.2,4u,54.7,i1,52.1 2003.254.16:28:55.84/tsys/9u,66.6,au,62.6,bu,58.0,cu,78.8,du,84.4,eu,77.3,i2,63.5 2003.254.16:28:55.85/tsys/5u,47.3,6u,55.6,7u,50.9,8d,46.8,i3,49.6 2003.254.16:28:55.93/fmout-gps/+7.8179E-006 2003.254.16:28:55.94:!2003.254.16:30:32 2003.254.16:28:56.01#setcl#time/318735835,4,2003,254,16,28,56.04,1.979,22.678,7 2003.254.16:28:56.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:30:32.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:30:32.02:disc_end 2003.254.16:30:32.48:disc_pos 2003.254.16:30:32.48/disc_pos/138268631624,134810968592, 2003.254.16:30:32.48:disc_check 2003.254.16:30:32.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h30m32.275s,17840,0.00250s,80000,4254460100, 2003.254.16:30:32.85:postob 2003.254.16:30:32.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 524562 : 3039 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:32.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:30:32.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 524631 : 2961 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:32.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:30:32.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 524356 : 3238 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:32.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:30:32.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 524526 : 3077 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:32.97/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:30:33.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.31 2003.254.16:30:33.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.16:30:33.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.16:30:33.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.16:30:33.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.22 2003.254.16:30:33.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.16:30:33.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.16:30:33.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.07 2003.254.16:30:33.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.16:30:33.97:scan_name=254-1632,rd0308,116 2003.254.16:30:33.98:source=1053+815,105336.14,813036.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:30:37.00:setup4f 2003.254.16:30:40.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:40.96/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:30:40.98:!2003.254.16:31:58 2003.254.16:31:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:31:58.02/disc_pos/138268631624,138267631624, 2003.254.16:31:58.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:31:58.16:!2003.254.16:31:58 2003.254.16:31:58.16:preob 2003.254.16:31:58.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:31:58.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:32:01.74/tpical/1d,7129,2u,11137,3u,14023,4u,21590,i1,14229 2003.254.16:32:01.74/tpical/9u,5981,au,14210,bu,12540,cu,6961,du,5959,eu,8873,i2,5631 2003.254.16:32:01.74/tpical/5u,17269,6u,15380,7u,14075,8d,6697,i3,39693 2003.254.16:32:04.39/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,461,i1,83 2003.254.16:32:04.39/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,860,i2,70 2003.254.16:32:04.39/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1148,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.16:32:07.48:!2003.254.16:32:08 2003.254.16:32:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:32:08.00/disc_pos/138524491776,138267631624, 2003.254.16:32:08.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:32:08.02:midob 2003.254.16:32:08.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:32:08.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:32:08.36/cable/+3.5874427E-02 2003.254.16:32:08.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9289,3807 2003.254.16:32:08.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25444 2003.254.16:32:08.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7850 2003.254.16:32:08.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10548 2003.254.16:32:08.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8429 2003.254.16:32:09.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:32:09.80/tpi/1d,4801,2u,7847,3u,9416,4u,14429,i1,9291 2003.254.16:32:09.80/tpi/9u,4106,au,9639,bu,8428,cu,5178,du,4447,eu,6547,i2,3809 2003.254.16:32:09.81/tpi/5u,11009,6u,10564,7u,9476,8d,4571,i3,25447 2003.254.16:32:09.82/tpdiff/1d,2328,2u,3290,3u,4607,4u,7161,i1,4938 2003.254.16:32:09.82/tpdiff/9u,1875,au,4571,bu,4112,cu,1783,du,1512,eu,2326,i2,1822 2003.254.16:32:09.83/tpdiff/5u,6260,6u,4816,7u,4599,8d,2126,i3,14246 2003.254.16:32:09.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:32:09.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:32:09.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:32:09.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:32:09.87/tsys/1d,51.0,2u,51.9,3u,48.9,4u,50.7,i1,48.5 2003.254.16:32:09.87/tsys/9u,64.6,au,60.6,bu,56.2,cu,78.4,du,76.1,eu,73.3,i2,61.6 2003.254.16:32:09.88/tsys/5u,44.1,6u,52.3,7u,47.1,8d,43.6,i3,46.1 2003.254.16:32:09.91/fmout-gps/+7.7229E-006 2003.254.16:32:09.93:!2003.254.16:34:04 2003.254.16:32:09.99#setcl#time/318755233,4,2003,254,16,32,10.03,1.985,22.732,8 2003.254.16:32:09.99#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:34:04.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:34:04.00:disc_end 2003.254.16:34:04.47:disc_pos 2003.254.16:34:04.48/disc_pos/142302258880,138268631624, 2003.254.16:34:04.48:disc_check 2003.254.16:34:04.86/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h34m04.275s,14380,0.00250s,80000,2750376204, 2003.254.16:34:04.86:postob 2003.254.16:34:04.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 539870 : 3124 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:04.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:34:04.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 539939 : 3049 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:04.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:34:04.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 539623 : 3364 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:04.93/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:34:04.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 539826 : 3172 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:04.97/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:34:05.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.43 2003.254.16:34:05.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.254.16:34:05.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.56 2003.254.16:34:05.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.16:34:05.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.60 2003.254.16:34:05.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.16:34:05.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:34:05.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.57 2003.254.16:34:05.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.16:34:05.97:scan_name=254-1637,rd0308,585 2003.254.16:34:05.98:source=1144-379,114430.85,-375530.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:34:09.00:setup4f 2003.254.16:34:12.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:12.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:34:12.97:!2003.254.16:37:40 2003.254.16:37:40.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:37:40.01/disc_pos/142302258880,142301258880, 2003.254.16:37:40.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:37:40.15:!2003.254.16:37:40 2003.254.16:37:40.15:preob 2003.254.16:37:40.15#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:37:40.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:37:43.73/tpical/1d,9104,2u,13942,3u,17692,4u,27362,i1,18160 2003.254.16:37:43.73/tpical/9u,6551,au,15545,bu,12952,cu,39063,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$ 2003.254.16:37:43.73/tpical/i2,6326 2003.254.16:37:43.73/tpical/5u,21635,6u,18652,7u,17339,8d,8176,i3,50183 2003.254.16:37:46.38/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,461,i1,85 2003.254.16:37:46.38/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,769,eu,987,i2,72 2003.254.16:37:46.38/tpzero/5u,392,6u,870,7u,1148,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.16:37:49.47:!2003.254.16:37:50 2003.254.16:37:50.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:37:50.00/disc_pos/142558224384,142301258880, 2003.254.16:37:50.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:37:50.01:midob 2003.254.16:37:50.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:37:50.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:37:50.36/cable/+3.5872245E-02 2003.254.16:37:50.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,13242,4617 2003.254.16:37:50.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,36023 2003.254.16:37:50.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10652 2003.254.16:37:50.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,13987 2003.254.16:37:50.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9157 2003.254.16:37:51.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:37:51.80/tpi/1d,6771,2u,10647,3u,13108,4u,20344,i1,13237 2003.254.16:37:51.80/tpi/9u,4738,au,11341,bu,9167,cu,40128,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,4583 2003.254.16:37:51.81/tpi/5u,15467,6u,13976,7u,12878,8d,6073,i3,36018 2003.254.16:37:51.83/tpdiff/1d,2333,2u,3295,3u,4584,4u,7018,i1,4923 2003.254.16:37:51.83/tpdiff/9u,1813,au,4204,bu,3785,cu,-1065,du,$$$$$,eu,$$$$$,i2,1743 2003.254.16:37:51.84/tpdiff/5u,6168,6u,4676,7u,4461,8d,2103,i3,14165 2003.254.16:37:51.85/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:37:51.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:37:51.86/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:37:51.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:37:51.87?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vc overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.16:37:51.87?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.16:37:51.87?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device ve overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.16:37:51.89/tsys/1d,72.8,2u,73.9,3u,70.0,4u,73.7,i1,69.5 2003.254.16:37:51.90/tsys/9u,77.2,au,78.0,bu,66.9,cu,$$$$$$$$,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,$$$$$$$$ 2003.254.16:37:51.91/tsys/i2,77.6 2003.254.16:37:51.91/tsys/5u,63.5,6u,72.9,7u,68.4,8d,62.6,i3,65.8 2003.254.16:37:52.91/fmout-gps/+7.7289E-006 2003.254.16:37:52.93:!2003.254.16:47:35 2003.254.16:37:53.00#setcl#time/318789533,4,2003,254,16,37,53.04,1.987,22.827,8 2003.254.16:37:53.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:37:56.20;rxmon 2003.254.16:37:56.31/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.92 2003.254.16:37:56.42/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.254.16:37:56.53/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.254.16:37:56.64/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.16 2003.254.16:37:56.75/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.07 2003.254.16:37:56.86/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.16:37:56.97/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:37:57.08/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.33 2003.254.16:37:57.19/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,51.40 2003.254.16:47:35.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:47:35.00:disc_end 2003.254.16:47:35.46:disc_pos 2003.254.16:47:35.47/disc_pos/161344003280,142302258880, 2003.254.16:47:35.47:disc_check 2003.254.16:47:35.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h47m35.265s,9584,0.00250s,80000,6909940396, 2003.254.16:47:35.85:postob 2003.254.16:47:35.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 612068 : 3577 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:35.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:47:35.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 612175 : 3468 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:35.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:47:35.92/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 611795 : 3844 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:35.93/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:47:35.95/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 611992 : 3657 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:35.97/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:47:36.08/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.16 2003.254.16:47:36.18/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.56 2003.254.16:47:36.29/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.05 2003.254.16:47:36.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.16:47:36.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.31 2003.254.16:47:36.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.697 2003.254.16:47:36.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.16:47:36.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.63 2003.254.16:47:36.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.16:47:36.95:scan_name=254-1649,rd0308,490 2003.254.16:47:36.96:source=1255-316,125515.17,-313905.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:47:39.97:setup4f 2003.254.16:47:43.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:43.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:47:43.97:!2003.254.16:49:48 2003.254.16:49:48.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:49:48.01/disc_pos/161344003280,161343003280, 2003.254.16:49:48.01:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:49:48.15:!2003.254.16:49:48 2003.254.16:49:48.16:preob 2003.254.16:49:48.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:49:48.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:49:51.74/tpical/1d,8432,2u,12990,3u,16409,4u,25397,i1,16794 2003.254.16:49:51.74/tpical/9u,6538,au,15432,bu,13653,cu,7468,du,7724,eu,10315,i2,6183 2003.254.16:49:51.74/tpical/5u,19990,6u,17494,7u,16167,8d,7647,i3,46334 2003.254.16:49:54.40/tpzero/1d,234,2u,1281,3u,758,4u,462,i1,87 2003.254.16:49:54.40/tpzero/9u,69,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,613,eu,862,i2,71 2003.254.16:49:54.40/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1148,8d,1009,i3,192 2003.254.16:49:57.49:!2003.254.16:49:58 2003.254.16:49:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:49:58.00/disc_pos/161599864832,161343003280, 2003.254.16:49:58.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:49:58.02:midob 2003.254.16:49:58.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:49:58.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:49:58.28/cable/+3.5871316E-02 2003.254.16:49:58.35/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11888,4359 2003.254.16:49:58.42/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,32246 2003.254.16:49:58.49/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9699 2003.254.16:49:58.57/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12785 2003.254.16:49:58.64/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9570 2003.254.16:49:59.20/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:49:59.74/tpi/1d,6113,2u,9698,3u,11879,4u,18383,i1,11891 2003.254.16:49:59.74/tpi/9u,4666,au,10906,bu,9561,cu,5689,du,6928,eu,8337,i2,4355 2003.254.16:49:59.75/tpi/5u,13848,6u,12787,7u,11692,8d,5555,i3,32254 2003.254.16:49:59.76/tpdiff/1d,2319,2u,3292,3u,4530,4u,7014,i1,4903 2003.254.16:49:59.76/tpdiff/9u,1872,au,4526,bu,4092,cu,1779,du,796,eu,1978,i2,1828 2003.254.16:49:59.77/tpdiff/5u,6142,6u,4707,7u,4475,8d,2092,i3,14080 2003.254.16:49:59.78/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:49:59.78/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:49:59.79/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:49:59.80/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:49:59.81/tsys/1d,65.9,2u,66.5,3u,63.8,4u,66.4,i1,62.6 2003.254.16:49:59.81/tsys/9u,73.7,au,69.6,bu,64.8,cu,87.2,du,238.0,eu,113.4,i2,70.3 2003.254.16:49:59.82/tsys/5u,57.0,6u,65.8,7u,61.3,8d,56.5,i3,59.2 2003.254.16:49:59.93/fmout-gps/+7.7559E-006 2003.254.16:49:59.94:!2003.254.16:58:08 2003.254.16:50:00.01#setcl#time/318862231,4,2003,254,16,50,00.04,1.991,23.029,8 2003.254.16:50:00.01#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.16:58:08.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.16:58:08.00:disc_end 2003.254.16:58:08.46:disc_pos 2003.254.16:58:08.47/disc_pos/177345638976,161344003280, 2003.254.16:58:08.47:disc_check 2003.254.16:58:08.83/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d16h58m08.260s,47396,0.00250s,80000,4254166492, 2003.254.16:58:08.84:postob 2003.254.16:58:08.84/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 672771 : 3929 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:08.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:58:08.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 672858 : 3838 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:08.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:58:08.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 672442 : 4253 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:08.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:58:08.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 672640 : 4062 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:08.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.16:58:09.01/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.16 2003.254.16:58:09.13/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.254.16:58:09.24/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.54 2003.254.16:58:09.35/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.254.16:58:09.46/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.95 2003.254.16:58:09.57/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.687 2003.254.16:58:09.68/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.254.16:58:09.79/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,24.63 2003.254.16:58:09.90/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.16:58:09.90:scan_name=254-1659,rd0308,98 2003.254.16:58:09.90:source=0642+449,064252.98,445430.9,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.16:58:12.92:setup4f 2003.254.16:58:16.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:16.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.16:58:16.98:!2003.254.16:59:12 2003.254.16:59:12.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:59:12.02/disc_pos/177345638976,177344638976, 2003.254.16:59:12.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.16:59:12.16:!2003.254.16:59:12 2003.254.16:59:12.17:preob 2003.254.16:59:12.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:59:12.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:59:15.74/tpical/1d,7223,2u,11229,3u,14166,4u,21646,i1,14289 2003.254.16:59:15.74/tpical/9u,6045,au,14332,bu,12683,cu,6993,du,5989,eu,8969,i2,5696 2003.254.16:59:15.74/tpical/5u,17005,6u,15162,7u,13954,8d,6677,i3,39407 2003.254.16:59:18.39/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,461,i1,80 2003.254.16:59:18.39/tpzero/9u,69,au,405,bu,721,cu,518,du,613,eu,861,i2,69 2003.254.16:59:18.39/tpzero/5u,390,6u,871,7u,1149,8d,1010,i3,192 2003.254.16:59:21.48:!2003.254.16:59:22 2003.254.16:59:22.00:disc_pos 2003.254.16:59:22.00/disc_pos/177601552384,177344638976, 2003.254.16:59:22.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.16:59:22.01:midob 2003.254.16:59:22.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.16:59:22.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.16:59:22.41/cable/+3.5872121E-02 2003.254.16:59:22.48/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9427,3872 2003.254.16:59:22.55/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25589 2003.254.16:59:22.62/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7980 2003.254.16:59:22.69/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10552 2003.254.16:59:22.76/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8579 2003.254.16:59:23.32/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.16:59:23.87/tpi/1d,4911,2u,7975,3u,9612,4u,14644,i1,9427 2003.254.16:59:23.87/tpi/9u,4172,au,9784,bu,8574,cu,5220,du,4480,eu,6634,i2,3871 2003.254.16:59:23.88/tpi/5u,11004,6u,10527,7u,9505,8d,4609,i3,25574 2003.254.16:59:23.89/tpdiff/1d,2312,2u,3254,3u,4554,4u,7002,i1,4862 2003.254.16:59:23.89/tpdiff/9u,1873,au,4548,bu,4109,cu,1773,du,1509,eu,2335,i2,1825 2003.254.16:59:23.90/tpdiff/5u,6001,6u,4635,7u,4449,8d,2068,i3,13833 2003.254.16:59:23.91/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.16:59:23.92/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.16:59:23.93/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.16:59:23.93/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.16:59:23.94/tsys/1d,52.6,2u,53.5,3u,50.6,4u,52.7,i1,50.0 2003.254.16:59:23.95/tsys/9u,65.7,au,61.9,bu,57.3,cu,79.6,du,76.9,eu,74.2,i2,62.5 2003.254.16:59:23.96/tsys/5u,46.0,6u,54.2,7u,48.8,8d,45.2,i3,47.7 2003.254.16:59:24.91/fmout-gps/+7.8079E-006 2003.254.16:59:24.93:!2003.254.17:01:00 2003.254.16:59:25.00#setcl#time/318918730,4,2003,254,16,59,25.03,1.977,23.186,7 2003.254.16:59:25.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:01:00.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:01:00.01:disc_end 2003.254.17:01:00.47:disc_pos 2003.254.17:01:00.48/disc_pos/180803261800,177345638976, 2003.254.17:01:00.48:disc_check 2003.254.17:01:00.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h01m00.278s,74984,0.00250s,80000,2046909588, 2003.254.17:01:00.85:postob 2003.254.17:01:00.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 685892 : 4003 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:00.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:01:00.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 685966 : 3925 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:00.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:01:00.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 685543 : 4351 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:00.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:01:00.96/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 685751 : 4147 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:00.97/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:01:01.09/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.67 2003.254.17:01:01.20/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.254.17:01:01.31/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.17 2003.254.17:01:01.42/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.254.17:01:01.53/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.254.17:01:01.64/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.17:01:01.75/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.17:01:01.86/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.33 2003.254.17:01:01.97/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.17:01:01.97:scan_name=254-1705,rd0308,98 2003.254.17:01:01.98:source=3c371,180718.63,694857.2,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:01:05.00:setup4f 2003.254.17:01:08.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:08.94/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:01:08.97:!2003.254.17:04:58 2003.254.17:04:58.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:04:58.02/disc_pos/180803261800,180802261800, 2003.254.17:04:58.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:04:58.15:!2003.254.17:04:58 2003.254.17:04:58.16:preob 2003.254.17:04:58.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:04:58.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:05:01.73/tpical/1d,7257,2u,11318,3u,14328,4u,22029,i1,14490 2003.254.17:05:01.73/tpical/9u,6042,au,14347,bu,12703,cu,7150,du,5886,eu,8952,i2,5696 2003.254.17:05:01.73/tpical/5u,17448,6u,15568,7u,14342,8d,6846,i3,40361 2003.254.17:05:04.38/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,461,i1,85 2003.254.17:05:04.38/tpzero/9u,70,au,405,bu,722,cu,518,du,613,eu,861,i2,72 2003.254.17:05:04.38/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1148,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.17:05:07.47:!2003.254.17:05:08 2003.254.17:05:08.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:05:08.00/disc_pos/181059219456,180802261800, 2003.254.17:05:08.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:05:08.01:midob 2003.254.17:05:08.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:05:08.02/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:05:08.37/cable/+3.5872197E-02 2003.254.17:05:08.44/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9552,3864 2003.254.17:05:08.51/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,26103 2003.254.17:05:08.58/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8016 2003.254.17:05:08.65/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10798 2003.254.17:05:08.72/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8565 2003.254.17:05:09.28/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:05:09.80/tpi/1d,4921,2u,8025,3u,9700,4u,14876,i1,9548 2003.254.17:05:09.80/tpi/9u,4162,au,9767,bu,8570,cu,5392,du,4352,eu,6603,i2,3864 2003.254.17:05:09.81/tpi/5u,11219,6u,10783,7u,9733,8d,4703,i3,26108 2003.254.17:05:09.82/tpdiff/1d,2336,2u,3293,3u,4628,4u,7153,i1,4942 2003.254.17:05:09.83/tpdiff/9u,1880,au,4580,bu,4133,cu,1758,du,1534,eu,2349,i2,1832 2003.254.17:05:09.83/tpdiff/5u,6229,6u,4785,7u,4609,8d,2143,i3,14253 2003.254.17:05:09.84/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:05:09.85/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:05:09.85/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:05:09.86/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:05:09.87/tsys/1d,52.2,2u,53.3,3u,50.2,4u,52.4,i1,49.8 2003.254.17:05:09.88/tsys/9u,65.3,au,61.3,bu,57.0,cu,83.2,du,73.1,eu,73.3,i2,62.1 2003.254.17:05:09.88/tsys/5u,45.2,6u,53.9,7u,48.4,8d,44.8,i3,47.3 2003.254.17:05:09.92/fmout-gps/+7.7394E-006 2003.254.17:05:09.92:!2003.254.17:06:46 2003.254.17:05:10.00#setcl#time/318953228,3,2003,254,17,05,10.03,1.990,23.282,8 2003.254.17:05:10.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:06:46.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:06:46.00:disc_end 2003.254.17:06:46.47:disc_pos 2003.254.17:06:46.48/disc_pos/184260925992,180803261800, 2003.254.17:06:46.48:disc_check 2003.254.17:06:46.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h06m46.265s,4736,0.00250s,80000,7614006056, 2003.254.17:06:46.85:postob 2003.254.17:06:46.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 699018 : 4075 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:46.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:06:46.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 699072 : 4015 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:46.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:06:46.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 698639 : 4450 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:46.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:06:46.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 698850 : 4245 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:46.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:06:47.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.19 2003.254.17:06:47.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.80 2003.254.17:06:47.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.254.17:06:47.39/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.17:06:47.50/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,29.97 2003.254.17:06:47.61/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.17:06:47.72/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.61 2003.254.17:06:47.83/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.254.17:06:47.94/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.17:06:47.94:scan_name=254-1709,rd0308,114 2003.254.17:06:47.94:source=1606+106,160623.42,103700.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:06:50.96:setup4f 2003.254.17:06:54.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:54.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:06:54.97:!2003.254.17:08:59 2003.254.17:08:59.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:08:59.02/disc_pos/184260925992,184259925992, 2003.254.17:08:59.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:08:59.17:!2003.254.17:08:59 2003.254.17:08:59.17:preob 2003.254.17:08:59.17#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:08:59.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:09:02.75/tpical/1d,7626,2u,11854,3u,14966,4u,23164,i1,15229 2003.254.17:09:02.75/tpical/9u,6196,au,14694,bu,13015,cu,6979,du,6730,eu,9162,i2,5851 2003.254.17:09:02.75/tpical/5u,18326,6u,16269,7u,15000,8d,7130,i3,42461 2003.254.17:09:05.40/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,462,i1,87 2003.254.17:09:05.40/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,721,cu,517,du,613,eu,862,i2,70 2003.254.17:09:05.40/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1149,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.17:09:08.49:!2003.254.17:09:09 2003.254.17:09:09.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:09:09.00/disc_pos/184516657152,184259925992, 2003.254.17:09:09.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:09:09.01:midob 2003.254.17:09:09.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:09:09.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:09:09.19/cable/+3.5871279E-02 2003.254.17:09:09.26/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10282,4040 2003.254.17:09:09.33/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,28151 2003.254.17:09:09.40/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8539 2003.254.17:09:09.47/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11475 2003.254.17:09:09.54/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8930 2003.254.17:09:10.10/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:09:10.62/tpi/1d,5287,2u,8531,3u,10355,4u,16010,i1,10282 2003.254.17:09:10.62/tpi/9u,4346,au,10201,bu,8942,cu,5202,du,5154,eu,6834,i2,4045 2003.254.17:09:10.63/tpi/5u,12096,6u,11471,7u,10392,8d,4981,i3,28156 2003.254.17:09:10.64/tpdiff/1d,2339,2u,3323,3u,4611,4u,7154,i1,4947 2003.254.17:09:10.64/tpdiff/9u,1850,au,4493,bu,4073,cu,1777,du,1576,eu,2328,i2,1806 2003.254.17:09:10.65/tpdiff/5u,6230,6u,4798,7u,4608,8d,2149,i3,14305 2003.254.17:09:10.66/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:09:10.66/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:09:10.67/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:09:10.68/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:09:10.69/tsys/1d,56.2,2u,56.7,3u,54.1,4u,56.5,i1,53.6 2003.254.17:09:10.69/tsys/9u,69.3,au,65.4,bu,60.6,cu,79.1,du,86.4,eu,77.0,i2,66.0 2003.254.17:09:10.70/tsys/5u,48.8,6u,57.5,7u,52.2,8d,48.1,i3,50.8 2003.254.17:09:10.91/fmout-gps/+7.7404E-006 2003.254.17:09:10.92:!2003.254.17:11:03 2003.254.17:09:10.99#setcl#time/318977328,4,2003,254,17,09,11.03,1.984,23.349,8 2003.254.17:09:10.99#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:11:03.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:11:03.00:disc_end 2003.254.17:11:03.46:disc_pos 2003.254.17:11:03.47/disc_pos/188230100592,184260925992, 2003.254.17:11:03.47:disc_check 2003.254.17:11:03.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h11m03.270s,51752,0.00250s,80000,4254938384, 2003.254.17:11:03.84:postob 2003.254.17:11:03.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 714074 : 4168 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:03.86/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:11:03.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 714125 : 4111 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:03.87/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:11:03.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 713682 : 4556 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:03.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:11:03.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 713897 : 4345 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:03.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:11:04.03/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.94 2003.254.17:11:04.14/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.44 2003.254.17:11:04.25/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.254.17:11:04.36/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.17:11:04.47/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.254.17:11:04.58/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.17:11:04.69/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.254.17:11:04.80/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,26.62 2003.254.17:11:04.92/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.17:11:04.92:scan_name=254-1717,rd0308,258 2003.254.17:11:04.92:source=1334-127,133500.00,-124209.7,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:11:07.94:setup4f 2003.254.17:11:11.93/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:11.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:11:11.98:!2003.254.17:16:51 2003.254.17:16:51.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:16:51.01/disc_pos/188230100592,188229100592, 2003.254.17:16:51.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:16:51.15:!2003.254.17:16:51 2003.254.17:16:51.15:preob 2003.254.17:16:51.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:16:51.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:16:54.75/tpical/1d,7529,2u,11678,3u,14770,4u,22737,i1,14981 2003.254.17:16:54.75/tpical/9u,6186,au,14603,bu,12924,cu,7009,du,6151,eu,9105,i2,5827 2003.254.17:16:54.75/tpical/5u,17928,6u,15931,7u,14636,8d,6957,i3,41463 2003.254.17:16:57.40/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1281,3u,757,4u,462,i1,86 2003.254.17:16:57.40/tpzero/9u,70,au,406,bu,722,cu,518,du,612,eu,861,i2,70 2003.254.17:16:57.40/tpzero/5u,391,6u,868,7u,1148,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.17:17:00.49:!2003.254.17:17:01 2003.254.17:17:01.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:17:01.00/disc_pos/188486000640,188229100592, 2003.254.17:17:01.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:17:01.01:midob 2003.254.17:17:01.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:17:01.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:17:01.15/cable/+3.5872010E-02 2003.254.17:17:01.22/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,10071,4022 2003.254.17:17:01.29/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,27373 2003.254.17:17:01.36/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8400 2003.254.17:17:01.43/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,11207 2003.254.17:17:01.50/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8856 2003.254.17:17:02.06/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:17:02.58/tpi/1d,5196,2u,8398,3u,10152,4u,15633,i1,10063 2003.254.17:17:02.58/tpi/9u,4333,au,10126,bu,8861,cu,5280,du,4627,eu,6777,i2,4020 2003.254.17:17:02.59/tpi/5u,11770,6u,11220,7u,10106,8d,4851,i3,27377 2003.254.17:17:02.60/tpdiff/1d,2333,2u,3280,3u,4618,4u,7104,i1,4918 2003.254.17:17:02.60/tpdiff/9u,1853,au,4477,bu,4063,cu,1729,du,1524,eu,2328,i2,1807 2003.254.17:17:02.61/tpdiff/5u,6158,6u,4711,7u,4530,8d,2106,i3,14086 2003.254.17:17:02.62/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:17:02.62/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:17:02.63/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:17:02.64/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:17:02.65/tsys/1d,55.3,2u,56.4,3u,52.9,4u,55.5,i1,52.7 2003.254.17:17:02.65/tsys/9u,69.0,au,65.1,bu,60.1,cu,82.6,du,79.0,eu,76.2,i2,65.6 2003.254.17:17:02.66/tsys/5u,48.0,6u,57.1,7u,51.4,8d,47.4,i3,50.2 2003.254.17:17:02.91/fmout-gps/+7.7809E-006 2003.254.17:17:02.92:!2003.254.17:21:19 2003.254.17:17:02.99#setcl#time/319024527,4,2003,254,17,17,03.03,1.983,23.480,8 2003.254.17:17:02.99#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:21:19.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:21:19.01:disc_end 2003.254.17:21:19.47:disc_pos 2003.254.17:21:19.48/disc_pos/196807941664,188230100592, 2003.254.17:21:19.48:disc_check 2003.254.17:21:19.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h21m19.275s,45668,0.00250s,80000,11134325012, 2003.254.17:21:19.85:postob 2003.254.17:21:19.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 746607 : 4367 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:19.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:21:19.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 746661 : 4305 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:19.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:21:19.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 746184 : 4785 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:21:19.94/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 746402 : 4570 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:19.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:21:20.06/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.16 2003.254.17:21:20.17/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.80 2003.254.17:21:20.28/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.41 2003.254.17:21:20.40/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.29 2003.254.17:21:20.51/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,30.83 2003.254.17:21:20.62/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.690 2003.254.17:21:20.73/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.78 2003.254.17:21:20.84/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.76 2003.254.17:21:20.95/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.10 2003.254.17:21:20.95:scan_name=254-1727,rd0308,475 2003.254.17:21:20.95:source=1255-316,125515.17,-313905.0,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:21:23.96:setup4f 2003.254.17:21:27.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:27.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:21:27.98:!2003.254.17:26:53 2003.254.17:26:53.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:26:53.02/disc_pos/196807941664,196806941664, 2003.254.17:26:53.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:26:53.16:!2003.254.17:26:53 2003.254.17:26:53.16:preob 2003.254.17:26:53.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:26:53.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:26:56.75/tpical/1d,8201,2u,12623,3u,15977,4u,24618,i1,16280 2003.254.17:26:56.75/tpical/9u,6381,au,15090,bu,13434,cu,8689,du,23054,eu,17158 2003.254.17:26:56.75/tpical/i2,6065 2003.254.17:26:56.75/tpical/5u,19301,6u,16979,7u,15690,8d,7427,i3,44736 2003.254.17:26:59.41/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1280,3u,757,4u,462,i1,83 2003.254.17:26:59.41/tpzero/9u,69,au,406,bu,721,cu,518,du,614,eu,861,i2,76 2003.254.17:26:59.41/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1148,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.17:27:02.50:!2003.254.17:27:03 2003.254.17:27:03.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:27:03.02/disc_pos/197063933952,196806941664, 2003.254.17:27:03.02:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:27:03.03:midob 2003.254.17:27:03.03#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:27:03.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:27:03.08/cable/+3.5867729E-02 2003.254.17:27:03.15/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,11367,4258 2003.254.17:27:03.22/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,30721 2003.254.17:27:03.29/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9341 2003.254.17:27:03.36/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,12275 2003.254.17:27:03.43/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9381 2003.254.17:27:03.99/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:27:04.51/tpi/1d,5864,2u,9335,3u,11384,4u,17563,i1,11368 2003.254.17:27:04.52/tpi/9u,4543,au,10636,bu,9404,cu,7033,du,25778,eu,17002,i2,4266 2003.254.17:27:04.52/tpi/5u,13196,6u,12277,7u,11199,8d,5337,i3,30715 2003.254.17:27:04.53/tpdiff/1d,2337,2u,3288,3u,4593,4u,7055,i1,4912 2003.254.17:27:04.54/tpdiff/9u,1838,au,4454,bu,4030,cu,1656,du,-2724,eu,156,i2,1799 2003.254.17:27:04.54/tpdiff/5u,6105,6u,4702,7u,4491,8d,2090,i3,14021 2003.254.17:27:04.55/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:27:04.56/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:27:04.57/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:27:04.57/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:27:04.58?ERROR qk -211 Tsys value for device vd overflowed or was less than zero. 2003.254.17:27:04.59/tsys/1d,62.6,2u,63.7,3u,60.2,4u,63.0,i1,59.7 2003.254.17:27:04.60/tsys/9u,73.0,au,68.9,bu,64.6,cu,118.0,du,$$$$$$$$,eu,3104.0 2003.254.17:27:04.60/tsys/i2,69.9 2003.254.17:27:04.61/tsys/5u,54.5,6u,63.1,7u,58.2,8d,53.8,i3,56.6 2003.254.17:27:04.92/fmout-gps/+7.7914E-006 2003.254.17:27:04.92:!2003.254.17:34:58 2003.254.17:27:04.99#setcl#time/319084726,4,2003,254,17,27,05.03,1.979,23.647,8 2003.254.17:27:04.99#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:34:58.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:34:58.00:disc_end 2003.254.17:34:58.46:disc_pos 2003.254.17:34:58.47/disc_pos/212329332480,196807941664, 2003.254.17:34:58.47:disc_check 2003.254.17:34:58.84/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h34m58.273s,53108,0.00250s,80000,10686521744, 2003.254.17:34:58.84:postob 2003.254.17:34:58.85/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 805441 : 4755 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:34:58.85/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:34:58.87/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 805490 : 4698 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:34:58.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:34:58.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 804987 : 5205 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:34:58.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:34:58.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 805243 : 4950 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:34:58.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:34:59.03/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.90 2003.254.17:34:59.14/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.17 2003.254.17:34:59.25/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,33.15 2003.254.17:34:59.36/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.53 2003.254.17:34:59.47/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.17 2003.254.17:34:59.59/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.692 2003.254.17:34:59.70/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.98 2003.254.17:34:59.81/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,25.98 2003.254.17:34:59.92/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,54.18 2003.254.17:34:59.92:scan_name=254-1736,rd0308,145 2003.254.17:34:59.92:source=0743+259,074323.03,255625.1,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:35:02.94:setup4f 2003.254.17:35:06.92/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:35:06.93/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:35:06.96:!2003.254.17:35:52 2003.254.17:35:52.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:35:52.02/disc_pos/212329332480,212328332480, 2003.254.17:35:52.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:35:52.16:!2003.254.17:35:52 2003.254.17:35:52.16:preob 2003.254.17:35:52.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:35:52.16/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:35:55.76/tpical/1d,7265,2u,11322,3u,14243,4u,21860,i1,14437 2003.254.17:35:55.76/tpical/9u,8397,au,13333,bu,11777,cu,7966,du,11386,eu,9900,i2,6033 2003.254.17:35:55.76/tpical/5u,17085,6u,15221,7u,13923,8d,6662,i3,39516 2003.254.17:35:58.42/tpzero/1d,235,2u,1280,3u,758,4u,462,i1,83 2003.254.17:35:58.42/tpzero/9u,71,au,406,bu,722,cu,518,du,613,eu,862,i2,70 2003.254.17:35:58.42/tpzero/5u,391,6u,869,7u,1147,8d,1010,i3,191 2003.254.17:36:01.51:!2003.254.17:36:02 2003.254.17:36:02.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:36:02.00/disc_pos/212585230336,212328332480, 2003.254.17:36:02.01:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:36:02.02:midob 2003.254.17:36:02.02#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:36:02.03/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:36:02.36/cable/+3.5870446E-02 2003.254.17:36:02.43/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,9582,4292 2003.254.17:36:02.50/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,25790 2003.254.17:36:02.57/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8074 2003.254.17:36:02.64/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,10582 2003.254.17:36:02.71/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,8040 2003.254.17:36:03.27/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:36:03.79/tpi/1d,4968,2u,8075,3u,9730,4u,14836,i1,9587 2003.254.17:36:03.79/tpi/9u,6761,au,9194,bu,8052,cu,6123,du,9766,eu,7596,i2,4405 2003.254.17:36:03.80/tpi/5u,11086,6u,10576,7u,9541,8d,4626,i3,25793 2003.254.17:36:03.81/tpdiff/1d,2297,2u,3247,3u,4513,4u,7024,i1,4850 2003.254.17:36:03.81/tpdiff/9u,1636,au,4139,bu,3725,cu,1843,du,1620,eu,2304,i2,1628 2003.254.17:36:03.82/tpdiff/5u,5999,6u,4645,7u,4382,8d,2036,i3,13723 2003.254.17:36:03.83/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:36:03.83/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:36:03.84/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:36:03.85/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:36:03.86/tsys/1d,53.6,2u,54.4,3u,51.7,4u,53.2,i1,50.9 2003.254.17:36:03.86/tsys/9u,122.7,au,63.7,bu,59.0,cu,91.2,du,169.5,eu,87.7,i2,79.9 2003.254.17:36:03.87/tsys/5u,46.4,6u,54.3,7u,49.8,8d,46.2,i3,48.5 2003.254.17:36:03.91/fmout-gps/+7.7269E-006 2003.254.17:36:03.93:!2003.254.17:38:27 2003.254.17:36:04.00#setcl#time/319138625,4,2003,254,17,36,04.03,1.977,23.797,7 2003.254.17:36:04.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:38:27.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:38:27.01:disc_end 2003.254.17:38:27.47:disc_pos 2003.254.17:38:27.48/disc_pos/217291100536,212329332480, 2003.254.17:38:27.48:disc_check 2003.254.17:38:27.85/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h38m27.273s,25212,0.00250s,80000,1726259840, 2003.254.17:38:27.85:postob 2003.254.17:38:27.86/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 824250 : 4881 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:27.88/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:38:27.89/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 824298 : 4824 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:27.90/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:38:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 823793 : 5335 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:27.91/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:38:27.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 824011 : 5116 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:27.94/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:38:28.05/rx/00(FRONT),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,27.65 2003.254.17:38:28.16/rx/01(REAR),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.29 2003.254.17:38:28.27/rx/02(LO),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,32.78 2003.254.17:38:28.38/rx/03(DCAL),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,48.41 2003.254.17:38:28.49/rx/05(SUP),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.92 2003.254.17:38:28.60/rx/07(-2.73V),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,-2.695 2003.254.17:38:28.71/rx/17(PRES),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,31.95 2003.254.17:38:28.82/rx/1E(20K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,28.14 2003.254.17:38:28.93/rx/1F(70K),on,a,on,on,on,off,locked,52.79 2003.254.17:38:28.93:scan_name=254-1744,rd0308,98 2003.254.17:38:28.93:source=0955+476,095508.50,473928.6,1950.0,neutral 2003.254.17:38:31.95:setup4f 2003.254.17:38:35.94/mk5/!play_rate = 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:35.95/mk5/!mode = 0 ; 2003.254.17:38:35.98:!2003.254.17:44:13 2003.254.17:44:13.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:44:13.02/disc_pos/217291100536,217290100536, 2003.254.17:44:13.02:disc_start=on 2003.254.17:44:13.16:!2003.254.17:44:13 2003.254.17:44:13.16:preob 2003.254.17:44:13.16#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:44:13.17/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:44:16.75/tpical/1d,6990,2u,10877,3u,13686,4u,20889,i1,13776 2003.254.17:44:16.75/tpical/9u,8060,au,12588,bu,11071,cu,13844,du,5313,eu,7998,i2,6486 2003.254.17:44:16.75/tpical/5u,16388,6u,14494,7u,13295,8d,6357,i3,37535 2003.254.17:44:19.40/tpzero/1d,236,2u,1279,3u,757,4u,461,i1,83 2003.254.17:44:19.40/tpzero/9u,71,au,405,bu,721,cu,518,du,612,eu,861,i2,73 2003.254.17:44:19.40/tpzero/5u,390,6u,870,7u,1147,8d,1009,i3,191 2003.254.17:44:22.49:!2003.254.17:44:23 2003.254.17:44:23.00:disc_pos 2003.254.17:44:23.00/disc_pos/217547014144,217290100536, 2003.254.17:44:23.00:data_valid=on 2003.254.17:44:23.01:midob 2003.254.17:44:23.01#antcn#ONSOURCE/TRACKING 2003.254.17:44:23.01/onsource/TRACKING 2003.254.17:44:23.12/cable/+3.5867454E-02 2003.254.17:44:23.19/ifd/20,22,nor,nor,rem,8947,4637 2003.254.17:44:23.26/if3/13,in,2,2,,,,present,missing,500.10,rem,lock,23921 2003.254.17:44:23.33/vc02/172.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7635 2003.254.17:44:23.40/vc06/272.89,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,9945 2003.254.17:44:23.47/vc11/236.99,8.000,u,10,10,rem,lock,7446 2003.254.17:44:24.03/form/m,16,1:2,off,,3,pass,41,0x06,okay 2003.254.17:44:24.56/tpi/1d,4689,2u,7638,3u,9159,4u,13917,i1,8948 2003.254.17:44:24.56/tpi/9u,6227,au,8530,bu,7432,cu,12504,du,3983,eu,5902,i2,4856 2003.254.17:44:24.57/tpi/5u,10408,6u,9933,7u,8919,8d,4332,i3,23927 2003.254.17:44:24.58/tpdiff/1d,2301,2u,3239,3u,4527,4u,6972,i1,4828 2003.254.17:44:24.58/tpdiff/9u,1833,au,4058,bu,3639,cu,1340,du,1330,eu,2096,i2,1630 2003.254.17:44:24.59/tpdiff/5u,5980,6u,4561,7u,4376,8d,2025,i3,13608 2003.254.17:44:24.60/caltemp/1d,26.000,2u,26.000,3u,26.000,4u,26.000,i1,26.000 2003.254.17:44:24.60/caltemp/9u,30.000,au,30.000,bu,30.000,cu,30.000,du,30.000,eu,30.000 2003.254.17:44:24.61/caltemp/i2,30.000 2003.254.17:44:24.62/caltemp/5u,26.000,6u,26.000,7u,26.000,8d,26.000,i3,26.000 2003.254.17:44:24.63/tsys/1d,50.3,2u,51.0,3u,48.3,4u,50.2,i1,47.7 2003.254.17:44:24.63/tsys/9u,100.8,au,60.1,bu,55.3,cu,268.3,du,76.0,eu,72.2,i2,88.0 2003.254.17:44:24.64/tsys/5u,43.6,6u,51.7,7u,46.2,8d,42.7,i3,45.4 2003.254.17:44:24.91/fmout-gps/+7.7429E-006 2003.254.17:44:24.93:!2003.254.17:46:01 2003.254.17:44:25.00#setcl#time/319188723,4,2003,254,17,44,25.03,1.985,23.936,8 2003.254.17:44:25.00#setcl#model/old,1060111126,-75018,310571761,1.892,147.246,rate 2003.254.17:46:01.00:data_valid=off 2003.254.17:46:01.01:disc_end 2003.254.17:46:01.48:disc_pos 2003.254.17:46:01.48/disc_pos/220749046608,217291100536, 2003.254.17:46:01.49:disc_check 2003.254.17:46:01.87/disc_check/mark4,32,2003y254d17h46m01.280s,14704,0.00250s,80000,11070304436, 2003.254.17:46:01.87:postob 2003.254.17:46:01.88/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 0 : 837350 : 4978 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:46:01.89/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 1 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:46:01.90/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 2 : 837417 : 4904 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:46:01.92/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 3 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:46:01.93/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 4 : 836891 : 5434 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:46:01.95/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 5 : Probably no such disk ; 2003.254.17:46:01.97/mk5/!get_stats? 0 : 6 : 837122 : 5203 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 : 0 ; 2003.254.17:46:01.98/mk5/!get_stats? 4 : 7 : Probably no 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727721
# Presentation: 727721 ## America at the Close of the 20th Century **POPULATION PROFILE OF THE UNITED STATES: 1999** **Notes:** In years ending in zero, population censuses provide detailed information about the people living in the United States. In the meantime, people are born and die; some move and others take their place. For the years in between censuses, people who need more recent numbers rely on intercensal population estimates and survey results from the U.S. Census Bureau. The primary sources for this population profile of the United States are the Census Bureau’s Population Estimates Program, the Current Population Survey (CPS), the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), and the American Housing Survey (AHS). ## The 24 million people added to the United States between 1990 and 1999 is greater than the 1999 population of Texas and Oklahoma combined. **Notes:** Between April 1, 1990 and July 1, 1999, there were 37 million births and 21 million deaths in the United States. This natural increase, as it is called, added 16 million people to the resident population. The remainder of the increase came from a positive international migration flow that added 7.5 million more people to the population. In 1999, the South was the most populous region of the country, accounting for 96 million residents. Sixty-three million people lived in the Midwest and 61 million people lived in the West. The Northeast, with 52 million residents, had the smallest share of the U.S. population. ## Region-to-region migration favors the South and West over the Northeast and Midwest **Notes:** Migration flows within the United States produced significant internal migration losses in both the Northeast and the Midwest between 1998 and 1999. About 163,000 more people left the Northeast than moved there. And 171,000 more people left the Midwest than moved there. With a 270,000-person gain, the South was the only region of the country to experience a significant population gain due to internal migration. The net internal migration for the West, 63,000, was not significantly different than zero. ## Not all segments of the population grow at the same rate. **Notes:** As of July 1, 1999, the resident population of the United States was 273 million, a 10-percent increase over the April 1, 1990 census count. However, not all segments of the population grew at the same rate. Rapid growth in the Asian and Pacific Islander and Hispanic populations was fueled by migration from abroad. However, the Black and American Indian and Alaska Native populations also experienced relatively rapid population growth. The growth for Whites who were not of Hispanic origin was only 4 percent. Because other groups were growing faster, the White non-Hispanic share of the total population dropped from 76 percent in 1990 to 72 percent in 1999. ## In 1999, about 10 percent of the people living in the United States (26 million) were foreign born. **Notes:** Changes in the immigration laws from 1965 to 1990 contributed to increased migration from abroad and generated greater diversity among the newcomers. The foreign-born population in the United States grew from 10 million in 1970, the lowest total in this century, to 20 million in 1990. In March 1999, the estimated foreign-born population in the United States was 26 million – not statistically different than the high reached in 1997. ## Between 1990 and 1999, the population aged 45 to 54 swelled 43 percent and those aged 85 and older grew 38 percent. **Notes:** The population of the United States is growing older. In July 1999, half of all people living in the United States were aged 36 or older, almost 3 years older than the median age in April 1990. The aging of the baby boom generation, a large group of people born between 1946 and 1964 is partially responsible for this increase. As they moved into their middle years, the population aged 45 to 54 swelled 43 percent. However, the oldest age category also experienced substantial gain during this period. Between 1990 and 1999, the population aged 85 and older experienced a 38-percent gain. ## Of the 112 million year-round housing units in the United States in 1999, 52 million were in the suburbs. **Notes:** In 1999, 92 percent of the country’s 112 million year-round housing units were occupied and the American dream of homeownership was a reality for two-thirds of householders. With about three-quarters of occupied housing units owner-occupied, ownership rates were highest in the suburbs and nonmetropolitan areas. In central cities, only about half of year-round occupied housing units were owner-occupied. ## Families still dominate American households, but less so than they did 20 years ago. **Notes:** In 1980, families represented 74 percent of all households. By 1998, only 69 percent of America’s 102 million households were families – and not all families consisted of children under age 18 living with both their parents. In fact, fewer than half of all family households were composed of children under age 18 living with at least one parent. Single parents accounted for about 27 percent of all families with children. ## The number of elementary and high school students in 1998 fell just short of the all-time high of 49 million reached in 1970. - (in millions) **Notes:** About 8 million children were enrolled in nursery school or kindergarten and 33 million in elementary school in 1998. High schools and colleges accounted for about 16 million students each. ## Although the percentage of adults who are high school graduates continues to rise, the educational attainment of young adults may be leveling off. **Notes:** Over four-fifths of all adults aged 25 and older were high school graduates. One in four adults held a bachelor’s degree or higher. However, the educational attainment of young adults may be leveling off. The percentage of people aged 25 to 29 in 1999 who had completed high school was 88 percent, no different than it was in 1997 and 1998. The percentage of young adults who had completed a bachelor’s degree was 28 percent; statistically equivalent to the record high reached in 1998. ## In 1997, almost half of all adults used computers, but three out of four children did. **Notes:** At work, school, and home, the personal computer has become a basic tool. In 1997, 37 percent of American households had a computer, compared with only 8 percent in 1984. Although households with high incomes were more likely than others to have a computer, computer presence in the home rose in general across many segments of society. In 1997, almost half of all adults used computers, but three out of every four children aged 3 to 17 did. ## Family and nonfamily households had higher median incomes in 1999 than in 1998. - *Family household, - no spouse present. **Notes:** The year 1999 was the fifth consecutive year with a gain in real median income. All types of households experienced gains. Female-householder families with no spouse present saw their median increase 5 percent to $26,200. On the other hand, the percent gain for married-couple families was only about half of what it was for female-householder families. But their median income grew to $56,800. ## Between 1998 and 1999, the percent of people in poverty declined for every major racial and ethnic group. **Notes:** About 12 percent of people in the United States were classified as poor in 1999. The average poverty threshold for a family of four was $17,029. And the average income deficit for poor families – the amount needed to raise a family out of poverty – was $6,687. However, averages cannot adequately describe this phenomenon which visits all communities but burdens some more greatly than others. ## The percentage of people without health insurance was greater in 1999 than in 1987. **Notes:** The share of the population without health insurance declined in 1999 – reversing a 12-year trend. The decline was the first since 1987 when comparable health insurance statistics were first available. In 1999, 15.5 percent of the population were without health insurance coverage during the entire year, compared with 12.9 in 1987 and 16.3 percent in 1998. Between 1998 and 1999, the number of people without health insurance coverage dropped by 1.7 million, leaving 42.6 million people uninsured. Age was an important factor. With 29 percent uninsured, young adults, aged 18 to 24, were more likely than others to lack coverage during the entire year. Because of Medicare, the elderly were at the other extreme with only about 1 percent lacking coverage. About 14 percent of all children lacked health insurance. Among poor children, 23 percent were not covered in 1999. ## Almost one in five adults had some type of disability in 1997 and the likelihood of having a disability increased with age. **Notes:** Among those aged 45 to 54, 23 percent had some form of a disability and 14 percent had a severe disability. Only 4 percent needed personal assistance. For those aged 80 and older, the proportion increased to 74 percent with some disability, 58 percent with a severe disability, and 35 percent needing assistance. ## You can access Census Bureau data through: - The Census Bureau’s Web site at www.census.gov. - The Census Bureau’s customer service center at 301-457-4100. - State Data Centers: Call 301-457-1305. - Census Information Centers (For information on specific racial and ethnic groups): Call 301-457-1305. - Federal Depository Libraries: Call 888-293-6498. **Notes:** Today’s Census Bureau surveys touch on topics that the population census cannot even begin to address, such as computer use, voting behavior, and neighborhood crime. The Census Bureau supplies information that federal, state, and local governments need to govern, businesses need to stay in business, nonprofits need to serve their communities, and you need to make informed decisions. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
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SEC NEWS DIGEST Issue 2003-213 November 7, 2003 STANDARDS SETTING BOARDS APPROVAL OF PROPOSED CODE OF ETHICS The Commission approved proposed rule (PCAOB-2003-04) submitted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board concerning an ethics code to govern the conduct of its members, employees, and certain contractors and consultants. Publication of the notice is expected in the Federal Register during the week of November 10. (Rel. 34-48755) SELF-REGULATORY ORGANIZATIONS APPROVAL OF PROPOSED RULE CHANGE The Commission approved a proposed rule change (SR-NYSE-2003-24), and Amendment No. 1 thereto, submitted by the New York Stock Exchange to reduce initial and annual branch office registration fees, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2003, charged to member organizations with more than one thousand branch offices. Publication of the notice is expected in the Federal Register during the week of November 10. (Rel. 34-48749) DELISTING GRANTED An order has been issued granting the application of the Pacific Exchange to strike from listing and registration certain call and put options contracts issued by The Options Clearing Corporation, respecting the underlying common stock of the following companies, effective at the opening of business on November 7: Maytag Corp. (MYG) TXU Corp. (TXU) (Rel. 34-48751) SECURITIES ACT REGISTRATIONS The following registration statements have been filed with the SEC under the Securities Act of 1933. The reported information appears as follows: Form, Name, Address and Phone Number (if available) of the issuer of the security; Title and the number and/or face amount of the securities being offered; Name of the managing underwriter or depositor (if applicable); File number and date filed; Assigned Branch; and a designation if the statement is a New Issue. Registration statements may be obtained in person or by writing to the Commission's Public Reference Branch at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 or at the following e-mail box address: <[email protected]>. In most cases, this information is also available on the Commission's website: <www.sec.gov>. S-2 DENMARK BANCSHARES INC, 103 EAST MAIN STREET, PO BOX 130, DENMARK, WI, 54208-0130, 920-863-2161 - 2,000 ($1,450,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110272 - Nov. 6) (BR. 07) S-3 TECO ENERGY INC, 702 N FRANKLIN ST, TECO PLAZA, TAMPA, FL, 33602, 8132284111 - 3,500,000 ($46,112,500.00) Equity, (File 333-110273 - Nov. 6) (BR. 02) S-4 HARTFORD FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP INC/DE, HARTFORD PLZ, HARTFORD, CT, 06115, 8605475000 - 0 ($320,000,000.00) Non-Convertible Debt, (File 333-110274 - Nov. 6) (BR. 01) S-8 ALBERTO CULVER CO, 2525 ARMITAGE AVE, MELROSE PARK, IL, 60160, 7084503039 - 0 ($2,433,841.00) Equity, (File 333-110275 - Nov. 6) (BR. 02) S-8 ALBERTO CULVER CO, 2525 ARMITAGE AVE, MELROSE PARK, IL, 60160, 7084503039 - 0 ($71,359,311.00) Equity, (File 333-110276 - Nov. 6) (BR. 02) S-3 STANLEY WORKS, 1000 STANLEY DR, P O BOX 7000, NEW BRITAIN, CT, 06053, 8602255111 - 900,000,000 ($900,000,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110279 - Nov. 6) (BR. 06) S-3 WELLS FARGO ASSET SECURITIES CORP, 7485 NEW HORIZON WAY, FREDERICK, MD, 21703, 3018468881 - 0 ($15,000,000,000.00) Mortgage Backed Securities, (File 333-110283 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-8 BARAN GROUP LTD, BARAN HOUSE, 8 OMARIM ST INDUSTRIAL PARK, OMER ISRAEL, L3, 84965, 116,000 ($814,320.00) Other, (File 333-110286 - Nov. 6) (BR. ) S-1 ESSEX CORPORATION, 9150 GILFORD RD, COLUMBIA, MD, 21046, 3019397000 - 4,250,000 ($40,417,500.00) Equity, (File 333-110287 - Nov. 6) (BR. 06) S-1 PORTEC RAIL PRODUCTS INC, 0 ($28,750,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110288 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-3 INVISION TECHNOLOGIES INC, 7151 GATEWAY BLVD, NEWARK, CA, 94560, 5107392400 - 0 ($125,000,000.00) Debt Convertible into Equity, (File 333-110289 - Nov. 6) (BR. 36) S-4 RAYOVAC CORP, 601 RAYOVAC DR, MADISON, WI, 53711-2497, 6082753340 - 0 ($350,000,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110290 - Nov. 6) (BR. 36) S-4 ACG HOLDINGS INC, 225 HIGH RIDGE RD, STAMFORD, CT, 06905, 6153770377 - 0 ($280,000,000.00) Other, (File 333-110291 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-3 MYKROLIS CORP, 80 ASHBY ROAD, BEDFORD, MA, 01730, 8006455476 - 0 ($200,000,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110292 - Nov. 6) (BR. 36) S-8 WASTE MANAGEMENT INC, 1001 FANNIN STREET, STE 4000, HOUSTON, TX, 77002, 7135126200 - 500,000 ($12,940,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110293 - Nov. 6) (BR. 06) S-3 AMERADA HESS CORP, 1185 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, NY, 10036, 2129978500 - 0 ($1,500,000,000.00) Other, (File 333-110294 - Nov. 6) (BR. 04) S-8 FIRST AVENUE NETWORKS INC, 230 COURT SQUARE, SUITE 202, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA, 22902, 434 220 4988 - 0 ($284,165.00) Equity, (File 333-110295 - Nov. 6) (BR. 37) S-3 ORIENT EXPRESS HOTELS LTD, 41 CEDAR AVE, PO BOX HM 1179, HAMILTON HM EX BERMU, D0, 00000, 2127323200 - 0 ($59,374,500.00) Equity, (File 333-110296 - Nov. 6) (BR. 08) S-3 ELECTRONIC CLEARING HOUSE INC, 28001 DOROTHY DR, AGOURA HILLS, CA, 91301-2697, 8187068999 - 437,957 ($3,218,984.00) Equity, (File 333-110297 - Nov. 6) (BR. 07) SB-2 AUTO DATA NETWORK, 1 ROCKEFELLER PLAZA - SUITE 1600, NEW YORK, NY, 10020, 2125214497 - 6,831,000 ($15,413,750.00) Equity, (File 333-110298 - Nov. 6) (BR. 08) S-8 REDOX TECHNOLOGY CORP, 340 N SAM HOUSTON PKWY E, STE 250, HOUSTON, TX, 77060, 7134450020 - 3,600,000 ($108,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110299 - Nov. 6) (BR. 09) SB-2 SKYPATH NETWORKS INC, 300 METRO CENTER BLVD, SUITE 150A, WARWICK, RI, 02886, 4019211200 - 3,120,000 ($3,010,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110300 - Nov. 6) (BR. ) S-8 SCHOLASTIC CORP, 555 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY, 10012, 2123436100 - 0 ($15,320,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110301 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-8 SCHOLASTIC CORP, 555 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY, 10012, 2123436100 - 0 ($8,272,800.00) Equity, (File 333-110302 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-3 TIBCO SOFTWARE INC, 3165 PORTER DRIVE, PALO ALTO, CA, 94304, 6508465000 - 0 ($381,600,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110304 - Nov. 6) (BR. 03) N-2 FLOATING RATE INCOME STRATEGIES FUND II INC, 800 SCUDDERS MILL ROAD, PLAINSBORO, NJ, 08536, 6092822800 - 50,000 ($1,000,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110305 - Nov. 6) (BR. 17) S-3 QLT INC/BC, 6047077000 - 172,500,000 ($172,500,000.00) Debt Convertible into Equity, (File 333-110306 - Nov. 6) (BR. 01) S-3 MAKEMUSIC INC, 6210 BURY DRIVE, EDEN PRAIRIE, MN, 55346, 9529379611 - 0 ($5,935,602.00) Equity, (File 333-110307 - Nov. 6) (BR. 03) S-8 MAKEMUSIC INC, 6210 BURY DRIVE, EDEN PRAIRIE, MN, 55346, 9529379611 - 0 ($1,912,500.00) Equity, (File 333-110308 - Nov. 6) (BR. 03) S-8 EAGLE BROADBAND INC, 101 COURAGEOUS DR, LEAGUE CITY, TX, 77573, 2815386000 - 3,500,000 ($4,025,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110309 - Nov. 6) (BR. 37) S-8 OVERNITE CORP, 1000 SEMMES AVENUE, P O BOX 1216, RICHMOND, VA, 23218, 8042318000 - 3,500,000 ($76,055,000.00) Equity, (File 333-110310 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) S-8 OVERNITE CORP, 1000 SEMMES AVENUE, P O BOX 1216, RICHMOND, VA, 23218, 8042318000 - 0 ($27,346,000.00) Other, (File 333-110311 - Nov. 6) (BR. 05) RECENT 8K FILINGS Form 8-K is used by companies to file current reports on the following events: Item 1. Changes in Control of Registrant. Item 2. Acquisition or Disposition of Assets. Item 3. Bankruptcy or Receivership. Item 4. Changes in Registrant's Certifying Accountant. Item 5. Other Materially Important Events. Item 6. Resignations of Registrant's Directors. Item 7. Financial Statements and Exhibits. Item 8. Change in Fiscal Year. Item 9. Regulation FD Disclosure. Item 10. Amendments to the Registrant's Code of Ethics, or Waiver of a Provision of the Code of Ethics. Item 11. Temporary Suspension of Trading Under Registrant's Employee Benefit Plans. Item 12. Results of Operations and Financial Condition. The following companies have filed 8-K reports for the date indicated and/or amendments to 8-K reports previously filed, responding to the item(s) of the form specified. 8-K reports may be obtained in person or by writing to the Commission's Public Reference Branch at 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 or at the following e-mail box address: <[email protected]>. In most cases, this information is also available on the Commission's website: <www.sec.gov>. STATE 8K ITEM NO. NAME OF ISSUER CODE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 DATE COMMENT ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 21ST CENTURY INSURANCE GROUP CA X 11/05/03 21ST CENTURY TECHNOLOGIES INC NV X 11/05/03 A CONSULTING TEAM INC NY X X 11/06/03 ABERCROMBIE & FITCH CO /DE/ DE X 11/06/03 ABN AMRO MORTGAGE MULTI-CLASS MOR PAS DE X X 11/01/03 ACETO CORP NY X X 11/06/03 ACG HOLDINGS INC DE X X 11/06/03 ACME COMMUNICATIONS INC DE X 11/06/03 ACTION PERFORMANCE COMPANIES INC AZ X X 11/05/03 ACTIVISION INC /NY DE X X 11/06/03 ADVO INC DE X X 11/06/03 AEGIS COMMUNICATIONS GROUP INC DE X X 11/05/03 AEROFLEX INC DE X X 09/30/03 AEROSONIC CORP /DE/ DE X X 10/31/03 AGWAY INC DE X 11/06/03 AKSYS LTD DE X 11/06/03 ALAMOSA DELAWARE INC DE X X 11/06/03 ALAMOSA HOLDINGS INC DE X X 11/06/03 ALLETE INC MN X 11/06/03 ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT HOLDING L DE X X 11/06/03 ALLIANCE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT L P DE X X 11/06/03 ALLOS THERAPEUTICS INC DE X X 11/06/03 ALTRIA GROUP INC VA X X X 11/05/03 ALTUS EXPLORATIONS INC NV X X X 10/22/03 AMB PROPERTY CORP MD X X 10/06/03 AMB PROPERTY LP DE X X 10/06/03 AMERADA HESS CORP DE X X 11/06/03 AMERICAN ACCESS TECHNOLOGIES INC FL X X 10/30/03 AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR CO /MN/ MN X 11/05/03 AMERICAN EAGLE OUTFITTERS INC DE X X X 11/04/03 AMERICAN MORTGAGE ACCEPTANCE CO MA X X 11/06/03 AMERICAN RESIDENTIAL INVESTMENT TRUST MD X X 11/06/03 AMERICAN RESTAURANT GROUP INC DE X X 10/31/03 AMERICAN RETIREMENT CORP TN X X X 11/06/03 AMERICAN RETIREMENT CORP TN X X 11/06/03 AMERICAN SAFETY INSURANCE HOLDINGS LT X 09/30/03 AMERICAN SUPERCONDUCTOR CORP /DE/ DE X 11/06/03 AMERICAN TECHNOLOGY CORP /DE/ DE X X 11/06/03 AMERIQUEST MORTGAGE SECURITIES INC DE X X 11/05/03 ANALYTICAL SURVEYS INC CO X X 11/06/03 APOGEE TECHNOLOGY INC DE X X 11/05/03 APPLETON PAPERS INC/WI X X 11/06/03 AQUILA INC DE X X 11/06/03 ASHFORD HOSPITALITY TRUST INC MD X X 11/05/03 ATRIUM COMPANIES INC DE X X 11/06/03 AURORA FOODS INC /DE/ DE X X 11/05/03 AUTOCORP EQUITIES INC NV X X 10/29/03 AMEND AUTOZONE INC NV X X 11/03/03 BANC OF AMERICA COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE I DE X X 11/05/03 BANC OF AMERICA COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE I DE X X 11/05/03 BARR LABORATORIES INC NY X 11/06/03 BEAR STEARNS ASSET BACKED SECURITIES DE X 10/01/03 BEBE STORES INC CA X X 10/31/03 BECTON DICKINSON & CO NJ X X 11/06/03 BELL INDUSTRIES INC /NEW/ CA X X 11/06/03 BIOANALYTICAL SYSTEMS INC IN X X 10/31/03 BIRNER DENTAL MANAGEMENT SERVICES INC CO X 11/04/03 BORLAND SOFTWARE CORP DE X X 11/03/03 BOSTON PROPERTIES INC DE X X 10/21/03 AMEND BOSTON PROPERTIES LTD PARTNERSHIP X X 10/21/03 AMEND BROWN SHOE CO INC NY X X 11/06/03 BROWN TOM INC /DE DE X 11/06/03 BRUKER BIOSCIENCES CORP DE X 11/05/03 C-CHIP TECHNOLOGIES CORP NV X X 11/06/03 CAGLES INC GA X 11/06/03 CALIPER TECHNOLOGIES CORP DE X 11/06/03 CALPINE CORP DE X 11/05/03 CALPINE CORP DE X 11/06/03 CAPITAL VENTURES GROUP I INC FL X 11/05/03 CAPSTONE TURBINE CORP DE X 11/06/03 CARMAX AUTO FUNDING LLC DE X X 10/30/03 CARNIVAL CORP DE X X 11/05/03 CARNIVAL PLC X X 11/05/03 CARRIZO OIL & GAS INC TX X 09/30/03 CATALINA MARKETING CORP/DE DE X X 11/03/03 CATALYTICA ENERGY SYSTEMS INC DE X X 11/06/03 CELLEGY PHARMACEUTICALS INC CA X X 11/06/03 CENDANT MORT CAPITAL LLC CDMC MORT PA DE X 10/27/03 CENDANT MORTGAGE CAP LLC CDMC MORT PA DE X 10/27/03 CENTRAL PARKING CORP TN X X 11/06/03 CERAMICS PROCESS SYSTEMS CORP/DE/ DE X 09/27/03 CERES GROUP INC DE X X 11/05/03 CERTIFIED SERVICES INC NV X X 10/31/03 CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS INC /MO/ DE X X 11/05/03 CHECKPOINT SYSTEMS INC PA X X 11/05/03 CHELSEA PROPERTY GROUP INC MD X X 11/04/03 CHILDRENS PLACE RETAIL STORES INC X X 11/06/03 CIMBIX CORP WA X 11/05/03 CITIZENS COMMUNICATIONS CO DE X 09/30/03 CLECO CORP LA X X 11/06/03 CLOROX CO /DE/ DE X 11/06/03 COAST DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM INC DE X X 11/04/03 COMMERCIAL CAPITAL BANCORP INC NV X X 11/06/03 COMMERCIAL METALS CO DE X X 11/05/03 COMMERCIAL METALS CO DE X X X 11/06/03 COMMUNITY CAPITAL BANCSHARES INC X 10/30/03 COMPUDYNE CORP NV X 11/06/03 CONCENTRA OPERATING CORP NV X X 11/05/03 CONCORD CAMERA CORP NJ X 11/06/03 CONRAD INDUSTRIES INC DE X X X 11/05/03 CORIXA CORP DE X X 11/06/03 CORNERSTONE REALTY INCOME TRUST INC VA X 11/05/03 CORRECTIONS CORP OF AMERICA MD X X 11/05/03 COST PLUS INC/CA/ CA X X 11/06/03 COST U LESS INC WA X X X 11/04/03 COURIER CORP MA X X 11/06/03 CRDENTIA CORP DE X X 11/04/03 CREDIT & ASSET REPACKAGING VEHICLE CO DE X 11/01/03 CROWN MEDIA HOLDINGS INC DE X X X 11/05/03 CUBIST PHARMACEUTICALS INC DE X X 11/05/03 CURIS INC DE X 11/03/03 CYBERONICS INC DE X X 11/05/03 DEERE & CO DE X 11/06/03 DELTATHREE INC DE X X 11/06/03 DENMARK BANCSHARES INC WI X 11/06/03 DEVON ENERGY CORP/DE DE X X 11/06/03 DIGENE CORP DE X X 11/06/03 DIGI INTERNATIONAL INC DE X X 11/06/03 DIMON INC VA X X 11/06/03 DOLLAR GENERAL CORP TN X X X 11/06/03 DOLLAR TREE STORES INC VA X X 11/06/03 DRUCKER INC DE X X X X X 11/04/03 AMEND DURECT CORP DE X X 11/06/03 DURECT CORP DE X 11/06/03 DYCOM INDUSTRIES INC FL X X 11/06/03 E THE MOVIE NETWORKS FL X X X X 11/05/03 ECOLOGY & ENVIRONMENT INC NY X X 10/31/03 AMEND EDAC TECHNOLOGIES CORP WI X X 11/04/03 EDT LEARNING INC DE X X 11/06/03 EGAIN COMMUNICATIONS CORP DE X X 11/06/03 ELOYALTY CORP DE X X 11/06/03 ENCORE CAPITAL GROUP INC DE X 11/05/03 ENCYSIVE PHARMACEUTICALS INC DE X X 11/06/03 ENZON PHARMACEUTICALS INC DE X X 11/06/03 EQUITY INNS INC TN X X 11/06/03 ESSEX CORPORATION VA X X 11/06/03 EUNIVERSE INC DE X X 11/03/03 EXCELLIGENCE LEARNING CORP DE X 11/05/03 EXPLORATION CO OF DELAWARE INC DE X X X 09/30/03 EXTENDICARE HEALTH SERVICES INC DE X X 11/06/03 FACTORY 2 U STORES INC DE X X 11/05/03 FARMLAND INDUSTRIES INC KS X X 10/31/03 FEDERATED DEPARTMENT STORES INC /DE/ DE X 11/06/03 FINLAY ENTERPRISES INC /DE DE X X 11/06/03 FINLAY FINE JEWELRY CORP DE X X 11/06/03 FIRST FEDERAL BANKSHARES INC DE X X 10/31/03 AMEND FIRST FRANKLIN MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 20 DE X X 10/27/03 FIRST FRANKLIN MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 20 DE X X 10/27/03 FIRST FRANKLIN MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 20 DE X X 10/27/03 FIRST NATIONAL BANKSHARES CORP WV X 11/06/03 FIRST PLACE FINANCIAL CORP /DE/ DE X X 11/06/03 FIRST REGIONAL BANCORP CA X X 10/30/03 FISHER COMMUNICATIONS INC WA X X 10/23/03 FLAGSTAR BANCORP INC MI X 10/22/03 FLORIDAFIRST BANCORP INC FL X X 11/03/03 FLOWERS FOODS INC GA X X 11/06/03 FNB BANCSHARES INC /SC/ SC X X 11/05/03 FOOT LOCKER INC NY X X 11/06/03 GAP INC DE X X X 11/06/03 GASCO ENERGY INC NV X X 11/06/03 GENERAL COMMUNICATION INC AK X X 11/05/03 GLOBAL BUSINESS RESOURCES INC DE X 11/05/03 GOLDEN PATRIOT CORP NV X 11/06/03 GOLDEN TELECOM INC DE X X 11/05/03 GRANITE CONSTRUCTION INC DE X X 11/05/03 GREEN MOUNTAIN POWER CORP VT X 11/04/03 GREENWICH CAPITAL ACCEPTANCE INC THOR DE X X 10/27/03 GREENWICH CAPITAL ACCEPTANCE THORNBUR DE X X 10/27/03 GREG MANNING AUCTIONS INC NY X 09/18/03 AMEND GS MORTGAGE SECURITIES CORP MORT PAS DE X X 10/27/03 GUILFORD PHARMACEUTICALS INC DE X 11/06/03 GYMBOREE CORP DE X X X 11/06/03 H&E EQUIPMENT SERVICES LLC LA X X 11/06/03 HALLIBURTON CO DE X 11/06/03 HANGER ORTHOPEDIC GROUP INC DE X X 10/30/03 HARTFORD FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP INC DE X 11/05/03 HARVEST NATURAL RESOURCES INC DE X 11/06/03 HCA INC/TN DE X X 10/31/03 HCC INSURANCE HOLDINGS INC/DE/ DE X X 11/06/03 HEALTH NET INC DE X 11/04/03 HEALTHETECH INC X X 11/06/03 HEARTLAND BANCSHARES INC /IN/ IN X X 11/03/03 HIENERGY TECHNOLOGIES INC DE X 10/30/03 HINES HORTICULTURE INC DE X X 11/06/03 HORNBECK OFFSHORE SERVICES INC /LA DE X X 11/06/03 HOUSTON EXPLORATION CO DE X X 11/06/03 IMMUNOGEN INC MA X X 11/06/03 IMPAC MORTGAGE HOLDINGS INC MD X X 11/05/03 INFONET SERVICES CORP X X 11/06/03 INNOTRAC CORP GA X X 11/06/03 INSTANET INC CO X 06/25/03 AMEND INTEGRATED BIOPHARMA INC DE X X X 10/22/03 INTELIDATA TECHNOLOGIES CORP DE X X 11/06/03 INTER PARFUMS INC DE X 11/05/03 INTERNET CAPITAL GROUP INC DE X X 11/06/03 INTERNET PICTURES CORP DE X 11/06/03 INTERPOOL INC DE X X X 11/05/03 ITLA CAPITAL CORP CA X 11/03/03 JAMESON INNS INC GA X X 11/06/03 JO-ANN STORES INC OH X 11/04/03 JO-ANN STORES INC OH X 11/06/03 JONES LANG LASALLE INC MD X X 11/05/03 KARMA MEDIA INC NV X 11/06/03 KCS ENERGY INC DE X X X 11/06/03 KEITH COMPANIES INC CA X X X 11/05/03 KEY TECHNOLOGY INC OR X X 11/06/03 KEYSPAN CORP NY X X 09/30/03 KEYSTONE PROPERTY TRUST MD X X 11/06/03 KINDRED HEALTHCARE INC DE X X 11/05/03 KOHLS CORPORATION WI X 11/06/03 LA JOLLA PHARMACEUTICAL CO DE X 11/06/03 LANDACORP INC DE X 11/05/03 LAUREL CAPITAL GROUP INC PA X X 10/31/03 LEAP WIRELESS INTERNATIONAL INC DE X X 10/22/03 LEHMAN ABS CORP BACKED TR CERT GA PAC DE X X 10/30/03 LEHMAN ABS CORP BACKED TRUST CERTS SE DE X X 10/30/03 LEHMAN ABS CORP FIFTH THIRD HOME EQUI DE X 10/27/03 LEHMAN ABS CORP SPRINT CAPITAL BACK S DE X X 10/29/03 LEHMAN BROTHERS HOLDINGS INC DE X 11/06/03 LEUCADIA NATIONAL CORP NY X X 11/05/03 LINCOLN INTERNATIONAL CORP KY X 10/31/03 LIPID SCIENCES INC/ AZ X 11/06/03 LONG BEACH ACCEPTANCE CORP X X 11/04/03 LOUDEYE CORP DE X 11/06/03 LUBRIZOL CORP OH X X 11/06/03 AMEND LUCILLE FARMS INC DE X X 11/06/03 M & F WORLDWIDE CORP DE X 11/06/03 MACK CALI REALTY CORP MD X X 11/05/03 MAIN STREET & MAIN INC DE X 11/06/03 MAIN STREET BANKS INC /NEW/ GA X X 11/06/03 MANITOWOC CO INC WI X X 11/06/03 MARCONI CORP PLC X0 X 11/06/03 MASSEY ENERGY CO DE X X 11/05/03 MBNA CORP MD X 11/06/03 MBNA CORP MD X 11/06/03 MCDATA CORP DE X X 11/05/03 MEASUREMENT SPECIALTIES INC NJ X 11/04/03 MEDICAL STAFFING NETWORK HOLDINGS INC DE X X 11/06/03 MEDTOX SCIENTIFIC INC DE X 11/04/03 MERCHANTS & MANUFACTURERS BANCORPORAT WI X X 11/01/03 META GROUP INC DE X X 11/06/03 MEVC DRAPER FISHER JURVETSON FUND I I DE X 11/06/03 MGP INGREDIENTS INC KS X X X 11/06/03 MICHAELS STORES INC DE X 11/06/03 MICRON ENVIRO SYSTEMS INC NV X 11/06/03 MIDDLESEX WATER CO NJ X 11/05/03 MIKOHN GAMING CORP NV X X 09/30/03 MILASTAR CORP DE X 11/06/03 MODTECH HOLDINGS INC CA X X 11/05/03 MOLINA HEALTHCARE INC DE X X 11/05/03 MORTGAGE ASSET SECURITIZATION TRANSAC DE X 11/06/03 MOSSIMO INC DE X X X 11/06/03 MPOWER HOLDING CORP DE X 09/30/03 MQ ASSOCIATES INC X X 11/06/03 MSC INDUSTRIAL DIRECT CO INC NY X X 11/04/03 MUZAK HOLDINGS FINANCE CORP DE X X 11/06/03 MUZAK HOLDINGS LLC DE X X 11/06/03 NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORP DE X X 09/05/03 NCO GROUP INC PA X X X 11/04/03 NEIMAN MARCUS GROUP INC DE X X 11/06/03 NEOPROBE CORP DE X X 11/05/03 NETWORK ENGINES INC DE X 11/06/03 NEW FRONTIER MEDIA INC CO X 11/06/03 NEW YORK COMMUNITY BANCORP INC DE X X 11/05/03 NEWPARK RESOURCES INC DE X X 11/06/03 NEWTECH RESOURCES LTD X X 11/03/03 NORDSTROM INC WA X X 11/06/03 NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORP VA X X 11/06/03 NORTEK INC DE X 10/04/03 NORTEK INC DE X 10/04/03 NORTH AMERICAN GALVANIZING & COATINGS DE X 10/05/03 NORTH COAST ENERGY INC / DE/ DE X X 11/06/03 NORTH VALLEY BANCORP CA X 11/06/03 NPS PHARMACEUTICALS INC DE X 11/06/03 NVIDIA CORP DE X 11/06/03 OCCAM NETWORKS INC/DE DE X X 11/04/03 OCCAM NETWORKS INC/DE DE X X 11/04/03 ODYSSEY MARINE EXPLORATION INC NV X 11/06/03 OFFSHORE LOGISTICS INC DE X X 09/30/03 OHIO CASUALTY CORP OH X X 09/30/03 ORBIT INTERNATIONAL CORP DE X 11/06/03 ORTHOLOGIC CORP DE X 11/06/03 OSHKOSH B GOSH INC DE X X 11/06/03 PACIFIC ENTERPRISES INC CA X 11/06/03 PACIFIC GOLD CORP NV X X 11/05/03 PACIFIC VEGAS GLOBAL STRATEGIES INC CO X 03/11/03 AMEND PALATIN TECHNOLOGIES INC DE X 11/01/03 PALMETTO BANCSHARES INC SC X X 11/03/03 PAMRAPO BANCORP INC DE X X 10/29/03 PARAGON FINANCIAL CORP DE X 11/06/03 PDI INC DE X X 11/05/03 PEAPACK GLADSTONE FINANCIAL CORP NJ X 11/03/03 PENN VIRGINIA CORP VA X X 11/06/03 PENN VIRGINIA RESOURCE PARTNERS L P DE X X 11/06/03 PENTON MEDIA INC DE X X 11/06/03 PEOPLES OHIO FINANCIAL CORP OH X 11/06/03 PEPSICO INC NC X X 11/05/03 PERCEPTRON INC/MI MI X X 11/06/03 PETRO HOLDINGS FINANCIAL CORP DE X X 10/28/03 PETRO STOPPING CENTERS HOLDINGS LP DE X X 11/06/03 PETROQUEST ENERGY INC DE X X 11/06/03 PFF BANCORP INC DE X 11/06/03 PHARMACOPEIA INC DE X X 11/04/03 PIEDMONT NATURAL GAS CO INC NC X X 11/06/03 PILGRIMS PRIDE CORP DE X 11/05/03 PIONEER DRILLING CO TX X X 11/06/03 PIXAR \CA\ CA X 11/06/03 PLAINS EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION CO DE X X X 11/06/03 PMA CAPITAL CORP PA X 11/06/03 POLYONE CORP X X 11/06/03 PRAB INC MI X X 11/03/03 PRELUDE VENTURES INC NV X X X 10/09/03 PRIME GROUP REALTY TRUST MD X X 11/05/03 PRIMUS TELECOMMUNICATIONS GROUP INC DE X X 11/06/03 PSYCHIATRIC SOLUTIONS INC DE X X 11/03/03 PUBLIC STORAGE INC /CA CA X 11/06/03 PURE CYCLE CORP DE X 11/06/03 PXRE GROUP LTD X X 11/05/03 QUALITY SYSTEMS INC CA X X 10/30/03 R & B INC PA X X 10/27/03 RALCORP HOLDINGS INC /MO MO X X 11/06/03 RAMPART CAPITAL CORP TX X X 11/06/03 RANGE RESOURCES CORP DE X X 11/04/03 REGIONS FINANCIAL CORP DE X X 11/06/03 RENAISSANCE MORT ACCEPT CORP HOME EQ DE X X 10/27/03 RENAISSANCE MORT ACCEPT CORP HOME EQU DE X 11/06/03 RES CARE INC /KY/ KY X 11/06/03 RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORT PRODUCT GMACM DE X X 10/19/03 ROCKWELL AUTOMATION INC DE X 11/06/03 ROSS STORES INC DE X X 11/06/03 ROXIO INC DE X 11/06/03 ROYAL GOLD INC DE X 11/06/03 RUDDICK CORP NC X 11/05/03 SAGA COMMUNICATIONS INC DE X X 11/06/03 SAKS INC TN X X 11/06/03 SALON MEDIA GROUP INC DE X X 10/30/03 SALTON INC DE X X 11/06/03 SAN DIEGO GAS & ELECTRIC CO CA X 11/06/03 SAUL CENTERS INC MD X X 11/04/03 SEARS ROEBUCK ACCEPTANCE CORP DE X X 11/06/03 SEITEL INC DE X X 11/05/03 SEMPRA ENERGY CA X 11/06/03 SEROLOGICALS CORP DE X 11/06/03 SGC HOLDINGS INC X 10/20/03 SHOE CARNIVAL INC IN X 11/06/03 SIMULA INC AZ X X X 11/06/03 SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP INC MD X 11/06/03 SMART & FINAL INC/DE DE X X 11/04/03 SPECTRX INC DE X X 11/06/03 SPIEGEL INC DE X 11/06/03 SPINNAKER EXPLORATION CO DE X 11/04/03 ST MARY LAND & EXPLORATION CO DE X X 11/05/03 ST MARY LAND & EXPLORATION CO DE X X 11/06/03 AMEND STANDARD COMMERCIAL CORP NC X X 11/05/03 STATION CASINOS INC NV X 11/06/03 STRUCTURED ASSET INV LOAN MORT PASS T NY X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET INV LOAN MORT PASS T NY X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET MORT INV MORT PASS T NY X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET MORTGAGE INV INC MOR NY X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET MORTGAGE INVESTMENTS X X 10/28/03 STRUCTURED ASSET SEC CORP MORT PAS TH DE X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET SEC CORP MORT PAS TH DE X X 10/27/03 STRUCTURED ASSET SEC CORP MORT PASS T DE X X 10/27/03 SUPERIOR TELECOM INC DE X X X 10/22/03 SURETY HOLDINGS CORP DE X 11/06/03 SYNAGRO TECHNOLOGIES INC DE X X 11/06/03 SYNOVIS LIFE TECHNOLOGIES INC MN X X 11/06/03 TABLE TRAC INC NV X 10/28/03 TALBOTS INC DE X 11/06/03 TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS INC DE X X 11/06/03 TAYLOR ANN STORES CORP DE X X 11/06/03 TERAYON COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS DE X X 11/06/03 TEXAS CAPITAL BANCSHARES INC/TX DE X X 10/22/03 TII NETWORK TECHNOLOGIES INC DE X 11/05/03 TRIUMPH GROUP INC / DE X X 10/30/03 TRIZEC PROPERTIES INC DE X X 11/06/03 TRIZEC PROPERTIES INC DE X 11/05/03 TROPICAL SPORTSWEAR INTERNATIONAL COR FL X 11/06/03 TROVER SOLUTIONS INC DE X X 11/05/03 UICI DE X X 11/06/03 ULTRA PETROLEUM CORP X 11/04/03 ULTRALIFE BATTERIES INC DE X X 11/06/03 UNI MARTS INC DE X X 11/05/03 UNITED GUARDIAN INC DE X X 11/05/03 UNITED THERAPEUTICS CORP DE X X 11/06/03 UNUMPROVIDENT CORP DE X 11/05/03 US AIRWAYS GROUP INC DE X X 11/06/03 UWHARRIE CAPITAL CORP NC X 11/06/03 VALPEY FISHER CORP MD X X 11/06/03 VIASAT INC CA X X 11/06/03 VILLAGEWORLD COM INC NY X X 11/06/03 VINTAGE PETROLEUM INC DE X 11/05/03 VITA FOOD PRODUCTS INC NV X X 10/31/03 WABASH NATIONAL CORP /DE DE X 11/06/03 WARRANTECH CORP DE X X X 11/06/03 WEBMD CORP /NEW/ DE X X X 11/06/03 WELLS FINANCIAL CORP MN X X 11/05/03 WESTPORT RESOURCES CORP /NV/ NV X X 11/06/03 WHITEHALL JEWELLERS INC DE X X 10/29/03 WILLBROS GROUP INC R1 X 11/05/03 WILLIAMS COMPANIES INC DE X X X 11/06/03 WILLIAMS SCOTSMAN INC MD X X 09/30/03 WILMINGTON REXFORD INC DE X X X 10/30/03 AMEND WIND RIVER SYSTEMS INC DE X X 11/05/03 WINDROSE MEDICAL PROPERTIES TRUST MD X X 11/06/03 WOLOHAN LUMBER CO MI X X 11/05/03 XM SATELLITE RADIO HOLDINGS INC DE X 11/06/03 ZALE CORP DE X X 11/05/03 ZAMBA CORP DE X 11/06/03 ZAMBA CORP DE X 11/06/03 AMEND ZOLL MEDICAL CORPORATION MA X X 09/28/03 ZOMAX INC /MN/ MN X X X 11/06/03 ZYMOGENETICS INC WA X X 11/06/03
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![](media/image1.png){width="1.125in" height="0.8958333333333334in"} Request for NCPC Images and Text **Part I** Name: Organization: Address: State: Zip: Email: **[Note:]{.underline} NCPC requests that a courtesy line accompany its images and/or text. If you wish to use the same image(s) and/or text for future purposes, please submit a new request form.** What precise image(s) and/or text do you wish to use (please note the source document, page number, description): How do you intend to use NCPC's image(s) and/or text (please note the name and date of the intended publication, presentation, or other purpose and describe how the image and/or text will be integrated): What is your deadline for receiving the requested materials? How did you become aware of the image(s)/text that you seek? **Please email or fax your completed form to Stephen Staudigl at [email protected] or 202-482-7272.** *\* Please note that there is generally a two-week turnaround time following the initial receipt of this form \** *(Once request is approved, NCPC will return this form to you for completion of Part II.)* \*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\* **Part II** ***NCPC requests that the following courtesy line appear with its image(s) and/or text:*** ***Please provide your name and signature below:*** Name: Signature: Date: \*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\* **NCPC USE ONLY** This request has been: Approved Request completed by: ate:
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HQ W231595 May 19, 2008 OT:RR:CTF:ER LIQ-15 HQ W231595 ECD Mr. Robert Blanchard Assistant Port Director, Trade U.S. Customs and Border Protection 198 West Service Road Champlain, New York 12919 RE: Application for Further Review of Protest No. 0712-06-100148: Requirement for Country of Origin Certificate for Natural Gas Importations from Canada Pursuant to the North American Free Trade Agreement Dear Mr. Blanchard: The following is our decision regarding the Application for Further Review ("AFR") of Protest No. 0712-06-100148 (the "Protest") filed by Constellation Energy Commodities Group Inc. ("Constellation Energy" or "protestant"), which we received from your office on October 18, 2006. We have completed our review of this protest and are returning to you the protest and appropriate documents, which were forwarded for review. We are also including directions for disposition of the protest, as discussed below. **FACTS:** On April 4, 2006, Constellation Energy submitted a post-importation refund claim, pursuant to the North American Free Trade Agreement ("NAFTA"), 19 U.S.C. § 1520(d), and 19 C.F.R. § 181.31, for a refund of Merchandise Processing Fees ("MPF") paid on entries from Canada filed at the Service Port of Champlain (the "Port"). The entries covered natural gas imported via pipeline from April 1, 2005, through February 28, 2006. Constellation Energy did not provide any NAFTA Certificates of Origin, stating that it was unable to obtain them from its suppliers, but requested that CBP waive the requirement pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 181.22(d)(1)(i). The Port denied the claim on May 17, 2006. Some of the entries were liquidated on August 11, 2006, and the rest were liquidated on August 18, 2006. On August 15, 2006, Constellation Energy filed a protest, objecting to the rejection of its claim. It argued that that it was unable to obtain certification that its natural gas is of Canadian origin from its natural gas suppliers, because of the intangible nature of natural gas, its manner of transportation, and because it is traded on in a secondary market. Constellation Energy argues that certification should not be required because most natural gas in the pipelines originated either from Canada or the United States. Constellation Energy asserts that the natural gas is "unquestionably NAFTA-qualifying"; therefore, MPF should not be assessed on its imports of natural gas. The following entries are listed in its Protest: +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | Entry No. | Import Date | Aggregate | Liquidation | | | | Entry Date | Date | | | (mo./yr.) | | | | | | (mo./day/yr.) | (mo./day/yr.) | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx584 | 4/2005 | 10/3/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx592 | 5/2005 | 10/3/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx600 | 6/2005 | 10/3/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx618 | 7/2005 | 10/3/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx907 | 8/2005 | 10/3/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx949 | 9/2005 | 10/25/2005 | 8/11/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx012 | 10/2005 | 11/30/2005 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx087 | 11/2005 | 12/20/2005 | 8/11/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx152 | 12/2005 | 1/23/2006 | 8/18/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx277 | 1/2006 | 2/22/2006 | 8/11/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ | 551-xxxxx350 | 2/2006 | 3/21/2006 | 8/11/2006 | +----------------+----------------+----------------+-----------------+ These entries are the same entries listed in the April 6, 2006, post-importation NAFTA refund claim. On September 19, 2006, the Port approved the application for further review as a "no precedent issue." According to Constellation Energy, there are three sectors in the natural gas industry: the upstream sector, which covers the discovery and initial stages of production of natural gas; the midstream sector, which covers the processing of natural gas; and the downstream sector, which covers the transportation and use of natural gas. Natural gas can be distributed either via pipeline as a gas, or in tanks as liquefied natural gas ("LNG"). Natural gas enters the pipeline either directly from natural gas producers who have obtained the gas from wells, or is injected into the pipeline from storage facilities, and from LNG regasification facilities, or "peaking facilities." As explained in the Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy ("EIA") June 2007 Report, "About Natural Gas Pipelines," the natural gas industry uses underground natural gas storage and LNG peaking facilities to meet surges in demand for natural gas in "climate-sensitive markets such as the Midwest and Northeast" United States. EIA, "About Natural Gas Pipelines" at 32-33, 41, 55 available at <http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/analysis_publications/ngpipeline/fullversion.pdf> (last visited May 16, 2008, printout in file). The North American natural gas pipeline is not unidirectional; it is an extensive network, extending from Mexico, through the United States, and throughout Canada, and is referred to as a pipeline grid, through which natural gas flows continuously, and includes the Champlain delivery point. According to the EIA, natural gas flows in both directions along various points along the United States and Canadian border, although it is an import delivery point in Champlain, New York. [See]{.underline} EIA Report, "Locations of U. S. Natural Gas Import & Export Points, 2008," available at <http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/analysis_publications/ngpipeline/impex_list.html> (accessed May 16, 2008, printout in file)("Natural Gas Import/Export Locations List"). Ownership of the natural gas at any given point in the pipeline is determined by contractual rights, which may be traded in a secondary market and imported into the United States. Pipeline operators monitor the flow of gas, and maintain records as to what parties have contractual rights over the natural gas flowing through the pipeline at a given time. Importers receive a report indicating the quantity of natural gas, which is based on the amount of natural gas it requested be delivered based on its contractual rights. Although the pipeline operator may not know from whom the importer purchased the contractual right to the natural gas, the importer knows from whom it purchased its right to the natural gas. Although some importers may be from the upstream or midstream sectors, or importers that purchase natural gas directly from the natural gas producers, all of which may be able to obtain NAFTA Certificates of Origin, Constellation Energy purchases natural gas contractual rights that are traded on the secondary market. According to Constellation Energy, it purchases its natural gas rights from traders who do not produce natural gas and those traders cannot certify the origin of the natural gas they sell, because they have no records indicating the origin of the gas. Furthermore, the contractual rights are traded through many different parties, and NAFTA Certificates of Origin do not travel with the natural gas rights purchased in a secondary market. Constellation Energy admits that some of the natural gas in the general pipeline pool of natural gas it purchases may have been imported from the United States, and may be from a non-NAFTA country. As already discussed, the natural gas pipeline grid allows natural gas to flow both into and out of Canada. According to a search on the United States International Trade Commission's DataWeb, "HTS -- 271121: Natural Gas, Gaseous" available at [http://dataweb.usitc.gov](http://dataweb.usitc.gov/) , in 2005 the United States exported nearly \$3 billion of natural gas to Canada, and in 2006 exported more than \$2 billion of natural gas to Canada. The United States imported nearly \$27 billion in natural gas from Canada in 2005, and in 2006, it imported more than \$24 billion. Of that amount, some may be regasified LNG. The natural gas Constellation Energy purchased in Canada may have originated from a non-NAFTA country in two ways: it may have been exported as LNG and regasified into natural gas in Canada, or LNG could have been imported into the United States, regasified and injected into the pipeline, exported into Canada, and reimported into the United States. According to a search on DataWeb, "HTS-271111: Natural Gas, Liquefied", in 2005 the United States exported \$27,041,331 of LNG to Canada, and in 2006, the United States exported only \$2,006,891. It is unclear whether any non-NAFTA LNG was imported into Canada from the United States; however, according to another EIA report, the United States exported 60,938 million cubic feet of LNG in 2006, and 65,367 million cubic feet of LNG in 2005, and all of it was exported either to Japan or to Mexico. EIA, Office of Oil and Gas, "U.S. Natural Gas Imports and Exports: 2006" at Table SR8 (March 2008) available at http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/feature_articles/2008/ngimpexp/ngimpexp.pdf (last visited May 19, 2008, in file)("2005-2006 Natural Gas Export Table"). Therefore, based on the information in the file, it is not clear whether non-NAFTA LNG was exported into Canada, regasified, injected into the pipeline, and ended up being imported as gas into the United States. Furthermore, although there are no LNG marine terminals in Canada, the amount of LNG imports may soon increase dramatically: with the demand for natural gas exceeding the supply, there are several proposed sites for LNG marine terminals in Canada. One proposal is Rabaska, a project to build an LNG marine and regasification terminal in Lévis, Québec, Canada, less than 200 miles from Champlain, New York. Rabaska has announced it has received all necessary government approvals to begin construction, it anticipates receiving LNG tankers in 2014, and that it intends to import LNG from Russia. [See]{.underline} Press Release, "Gazprom US Based Subsidiary and Rabaska Reach Agreement; GMTUSA to Subscribe for 100% of Capacity in North American LNG Terminal," (May 15, 2008), available at <http://www.rabaska.net/docs/press-release_gazprom-rabaska_20080515.pdf> (accessed May 16, 2008, in file). The LNG the United States imported in 2005 and 2006 was primarily from non-NAFTA countries. Another search of United States imports of LNG on the DataWeb revealed that in 2005, the United States purchased more than \$5 billion of LNG, from, in descending order, Trinidad & Tobago, Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria, Qatar, Oman, Venezuela, and Mexico. In 2006, the United States imported nearly \$4.6 billion of LNG from, in descending order, Trinidad & Tobago, Egypt, Nigeria, Algeria, Iraq, Mexico, Venezuela, Norway, Libya, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Equitorial Guinea, and Tunisia. The location of LNG marine terminals in the United States increases the likelihood of non-NAFTA natural gas entering the pipeline in Canada and being imported or re-imported into the United States at the Champlain delivery point. Of the five marine terminals in the United States that import LNG, two are located in the Northeastern United States. One terminal, Everett Marine Terminal, is operated by Distrigas of Massachusetts LLC, which owns and operates the LNG import and regasification facility in Everett, Massachusetts. It delivers regasified LNG into, among other pipelines, the Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company. The Tennessee Gas Pipeline connects to the TransCanada Pipeline Ltd pipeline at the Niagara Falls delivery point, and the Niagara Falls delivery point operates as both an import and export point, although it primarily imports natural gas. [See]{.underline} Natural Gas Import/Export Locations List. The TransCanada Pipeline Ltd pipeline is the Canadian pipeline that connects to the North Country Pipeline at the Champlain delivery point. We note that no natural gas was exported from Niagara Falls in 2005 or 2006; however, the information in the file does not eliminate the possibility that regasified LNG entered the Canadian pipeline grid via another export point, such as St. Clair, Michigan or Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, and was imported into the United States through Champlain. [See]{.underline} 2005-2006 Natural Gas Export Table. **ISSUES:** Whether the Port properly denied a request that it reliquidate entries to refund MPF paid for imports of natural gas made via pipeline from Canada, when the importer failed to provide copies of applicable NAFTA Certificates of Origin or other certifications of origin, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1520(d). Whether the Port is required to grant a request that it waive the requirement for a NAFTA Certificate of Origin or other certification, pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 181.22(d), when the importer alleges that the nature of its merchandise should obviate the need for certification, but the importer cannot provide verifiable certification that all of its natural gas imports originated from Canada. **LAW AND ANALYSIS:** As an initial matter, Constellation Energy's Protest is timely, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1514(c)(3)(B), because it was filed on August 15, 2006, which is within 180 days of the date CBP denied the request for refund of MPF, on May 17, 2006. The Port properly granted the application for further review. Further review is appropriate when the Port considers a protest should be denied, but the protest involves issues that have not been the subject of a CBP Headquarters ruling or a court decision. See 19 C.F.R. § 174.26(b)(1)(iv). In this Protest, no prior rulings or court decisions have addressed the issue of whether the nature of merchandise could render unnecessary any kind of certification as to the merchandise's origin. Therefore, pursuant to 19 C.F.R § 174.26(b)(1)(iv), we are addressing first, whether the Port properly denied a request to refund MPF paid for imports that were uncertified as originating from Canada, and second, whether the nature of the imports renders unnecessary any requirement for a NAFTA Certificate of Origin. **Part of the Request Was Properly Denied as Untimely** Any post-importation refund request that concerns importations made more than one year before the date of refund request must be denied as untimely. The statute allows for post-importation requests for refunds of duties and MPF, if the importer demonstrates that its imported merchandise qualifies according to the rules of origin delineated by a fair trade agreement and the importer files its request within one year after the date of importation. [See]{.underline} 19 U.S.C. § 1520(d). The statute states: > \(d\) Goods qualifying under free trade agreement rules of origin > > Notwithstanding the fact that a valid protest was not filed, the > Customs Service may, in accordance with regulations prescribed by the > Secretary, reliquidate an entry to refund any excess duties (including > any merchandise processing fees) paid on a good qualifying under the > rules of origin set out in section 3332 of this title, section 202 of > the United States-Chile Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act, or > section 4033 of this title for which no claim for preferential tariff > treatment was made at the time of importation if the importer, within > 1 year after the date of importation, files, in accordance with those > > regulations, a claim that includes--- > > \(1\) a written declaration that the good qualified under the > applicable rules at the time of importation; > > \(2\) copies of all applicable NAFTA Certificates of Origin (as > defined in section 1508(b)(1) of this title), or other certificates or > certifications of origin, as the case may be; and > > \(3\) such other documentation relating to the importation of the > goods as the Customs Service may require. [Id]{.underline}. The request Constellation Energy submitted was dated April 4, 2006. According to a prior CBP ruling, if a request includes imports made more than one year prior to the date on its request, those entries may not be refunded, even if there is an otherwise complete request for refund. [See]{.underline} HQ 227990 (June 8, 2000). CBP Regulations permit the aggregation of the ad valorem fee for daily importations of natural gas into a monthly consolidated pipeline entry made at an individual port by the same importer or exporter. [See]{.underline} 19 CFR § 24.23(d). In this case, any imports of natural gas that were made on or before April 3, 2005, even as part of the consolidated monthly Entry No. 551-xxxxx584, may not be considered as part of this request, because they were imported more than one year prior to the date Constellation Energy made the request. However, as discussed in Ruling HQ 231489, the consolidated monthly entry represents multiple releases or entries made on a daily basis, so Entry No. 551-xxxxx584 will be considered for purposes of this protest to the extent that it includes any releases made on April 4, 2005 through April 30, 2005. **Without Certification of Origin or an Existing Waiver, CBP Will Not Refund MPF** As discussed above, section 520(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930 (the "Act") allows for post-importation refund requests. [See]{.underline} 19 U.S.C. § 1520(d). The regulation for filing a post-importation refund claim states that a Certificate of Origin is required for a post-importation refund claim, unless the Port Director has waived that requirement: > \(b\) Contents of claim. A post-importation claim for a refund shall > be filed by presentation of the following: > > \(1\) A written declaration stating that the good qualified as an > originating good at the time of importation and setting forth the > number and date of the entry covering the good; > > \(2\) Subject to §181.22(d) of this part, a copy of each Certificate > of Origin (see §181.11 of this part) pertaining to the good; 19 C.F.R. § 181.32(b)(1)-(2). The waiver provision cited in the regulations states: > \(d\) Certificate not required ---(1) General. Except as otherwise > provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, an importer shall not be > required to have a Certificate of Origin in his possession for: > > \(i\) An importation of a good for which the port director has in > writing waived the requirement for a Certificate of Origin because the > port director is otherwise satisfied that the good qualifies for > preferential tariff treatment under the NAFTA; 19 C.F.R. § 181.22(d)(1)(i). Thus the statute states that a Certificate of Origin is required in a NAFTA post-importation claim unless the Certificate was waived, which is not the case here. Constellation Energy does not claim that it has a Certificate of Origin; in fact, it admits that it cannot provide a verifiable certification of origin of its natural gas. Constellation Energy does not claim that it has obtained a waiver of the Certificate of Origin requirement. Therefore, Constellation Energy has not met the requirements of section 520(d) of the Act, and its claim must be denied. **The Absence of a** **Waiver Is Not An Abuse of Discretion** The facts in this case demonstrate that the Port of Champlain's refusal to waive the Certificate of Origin requirement, pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 181.22(d)(1)(i), was not an abuse of discretion. To waive means voluntarily to give up a right or a claim. [See]{.underline} "Waive", American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4^th^ ed. 2000); "Waiver" Webster's Third New International Dictionary for the English Language Unabridged (1993). Thus, in giving port directors the authority to voluntary relinquish a claim to demand that a Certificate of Origin be in an importer's possession, the regulations allow Port Directors to act or not as they deem proper. As a discretionary act, CBP Headquarters is reluctant to overturn Port Directors' waiver decisions unless there is a showing of an abuse of discretion. [See]{.underline} HQ 222609 (November 7, 1990). An abuse of discretion is a decision > "Made without a rational explanation, inexplicably departed from > established policies, or rested on an impermissible basis, such as an > invidious discrimination against a particular race or group, or in > Judge Learned Hand's words, on other 'considerations that Congress > could not have intended to make relevant.'" [Suwanee Steamship Co. v. United States]{.underline}, 435 F. Supp. 389, 395 (Cust. Ct. 1977)(quoting [Wong Wing Hang v. Immigration and Naturalization Service]{.underline}, 360 F.2d 715, 719 (2d Cir. 1966)). Congress provided a general description of what considerations it considered relevant, when it created the Certificate of Origin requirement in section 520(d) of the Act. [See]{.underline} 19 U.S.C. § 1520(d). In delegating authority to CBP to enforce the NAFTA country of origin requirements, Congress stated that the "rules are essential to ensure that the benefits of the NAFTA accrue primarily to North American producers, and the Committee intents that the Customs Service vigorously enforce them." S. Rep. 103-189 at 14 (Nov. 18, 1993); [see]{.underline} [also]{.underline} [id]{.underline}. at 21 (tariffs on non-NAFTA components to "create an incentive to use North American inputs and . . . help guard against the establishment of export platforms in Mexico by companies seeking to take advantage of NAFTA tariff preferences."). Constellation Energy states that it cannot provide a "verifiable Certificate of Origin for its entries," because of the way natural gas is traded in a secondary market. It alleges that its treatment is unfair, because it favors those that purchased natural gas on the primary market, [i.e.]{.underline} only Canadian natural gas producers and importers that purchase natural gas directly from Canadian producers can obtain NAFTA Certificates of Origin. However, that inability reflects a defect in the chain of trades in the secondary market, not an impermissible basis for the Port's refusal to waive the requirement. Congress intended for North American producers to obtain the benefit of the NAFTA, and North American natural gas producers are benefiting from the NAFTA. Therefore, the Port of Champlain's denial of the waiver was based on considerations Congress considered relevant. Overall import and export statistics do not support Constellation Energy's argument that any non-NAFTA natural gas it imports must be below de minimis, pursuant to General Note 12 ("GN 12") HTSUS. [See]{.underline} GN 12 HTSUS (f)(i). GN 12(f) requires that "if the transaction value is unacceptable . . . the value of all such non-originating materials is not more than 7 percent of the total cost of the good". Constellation Energy concedes that it is possible that non-NAFTA-origin regasified LNG is intermingling with Canadian natural gas, and is flowing into the United States. Constellation Energy argues, however, that because Canada has no LNG terminals for receiving large shipments of LNG, any natural gas that is non-NAFTA origin, according to Constellation Energy, would be below de minimis. In this case, we have no data as to what percentage of non-originating materials is included in the natural gas the protestant imported, and thus Constellation Energy's argument must fail. To claim that the value of non-NAFTA originating goods is de minimis, the claimant must first know what portion of its commingled merchandise is non-NAFTA originating, not what percentage of overall imports into its country are non-NAFTA originating. [See]{.underline}, [e.g]{.underline}. HQ 563310 (May 19, 2006). Constellation Energy cannot certify that the specific natural gas rights it purchases covers natural gas that originated from Canada Furthermore, there is a possibility that non-NAFTA regasified LNG is flowing from the United States, into Canada, is sold in the secondary market, and then imported into the United States. As discussed above, two major LNG terminals are located on the east coast of the United States, and at least one is injecting regasified LNG, or natural gas, into the pipline grid, which flows into Canada. Thus, given the possibility that non-NAFTA natural gas is in the North American pipeline grid, and Constellation Energy may have imported it into the United States; and that Constellation Energy does not know the country of origin of the natural gas to which it purchased the rights, the Port did not abuse its discretion in refusing to waive the requirement for a NAFTA Certificate of Origin for Constellation Energy's imports of natural gas. CBP Regulations permit an individual port to waive the requirement for a NAFTA Certificate of Origin. Although circumstances could possibly exist that would obviate the need for certification, Constellation Energy has not provided such information to cause us to conclude that the Port of Champlain abused its discretion in denying the waiver request. Because the waiver is discretionary, Constellation Energy is not foreclosed from requesting a waiver in the future from the Port of Champlain or any other port, and our denial of Constellation Energy's claim with respect to this particular waiver cannot be construed as an ultimate denial of any waiver request it could make for future entries. **This Ruling Constitutes Written Explanation for Denial of This Request in This Case** The regulations require a written explanation for the original denial of the post-importation refund request; however, this ruling remedies any failure to provide a written explanation. Specifically, CBP must provide an explanation in writing, pursuant to 19 C.F.R. § 181.33(d), for the reasons for denying a claim for a refund, and provide a statement regarding the right to file a protest. In this case, the Port stamped the letter "denied" and returned the letter, but did not provide an explanation or a statement. The courts have held that in the absence of consequential language, failure to meet a statutory deadline does not lead to CBP being compelled to grant a protestant's request. [See]{.underline} [Fujitsu Gen. Am. Inc. v. United States]{.underline}, 283 F.3d 1364, 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2002). In this case, an absence of any consequence to the failure to provide an explanation or a protest statement, CBP is not required to set aside the denial of the refund. Furthermore, the timely filing of the Protest, and the decision here, demonstrate that Constellation Energy has suffered no prejudice as a result of the original omission of an explanation. The courts have held that CBP's procedural missteps are "harmless unless the errors are 'prejudicial to the party seeking to have the action declared invalid.'" [Am. Nat'l Fire Ins. Co. v. United States]{.underline}, 441 F. Supp. 2d 1275, 1287 (Ct. Int'l Trade 2006). By forwarding this letter to Constellation Energy, CBP is now providing a written explanation, which Constellation Energy may appeal to the Court of International Trade. **HOLDING:** You are instructed to DENY the protest in full. The Port properly denied the request for a post-importation refund of MPF for monthly entries of natural gas, because the request with respect to some of the releases was untimely, and for the rest of the releases, Constellation Energy failed to obtain either a Certificate of Origin or a waiver of the certification requirement. The refusal to waive the certificate was not an abuse of discretion. Because the Port Director has the discretion to waive the requirement of a Certificate of Origin, Constellation Energy is free to request a waiver from the Port Director in the future. This decision will result in the assessment of MPF, and any reliquidation of the entries in accordance with the decision must be accomplished prior to mailing of the decision, in accordance with Section IV of the Customs Protest/ Petition Processing Handbook (CIS HB, January 2002, pp. 18 and 21). You are to mail this decision, together with CBP Form 19, to the protestant no later than 60 days from the date of this letter. No later than 60 days from the date of this letter, Regulations and Rulings of the Office of International Trade will make the decision available to CBP personnel, and to the public on the CBP Home Page on the World Wide Web at [www.cbp.gov](http://www.cbp.gov/), by means of the Freedom of Information Act, and by other means of public distribution. Sincerely, Myles B. Harmon, Director Commercial and Trade Facilitation Division
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From: [email protected] Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2001 2:09 PM To: [email protected] Subject: What's in your food? (FDA Dockets 00N-1396 and 00D-1598) Dear Corporate and Government Leaders, Neither government nor industry is protecting Americans from the risks posed to human health and the environment by genetically engineered (GE) foods. The Food and Drug Administration's "new" policy on GE foods (proposed January 18, 2001) continues to let the biotech industry regulate itself; it fails to require the long-term, pre-market safety testing demanded by independent experts. The "voluntary labeling" guidelines are a wholly inadequate response to the overwhelming public support for mandatory labeling of genetically engineered foods. Therefore, I urge you to keep all genetically engineered ingredients and crops off the market unless: 1) Independent safety testing demonstrates they have no harmful effects on human health or the environment, 2) They are labeled to ensure the consumer's right-to-know, and 3) The biotechnology corporations that manufacture them are held accountable for any harms they may cause. As a mother of two young children I would like to know what my children are eating. For now I buy Organic food. However, I have heard that genetically modified corn has shown up on farms that did not plant it, simply because these farms were next door to those with GM crops. This is scary. What is even more scary is that our government is feeding us this without letting us know. Please label GM food or get rid of it! Sincerely Anna Creissen 4310 Hope Valley Drive Hillsborough, North Carolina 27278
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Board of Contract Appeals General Services Administration Washington, D.C. 20405 _______________________________________________ June 11, 1998 _______________________________________________ GSBCA 14439-RELO In the Matter of KENNETH W. MUZZO Kenneth W. Muzzo, Madison, AL, claimant. Robert H. Garfield, Chief, General Law Division, United States Army Aviation and Missile Command, Redstone Arsenal, AL, appearing for Department of the Army. BORWICK, Board Judge. Claimant, Kenneth W. Muzzo, a civilian employee with the Department of the Army (agency), seeks to overturn the agency's decision to deny him a sixty-day extension of his period for reimbursement of temporary quarters subsistence expenses (TQSE). We sustain the decision of the agency. As a result of the Base Relocation and Closure Act of 1995, the agency's Aviation and Troop Command (ATCOM) moved from St. Louis, Missouri, to Huntsville, Alabama, and merged with the agency's Missile Command, forming the Aviation and Missile Command. Pursuant to that consolidation the agency transferred many ATCOM employees, including claimant, from St. Louis to Huntsville. On March 27, 1997, the agency issued claimant a permanent duty travel authorization, which provided for transportation for claimant and his family, a ten-day house hunting trip, and fifty days of TQSE. Claimant relied on a relocation company to sell his house in St. Louis, and expected to receive an offer on his house no later than May 30. Acting upon that expectation, claimant went on a house hunting trip to Huntsville, and, on May 1, 1997, signed a purchase contract for a house in the Huntsville area. The closing date was July 31, but the contract was contingent upon the sale and closing of claimant's house in St. Louis. An addendum to the purchase contract, known as a right of first refusal, gave the seller the right to continue showing the house and to accept other offers subject to the claimant's right to remove the contingency and proceed with the purchase. Claimant's right, however, expired at midnight on June 7. Trouble arose with the relocation service.[foot #] 1 Instead of a purchase offer for claimant's St. Louis house on May 30, as claimant had expected, the relocation service could not provide the offer until July 8. By that time claimant's right to buy the Huntsville house had expired and that house was sold to someone else. The record contains no evidence that claimant tried to extend the contingency period for the purchase of the house in Huntsville. Claimant began his TQSE period on July 28, at which time claimant's house hunting began again. Claimant states that: Being unable to find a suitable existing house, after viewing about 200 houses, we signed a contract on a new house that was already under construction on 22 August 1997. Closing on this house is scheduled for on or before 15 Nov. 1997. Per the builder, this date cannot be improved upon. Claimant's fifty-day TQSE period ended on September 15, 1997. Claimant and his family stayed in temporary quarters from September 16 through November 14 and claimed reimbursement of $10,366.31, which included lodging at a motel in Huntsville and meals and tips. The agency denied the claim, noting that claimant had not demonstrated that circumstances occurring during the original period of temporary quarters occupancy was beyond claimant's control. During the relevant time period, the Joint Travel Regulations (JTR) provided in pertinent part: Subsistence expenses as provided in subpar. 1 may be allowed for an additional period of time not to exceed ----------- FOOTNOTE BEGINS --------- [foot #] 1 On May 9 two appraisers appraised claimant's St. Louis house, and on May 14 a general home inspection occurred, with a termite inspection on May 17. On May 30 the relocation service advised claimant of the necessity of a third appraisal before it could provide an offer. Claimant found a third appraiser to appraise the house on June 2, but that appraiser was not acceptable to the relocation service. An emergency appraisal was scheduled for June 7, but the appraiser did not appear until June 10. Then, as a result of the May 14 house inspection, the relocation company demanded an additional inspection to determine whether there was a problem in the basement. On June 20, the third appraiser submitted his report, but discrepancies among the three appraisals caused the relocation company to request that all the appraisers re-measure the house. Only one appraiser did. ----------- FOOTNOTE ENDS ----------- 60 consecutive days provided the head of the DOD component concerned or his/her designee determines there are compelling reasons for the continued occupancy of temporary quarters. . . . Extensions of the temporary quarters may be authorized only in situations where there is a demonstrated need for additional time in temporary quarters due to circumstances which have occurred during the initial 60-day period of temporary quarters occupancy and which are determined to be beyond the employee's control and acceptable to DOD components concerned. Examples of compelling reasons which could be considered as beyond the employee's control for purposes of granting this extension may include, but are not limited to, the following situations. . . . . b. new permanent residence cannot be occupied because of unanticipated problems (i.e. delays in settlement on new residence, short term delay in construction of a new residence, etc.); c. inability to locate permanent residence which is adequate for family needs because of housing conditions at the new official station. JTR C13004-2. [foot #] 2 Consistent with the General Accounting Office, we have held that, in view of the statute and regulations referenced above, decisions concerning extensions of TQSE are left to the agency's discretion and will not be overturned unless they are shown to be arbitrary, capricious or contrary to law. Luis Flores, GSBCA 13977-RELO, 97-1 BCA 28,928; Blanch Brown, B-260580 (Nov. 13, 1995). The agency did not abuse its discretion in refusing an extension of claimant's TQSE period. The relocation agency's delay, which claimant argues was the cause of his forfeiture of the first purchase, occurred before the start of claimant's TQSE period and cannot serve as grounds for extension of the period. Further, claimant has not established that extension of the June 7 date for expiration of the right of first refusal was ----------- FOOTNOTE BEGINS --------- [foot #] 2 Recently Change 389 to the JTR removed the requirement that the circumstance leading to the need for an extension occur during the initial sixty-day period of TQSE. This change, however, has no application to claimant since it did not become effective until March 1, 1998, considerably after claimant's TQSE period ended. See Charles D. Parton, GSBCA ___ ___________________ 14463-RELO (Apr. 15, 1998). ----------- FOOTNOTE ENDS ----------- impossible and that the circumstance was therefore beyond his control. Since claimant was able to view over two hundred homes, there appears to have been plentiful housing in Huntsville and the agency did not arbitrarily determine that adequate housing existed there. Flores. That none of the two hundred houses claimant viewed was pleasing to claimant or his family does not demonstrate that the agency's conclusion was an abuse of discretion. Id. Finally, claimant's contract for purchase of a newly constructed house with a closing date approximately two months after the end of the TQSE period is not the unanticipated problem contemplated by the JTR, since claimant knew when he signed the contract that the house would not be ready for occupancy during the initial period for TQSE reimbursement. Robert R. Burns, GSBCA 13848-RELO, 97-1 BCA 28,875. The agency's denial of claimant's request for an extension of his TQSE period is sustained. __________________________ ANTHONY S. BORWICK Board Judge
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# Presentation: 929206 ## Innovative Systems for Delivery of Drugs and Biologics Drug-Eluting Stents Current Approach to Review - Ashley B. Boam, MSBE - Division of Cardiovascular Devices - Office of Device Evaluation - Center for Devices and Radiological Health ## What is a Drug-Eluting Stent (DES)? - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ***Example:***** ****Cordis’ Cypher****TM Sirolimus-Eluting Coronary Stent** - Stent Platform & Delivery System - Carrier(s) - Drug _***Components***_ ## DES and the Regulatory Process - Stent Platform & Delivery System **[CRDH Review]** - Pharmacologic - Agent (‘Drug’) **[CDER Review]** - Carrier (*e.g.*, Polymer) **[CDRH Review]** **Drug** **Eluting** **Stent** - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ***Three Component System*** **Notes:** *************************************************************** ## Overview of Review “Challenges” for DES - Regulatory jurisdiction - Inspectional authority & site readiness - Disparity in statutory & regulatory requirements between CDRH & CDER - Appropriate leveraging of information from INDs, NDAs, DMFs, MAFs, etc. - Appropriate pre-clinical testing & clinical trial design - Post-market studies and surveillance ## Regulatory Jurisdiction - Combination Products (21 CFR Part 3) - CDRH lead center with CDER consultation - http://www.fda.gov/oc/combination/updates.html - Divisions involved include... - Cardiovascular Devices (ODE/CDRH) - Cardio-Renal Drug Products (OND/CDER) - New Drug Chemistry I (OPS/CDER) - Pharmaceutical Evaluation I (OCP/CDER) - Mechanics & Materials (OST/CDRH) - Submissions: IDEs & PMAs - DHHS/FDA/CDRH **Notes:** *************************************************************** ## Regulatory Review Team for DES - CDRH + CDER = SUCCESS ***Expertise required...*** **Mechanical Performance** **& Testing Regimes** **Chemistry ** **[Drug Substance & Carrier(s)]** **Manufacturing** **Animal Experimentation ** **& Evaluation** **Clinical Trial Design ** **& Methodology** **Pharmacokinetics / ** **Pharmacodynamics** - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ## Inspectional Authority and Site Readiness - Inspections conducted by CDRH with CDER/ONDC participation - Validations should be complete prior to inspection - Subsequent manufacturing changes may require reinspection ## Approval of Devices, Drugs & Biologics | CDRH | CDER | CBER | | --- | --- | --- | | Approval to begin Clinical Evaluation | | | | IDE Investigational Device Exemption | IND Investigational New Drug | IND Investigational New Drug | | Permission to begin Marketing | | | | PMA (Class III Devices) | NDA New Drug Application | BLA Biologic License Application | | Permission to Market a Modified Product | | | | PMA Supplement | NDA or Efficacy/Manufacturing Supplement (for approved drug) | New License Application, Efficacy or Manufacturing Supplement | | Other Pathways to Marketing | | | | 510(k) PreMarket Clearance | ANDA Abbreviated NDA | N/A | | | Generic drug bioequivalent to approved drug | | **Notes:** *************************************************************** ## Comparison of Device & Drug Development - DHHS/FDA/CDRH | Developmental Feature | Device | Drug | | --- | --- | --- | | Rate of technology change | Fast | Slow | | Ease of in vitro assessment | High | Low | | Reimbursement during clinical trials | Frequent | Rare | | Influence of MD technique on results | High | Low | | Ability to visualize performance after use | High | Low | | Definition of “Orphan” (# of patients) | 4,000 | 200,000 | | # of full scale studies usually required | 1 | 2 | | # of regulatory classes | 3 | 1 | **Notes:** *************************************************************** ## Information to Support DES Applications - * **Refer to CDER Guidance**, “Content & Format of INDs for Phase 1 - Studies of Drugs...”; www.fda.gov/cder/guidance/phase1.pdf - * **Refer to CDRH Guidance**, “...Interventional Cardiology Devices: - ...Intravascular Stents”; www.fda.gov/cdrh/ode/846.pdf - DHHS/FDA/CDRH | Drug ± Carrier(s) | Stent Platform * | | | --- | --- | --- | | | Approved | Unapproved | | Approved | 1 | 2 | | Unstudied * | 3 | 4 | **Notes:** ************************************************************* ## Approved vs. Unstudied Drug Substances - Potential Sources for Safety Data (Phase 1 IND) - Approved drug – NDA - Drug under IND investigation - “Unstudied” – New Molecular Entity (NME) - Analog of Approved Drug is an NME - Necessary Categories of Safety Information - Chemistry, Manufacturing & Controls (CMC) - Systemic Pre-clinical Pharmacology/Toxicity - Systemic Clinical Exposure - Potentially Influences Clinical Trial Design ## Preclinical Testing Objectives - Characterization of finished, sterilized product to be studied is essential - Coating/drug loading characteristics – drug and carrier content, uniformity, abrasion resistance (if coating), particulate *In vitro*/ *in vivo* elution - Methods and initial specifications for stability testing - Adequate animal studies needed to assess safety prior to human studies - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ## Common Preclinical Testing Deficiencies - Inadequate Stent Platform Testing - Fatigue and corrosion testing - Inadequate Analysis of Surface Modifications - Coating integrity/durability - Drug content/uniformity - Incomplete *In vitro* Pharmacokinetics - Methodology and IVIVC, if possible - CMC Issues Inadequately Addressed - Stability/shelf life ## Common Animal Study Deficiencies - Inadequate Reports to Assess Safety - Lack evaluation of _doses intended for __clinical evaluation_ &/or _overdosage_ at appropriate time points - Lack evaluation of serial sections of myocardium - Lack description of arterial histopathology - Lack necropsy reports (especially important for unexpected deaths) - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ## Clinical Evaluation of DES - Reasonable Assurance of _Safety_ and _Effectiveness_ - Clinical Study Needs to Be Designed for Both Objectives - Usual Standard of Evidence is RCT - Study Endpoints for Coronary DES - Primary – Clinically Meaningful - Use of surrogate and/or co-primary endpoints? - Non-inferiority trial - appropriate delta - Use of Independent Core Labs, CEC & Active DSMB - DHHS/FDA/CDRH ## DES Post-Market - TPLC is critical for DES! - 5 year follow-up of all patient cohorts (feasibility, pivotal, any supportive) - Additional data collection post-market to gain further understanding of rates of drug-related adverse events - Approval for new indications, new study populations through IDE - Adverse events are reported through MDR - reports to CDRH, data shared with CDER **Notes:** 1000 patient trials large for devices, small for drugs ## Questions? Talk to us! - Coronary DES - Ashley Boam, Branch Chief (_[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])__)_ - Joni Foy, Ph.D., Lead Reviewer (_[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])__) _ - Peripheral DES - Elisa Harvey, DVM, Branch Chief (_[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])__)_ - Jennifer Goode, Lead Reviewer (_[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])__) _
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If you need the complete document, download the WordPerfect version or Adobe Acrobat version, if available. ***************************************************************** Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of Principles for Promoting the Efficient Use of Spectrum by Encouraging the Development of Secondary Markets ) ) ) ) ) POLICY STATEMENT Adopted: November 9, 2000 Released: December 1, 2000 By the Commission: Commissioners Ness and Furchtgott-Roth issuing separate statements; Commissioner Tristani approving in part, dissenting in part and issuing a statement. I.Introduction 1.This Policy Statement sets forth the Commission's plans for facilitating secondary markets for radio spectrum that will allow and encourage licensees to make all or portions of their assigned frequencies and/or service areas available to other entities and uses. The Commission envisions that secondary markets can flourish by facilitating arrangements such as leasing, franchising, and joint operating agreements, and improving the conditions for transferability of spectrum usage rights through, for example, partitioning or disaggregation. Our Policy Statement outlines in general terms a series of initiatives that the Commission intends to undertake to promote secondary markets for spectrum usage rights. The Commission's current policies concerning transfer, assignment, disaggregation and partitioning of licenses allow certain licensees to market portions of their spectrum usage rights to others. In this new effort, we seek to significantly expand and enhance the existing secondary markets for spectrum usage rights to permit spectrum to flow more freely among users and uses in response to economic demand, to the extent consistent with our other statutory mandates and public interest objectives. 2.We believe that an expanded system of private sector markets will serve the public interest by creating new opportunities for increasing the communications capacity and efficiency of spectrum use by licensees. Such secondary market transactions will thereby complement the primary assignment function performed by the Commission through its spectrum auctions and licensing processes. While secondary markets are not a substitute for finding additional spectrum when needed and should not supplant our spectrum allocation process, a robust and effective secondary market for spectrum usage rights could help alleviate spectrum shortages by making unused or underutilized spectrum held by existing licensees more readily available to other users and uses and help to promote the development of new, spectrum efficient technologies. II.background 3.In recent years, the need for spectrum has increased dramatically as a result of the explosive growth in wireless communications technologies and consumer demand for services. This increased demand is being propelled by a host of developments including the growing shift of our economy towards the service sector, the increasing mobility of our workforce, and the convenience and increased efficiency produced by mobile/portable communications combined with improved performance and the falling costs of wireless devices. Increasing spectrum requirements for public safety and for national defense systems, satellite services, private users, amateur radio, and the dramatically growing interest in accessing the Internet are compounding the shortages of spectrum. 4.In mobile telephony services alone, the number of subscribers in the United States has grown from just over 90,000 in January 1985 to more than 86 million, or approximately 32 percent of the country's population, at the end of 1999. Growth in wireless subscribership has been accompanied by an increase in wireless usage. For example, the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association estimates that average monthly minutes-of-use (MOUs) by mobile telephone subscribers rose to 180 in the period between July and December 1999, an increase of 38 percent from the 130 MOUs during the same period in 1998 and some analysts estimate that current average MOUs at about 220 per subscriber. 5. To date, demand for mobile voice service has been the principal driver of the growth of mobile telephony services. As of early 2000, analysts estimated that data accounted for just 2 percent of mobile traffic. Many analysts believe, however, that the growth of mobile data services is likely to accelerate in the near future. According to one analyst's forecast, for example, the number of subscribers using some form of mobile data service will grow to 100 million by 2007, while another analyst estimates that wireless data subscribers will outnumber wireline data subscribers by 2002. The rapid growth of Internet usage and data traffic on wireline networks in the United States is taken as evidence that the potential size of the mobile Internet and data market is likewise very large. 6. While current subscriber numbers for fixed wireless services remain small by comparison with mobile wireless services, analysts expect the market for fixed wireless high-speed services to grow significantly over the next three to five years. In particular, analyst projections for residential use of fixed wireless high-speed services range from 2 to 2.6 million subscribers in 2003 and from 3 to 4.4 million subscribers in 2004, while projections for business use of such services range from 364,000 to 450,000 subscribers in 2003. 7. Notwithstanding the introduction of more efficient digital technologies that increase the potential capacity of spectrum to provide communications services, continuing expectations regarding increased demand raise the concern that spectrum may be a limiting factor for new technology and services. In the United States, virtually all spectrum, particularly in the most sought after bands below 3 GHz, has been allocated for various services. Consequently, with the exception of several small bandwidth segments of only a few megahertz each that are not sufficient to support high volume operations, there is very little unencumbered spectrum available for new uses or users. In order to provide spectrum for new services, we now have to find ways for such services to share spectrum with existing services or to reallocate spectrum from existing services to new services and technologies. In the latter case, we have sometimes implemented plans that relocate incumbent operations to other, generally higher frequency bands, and other times simply reduced the amount of bandwidth available for a service. 8. The Commission has previously taken a number of steps towards the development and implementation of comprehensive plans for effectively managing the spectrum based on the increasing demands of new services and its recognition that, in general, the best way to realize the maximum benefits from the spectrum is to permit and promote the operation of market forces in determining how spectrum is used. A principal tenet of this market-based approach is that in order for competition to bring consumers the highest valued services in the most efficient manner, competing users of spectrum need flexibility to respond to market forces and demands. In recent years the Commission has undertaken several efforts to address the growing complexities of spectrum management and how best to build upon general market-based principles. For example, in March 1996 and April 1999, the Commission held En Banc Hearings on Spectrum Management. In November 1999, the Commission issued a Policy Statement on "Principles for Reallocation of Spectrum to Encourage the Development of Telecommunications Technologies for the New Millennium" (Spectrum Policy Statement). In addition, the Commission has adopted specific rules to enhance flexibility in cellular and other commercial mobile radio services. The Commission has also convened a Technological Advisory Committee (TAC) to provide expert advice to the Commission on how to respond to rapid advances in technology, with a particular focus on spectrum management. 9. Information presented at the two En Banc hearings provided insight from industry and academia on their views of how the Commission's spectrum management responsibilities should evolve. Two key focus areas emerged: 1) promote greater efficiency in spectrum use and 2) make more spectrum available. Flexibility was again emphasized for both allocations and service rules. Other key suggested initiatives include: negotiated interference, new spectrum efficient technologies; innovative and streamlined assignment mechanisms; and a more active secondary market. Additional steps necessary to respond to the explosive growth in wireless communications and the resulting increased pressure for spectrum are identified in the Spectrum Policy Statement. In the Spectrum Policy Statement, we stated that an active secondary market will facilitate full utilization of spectrum by the highest value end users. We also indicated our intent to pursue a number of approaches for expanding secondary spectrum markets by bringing together prospective buyers and sellers. 10. Throughout these efforts, we have attempted to address the problem posed by spectrum scarcity through various initiatives aimed at increasing spectral efficiencies in the use of radio spectrum. To meet the spectrum needs of new and existing services and users in this growing market, we need to continue to look for innovative approaches that will ensure the most efficient and effective use of spectrum so as to maximize opportunities for new technologies, services, and users. In this regard, we believe that it is important to continue to develop and take affirmative new steps to ensure that spectrum scarcity does not hinder the growth of wireless services and use. In developing such plans, we recognize that some services such as public safety, educational services, private wireless, amateur radio, and other important services, may have spectrum needs that are not addressed under a market approach. For most spectrum, however, we continue to believe that the most effective way to achieve these goals is to allow market forces to direct the distribution of spectrum resources among specific users and uses, subject of course to appropriate technical standards to control interference. Consistent with this approach, we have successfully moved to a more market-oriented approach for assignment of spectrum. The assignment of spectrum through competitive bidding has facilitated more efficient and rapid licensing of spectrum to those who value it the most. We have also adopted more market-based principles with regard to technical standards by permitting licensees to negotiate interference agreements, where possible. Also, in adopting rules for new services we have attempted to provide flexibility for licensees in both the services that may be provided and the technologies that are used for operations. In general, we expect that this flexibility and the economic need to make the most effective use of investments will lead wireless licensees to maximize the use of their spectrum consistent with their particular business and operating plans. III.The need for effective secondary Spectrum markets 11.The information presented to the FCC at our Public Forum and in other contexts suggests that existing licensees may not be fully using all of the spectrum that has been assigned to them. This could occur for a number of reasons. For example, a licensee's business plan, even considering future growth, may not encompass some portion of its assigned frequencies or geographic service area. It is also possible that in establishing a new service, a licensee may not need to use all of its spectrum for a period of years, as it grows its customer and operating base. In addition, a licensee may face problems in equipment availability that affects its ability to rapidly buildout services as manufacturers look for a clear indication of communications businesses that will support equipment orders. Holding spectrum unused in such circumstances may serve legitimate business needs and would not be inefficient unless it excluded higher valued uses. The preclusion of higher valued uses might occur if service flexibility is restricted by rule or the cost of trading is high. When considered across our many services, these factors may leave a substantial amount of spectrum unnecessarily lying fallow, especially in rural areas. At the same time, substantial unmet demand for spectrum for various applications exists in many areas, including such potentially high-valued uses as broadband fixed and mobile services. For example, there is continuing growth in demand for spectrum for new data networks and advanced services such as third generation mobile services that offer much faster mobile data speed. 12.We continue to believe that an effective way to make unused spectrum held by existing licensees available to others may be through secondary markets. An effectively functioning system of secondary markets would encourage licensees to be more spectrum efficient by freely trading their rights to unused spectrum capacity, either leasing it temporarily, or on a longer-term basis, or selling their rights to unused frequencies. Increased efficiency would contribute significantly to our ongoing efforts to make additional spectrum available. We also believe that secondary market transactions could contribute to increasing the amount of spectrum available to prospective users, uses, and new wireless technologies by making more effective use of spectrum that is currently assigned to existing licensees. This would provide opportunities for the development and operation of new services and competition. In addition, as licensees move to more efficient digital technologies they are likely to have more capacity that can be made available in secondary markets. It is also possible that by facilitating leasing, the Commission will create an economic incentive to develop and deploy efficient technologies because licensees will be able to realize a profit from their available spectrum. If a licensee knows that it has an economic opportunity by conserving and leasing rights to excess spectrum, it may make strong business sense to be more spectrum efficient. 13.The Commission has already begun the process of exploring how we can facilitate the development of more active and effective secondary markets in spectrum. The Office of Engineering and Technology convened a Public Forum on May 31, 2000, asking specific questions on the need for secondary spectrum markets, comparisons to other commodity markets, and FCC actions that could facilitate secondary spectrum markets. Panelists at the forum included representatives from academia, equipment manufacturers, service providers, and the legal community. The overwhelming consensus at the Public Forum was that a more active secondary market in spectrum is desirable and the Commission should foster opportunities in this area. Among the specific areas noted by the panelists as barriers to successful operation of secondary spectrum markets are: 1) FCC transfer of control policies that inhibit spectrum leasing and other similar arrangements; 2) high transaction costs; 3) interference; 4) equipment availability; 5) buildout requirements; and 6) limitations on service flexibility. One possible example of how a secondary market transaction could make more effective use of the spectrum would be in cases where spectrum was leased on a short-term basis. For example, a licensee holding commercial or private mobile radio spectrum or fixed wireless access spectrum in anticipation of its own growth could lease spectrum to another entity to allow the latter to meet a temporary need. This spike in demand might be produced by the presence of a major public event in the area such as a national political convention or a major sporting event. Arrangements such as these would produce a "win-win" result for everyone involved. The lessor would realize income while maintaining control of spectrum that it might need to meet long term strategic objectives, while the lessee would be able to make a profit by providing service to otherwise under-served customers. Users would benefit from the availability of the service and manufacturers would potentially benefit from the sale of products. The public interest would benefit from greater and more efficient use of the spectrum. These same types of benefits could accrue in situations where mid-term or longer-term leasing is implemented as well. 14.In many respects, our existing rules already provide flexibility to allow some licensees to make all or unused portions of their spectrum available to others through transfer arrangements. For example, our rules for Commercial Mobile Radio Services, e.g., cellular telephone service, PCS, and advanced paging systems, allow licensees to partially transfer, subject to regulatory approval: 1) portions of their right to use frequency bands across their service area (disaggregation); 2) their rights to use frequency bands in portions of their service area (partitioning); or 3) portions of their right to use frequency bands in a portion of their service area (a combination of both disaggregation and partitioning). These provisions allow licensees to tailor their operations in accordance with the spectrum needs and service areas in their business plans as well as promote the availability of unused spectrum for use by others. In other instances, our rules expressly allow leasing or resale arrangements in which a third party can use licensed spectrum without the licensee transferring its rights outright. For example, our rules allow the lease of spectrum between Multichannel-Multipoint Distribution Service (MMDS) and Instructional TV Fixed Service (ITFS) licensees, resale of satellite transponder capacity, and Private Land Mobile Radio Services (PLMRS) licensees may share the use of their facilities by permitting persons not licensed for the station to operate the station for their own purposes pursuant to the licensee's authorization. 15.Notwithstanding the existing potential for secondary market activities and the economic incentives that primary licensees would be expected to have to either make their spectrum usage rights available to others, the secondary market remains underdeveloped. On the one side, there appears to be reluctance on the part of existing licensees to trade in rights to the unused portions of their assigned frequencies and service areas under current Commission rules. As with any scarce resource there are incentives for licensees to hold on to their right to use spectrum, especially when there may be no established mechanism to offer spectrum usage rights for a limited time period. These incentives could derive from: 1) concerns they will need spectrum for future capacity; 2) speculation that future increases in values make it worthwhile to hold on for higher prices later; 3) a perception that disaggregation or partitioning would reduce the value of their spectrum usage rights; or 4) a desire to forestall competition. Licensees may also believe that administrative requirements create transaction and opportunity costs that exceed potential benefits that may accrue from making all or part of their spectrum license available to others. Licensees have also indicated that they fear that any available excess capacity they might identify would be reclaimed by the Commission. Licensees may be further unwilling to engage in lease agreements because they believe that such agreements are prohibited under Section 310(d) of the Communications Act of 1934 as amended or Commission policy. Some panelists at the Public Forum indicated that the reluctance of attorneys to issue a legal opinion that proposed leasing arrangements comply with applicable regulatory standards creates regulatory uncertainty and thus creates a disincentive to secondary market participation. These barriers to secondary market trading may be affected by several factors, including, for example, whether spectrum is licensed on a site-by-site or geographic area basis or whether the license was acquired through payment, i.e. auctions or purchase vs. no cost other than a license application fee. On the other side, demand for leasing appears to be affected by the price of spectrum usage rights when they are available, uncertainty regarding lease term and regulatory requirements, high transactions costs due to other legal uncertainties, equipment availability, and the lack of mechanisms for identifying available spectrum. 16. The policies and initiatives outlined in this Policy Statement are aimed at encouraging both the supply and demand for spectrum usage rights and to generally facilitate the development of an efficient secondary market in such rights. In particular, we seek to identify ways to encourage licensees, i.e., the supply side, to overcome their resistance to sell or lease unused spectrum usage rights. For example, we believe that leasing of spectrum usage rights (as opposed to transfer) could address licensee concerns regarding future capacity requirements and speculation on value. We hope that the planned initiatives discussed below will lead to greater regulatory certainty that will mitigate general resistance to resale or leasing. We intend to examine a number of possible means to encourage greater licensee participation in the secondary market. 17.We believe that a secondary market for spectrum resources can develop as it has for wireline bandwidth, which is now being actively traded like traditional commodities such as oil, gas, and grains. We believe that the limited secondary market activity in spectrum usage rights is the result of a combination of factors that include: 1) regulatory constraints, 2) the availability of equipment for operation, and 3) the lack of adequate systems and information for the conduct of effective trading and market operations. We believe that it is possible to achieve improvements in each of these areas, and thereby to move towards a more freely functioning system of secondary markets for spectrum usage rights. In developing specific initiatives for improving secondary markets, we believe it is appropriate to rely on the general economic theory of markets. Certain essential elements that need to be present for a market system to operate most effectively include: 1) clearly defined economic rights; 2) full information on prices and products available to all participants; 3) mechanisms for bringing buyers and sellers together to make transactions with a minimum of administrative cost and delay; 4) easy entry and exit to the market by both buyers and sellers; and 5) effective competition, with many buyers and sellers. IV.Secondary Markets initiative A.Goals and Principles 18.Spectrum management is one of the Commission's core functions. In the Spectrum Policy Statement, we recognized that "[w]ith the increased demand for a finite supply of spectrum, the Commission's spectrum management activities must focus on allowing spectrum markets to become more efficient and increasing the amount of spectrum available for use." In exercising our spectrum management role, consistent with our licensing authority and the public interest obligations in the Communications Act, we plan to substantially enhance the system of secondary markets for spectrum usage rights. Our goal in this effort is to promote the operation of competitive markets for the sale and lease of spectrum usage rights by licensees, and thereby facilitate both the transfer of the right to use spectrum for existing services to new, higher valued uses and the availability of unused and underutilized spectrum to those who would use it for providing service. We also seek to foster market structures and incentives that will encourage more sellers to make spectrum available. This will bring unused spectrum to the market, allow sellers to apply the resource value of that spectrum to other aspects of their businesses, and provide buyers with more opportunities for choice in frequencies and service areas and lower prices. 19.To achieve these goals, we intend to pursue a broad range of policies that will develop and support efficient market systems. A major focus of our secondary markets efforts will be to remove, relax or modify our rules and procedures to eliminate unnecessary inhibitions on the operation of secondary market processes and to promote flexibility and fungibility (exchangeable or substitutable) in the use of spectrum. In order to remove barriers to entry and to promote seller participation for spectrum usage rights, we also intend to encourage advances in equipment that will facilitate use of available spectrum for a broad range of services. An additional element of this effort will be to encourage mechanisms, including information sources, spectrum exchanges, and brokers, that bring together buyers and sellers and effect transfers of the right to use spectrum in a timely and cost effective manner. In developing policies under each of these elements, we will seek solutions that will bring to spectrum markets the essential characteristics that need to be present for effective and efficient market operation. This effort is a substantial undertaking that will examine the potential for improving secondary market operations in as many of our spectrum-based services as possible. 20. We also recognize that for secondary markets to operate effectively, licensees and users must have certain rights and responsibilities that define and ensure their economic interests. In developing our secondary market policies, we intend to apply the following principles concerning licensee rights and responsibilities where consistent with our licensing authority and the public interest obligations of the Communications Act: Licensees should generally have clearly defined usage rights to their spectrum, including frequency bands, service areas, and license terms of sufficient length, with reasonable renewal expectancy, to encourage investment. Licenses and spectrum usage rights should be easily transferable for lease or sale, divisible, or aggregatable. Licensees/users should have flexibility in determining the services to be provided and the technology used for operation consistent with the other policies and rules governing the service. Licensees/users have a fundamental obligation to protect against and the right to be protected from interference to the extent provided in the Commission's rules. 25.We note that a policy promoting secondary markets for radio spectrum licenses, and rights thereunder, through leasing or other arrangements, inevitably raises larger issues surrounding spectrum licensees' rights and obligations. At our public forum, some of the panelists recommended that the Commission implement a more property-right based system as part of its secondary market initiatives. Specifically, panelists noted that markets functions best when property rights and liability rules are clearly defined. Section 301 of the Act states that the purpose of the Act is "to maintain the control of the United States over all the channels of radio transmission" and "to provide for the use, but not the ownership thereof." The Act also recognizes that use of spectrum is temporary, limited, and subject to withdrawal in a wide variety of circumstances. Further, Section 304 of the Act requires that any applicant seeking to use spectrum, must waive any claim to the use of any particular frequency or of the electromagnetic spectrum as against the regulatory power of the United States. These provisions make it clear that spectrum ultimately belongs to the public and not to individual licensees. Sections 302 and 303 of the Act authorize the Commission, consistent with the public interest, convenience, and necessity, to make reasonable regulations to protect against interference and to classify radio stations, assign frequencies, and establish service rules. 26.While individuals cannot "own" spectrum pursuant to statute, a license to use spectrum confers certain rights to use the spectrum, which we have referred to as "spectrum usage rights." The spectrum usage right is defined within the terms, conditions, and period of the license at the time of issuance. In light of the statutory limitations, we seek to develop policies that define the contours of the "usage rights" granted within the license terms and conditions. We believe that clarifying a licensee's spectrum usage rights will facilitate markets and open an important dialog about our spectrum management policies. 27.In our efforts to remove impediments to the efficient use of spectrum, we may also want to consider ways in which a licensee may be able to maximize its own efficient use of spectrum. One approach would be to consider ways licensees could leverage the value of their retained spectrum usage rights to increase access to capital. Access to capital, especially for smaller businesses, affects the licensee's ability to use its spectrum resources under its license. Specifically, we plan to evaluate our policies prohibiting security and reversionary interests in licenses. We will also explore other financial mechanisms that licensees could use in order to facilitate the provision of service to the public. For example, we intend to consider whether newer market-based mechanisms applicable to other interests such as asset-backed securitization may further assist licensees' capital formation efforts. 28.While we are committed to promoting viable and effective secondary markets for the right to use spectrum based on policies that provide for licensees' discretion to use and trade their right to use assigned frequencies and service areas, we emphasize here our statutory authority and ultimate administrative control over spectrum. Section 303 of the Act, for example, requires the Commission "from time to time, as public convenience, interest, or necessity requires, " to set service rules, band assignments, interference protection, and station operator qualifications, among other things. Because spectrum is a vitally important and scarce public resource, we must maintain authority and administrative control to safeguard the interests of the public and other licensees. In order to protect these interests while promoting the efficient and effective use of the spectrum, we must carefully balance our exercise of authority with the ability of licensees to freely trade their spectrum usage rights. Here we affirm the exercise of our authority in, for example, the allocation of spectrum in instances where the economic benefits available in the marketplace do not directly support the provision of necessary services such as public safety services. We must also promulgate technical rules to protect against interference and take action to allow sharing with existing services where new uses can operate without harmful interference to existing services. Moreover, in fulfilling our responsibilities under the Communications Act, we have implemented a number of economic based rules and policies, e.g. limits on aggregation, interconnection with other providers, resale, roaming, as well as regulations to promote other public interests such as E911 rules for mobile telephony providers. In implementing our secondary markets initiatives, we must also seek to ensure competition in services and address the impact of relocating existing services to new frequencies on consumers of those existing services and on their choice in the range of services available. B.Focus Areas and Initiatives 25.In this Policy Statement, we indicate, in general terms, possible initiatives that could facilitate secondary markets. While most of these initiatives would be undertaken by the Commission, some would more appropriately be implemented by others such as private sector organizations. Specific proposals for implementing initiatives undertaken by the Commission will be addressed in separate rule making proceedings. Interested parties will be provided opportunity to comment on our proposals and related issues in the context of those proceedings. Our efforts will focus on initiatives in the following three areas: 1)Eliminate unnecessary regulations and administrative requirements 26.Secondary markets can be expected to function best when licensees are free to transfer spectrum usage rights to different uses and users with a minimum of administrative review. Restrictions on the kinds of services that may be provided on licensees' right to use spectrum reduce the scope and potential of secondary trading and, at a minimum, impose additional cost and delay as licensees must seek waivers or rule changes. To the extent service flexibility can be increased consistent with statutory authority and regulatory goals, the efficient operation of secondary markets will be enhanced. Given greater opportunities to profit from their spectrum usage right, licensees' incentives to participate in secondary market trading and to employ efficient technologies will be similarly strengthened. In this regard, examples of the types of activities we plan to consider include: Harmonization of operating rules for similar services to promote spectrum fungibility. Modifications to our service definitions, where appropriate, to increase flexibility and maximize spectrum efficiency. Flexibility will allow multiple services to operate in the same spectrum. This may help mitigate the inclination to avoid participating in secondary markets for anti- competitive reasons. Identification of circumstances where we will favorably consider waivers or forbearance from service and technical rules that increase flexibility and maximize spectrum efficiency. 30.As a threshold matter, we must address statutory limitations on the kinds of arrangements into which licensees may enter with third parties without Commission approval. In particular, licensees may not enter into arrangements that would violate Section 310(d) of the Act. Before a licensee can transfer control of its license (or parts of the license, where permitted) to a third party, Section 310(d) requires that the licensee and the third party gain Commission approval to transfer or assign the license (or parts thereof). One of the most problematic areas affecting secondary market activity identified at the Public Forum concerns the Commission's interpretation of Section 310(d). Section 310(d) addresses both reassignment of licensed spectrum from one party to another and transfer of control without conveyance of license. Our rules and policies pursuant to Section 310(d) require that assignment or transfers of control of licenses be approved by the Commission and that licensees maintain control over and responsibility for their assigned spectrum, equipment, and operations. In overseeing license transfers, we seek to ensure that the transferee is eligible to hold the license and that radio facilities are operated in compliance with applicable technical and service rules. 31.The primary focus of concern at the Public Forum was a Commission test for unauthorized de facto transfer of control of commercial wireless licensees. This test was established in a 1963 decision involving a point-to-point microwave service operator, Intermountain Microwave (Intermountain). The Intermountain test sets forth six factors for determining whether there has been an unauthorized de facto transfer of control of a license. This test is widely applied in cases involving wireless services and in some instances involving satellite services. Industry representatives have indicated that, in the context of spectrum leases and management and affiliation agreements, Intermountain can pose constraints, especially where the prospective lessee or manager seeks to control daily operations, personnel and profits. These parties asked that we reduce these barriers by modifying the Intermountain factors to facilitate spectrum leasing and/or simplifying the process for obtaining waivers and Commission approval of license transfers. They stated that additional flexibility is desirable to facilitate secondary market leasing of unused portions of licensed spectrum. 32.In this regard, we intend to consider a range of possible options for allowing third parties to operate and control leased facilities. For example, we recently adopted rules permitting leasing of spectrum though band manager licensees in allocating the "guard bands" frequencies of the 746-806 MHz commercial bands. We defined a Guard Band Manager as a commercial licensee that has the ability to lease access to its licensed spectrum to other eligible users. Subject to technical, operational, and other rules that govern the band, spectrum use by the end users is by private contract between the Guard Band Manager and the end user. We believe we can build upon our Guard Band decision by exploring broader steps that we can take in other bands to provide additional flexibility in our transfer of control rules and policies to further secondary market activity. 33.A second area of our rules that was raised at the Public Forum as a constraint on transfer and leasing of spectrum usage rights is the Commission's buildout requirements. Buildout requirements specify that a licensee must build and operate to serve a specified portion of its service area or the population in its service area on a fixed schedule. These requirements are intended to ensure that licensees make productive use of their spectrum usage right in a timely manner and to further our general universal service and competition goals. Licensees have indicated that they are concerned that if they were to lease portions of their spectrum usage right, they would not be able to meet their construction requirements unless they were able to count the lessee's service towards fulfilling those requirements. They note that the rules currently are unclear on whether a lessee's service would count towards a licensee's buildout requirements. 34.We recognize that additional flexibility on buildout requirements may be desirable in certain circumstances. For example, in some services, we have shifted from incremental buildout milestones to an assessment of whether substantial service exists at license renewal time in order to increase a licensee's ability to respond to marketplace demands. The efficient use of spectrum through leasing may be furthered if we took steps to allow licensees to meet their buildout obligations through service provided by lessees in appropriate circumstances. In examining issues relating to spectrum transfer and leasing, we plan to review our buildout requirements for alternatives that will promote leasing and resale consistent with our other regulatory concerns. 35.Licensees and their representatives have also indicated that minimizing administrative delays by eliminating inefficiencies in our rules and application processes would reduce transaction costs and facilitate the development of secondary markets. Taking into account these comments, a fundamental goal in developing our secondary market initiative is to streamline the existing rules in order to facilitate an incumbent's ability to lease or transfer portions of its capacity. In this regard, we plan to: Assess how changes to Commission rules and processes could further facilitate transferability of spectrum usage rights and re-packaging. Our plan to evaluate our test for de facto transfer of control is one possible such change. Consider whether modification or waiver of eligibility restrictions and licensing rules could be appropriate in certain circumstances, to facilitate trading. Evaluate ways to minimize administrative overhead and processing time. As part of this effort we will identify and implement more efficient processing techniques and procedures. Revise our technical rules to define the rights and obligations of lessees with regard to interference and other technical issues. Consider areas where waiver of technical requirements may be appropriate. 40.Another issue that was raised at the Public Forum concerns the rights of spectrum lessees with regard to occupancy, including the length of the contract term. This impacts their ability to raise capital and willingness to invest in infrastructure. We recognize these concerns lessees indeed must have reasonable expectations that they will have the right to continue to occupy spectrum. These concerns have been addressed in part by our actions to provide an expectation of renewal for licensees. Thus, while a licensee cannot grant a lease for longer than its license terms, it is able to negotiate conditional options for renewal. We intend to look for additional ways that we can enhance licensees' ability to negotiate with lessees to ensure continuity of service. 41.We also seek to minimize the transaction costs and time associated with completing agreements for transfer or lease of spectrum usage rights. Some of these costs may be associated with the lack of currently available information on available spectrum. The majority of these costs, however, stem from contract negotiation and regulatory review. For example, questions regarding regulatory rights and status, interference, technical parameters, indemnification, and contract terms may complicate a transaction. High transaction costs create disincentives for trading or leasing of spectrum usage rights by serving as a barrier to entry. To further help reduce transaction costs, we also plan to consider ways we could facilitate the establishment of brokerage agents and institutions such as spectrum exchanges and standardized contracts between licensees and transferees/lessees. 42.In addition, we plan to augment our existing enforcement infrastructure to support the growth of secondary spectrum markets. Having a mechanism in place to effectively deal with accidental or intentional interference with the ability of users to effectively utilize the spectrum is an important function. We plan to enhance the technical capabilities and resources of our enforcement staff so it can deal with accidental or deliberate interference in a timely and effective way. 2)Promote the availability of frequency and technically agile equipment 36.One of the most difficult problems that users face in providing services in new spectrum is the availability of equipment that will provide the desired service on the specified frequency with an appropriate transmission technology. Different frequencies and services have unique propagation and operating characteristics that require specific equipment performance attributes. Radio equipment is generally not frequency and technically agile, i.e., it is generally designed to operate on a specific band or bands, use a specific modulation method and perform a specific function, and cannot be readily adjusted or modified to work differently. For example, an AM broadcast receiver operates differently and performs different functions than a cellular telephone. Even where devices perform similar functions, current technology does not make it feasible for devices to operate on a frequency band different than those for which they were designed. For example, a VHF maritime radio that uses frequencies in the 150-160 MHz region cannot be readily modified to operate with PCS service at 2 GHz. These limitations on equipment flexibility are generally based on considerations of cost, performance, power and size. With traditional technology, it makes little economic sense to build expensive capabilities into a device that likely will never be used or that will increase its size and weight. 37.However, advanced integrated circuitry, digital designs and processors, and stored program capabilities are increasingly making it more economically feasible to incorporate additional technical flexibility into radio equipment. New equipment concepts known as "software defined" radios are now being developed that will incorporate these new technologies to make radio receivers, transmitters, and transceivers more fungible across different applications and services. We believe these new equipment concepts offer significant potential for providing equipment solutions that would allow a service provider to rapidly begin operations in a newly acquired band of frequencies or to operate economically on a term basis on leased spectrum. We intend to facilitate the deployment of more flexible technologies for equipment, such as software-defined radios and multi-band transmitters and receivers wherever possible. 3)Promote more effective functioning of market processes 38.In order for any market-based system to function there must be a means for bringing buyers and sellers together, presenting products for trade, establishing a mutually acceptable price, and completing their transaction. In the simple example of a traditional bricks and mortar retail store, buyers and sellers come together at the seller's place of business, merchandise is presented on shelves or floor displays, price is established by marking goods or through negotiation, and transactions are completed by exchanging payment for the goods. The opportunity to shop at other stores provides for competition. This market approach is simple, timely and relatively inexpensive. Other types of standard market organizations, such as the brokerage trading approach used in commodity markets, also provide effective, efficient means of exchange. There is, however, no such standard market model for sale or lease of spectrum usage rights. Buyers and sellers must search each other out through brokers, advertising, private contacts or other ad hoc means. Negotiations for bandwidth and service area can be limited by the Commission's technical and service rules. Also, completing the transaction requires approval by the Commission that can, to varying degrees, involve complex submissions and be time consuming and expensive. 39.We seek to encourage improvements in the functioning of the market processes for exchange of spectrum usage rights. Basic to this process is the means for bringing buyers and sellers together. Several of the panelists at our public forum noted the need for a mechanism to identify available spectrum. A relatively simple, cost-effective means for identifying licensees who desire to trade in spectrum usage rights or might have unused spectrum rights available that could be sold or leased to potential buyers could greatly facilitate the development of secondary markets. This function could be provided through several different types of information sources or services that would vary in the extent to which they would address a potential buyer's specific needs. In general, we believe that if our rules permit the operation of robust spectrum market, sufficient economic incentives will exist for mechanisms to develop in those markets to gather and disseminate the relevant information. To help further these developments, we intend to pursue options that look to: Maintain an on-line listing of licenses by service, frequencies, and service area. This is the simplest means for identifying spectrum usage rights to potential buyers/lessees. This would not, however, identify specific spectrum the rights to which licensees might be willing to sell or lease. Support development of services that list spectrum resources that licensees are actively offering for sale or lease. This is a more useful approach than a simple comprehensive listing of licenses by service. Support the establishment of private spectrum exchanges and brokers who would match parties interested in acquiring spectrum usage rights with suitable resources held by existing licensees. Spectrum brokers could bring specific expertise and knowledge of the unique properties of different spectrum bands to assist prospective buyers in identifying the best spectrum for their needs. V.Conclusion 40.The goals set forth in this Policy Statement are intended to establish a framework for the Commission's efforts to facilitate the development of active secondary markets in spectrum usage rights. This endeavor is part of our ongoing efforts to evolve our spectrum management and licensing activities to respond to the changing communications environment. Given the dynamic nature of the market for telecommunications services and the importance of communications to our economic growth, we cannot let spectrum scarcity limit the development of new services. Consistent with our statutory obligations, we are optimistic that an improved system of secondary markets in spectrum usage rights will further the efficient and intensive use of the electromagnetic spectrum and the development and rapid deployment of new technologies, products, and services for the benefit of the public. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Magalie Roman Salas Secretary SEPARATE STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER SUSAN NESS Re: Principles for Encouraging the Development of Secondary Markets for Spectrum The United States has long been the vanguard for developing new approaches to spectrum policy and management. Today, we launch another vehicle to increase the efficiency with which spectrum a scarce national resource is deployed in this country. Previously, we have led the way globally to encourage the adoption of flexible wireless allocations and competitive bidding for license assignment. We have promoted the development of new technologies, such as software defined radio, that will facilitate more efficient, less costly, and less regulated access to spectrum. I am pleased that we are initiating a policy to foster secondary markets for spectrum another effort to increase the opportunity for the public to have access to new services made possible by more efficient use of the spectrum. The viability of a secondary market for spectrum will depend upon three crucial elements: (1) whether the Commission in future proceedings can establish the appropriate legal framework; (2) whether industry can produce equipment that takes advantage of this flexibility without causing undue interference; and (3) whether the market can develop a mechanism for identifying and distributing available spectrum. I look forward to working with all parties to accomplish these goals. SEPARATE STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER HAROLD W. FURCHTGOTT-ROTH Re: Principles for Encouraging the Development of Secondary Markets for Spectrum, Policy Statement; Promoting Efficient Use of Spectrum Through Elimination of Barriers to the Development of Secondary Markets. Markets and government regulation are not complete strangers. Mutual contempt has bred an all too asymmetric familiarity. Regulations change, and markets, by necessity, adapt instantaneously. The converse, however, is not true. It is difficult to find a market in which all applicable regulations have not been reflected; their effects on the market for good or ill are implicitly counted. By contrast, it is rare to find a regulation that directly and reasonably accounts for its effects in one market, much less all markets. Thus, even a casual observer should pause when a government agency writes a regulation with the word "market" in its title. What is at work here? A regulation based on familiarity with markets, or all too familiarly a regulation based on contempt for markets? I am happy to report that the items today reflect more the former than the latter, and for this, the Office of Engineering Technology and Dale Hatfield along with Tom Sugrue and his Wireless Telecommunications Bureau deserve enormous credit. Indeed, these items are conceived from the all too obvious and all too often ignored observation that markets for spectrum rights are not working well. Buyers complain. Sellers complain. And the common refrain is that FCC rules are costly, cumbersome, and do more harm than good for spectrum markets. Even with the progress made by these items, much more needs to be done. These are but the first infant steps when giant steps are ultimately needed, particularly to remove the shadow of regulatory uncertainty from spectrum markets. Clarifying lease arrangements The items today do much to clarify Commission rules and policy regarding leasing arrangements for spectrum rights, and this newfound clarity and certainty will reduce one significant area of regulatory uncertainty. There remain some issues surrounding rental or leasing arrangements that are unresolved by today's items, but surely the additional clarity in Commission policy is a positive step. Some may observe that secondary markets for spectrum are alive and thriving. Indeed, every year the FCC processes thousands of license transfers, the consummation of secondary markets for spectrum rights. In many if not most instances, these licenses are transferred from one party to another in exchange for some form of consideration as a result of a contract. Yet, the mere existence of a secondary market for spectrum rights does not imply that the market functions particularly well. Complaints about the license transfer process at the FCC are legion. As I have often noted, the license transfer process at the FCC is seriously flawed with delays, discriminatory treatment of applicants, unwritten rules, and other problems. The unpredictable, dysfunctional, and possibly unlawful license transfer process at the FCC burdens secondary markets for spectrum rights. The process discourages some potential market participants, and leaves many participants disenchanted. Even if the FCC were to move to timely, nondiscriminatory, transparent, carefully crafted, fully lawful rules for license transfers, secondary markets for spectrum rights would still not be as vibrant as they could be. This is because Commission policies in many areas militate against transactions for spectrum. Despite all of the good that comes from today's items, they do not, in my view, go nearly far enough. Markets for spectrum rights labor under a multitude of regulations, only a few of which are meaningfully reviewed or addressed, in these items. In the remainder of this statement, I describe broad areas where markets for spectrum rights are hampered. What makes a market Markets are simply means by which buyers and sellers exchange for mutual benefit goods, services, or bundles of rights. Markets facilitate exchanges in all societies, both primitive and modern. In primitive societies, many transactions may be based on barter exchange at one point in time. In modern times, transactions can be quite subtle and complex involving complicated contractual arrangements that occur over long periods of time. All market transactions, both simple and complex, have many rules either explicit or implicit, and these can be summarized in three broad categories: 1. Property or exclusivity rights. The parties to a transaction should agree on what is being exchanged. In a simple transaction involving simple property, this might mean a good or service without much description or qualification of the rights associated with the good or service. But for many goods and services, the precision with which associated rights are defined determines the value of the good or service. One example of the importance of associated rights is spectrum. The extent to which excludability or property rights are defined and associated with a spectrum license determines the value of the license. Much like land or many other forms of property, the right to exclude others from the use of spectrum is important to the value of spectrum. The use of spectrum with most current technologies is congestible. Different, uncoordinated uses of spectrum in the same band and location are likely to conflict and interfere with one another. The value of access to spectrum is directly related to the exclusivity rights of that spectrum, both for current and future use. On the other hand, limitations on the uses to which property may be used diminish the value of the property, including spectrum. Under FCC rules, there are limitations on the uses of practically all spectrum licenses. 2. Contract or transaction rights. When a good or service is bought or sold, the rights of the buyer to transfer the good or service to a third party may be restricted. To the extent there are restrictions, however, those are usually agreed upon at the time of the transaction. For FCC licensees, except for those limited leasing arrangements described in today's items, these transactions must be approved by the Commission. 3. Enforcement and liability rules. In most sophisticated contracts, the means to enforce the contract and the liability rules for failure to perform under the contract are explicitly stated. For FCC license transfers, enforcement and liability rules between private parties are difficult to write and to implement because the FCC is an intermediary in all transactions. Uncertainty and markets Demand and supply conditions in a market determine prices, and perturbations in demand and supply conditions lead to corresponding changes in prices. Even market participants with complete information on their current and future excludability rights, contract rights, enforcement rights, liability rules, and the other bundles of rights associated with goods or services in a market understand that prices are not constant forever. Buyers and sellers make transactions with expectations that prices will change, although perhaps not with shared expectations of price movements. At least in competitive markets, neither buyers nor sellers believe that any market participant has the power individually to influence market conditions. Future market volatility as the result of changing demand and supply conditions is assumed to be an unpredictable exogenous event. This volatility in a competitive market where buyers and sellers have complete information on their current and future bundle of rights reflects the common usage of "market uncertainty." For this common usage of "market uncertainty," firms will be more or less inclined to participate in a market depending on the firm's degree of risk aversion specifically to market uncertainty. Some firms like more risk; others like less. Some firms can insure against risks in one market with offsetting risks in another market while others cannot. Market uncertainty affects transactions and the distribution of assets in a market, but those outcomes are rationally assumed to be competitively neutral, not favoring one class of firms over another, except perhaps those that can or those that believe they can better insure against market risks than others. In any event, government agencies can do nothing to remove this form of market uncertainty. There is a different form of uncertainty in markets that is independent of the market uncertainty of changing demand and supply conditions. This uncertainty is regulatory uncertainty, or incomplete information about future regulatory outcomes. There are many possible categories of regulatory uncertainty, but the three categories for transactional rules -- property, contract, and liability -- are convenient. Where market participants are unsure about current and future property rules, contract rules, and liability rules, not only will asset values fall but participants will be discouraged from transactions. If the future outcomes of property rules, contract rules, and liability rules are believed to be random events, uninfluenced by any market participants, it is conceivable that regulatory uncertainty can be consistent with a competitive market. In practice, however, regulatory rules are the product of regulators who participate in spectrum markets often as sellers of spectrum, and always as intermediaries for all license transfers. Where sellers and intermediaries have the power to change regulatory rules, the competitive paradigm for regulatory uncertainty vanishes. Moreover, many other market participants actively lobby regulators, obviously in the belief that regulators can be persuaded one way or another. Again, where regulatory rules are influenced by market participants, regulatory uncertainty is inconsistent with the competitive paradigm. As with market uncertainty, regulatory uncertainty affects the distribution of assets in a market. Many firms may simply avoid markets with substantial regulatory uncertainty. Unlike market uncertainty, it is difficult to insure against regulatory risk in one market with offsetting risk in another market. While some firms may believe they have the power to influence regulators, and therefore they may broaden their portfolio of assets subject to regulatory risks, other firms may view a portfolio of such assets as non-diversifiable risk. FCC actions increase regulatory risk The FCC has taken many actions that increase regulatory risk particularly by changing the property, contract, and liability rules that apply to licensees. These include consideration of and adoption of rules that limit the rights of licensees to exclude others from using or interfering with licensed spectrum. Examples include consideration of sharing of spectrum for DBS licensees, changing interference protection for FM radio broadcasters, absence of protection for WCS licensees, and forced relocation for certain licensees. Although there are perhaps more examples of the FCC relaxing use restrictions, there are some examples where the Commission has considered and adopted more restrictive limitations on spectrum use. Examples include new public interest requirements on broadcasters. Commission practice regarding license transfer transactions are also ever changing. (Formal rules rarely change because there are few formal written rules on license transfers.) Outside parties simply do not know how license transfers, whether simple or complex, will be treated at the agency. Finally, liability rules for interference change. Most licensees are assigned a license that is defined by geographic location, a spectral band, power limits, and other restrictions. While licenses sometimes delineate explicit protection from a small number of identifiable sources of interference, the FCC rarely makes explicit the interference protections to be afforded licensees from all other potential sources of interference. When legal but creeping interference increases in a band, liability rules implicitly are relaxed. When interference standards for broadcasters change or underlying noise levels for ultrawideband technology are modified, so too do associated liability rules and their enforcement. Erosion of these property, contract, and liability rules ultimately increase regulatory risk, diminish the value of spectrum licenses, and discourage participation in spectrum markets. These adverse regulatory effects develop independent of the steps we take today to provide greater clarity for leasing of spectrum rights by licensees. Frustration of parties with the FCC Every business day, the FCC hears entreaties from many private parties concerning spectrum. Some want to acquire bundles of rights to spectrum. Some want to sell various rights associated with spectrum. Others want to facilitate (or to interfere with) the transfer of a spectrum license from one party to another. In the ordinary course of business for other commodities, buyers and sellers meet in markets, markets that may develop anywhere in America. For spectrum, all markets pass through the FCC in Washington. Market transactions typically occur when all parties to the transaction are at least as well off as a result of the transaction. Buyers and sellers come to the FCC not because we make transactions less complex or more certain; they come here because, by law, they must. Buyers and sellers have some divergent interests, but, after their experiences at the FCC, all parties repeat common themes: (1) impatience with our process in which delays are the norm; (2) puzzlement at our complex rules and the unknown range of possible outcomes; (3) fear of the unknown likelihood of each unknown result; and (4) frustration at the absence of effective remedies for outcomes they perceive as unfavorable. While the Commission today calls for a more active secondary spectrum market, it largely misses an opportunity to define the property, contract, and liability rights associated with a spectrum license. Absent a clear definition of the rights of its licensees, secondary markets cannot reach their full potential. Regulatory uncertainty is rampant at the FCC as evident by the types of questions regulated entities pose: What are the range of possible rights associated with a spectrum license? What is the likelihood associated with each outcome? Will the Commission change those rights unilaterally? What protections do licensees have from interference? What certainty do licensees have that the Commission will not seek to relocate them or ask them to share with other potentially interfering users? What remedies do licensees have for bad outcomes? How long will FCC proceedings last? The answer to each question seems to vary by proceeding. Even more troubling is the Commission's reluctance to answer these questions at all. For example, there is reluctance to explain why we contemplate sharing arrangements in some bands of spectrum and not in others. Similarly, we refrain from defining interference protections because we want the "discretion" to alter those rules later on. Yet to the extent the Commission wants to continue to change, eliminate, or overrule its decisions about the scope of licensees' rights, the Commission must accept as a consequence of increased regulatory uncertainty that secondary markets will not flourish. Few want to buy something that cannot be defined. Licensees can only sell what they have yet the FCC is reluctant to define exactly what "spectrum usage rights" these licensees have. A Pig in a PokePig in a Poke Much wisdom rests in an old country saying: "Don't buy a pig in a poke." Narrowly, the expression admonishes a potential buyer to have responsibility for diligence before purchasing a good or service. More broadly, the expression means that a person should not blindly enter into situations without having some knowledge of the possible outcomes, the likelihood of those outcomes, and any remedies that might be available for bad outcomes. Where the range of possible outcomes is unknown, the likelihood associated with any outcome is unknowable, and remedies for bad outcomes are unavailable, individuals should be wary. One can look around America, in urban canyons and in country fairs, and still not find a market for a "pig in a poke." It is not for the difficulty of supply; while difficult, putting a pig in a bag is not impossible. There is no market because no one wants to buy one, and it is consumer demand not the ease of supply that creates a market. Few markets have products where the range of possible outcomes is unknown, the likelihood associated with any outcome is unknowable, and remedies for bad outcomes are unavailable. If there is such a pig-in-the-poke market, it is generally the market and more particularly the secondary market--for spectrum rights and all of the regulatory uncertainty associated with it. The Commission's consensus goal of a vigorous secondary spectrum market will only be achieved if we are prepared to answer the difficult questions associated with clearly defining exactly what rights a spectrum license creates. The process will be difficult, but the resulting benefits make it our necessary course. Ultimately only through free market evolution will spectrum-based services ever keep pace with consumer demand and technological change. Thus defining spectrum usage rights is a challenge that we have no choice but to accept. STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER GLORIA TRISTANI DISSENTING IN PART Re: Principles for Promoting the Efficient Use of Spectrum by Encouraging the Development of Secondary Markets; Promoting Efficient Use of Spectrum Through Elimination of Barriers to the Development of Secondary Markets (adopted November 9, 2000) I support our action here to examine whether we can facilitate more efficient use of commercial and private wireless licensed spectrum by encouraging a secondary market in spectrum usage. I write separately, however, to dissent on the scope of our discussion in the Policy Statement and to highlight my keen interest in encouraging comments on certain issues raised in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM). As an initial matter, the Policy Statement alludes to future consideration of secondary markets in spectrum dedicated to broadcast licenses, and I believe the item should have focused exclusively on spectrum used for commercial and private wireless services. Our action here stems in large part from last May's Secondary Markets Public Forum, which did not include any panelists from the broadcast industry or the public interest community and focused on commercial and private wireless spectrum. Any discussion of spectrum licensed for broadcast use must include the principles of localism and diversity. While the Policy Statement acknowledges public interest "considerations" in the broadcast context, the values of localism and diversity are at the core of broadcasters' public interest obligations and should not be subordinate to spectrum efficiency. These issues were not raised at the Public Forum, and the Policy Statement merely asserts that the Commission will accord such values "adequate weight in pursuing a secondary markets policy." I believe that we must engage with the broadcast industry and the public interest community before we hint at embarking on a secondary market campaign in the broadcast arena, and we must reflect on the importance of these values in any debate. I cannot support such discussion when we have not. Nonetheless, I support the essence of these items as they explore how this agency can take steps to foster increased use of spectrum licensed for commercial and private wireless services, consistent with the Communications Act and sound public policy. It goes without saying that spectrum is an increasingly valuable public resource, and that spectrum management is a core function of this agency. In exercising this responsibility, exploring ways to encourage more intense use of this limited public resource serves the public interest. Secondary market transactions may be one opportunity to do just that. A vision of secondary market transactions, however, raises several legal and policy issues. With regard to the NPRM, I intend to look closely at the comments regarding our obligation to review radio spectrum license transfers under section 310(d) of the Act. We are aware that some leasing arrangements are scuttled by regulatory uncertainty and others by the transactions cost of license transfer proceedings. Leasing arrangements without Commission approval, we are told, would tap the secondary market. To that end, what is the nature of our statutory obligation to review radio license transfers of control? How should we define control under section 310(d) for purposes of commercial and private wireless licenses? Are there considerations beyond ultimate responsibility for compliance with our rules that we must consider in the context of spectrum use and control of a license? I encourage interested parties to examine these issues thoroughly. We cannot ignore the obligations of the Act in the name of secondary markets. The NPRM also seeks comment on the extent to which existing service rules applicable to licensees should extend to spectrum lessees. I believe the wisest course in this uncharted territory is to move deliberately, lest we find ourselves advancing secondary markets at the expense of the underlying purposes of our rules. More to the point, I am concerned that relaxation of our service rules, under the guise of furthering secondary markets, could invite opportunities to circumvent enforcement of our licensing responsibilities and public interest requirements. I am inclined to support a starting point where the lessee "stands in the shoes" of the licensee, agreeing to all interference and service rules that attach to the licensee. Certainly, there are circumstances that warrant relief from the service rules, and I encourage commenters to explore where we should grant such relief. Ultimately, my goal is to find a balance that will foster secondary markets without undermining our obligations under the Communications Act or our policies to promote the public interest. I hope that this Policy Statement and the NPRM offer tangible steps, and I look forward to reviewing the record.
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Modern Conventional Warfare: An Overview By Martin van Creveld Hebrew University, Jerusalem **The views expressed in this and other papers associated with the NIC 2020 project** **are those of individual participants. They are posted for discussion purposes** **only and do not represent the views of the US Government.** Modern Conventional Warfare: An Overview By Martin van Creveld Hebrew University, Jerusalem What has been happening to conventional warfare; how does it stand in relation to other forms of war around the world; and where may it be going in the future? Partly because fifteen years are not enough to provide a true perspective, partly for other reasons that will become clear in a moment, the best starting-point for answering these questions is not the end of the Cold War (1989), as was proposed by the organizers of the present conference. Instead, the starting point of paper will be the end of World War II (1945); and the perspective it takes, the widest one possible. \* Since 1945, and particularly in view of the vast increase in the number of independent polities, conventional wars, here defined as armed conflicts openly waged by one state against another by means of their regular armies, have become the exception rather than rule. Ignoring numerous skirmishes too small to be called wars, such as the 1969 "Football War" fought by Honduras and El Salvador and the border clashes that took place between Peru and Ecuador in 1995, a list of such conflicts would be more or less limited to the following. First are the three Indian-Pakistani wars of 1947, 1965, and 1971. Next come the five Arab Israeli wars of 1948, 1956, 1967, 1969-70, and 1973. Others were the Korean War of 1950-53; the Indian-Chinese War of 1961; the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88; the war between Ethiopia and Somalia (1978); the Chinese attack on Vietnam (1979); the Falklands War (1982); the Kosovo Campaign (1999); and, of course, the two wars against Iraq (1991 and 2003). Even if we add the so- called "Cargill War" of 1999 (when 500 Pakistani irregulars entered a few hundred yards into India and had to be expelled), and the Israeli-Syrian clash of 1982 (which, lasting all of three days, was but a by product of the invasion of Lebanon), the total number of armed conflicts worthy of the name "conventional war" still stands at just nineteen. Concerning the importance or unimportance of these wars, something may be deducted from the fact that, during the same period, the number of sub-conventional wars---here defined as conflicts waged by, or against, non-state organizations and ranging all the way from terrorism to clashes between armed militias---stood at well over a hundred. The mightiest Empires that ever existed---the British, the French, the American (in Vietnam), the Soviet (in Afghanistan) tried their hand at this kind of war and failed; from Iraq to the Sudan, and from the Philippines to Chechnya, other wars of this kind still surround us every day. As the events of 9-11 showed all too clearly, as of the beginning of the twenty-first century not even the most important targets in the most powerful countries are out of reach. Far from being small, harmless affairs, some sub-conventional conflicts were so ferocious, and led to such enormous casualties, as to border on genocide; Algeria, Vietnam, and Afghanistan being particularly good cases in point. Compared to these conflicts, the role played by conventional wars has been quite small. In the future, it may be expected to decline further still. Geographically speaking, what conventional wars did take place during the period in question were not spread evenly over the globe. Instead, almost all of them took place in what the British Geographer, Halford Mackinder, a hundred years ago used to call "the rimlands";[^1] namely, the huge crescent that starts in the Middle East, passes through the horn of Africa, proceeds through South Asia, and ends in northeast Asia (Korea). To this rule there were only two exceptions, i.e. the Falklands War on the one hand and the NATO Campaign against Bosnia on the other. Of these two, the former was waged in such a remote region, and over such an unimportant issue, as to make many people wonder why it had to be conducted at all---unless it was done in the name of that highly potent factor, "honor". The latter was "fought" with the aid of a forty to one advantage (counting combat aircraft only) against an enemy so small, and so utterly incapable of hitting back, that the Coalition did not suffer even a single casualty. Though other factors also played a role, by far the most important reason behind the small number of conventional wars, as well as their geographical location, is nuclear proliferation. Since 1945, when the first two atomic bombs were dropped, the number of countries with nuclear weapons in their arsenals has increased from just one to ten; namely, the US; Russia; Britain; France; Russia; China; India; Pakistan; Israel, and North Korea.[^2] At least as many countries are capable of producing them quickly should they want to do so, and will presumably do so if they feel that their security is seriously threatened. Out of those, several are working in this direction even now and are expected to go nuclear in the near future. In fact, by the early twenty first century any country sufficiently developed to build and maintain considerable conventional armed forces should also be capable of begging, stealing, or manufacturing nukes. The result, nuclear proliferation, has often been decried in the professional literature, particularly that which originates in the United States.[^3] The fears expressed concerning rogue states, unintentional escalation, and accidental war are not entirely without foundation. On the other hand, we now have sixty years' experience to show that, wherever proliferation takes place, large-scale conventional war has come to an end; never before has mankind developed a weapon and then refrained from using it for such a long time. This was true even when, as in the case of Stalin towards the end of his life and possibly Mao Tze Dong, the leaders in control of the weapons were mentally disturbed. Even when, as in the case of the U.S and the U.S.S.R during the Cuba Missile crisis, the number of delivery vehicles in the hands of one side exceeded those of the other by perhaps fifty to one. And even when, as in the case of both South Asia and the Middle East, the people of the region hated each other so much that they did not even shrink from suicide-bombings. \* Since any country capable of creating powerful conventional forces is now equally capable of manufacturing nukes, without exception the conventional wars that took place during the period in question were waged between, or against, third and fourth rate military powers. Gone are the days when eight mighty empires (the US, the USSR, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and, as a matter of courtesy, China) fought engaged in a life-and death struggle for world-supremacy. Gone, too, are the days when, out of those eight, four suffered such catastrophic defeats as to force them to surrender, six were invaded, and seven had their capitals either occupied or bombed. It would indeed be true to say that, in the period since they went nuclear, no country that did so has suffered a major conventional attack anywhere near is frontiers. As to the reasons behind this development, they are too obvious to require elaboration. Since large, powerful countries have ceased to wage conventional war against each other; and since what conventional wars are still being waged tend to take place between or against small, unimportant ones; no wonder that the size of campaigns has been declining. This is true both in terms of numbers and in respect to the ground that they covered. Since nuclear proliferation did not take place at the same time everywhere, the process has been uneven. Some regions, including all of those where large numbers of modern conventional weapons may be produced (North America; Western Europe, Russia; Japan) have not seen a conventional war for decades on end. In others, notably the Middle East and South Asia, third-rate powers such as Israel, the Arab States, India and Pakistan were still waging large campaigns against each other long after the Superpowers and their close allies had ceased doing so. As a result of this shrinking process, the German invasion of the USSR, with involved over 3,000,000 troops operating across a front 1,000 mile long, did not have a successor and presumably never will. The days when wars covered entire continents and oceans (the German march to Stalingrad and back, 1941-45; the North, African Campaign, 1940-43; the "Battle of the Atlantic"; the "battle of the Pacific"; and the like) are over. So is the time when 12,000 sorties were flown on a single day (6 June 1944). Instead of the Battle of Normandy we now have Somalia; a place where the U.S Marines, coming ashore, were met by nothing more dangerous than representatives of the international press. By the standards of World War II, World War I, or even those of the second half of the nineteenth century, our remaining military ventures resemble engagements more than they do full-sized campaigns. In 1939-45 entire army groups, each made up of a million and more men, confronted each other both on the Eastern Front and on the Western one. At the start of the nineteen nineties the largest usable formation was the corps; ten years later it was probably the division. From North America through Europe to the Middle East, the movement towards smaller numbers and units still continues so that future conventional wars are perhaps most likely to be fought by brigades. The two wars that the U.S fought against Iraq provide perfect cases in point. Now the U.S is the largest power by far, dwarfing everybody else. It commands about a quarter of the world's total wealth, spends as much on its military as do the next twelve countries combined, and is the only one whose forces possess a global reach. Nevertheless, with the budget deficit already running at four percent of GDP, there is every reason to think that, should it try to expand its forces, it will face very serious financial and social difficulties. Hence the trend towards smaller conventional wars will surely continue; as the Bible puts it, when the oaks catch fire what should the moss on the wall do? Another cardinal reason behind the declining size of conventional war---which, in terms of troops used, has now reached the point where, quantitatively speaking, it has been reduced to perhaps 5 percent of what it used to be at peak---was its growing cost. In part, the increase was the result of the switch from conscripts to professional forces. Starting during the 1970s, as far as developed countries are concerned it is now all but complete; by a rule of the thumb, and assuming no change in the salaries of officers, professional soldiers cost three times as much as conscripts do. Much more important than this factor was the tremendous technological progress that took place in weapons and weapons and weapons systems fielded by the main industrialized states and sold, or given, by them to their weaker allies and clients. Thus, at the peak of World War II in 1944, the U.S experienced no difficulty in building as many as 300 military aircraft per day,[^4] turning them out in huge batches as if they were matches; the ability to turn out other items such as "Liberty" ships was equally impressive. Sixty years later major weapon systems, ships and aircraft in particular, had become so expensive, so complex, and so few that, like fake antiques, they had to be virtually hand-crafted. One outcome of this was that weapon systems, having entered service, are likely to remain there for decades on end. Another is that not even the US was willing to abandon vast numbers of weapons or sell them for scrap as it had done both in 1918 and 1945. Instead, in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf War, each tank, APC, and artillery piece had to be laboriously gathered, cleaned, restored, and sent home.[^5] As to future procurement plans, they called for 300 new fighter-bombers (F-22s) to be purchased over *fifteen years*, no less;[^6] each time Congress, shocked by cost overruns, cuts the number the Air Force may purchase those that remain on the program become even more expensive. The ability of other developed countries, let alone developing ones, to afford and deploy modern weapon systems is much more limited still so that when a major one is lost it is seldom replaced. In consequence the armed forces of many of the countries in question have been reduced to mere shells of their former selves. Often they are hardly even suitable for being put on parade. Concerning the nature of that technological progress, the most important developments may perhaps be summed up as follows. Having got under way during the First World War, and continued during the Second, motorization proceeded apace, causing all armies to become mechanized and almost doing away with infantry as the former queen of the battlefield. Unfolding simultaneously from 1944-45 on, there was the introduction of jet engines for aviation. Developing much more power per pound of weight than than their predecessors, jet engines permitted vast increases in the size, weight, and performance of military aircraft of all kinds. Until, by century's end, the most advanced fighter bombers, such as the F-15 I, had become capable of carrying almost as much ordnance almost to the same distance as the largest bombers in World War II. Other outstanding advances included the development of helicopters and their incorporation into the order of battle for transport, observation, liaison, search and rescue, casualty-evacuation, and, last not least, ground attack. Then there were entire families of ground to ground, ground to air, air to ground, air to air, sea to air, sea to sea, and cruise missiles as well as a few anti-ballistic ones; precision guided-weapons (including, besides missiles certain kinds of artillery rounds) and the electronic countermeasures to them; various kinds of sensors capable of picking up the "signature" of enemy personnel and weapons; earth-circling satellites to extend war from the air into outer space; Remotely Piloted Vehicles (RPVs) and Unmanned Airborne Vehicles (UAVs) which, in the years after 2000, themselves began to carry missiles; and finally, in the form of computers and data-processing and transmitting systems, the vast command and control networks needed to keep the entire lot together. In theory, these and other technological advances, as well as the appropriate changes in organization, doctrine, and training, should have resulted in enormously enhanced military performance. It is, of course, true that an army dating to, say, 1975 could have cut through its 1945 predecessor like a knife through butter in the same way that an army dating to 2004 could have easily dealt with one of 1975. On the other hand, and if only because the most important weapon-producing countries kept an eye on each other and often came up with designs specifically aimed at countering those of the other side, gaining a technological advantage that would prove both significant and lasting was not easy. Even now that the U.S has become the sole remaining superpower, silver bullets\--meaning weapons so superior as to be capable of leading to a quick and easy victory\--remain about as elusive as they had been in 1939-45, a time when countermeasure followed countermeasure and any advantage gained by one side was often cancelled out in a matter of months or, in some cases, even less.[^7] To the extent that superiority was achieved, almost invariably it proved short- lived. Indeed it could be argued that, at least until 1988 (the year when the Iraq-Iran War finally came to an end) the most important features of conventional war had remained pretty much as they had been from the end of World War II on. Specifically, the most important weapons---from fighter-bombers through tanks to artillery barrels---had only undergone limited change. As a result, the relationship between attack and defense remained as it had been, more or less; in other words, the factors that had caused Clausewitz to declare the defense the stronger form of war[^8] continued to operate. Unable to occupy or hold ground, the growing power of air forces as well as guided and unguided missiles did not render land forces obsolete, as some had predicted would happen. As a result, maneuver by land forces remained very important and so, of course, did the various kinds of terrain in which it took place. So important were these factors that the 1980s saw the rise of entire doctrines---variously known as maneuver warfare, third-generation warfare, and air/land battle[^9]---which were based precisely on that assumption. Meanwhile, the fact that both maneuver warfare and air/land battle were little more than replays of the cooperation between Stukas and Panzers that had characterized the Wehrmacht at its best was conveniently overlooked. Whereas, during this period, some battles were much more costly than others---compare, for example, the 1973 Arab-Israeli War with the one fought by the same belligerents six years earlier---a fundamental shift in the balance between annihilation and attrition probably did not occur. Take concepts such as base and objective, front and line of communication, internal and external lines, direct and indirect approach, mobile and stationary war, and the like. All remain as useful to the analysis of contemporary strategy as they had been in the days when Basil Liddell Hart first published his classic work on that subject (1929), and all will presumably remain useful in the foreseeable future. One outcome of this was that the literature on conventional warfare froze. Instead of developing new ideas it became repetitive. Too often, it lost itself in detailed consideration as to how this or that new weapon might affect operations; indeed the fascination with technology itself became one reason that prevented a thoroughgoing reappraisal of warfare. Though many writers tried, none succeeded in attaining the stature of the above-mentioned Liddell Hart whose book on strategy went through a new edition each time a major armed conflict broke out anywhere in the world. As a result, few could come up with anything better than the standard cant about future conventional operations becoming faster, more effective, and more complicated;[^10] whereas, in fact, not even these predictions were always fulfilled. Another reason why, during this period, military performance in conventional war did not improve as much as might have been expected was rooted in the nature of logistics.[^11] During most of history, by far the most important commodities required by armies on campaign were food and fodder. Grown by the inhabitants or simply available in the fields, these commodities could be obtained almost everywhere; in regions where they could not, such as deserts, forests and mountains, campaigning was very difficult and often impossible. The advent, during the years between 1870 and 1914, of industrialized warfare, including, above all, quick-firing weapons with their insatiable demand for ammunition, changed in this situation in a fundamental way, as did the introduction of motor vehicles with their equally insatiable demand for fuel. From then on, with each passing decade, the relative importance (by weight) of food and fodder went down, and with it the ability of armies to live off the land and enjoy the resulting strategic mobility. From then on, with each passing decade, more and more of an army's supplies had to be produced in factories far in the rear, stored in bases, transported to the front, and distributed to the troops to be consumed or expended. Beginning in the 1920s, when the railways began a slow but steady decline, the most important means that linked armies to their bases were convoys of motor vehicles. Without those convoys, the best-known of which was the Red Ball Express deployed by the U.S Army in France in 1944, the campaigns of 1939-45 would have been inconceivable. During the decades after 1945 weapons technology continued to make vast strides; by contrast, and at least in so far as land forces were concerned, the means of transport that supported them stagnated. Of course there were countless improvements in detail such as high compression engines, tubeless tires, containers, and the like. Developments in electronics also made it much easier to trace individual items as they passed through the logistic pipeline much in the same way as scanners and bar codes allow airlines to check the whereabouts of individual pieces of luggage. Still, in the end lorries remained lorries and could only do what lorries had always done, i.e. move supplies over reasonable roads and at very great cost in spare parts, fuel, and personnel. Neither transport aircraft, nor helicopters, nor newfangled devices such as hovercraft or fantasies such as the land-walking machines proposed by some visionaries could take their place; consequently logistic limitations did as much to shape war after 1945 as they had done before that date. In spite the advent of precision-guided weapons, which in theory should have saved ammunition and eased the logistic burden, this continued to be the case during the 2003 War against Iraq too.[^12] Important developments, nevertheless, began to take place from about 1990 on. Just where the origins of the so-called Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) may be found, and when it got under way,[^13] are questions we can safely leave to historians. Suffice it to say that, as a result of simultaneous advances in the field of computers, sensors, and communications, there took place vast improvements in command and control. Spreading from the top down, the new technologies permitted everybody to communicate with everybody all the time. Not only were commanders able to follow their units in real time, but they were given the option of gaining information and giving instructions in the form of pictures as well as words. Enemy intelligence, often picked up automatically from a distance (or else from outer space) and translated into electronic signals, could be instantly relayed, distributed among as many headquarters and officers as were needed, displayed, stored, and instantly retrieved when required. Once this had been done, the same revolution in microelectronics that had made the above developments possible also enabled targets to be tracked and hit by precision-guided weapons. Including, above all, such as could be delivered from the air, whether from aircraft or, to a limited but growing extent, from UAVs; both of which, directed by the new command and control networks became more flexible than ever before. Again, in theory the outcome of these developments ought to have been a vast improvement in military performance. In practice, whether or not such an improvement took place has been somewhat obscured by the fact that, to date, there have been only three occasions when the new technology was used on any scale. We might as well admit the truth: namely, that the campaigns of 1991, 1999, and 2003 were all waged against opponents so small, so backward, and so lacking in military power as to be almost incapable of putting up resistance. Suppose a historian whose task is to evaluate the performance of the German Wehrmacht. Instead of looking at World War II as a whole, he (or she) has focused solely on the campaigns it waged against Poland, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxemburg, Greece, and Yugoslavia. Clearly, doing so, he would have ended up with some pretty strange ideas. As Friedrich Nietzsche once said, a great victory will make the victor stupid (and the loser malicious, but that is beside the point). If only for that reason, it is necessary to serve urgent warning against the belief that the victory gained by the U.S in its second war against Iraq proved the success of the RMA and the fulfillment of its promise, as many analysts have claimed. Rather, all it did prove was that when an elephant steps on an ant, the ant will be crushed\--especially if it does not have a single ally in the world, and especially if it has already been stepped on once before. \* Thus, taking all factors into consideration, and in spite of all the countless billions that have been and still are invested in it, it would be fair to say that there has been less to the development of conventional warfare since 1945 than meets the eye at first sight. As the 1967 and 1973 Arab-Israeli Wars---which have been compared to the 1940 German Blitzkrieg against France and the Battle of Kursk respectively---the Indo-Pak Wars, and the Iran-Iraq War in particular demonstrated, until the late nineteen eighties technological advances led to many changes in detail. However, they did not lead to a revolution in armed conflict; the most important elements remained very much as they had been. Driven by the ongoing RMA, the period from 1989 to 2004 saw more far- reaching changes, particularly in the field of command and control and particularly as far as the balance between air and land power is concerned. The catch is that each and every one of the campaigns that this period witnessed was waged by mighty coalitions against extremely weak opponents; hence they did not really provide many lessons for the conduct of conventional war as a whole. Presumably such lessons will have to wait until two modern states capable of producing and fielding the most advanced military technology engage each other in a full-scale conventional war. The nuclear reasons spelt out above, however, are causing such a war to appear less likely every day. Globally speaking, as conventional war became smaller and much more expensive, both its importance and the political results that it could yield declined. Not only did nuclear proliferation limit it to weak states, but it was accompanied by a very large number of conflicts fought between, or against, political organizations that were not states. As those conflicts evolved and multiplied, a very large number of terms were used to describe them: be they brushfire war, or insurgency, or guerrilla, or low intensity conflict, or asymmetric conflict, or terrorism (the most recent one), or whatever. Whereas the threat of nuclear escalation limited conventional warfare from above, sub-conventional war did the same from below. As a result, it has been caught in a vise. In the face of nuclear powers such as North Korea, let alone Russia, China, or India, or Pakistan, conventional armies and their weapon systems were largely useless---a fact which itself induced some of these countries to acquire nuclear weapons. As the aftermath of the occupation of Iraq by the Americans in 2003 proved once again, in the face of sub-conventional war those weapons and those armies were also very largely useless. Existing systems such as Abrams tanks, B-1 and B-2 bombers, ballistic missiles, and so on and so on will not put an end to the kind of terrorism that is now rife not only in Iraq but in many other parts of the world as well. Neither will future systems such as the F-22, F-40, or any other number of potential Fs. Seen in this perspective it would hardly be too much to say that the most recent conventional war, far from leading to shock and awe and demonstrating its own power, only showed how hollow its claims have become. This presumably does not mean that this kind of war will disappear all at once. But almost certainly it does mean that its life, and that of the armed forces and weapon systems designed for waging it, is limited. Extrapolating from the above, and assuming no new and revolutionary events upset the trends that have now persisted for almost sixty years, concerning the future the following may perhaps be said. First, compared with the role played by nuclear deterrence on the one hand and various forms of sub-conventional war on the other, that of conventional war is clearly declining and will continue to decline. Second, what wars of this kind still take place will rarely, if ever, involve the most modern armed forces on both sides; indeed the very fact that the forces on both sides are modern will constitute the best guarantee to prevent them from fighting each other in earnest. Third, such wars will continue to be limited mainly to the "rimlands" where the majority of states sufficiently large and developed to form relatively powerful armed forces, but unable or unwilling to build nuclear ones, are concentrated. Fourth, the scale of operations, as well as the number of troops and machines involved, will continue to decline even as their complexity and sophistication increases and in direct proportion thereto. Fifth, command and control systems will continue to evolve. They will permit much greater flexibility and speed; on the other hand, by increasing a commander's temptation to wait until he has all the information and threatening to overwhelm him, they may be counterproductive. Sixth, conventional war will be increasingly dominated from the air. However, this is not necessarily good news for the air force; partly because manned combat aircraft are on their way out, and partly because many of their unmanned successors will be operated by the other services. Seventh, as long as weapons continue to kill by firing metal or launching it into the air, and as long as vehicles of every sort continue to rely on the internal combustion engine, logistics, and with it problems of distance and terrain, will keep playing a major role. Logistics will do much to dictate the movements of armed forces, often preventing them from operating as fast, as deeply into enemy terrain, and as decisively as the current hype about the RMA and its derivatives might lead some people to expect. As the current fighting in Iraq demonstrates all too clearly, they will also continue to constitute a weak link; indeed one could argue that, compared to this factor, everything else is secondary at best. In view of all this, many questions arise. In particular, one might well ask how many tens or even hundreds of billions the U.S should continue to invest in preparing for conventional wars practically all of which take place so far away, and on such a small scale, as to be visible only on TV. On the one hand, that kind of war represents a leftover from the pre-nuclear age. On the other, as the unrest in Iraq is demonstrating even while these lines are being written in May 2004, the armed forces designed for fighting it are hopelessly unable to cope with asymmetric opponents and, to that extent, almost totally useless. Disregarding the numerous technicalities that have changed it and will continue to do so in the future, probably the best way of looking at conventional war is to realize the fact that it is declining and draw the necessary consequences from this fact. Fail to do this, and the only certain winner will be the national debt. [^1]: See most recently G. Sloan, "Sir Halford Mackinder; The Heartland Theory Then and Now", *Journal of Strategic Studies*, 22, 2-3, June-September 1999, pp. 15-38. [^2]: For the latest on this see J. Lumpkin, "Analysts Unsure of N. Korea's Nuke Weapon", 19 September 2003, available at http://nucnews.net/nucnews/2003nn/0309nn/030919nn.htm. [^3]: For several dozen articles on this subject, as well as statements by leading American personalities, see Coalition to Reduce Nuclear Dangers, "Nuclear Proliferation Dangers", available at http://www.clw.org/pub/clw/coalition/libloose.htm. [^4]: See, for the production figures, R. Overy, *The War in the Air*, London, Europea, 1980, p. 77. [^5]: W. H. Pagonis, *Moving Mountains: Lessons in Leadership and Logistics from the Gulf War*, Cambridge, Ma., Harvard Business School, 1991, pp. 151-58. [^6]: C. Bolkom, "F-22 Aircraft Program", 21 March 2000, summary, available at http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/crs/IB87111.htm. [^7]: ^?^See on this M. van Creveld, *Technology and War; From 2000 B.C to the Present Day*, New York, N.Y., 1989, pp. 227-28; also R. L. O'Connell, *Of Arms and Men: A History of Wars, Weapons and Aggression* (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989), p. 91. [^8]: *On War*, M. Howard and P. Paret, eds., Princeton, N.J, Princeton University Press, 1976, pp. 357-59. [^9]: See, on them, S. Naveh, *In Pursuit of Military Excellence: The Evolution of Operational Doctrine*, London, Cass, 1997, pp. 250=323. [^10]: One of the few exceptions was R. Simpson, *Race to the Swift: Thoughts on Twenty-First Century Warfare, Washington D.C.,* Brassey's, 1985. [^11]: See on this most recently M. van Creveld, *Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton*, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004, 2^nd^ edition, pp. 252-59. [^12]: See the discussion in [www.tank-net.org;]() also A. Cordesman, "The Instant Lessons of the Iraq War", 28 March 2003, p. 130, available at [www.csis.org](http://www.csis.org/). [^13]: See on these questions L. Freedman, ed., *The Revolution in Strategic Affairs*, London, IISS, Adelphi Paper No. 318, 1999; also W. Owens, *Lifting the Fog of War*, New York, N.Y., Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2000, especially pp. 97-149.
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MITSUBISHI MOTORS CORPORATION, PETITIONER V. SOLER CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH,INC. SOLER CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, INC., CROSS-PETITIONER V. MITSUBISHI MOTORS CORPORATION No. 83-1569 & No. 83-1733 In the Supreme Court of the United States October Term, 1984 On Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae Supporting Respondent in No. 83-1569 TABLE OF CONTENTS Interest of the United States Statement Introduction and summary of argument Argument: The federal antitrust claim in this case should not have been referred to foreign arbitration A. Congress intended that federal antitrust claims would not be subject to arbitration B. The fact that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim arose in connection with an international commercial transaction does not render it subject to arbitration 1. Arbitration of a federal antitrust claim that arises in connection with an international commercial transaction is no more appropriate than arbitration of a domestic claim 2. While the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards generally mandates enforcement of international agreements to arbitrate, it does not require United States courts to compel arbitration of federal antitrust claims Conclusion QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the district court erred in referring the federal antitrust counterclaim in this case to foreign arbitration pursuant to the terms of the parties' contract. /*/ INTEREST OF THE UNITED STATES The United States has primary responsibility for enforcement of the federal antitrust laws. However, private treble damages suits constitute a significant supplement to the government's antitrust enforcement efforts. The United States therefore has an interest in assuring that parties to a private contract do not employ general arbitration clauses in a manner that would improperly interfere with the role Congress has assigned to private actions in the antitrust enforcement scheme. The United States also is concerned with matters that affect our nation's foreign relations and, specifically, with proper interpretation of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, T.I.A.S. No. 6997, 330 U.N.T.S. 38 (entered into force for the United States December 29, 1970). STATEMENT 1. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. (Soler) is a Puerto Rican corporation with its principal place of business in Puerto Rico. Mitsubishi Motors Corporation (Mitsubishi) is a Japanese corporation that was formed in 1970 as part of a joint venture between Chrysler International, S.A. (CISA) and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Inc. (Pet. App. A5-A6). /1/ In 1979 Soler and CISA entered into a Distributor Agreement, which gave Soler the right to sell vehicles manufactured for CISA by Mitsubishi (Pet. App. B1-B2). At the same time, Soler, CISA and Mitsubishi executed a Sales Procedure Agreement, with regard to Soler's ordering of the Mitsubishi-manufactured vehicles (id. at B2). That agreement provided that it "is made in, and will be governed by and construed in all respects according to the laws of the Swiss Confederation as if entirely performed therein" (J.A. 56). It also provided for arbitration in Japan of contract disputes arising under specified portions of the agreement (id. at 52-53). /2/ Some two years later, during a slump in the new car market, Soler was unable to meet its minimum sales commitments in its assigned territory. Soler therefore attempted to transship vehicles to other areas, including Central and South America and the continental United States. Mitsubishi and CISA refused to permit transshipment, and Mitsubishi eventually withheld shipment of close to 1,000 vehicles ordered by Soler. In February 1982, Soler disclaimed responsibility for the vehicles stored in Japan. Pet. App. A6. 2. In March 1982, Mitsubishi brought suit against Soler in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, seeking an order compelling arbitration in Japan of alleged breaches of the Sales Procedure Agreement; /3/ Mitsubishi also filed a request for arbitration with the Japan Commercial Arbitration Association. Pet. App. A6-A7. Soler denied the allegations of the complaint and counterclaimed against Mitsubishi and CISA, alleging violations of, inter alia, the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. 1 et seq.; /4/ the federal Automobile Dealers' Day in Court Act, 15 U.S.C. 1221 et seq.; the Puerto Rico Dealers Act; and the Puerto Rican antitrust statute. J.A. 76-103. Mitsubishi then asked the district court to compel arbitration of Soler's counterclaims and to stay pending arbitration proceedings on any counterclaim the court determined to be nonarbitrable (id. at 113-114). The district court ordered Mitsubishi and Soler to arbitrate Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim, as well as several other claims raised by the parties. Pet. App. B1-B13. /5/ The district court recognized that antitrust claims are not arbitrable in a domestic context (id. at B9-B10). It concluded, however, that the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards and its implementing legislation, 9 U.S.C. 201 et seq., required an order compelling arbitration of Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim (Pet. App. B5-B9). 3. The court of appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part (Pet. App. A1-A29). It held, inter alia, that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim was not arbitrable. /6/ The court agreed with all other federal courts of appeals that had considered the issue that the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. 1 et seq., does not mandate arbitration of antitrust claims arising in domestic disputes because arbitration could pose unacceptable dangers to private enforcement of the antitrust laws (Pet. App. A15-A16). The court believed that foreign countries would be unlikely to regard United States insistence on judicial determination of antitrust disputes as parochial, in view of the known importance of United States antitrust laws and the existence of similar statutes or policies in several European nations (id. at A16-A18). On the other hand, if courts could be ousted of jurisdiction over antitrust disputes simply because a foreign entity was included as a party to an arbitration agreement, antitrust enforcement would be seriously hampered (id. at A18). The court concluded that the doctrine precluding arbitration of antitrust claims would apply at least to an agreement governing the sale and distribution of products in the United States (ibid.). The court of appeals concluded that the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards did not foreclose such a holding because an agreement to arbitrate antitrust issues would not concern a "subject matter capable of settlement by arbitration," as required by Article II(1) of the Convention. Pet. App. A18-A23. /7/ The court of appeals also held that this Court's decision in Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. 506 (1974), did not require referral of Soler's antitrust counterclaim to arbitration. Pet. App. A23-A28. The court of appeals left to the district court the decision "whether both arbitrable and nonarbitrable matters should proceed on their own course or whether one set of problems should await resolution of the other" (id. at A28-A29). /8/ INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT United States law generally requires federal courts to be hospitable to arbitration, which has proved to be an effective mechanism for resolution of many types of disputes. Where international agreements are involved, the interests of international commerce may require enforcement of an agreement to arbitrate even when a matter would be nonarbitrable in a domestic context; moreover, the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, to which the United States has acceded, contemplates that courts will enforce agreements to arbitrate in most cases. On the other hand, the United States antitrust laws embody a policy of preserving competition that is of great significance to our national interests. In establishing the antitrust enforcement scheme, Congress has assigned a crucial role to private plaintiffs, who are entitled to recover treble damages in federal court. While we recognize that exceptions to arbitrability are quite limited, particularly with respect to an agreement to arbitrate in connection with an international commercial transaction, we believe that the special public enforcement role Congress has assigned to private antitrust claims requires that such claims be regarded as nonarbitrable in both the domestic and international contexts. A. 1. Every court of appeals that has considered the question has held that federal antitrust claims are not arbitrable. There is strong support for that uniform view of congressional intent. The antitrust laws embody a highly significant national policy. Congress has assigned private suits a key role in the public enforcement scheme by providing that a private plaintiff may recover treble damages in federal court. In view of that special role, it is most unlikely that Congress would have intended that parties to a contract could avoid judicial resolution by diverting private antitrust claims to arbitration. The role that private antitrust actions play in vindicating important public interests in the preservation of competition renders them inappropriate for determination by arbitration. Such claims often involve firms that possess substantial market power, and the agreement to arbitrate itself may reflect an exercise of that market power by the stronger party. Arbitrators normally are drawn from the business community the antitrust laws are intended to regulate; in addition, they are likely to be less qualified than Article III judges to deal with the complex issues that arise in antitrust cases and more inclined to substitute general notions of fairness between the parties for careful economic analysis and interpretation of statutory policy. Finally, although they may be useful in the resolution of many types of commercial disputes, arbitral procedures -- including limitations on discovery, the absence of a written opinion in some cases, and the limited scope of judicial review -- are not adequate to effectuate antitrust enforcement policies. Of course, even though an antitrust claim is nonarbitrable, a court may order arbitration of contract claims to proceed, thereby serving both the policy of antitrust enforcement and the policy in favor of arbitration. 2. The Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. 1 et seq., does not render antitrust claims arbitrable. Although that Act was intended generally to authorize judicial enforcement of agreements to arbitrate and to make federal courts more hospitable to arbitration, nothing in its text or legislative history is sufficient to overcome the strong indications that Congress did not intend private antitrust claims to be arbitrable. B. The fact that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim arose in connection with an international commercial transaction does not render it subject to arbitration. 1. In some cases the fact that a dispute arises in the context of an international commercial transaction may make it more appropriate to enforce an agreement to arbitrate than if the dispute had arisen in a domestic context. That is not the case with federal antitrust claims. So long as there is a sufficient effect on United States commerce to bring a dispute within the coverage of the antitrust laws, private suits serve the same functions as in a domestic context, by supplementing governmental enforcement resources, punishing violators, deterring future violations, and publicizing anticompetitive conduct. Foreign arbitrators are even less likely than domestic arbitrators to be familiar with United States antitrust laws, and arbitral procedures, and limitations on judicial review interfere with antitrust enforcement interests at least as much in foreign arbitration as in domestic arbitration. To the extent parties may contract out of antitrust liability altogether by means of an agreement to arbitrate combined with a choice of law clause, arbitration clearly undermines antitrust enforcement interests, particularly in a case like this one, in which a substantial effect on United States commerce is alleged. Arbitration of antitrust claims is not required by this Court's decision in Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. 506 (1974), which involved an alleged securities law violation and an international agreement to resolve disputes through foreign arbitration. In this case, unlike in Scherk, there was no uncertainty concerning the applicable law; it should have been clear to the parties that the Sherman Act would apply to alleged anticompetitive restraints on the sale of vehicles shipped into Puerto Rico. Moreover, the concern of the United States with affording a federal judicial forum for private treble damages actions under the antitrust laws is not the sort of parochialism the Court disapproved in Scherk. 2. The Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards does not require arbitration of federal antitrust claims. Although the Convention contemplates that Contracting States will enforce agreements to arbitrate in most cases, it expressly permits them to make limited exceptions for cases in which arbitration would frustrate particularly important national policies. In view of the special importance Congress has assigned to private suits in the antitrust enforcement scheme, such suits come within the limited class of matters that are properly regarded as nonarbitrable under the Convention. ARGUMENT THE FEDERAL ANTITRUST CLAIM IN THIS CASE SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN REFERRED TO FOREIGN ARBITRATION A. Congress Intended That Federal Antitrust Claims Would Not Be Subject To Arbitration 1. The rule that federal antitrust claims are not arbitrable is well established, at least in the domestic context. /9/ Every court of appeals that has considered the question has held that such claims are nonarbitrable. /10/ Indeed, in the court of appeals Mitsubishi did not even contest the proposition that federal antitrust claims are not subject to arbitration in a domestic context. /11/ There is strong support for this uniform holding of the courts of appeals. At the time it enacted the Sherman Act in 1890, Congress could not have intended that private treble damages actions would be subject to arbitration. At that time both federal and state courts were unsympathetic to enforcement of arbitration agreements. See Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. 506, 510-511 & n.4 (1974); Red Cross Line v. Atlantic Fruit Co., 264 U.S. 109, 120-123 (1924). Congress undoubtedly understood that, at least in the absence of express statutory authorization, arbitration agreements involving the right to sue under the antitrust laws would be unenforceable. More fundamentally, the longstanding and exceptional importance that Congress has attributed to suits by private parties in the antitrust enforcement scheme makes it most unlikely that it would have intended such claims to be arbitrable. The Sherman Act is "a comprehensive charter of economic liberty" that is "as important to the preservation of economic freedom and our free-enterprise system as the Bill of Rights is to the protection of our fundamental personal freedoms." United States v. Topco Associates, Inc., 405 U.S. 596, 610 (1972); Northern Pacific Ry. v. United States, 356 U.S. 1, 4 (1958). The Sherman Act makes the Attorney General primarily responsible for enforcement (15 U.S.C. 4). However, Congress knew that the federal government would have only limited resources with which to pursue antitrust violations. In order to encourage vigorous enforcement, Congress expressly authorized private parties injured by antitrust violations to sue in federal courts, without regard to the amount in controversy; and it permitted private plaintiffs to recover treble damages and costs, including attorneys fees. 15 U.S.C. 15; Sherman Act Section 7, 26 Stat. 210 (1890). This treble damages provision does more than simply compensate injured parties. Treble damages constitute a special incentive to the enlistment of private parties -- who are in the best position to be aware of violations -- as "private attorneys general." See, e.g., Hawaii v. Standard Oil Co., 405 U.S. 251, 262 (1972); Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc., 395 U.S. 100, 130-131 (1969); Pitofsky, Arbitration and Antitrust Enforcement, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1072, 1073-1074 (1969). Treble damages also serve as a particularly effective means of punishing those who have violated the antitrust laws and thus of deterring potential violators. See 21 Cong. Rec. 3146-3147, 3150, 4091 (1890); Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v. International Parts Corp., 392 U.S. 134, 138-139 (1968); Lawlor v. National Screen Service, 349 U.S. 322, 329 (1955); Lyons v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 222 F.2d 184, 189 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 350 U.S. 825 (1955) (L. Hand, J.). Indeed, in the case of corporations, which cannot be imprisoned, treble damages are a far more effective deterrent to criminal activity than are fines. In enacting the treble damages provision, Congress could hardly have intended that private parties would have the option of relinquishing the right to bring such public judicial actions in favor of private arbitration. /12/ At the time the Sherman Act was passed, the treble damages provision was an extraordinary and unprecedented measure. It remains remarkable today. While Congress has granted private rights to sue for damages under many statutes, very few authorize the award of treble damages. /13/ In sum, Congress intended private actions under the antitrust laws to serve to vindicate important public interests in the preservation of competition, rather than merely to resolve disputes between the parties to the lawsuit. Cf. Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc., 390 U.S. 400 (1968). It is for this reason that they constitute a special class of claims not subject to arbitration. See American Safety Equipment Corp., 391 F.2d at 826. It is this important public interest ingredient of antitrust claims that renders them inappropriate for determination by arbitration. /14/ While arbitration can be an effective and efficient way of resolving a wide variety of claims, it presents numerous difficulties in the area of antitrust. Antitrust claims often involve firms that singly or by agreement possess monopoly power; indeed, the core purpose of the antitrust laws is to prevent the anticompetitive use of such power. Standard Oil Co. v. United States, 221 U.S. 1, 58-62 (1911). It would be detrimental to the public interest to permit contracts imposed through the exercise of such economic power to determine the forum for settlement of antitrust disputes. See American Safety Equipment Corp., 391 F.2d at 827. A monopolist or cartel member could use its market power to obtain from a customer an open-ended surrender of its rights to seek redress in court. Even when arbitration clauses are not technically contracts of adhesion, there is likely to be a significant disparity in economic power between the parties, which makes it more likely that the weaker parties will relinquish their rights. In addition, arbitrators frequently are chosen from the business community that is regulated by the antitrust laws. See American Safety Equipment Corp., 391 F.2d at 827. While such arbitrators may in fact be entirely fair, the public perception of such arrangements tends to undermine confidence in the even-handed administration of the antitrust laws. And, as Judge Posner has noted, many arbitrators are not even lawyers. University Life Insurance Co. v. Unimarc Ltd., 699 F.2d at 851. Such arbitrators may be unable to handle the complex legal issues often involved in antitrust claims. See Pitofsky, supra, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. at 1078. Arbitrators may be inclined to substitute general notions of fairness between the parties for careful economic and legal analysis. See Loevinger, Antitrust Issues As Subjects of Arbitration, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1085, 1090-1091 (1969). Furthermore, in some cases, limitations on fact gathering may prevent plaintiffs from pursuing antitrust claims effectively in an arbitral proceeding. See Loevinger, supra, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. at 1090-1091; Pitofsky, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. supra, at 1080. Preparation of a written opinion is generally optional; indeed, arbitrators may be encouraged to avoid written opinions. See, e.g., United Steelworkers v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp., 363 U.S. 593, 598 (1960); Wilko v. Swan, 346 U.S. 427, 436 (1953); Domke on Commercial Arbitration Section 29:06 (G. Wilner rev. ed. 1984); Pitofsky, supra, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. at 1076-1077. Even the results of an arbitration may be kept confidential, so that neither the federal government nor other injured parties will be alerted to the existence of possible violations. An arbitral award generally may not be set aside, even for errors of law, unless it is clearly arbitrary. See 9 U.S.C. 10, 207; Wilko v. Swan, 346 U.S. at 436-437; Domke on Commercial Arbitration, supra, at ch. 34. While the absence of arbitral opinions and the substantial inability of courts to review arbitral decisions may be entirely acceptable in the resolution of other types of commercial disputes, they create an unacceptable risk of incorrect and irremediable decisions on competition issues that Congress has designated as unusually important to the public interest in competitive functioning of the economy. /15/ Finally, there is a substantial question whether arbitrators may award punitive damages (see id. Section 33.03), which may make arbitration particularly attractive to potential antitrust defendants. If an arbitrator may award only actual damages for an antitrust violation, arbitration will eliminate a significant deterrent to anticompetitive behavior. /16/ This is not to suggest that insubstantial antitrust counterclaims should be allowed to delay arbitration of clearly arbitrable contract claims. To the contrary, a district court has ample discretion to order that arbitration of contract claims proceed prior to, or in tandem with, litigation of the antitrust claims. /17/ The decision whether to allow arbitration to proceed normally will be based at least in part on the likelihood of success on the merits of the antitrust claims. /18/ In the present case, for example, the district court on remand sent most of the claims to arbitration prior to hearing the antitrust claims, apparently based on a determination that the latter were of doubtful merit. See Mitsubishi Br. 11. In our view, this approach, involving a "quick look" at the validity of antitrust claims, is entirely appropriate. To the extent arbitration of nonantitrust claims is permitted to proceed, both the policy in favor of arbitration and the policy in favor of antitrust enforcement are served. 2. The considerations we have described, indicating that Congress viewed arbitration of antitrust claims as inconsistent with the public interest in effective enforcement of the antitrust laws, similarly lead to the conclusion that Congress did not intend to make antitrust claims arbitrable in 1925 when it passed the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. 1 et seq. Although that Act broadly provides that arbitration agreements in a "contract evidencing a transaction involving commerce" are enforceable in the federal courts (9 U.S.C. 2), nothing in its text or legislative history shows that Congress meant for private antitrust claims to be arbitrable. /19/ The Federal Arbitration Act is a general statute that was designed to give federal courts the power and duty to enforce a wide range of arbitration agreements and to make the courts more hospitable to the process of arbitration. S. Rep. 536, 68th Cong., 1st Sess. 2-3 (1924); H.R. Rep. 96, 68th Cong., 1st Sess. 1 (1924); Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. at 510-511. As this Court has noted, the Arbitration Act reflects "a national policy favoring arbitration." Southland Corp. v. Keating, No. 82-500 (Jan. 23, 1984), slip op. 7. /20/ But there is no indication that in passing the Act Congress intended to render every conceivable type of commercial claim arbitrable, regardless of any competing policies under other federal statutes. As we have explained, private antitrust actions differ from most other types of commercial claims, because of the role such actions play in a public enforcement scheme. While arbitration of most types of commercial claims would not interfere significantly with any public interest, subjecting federal antitrust claims to arbitration would undermine seriously Congress's purposes to effectuate the strong public interest in competition. In these circumstances, we believe that if Congress had wished to alter the prevailing rule, /21/ it would have provided expressly for that result. Compare, e.g., 35 U.S.C. 294 (authorizing agreements to arbitrate disputes concerning patent validity or infringement). Nothing in the language of the Federal Arbitration Act or in the brief and generally worded legislative history of that Act makes such an express change. /22/ B. The Fact That Soler's Federal Antitrust Counterclaim Arose In Connection With An International Commercial Transaction Does Not Render It Subject To Arbitration 1. Arbitration Of A Federal Antitrust Claim That Arises In Connection With An International Commercial Transaction Is No More Appropriate Than Arbitration Of A Domestic Claim a. In some cases the fact that a dispute arises in the context of an international commercial transaction may make it more appropriate to enforce an agreement to arbitrate that dispute. For example, in Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., supra, in which a United States company had initiated a securities law action against a German individual, this Court concluded that it was appropriate to compel arbitration pursuant to the terms of an international contractual agreement, despite its prior holding in Wilko v. Swan, supra, that securities claims were not arbitrable in the context of a domestic dispute. In the case of a federal antitrust claim, however, the presence of an international commercial transaction does not make arbitration more appropriate than in the domestic context. The concern that arbitration would undermine the special role of the private treble damages remedy Congress provided as part of the antitrust enforcement scheme applies with at least equal force in the context of international disputes. In drafting the private treble damages provision, Congress drew no distinction between domestic antitrust claims and those that would arise in connection with international transactions. See 15 U.S.C. 15. If an international transaction that involves an unreasonable restraint of trade has sufficient effect on United States commerce to come within the prohibition of the federal antitrust laws, /23/ private antitrust suits attacking that restraint will serve the same public interest functions as a similar suit in a domestic context -- i.e., they will supplement governmental enforcement resources, punish violators, deter future violations, and bring to light anticompetitive conduct that otherwise might remain undiscovered. The fact that a dispute arises in an international context does not make it more or less likely to involve parties with unequal bargaining power. The problems for antitrust enforcement created by arbitral procedures are at least as significant in cases of international arbitration as in domestic arbitration. For example, the Japanese arbitrators who would decide the claims in this case lack the power of compulsory process (see J.A. 218-219); thus, they may never obtain access to crucial witnesses or documents. Compare 9 U.S.C. 7 (district court may compel attendance of witnesses before arbitrators). Nor do Japanese arbitrators have the power to take testimony under oath (J.A. 219). Japanese arbitral proceedings are closed to the public (id. at 220); and the arbitrators are not required to provide reasons for their award if the parties so agree (id. at 221). Thus, a United States court may have no basis on which to review the adequacy of the arbitrators' assessment of the facts or their application of the law. /24/ While such procedures may be well suited to determination of many types of commercial claims, they are clearly inconsistent with the public interest in effective private enforcement of the antitrust laws. Moreover, foreign arbitrators are even less likely than domestic arbitrators to be familiar with the United States antitrust laws, including judicial interpretations of those laws (see page 13, supra). Although arbitrators involved in major international arbitrations may be distinguished jurists (see ICC Am. Br. 15-17), it is nonetheless quite unlikely that most foreign arbitrators -- particularly those chosen to deal with ordinary commercial contract disputes -- will be as familiar with United States antitrust laws as an Article III judge. /25/ While many of these arbitrators will be quite capable in many respects, they may come from countries that have no antitrust laws at all, or that have antitrust laws that are markedly different from United States laws. In many cases, foreign law is more hospitable to conduct that our law condemns, and in some instances it may be hostile to conduct our law permits. See 1 J. Atwood & K. Brewster, Antitrust and American Business Abroad Section 4.02 (1981). It is even possible that an arbitrator acting pursuant to an arbitration clause in an international agreement would not apply United States antitrust law at all because of the parties' choice of forum or choice of substantive law under the agreement. Indeed, amicus ICC acknowledges this possibility (Br. 24-25). /26/ In such a case, the parties would have succeeded in contracting out of liability under the United States antitrust laws, a result that clearly would not be permitted in a domestic context. See, generally, Thomas v. Matthiessen, 232 U.S. 221, 234 (1914); 15 S. Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts Section 1750A (3d ed. 1972). /27/ Such a result would be particularly troubling in a case like this one, in which the transactions at issue directly affect United States commerce. Here one of the contracting parties (Soler) is a United States company; the articles that were the subject of the contract were sold and delivered in the United States; and the alleged anticompetitive effects occurred in the United States. /28/ Thus, although this dispute arose in the context of an international commercial transaction, the United States' interest in effective enforcement of the antitrust laws is very strong. /29/ We think the conclusion is inescapable that compelling arbitration of Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim by Japanese arbitrators, who may choose not to apply United States antitrust laws, would be inconsistent with Congress's intent regarding the role private actions were to play in the antitrust enforcement scheme. b. Nor does this Court's decision in Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., supra, support arbitration in this case. In Scherk, the Court considered a clause requiring foreign arbitration /30/ contained in a contract between a United States company and a German citizen for the sale of several European businesses and trademarks. The lower courts had refused to stay the United States company's action for damages for violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. 78j(b), based on that Act's prohibition on agreements to waive compliance with any of its provisions, 15 U.S.C. 78cc(a). Although this Court had held in Wilko v. Swan, supra, that claims under the Securities Act of 1933 are nonarbitrable in a domestic context, it declined to apply the Wilko rule to the "truly international agreement" before it in Scherk (417 U.S. at 515). The Court noted first that, unlike in Wilko, where there was no doubt that United States law applied to the dispute, in Scherk it was unclear what substantive law would apply in the absence of the arbitration provision. The Court viewed the choice-of-law and choice-of-forum provisions of the agreement to arbitrate as "an almost indispensable precondition to * * * the orderliness and predictability essential to any international business transaction." 417 U.S. at 516. Second, the Court believed that a "parochial" refusal by courts of one country to enforce an international arbitration agreement would "invite unseemly and mutually destructive jockeying by the parties to secure tactical litigation advantages." Id. at 516-517. Finally, any advantage in choice of courts and venue the securities laws might give a plaintiff in a domestic dispute could well be "chimerical" in the context of an international contract, since a foreign party might obtain a foreign court order nullifying the advantage. Id. at 517-518. The concerns that underlay the Court's decision in Scherk lack force in the context of this case. /31/ Since the agreement between Soler and Mitsubishi dealt with the sale of vehicles shipped into Puerto Rico, it should have been clear that the Sherman Act would apply to alleged anticompetitive restraints in connection with the agreement. /32/ See Pet. App. A25. Moreover, the concern of the United States with ensuring that private antitrust claims are heard in federal courts is not the sort of parochialism the Court disapproved in Scherk. As we next explain, the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards recognizes that certain subjects may be considered so essential to national interests that Contracting States will insist that they be nonarbitrable, even in an international context; and we show that, in view of the special role Congress has assigned to private actions in the antitrust enforcement scheme, /33/ such actions are properly regarded as falling within that limited exception to arbitrability under the Convention. In these circumstances, Scherk should not be read to require foreign arbitration of federal antitrust claims. /34/ 2. While The Convention On The Recognition And Enforcement Of Foreign Arbitral Awards Generally Mandates Enforcement Of International Agreements To Arbitrate, It Does Not Require United States Courts To Compel Arbitration Of Federal Antitrust Claims In 1985, a conference sponsored by the United Nations adopted the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. The Convention provides that the Contracting States shall recognize and enforce agreements to arbitrate certain international disputes and the awards that result from such arbitration. /35/ While the Convention contemplates that Contracting States generally will be hospitable to international arbitration agreements, by its own terms it does not require enforcement of arbitration for all claims. The Convention expressly anticipates that a Contracting State may determine a subject to be nonarbitrable in certain limited circumstances. In our view, federal antitrust claims fall within that narrow class of nonarbitrable matters. a. We stress at the outset our belief that under the Convention Contracting States must, with limited exceptions, enforce agreements to arbitrate international disputes. As this Court has noted, the purposes of the Convention were to encourage the recognition and enforcement of arbitration agreements in international contracts and to establish uniform standards in connection therewith. Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. at 517 n.10. We fully support these purposes, which are of considerable importance to United States businesses engaged in international commerce. The assumption underlying the Convention is that most claims arising out of international agreements will be amenable to arbitration and that the agreement of the parties to arbitrate such claims should be honored by the Contracting States. /36/ United States courts should avoid restrictive interpretations that would undermine the generally proarbitration purposes of the Convention and the United States' accession to it. /37/ However, as the court of appeals recognized (Pet. App. A18-A23), the Convention by its own terms does not require arbitration of every claim that might fall within the scope of an international arbitration agreement. Three provisions of the Convention -- Articles II, III, and V -- express the general objective of encouraging arbitration, but permit certain limited exceptions, including an exception for nonarbitrable subject matter. Article II of the Convention concerns recognition of agreements to arbitrate and judicial referral of parties to arbitration. Article II(1) requires Contracting States to "recognize an agreement in writing under which the parties undertake to submit to arbitration all or any differences which have arisen or which may arise between them in respect of a defined legal relationship * * *." However, this obligation is not unconditional; Article II(1) defines the agreements that must be recognized as those "concerning a subject matter capable of settlement by arbitration." Article II(3) requires a court to refer a controversy to arbitration, at the request of one of the parties, if the parties have agreed to arbitrate. But the agreement the court is to enforce must be one "within the meaning of this article." Such agreements are those that, in accordance with Article II(1), concern "a subject matter capable of settlement by arbitration." /38/ Other provisions of the Convention govern recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards. Article III states the general principle that foreign arbitral awards will be recognized and enforced by all Contracting States. However, Article V lists several grounds on which a court may decline to enforce an award. In particular, Article V(2)(a) allows a court to refuse enforcement of an award if it finds that the "subject matter of the difference is not capable of settlement by arbitration" under the law of the country where enforcement is sought; and under Article V(2)(b) a court may refuse enforcement if the "recognition or enforcement of the award would be contrary to the public policy" of the country where enforcement is sought. /39/ b. The legislative history of the United States' accession to the Convention confirms that the Convention permits courts to decline to enforce an agreement to arbitrate if arbitration of the subject matter would frustrate particularly important national policies. When the President presented the Convention to the Senate, it was accompanied by a memorandum from the Department of State analyzing the articles of the Convention. The memorandum assured the Senate that accession would not preclude United States courts from declining to refer to arbitration certain matters the United States viewed as nonarbitrable: The requirement (of Article II(1)) that the agreement apply to a matter capable of settlement by arbitration is necessary in order to take proper account of laws in force in many countries which prohibit the submission of certain questions to arbitration. S. Exec. Doc. E, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 19 (1968). /40/ As an example, the memorandum noted that "(i)n some States of the United States * * * disputes affecting the title to real property are not arbitrable" (ibid.). In discussing Article V(2), the memorandum noted that both the nonarbitrability provision and the public policy exception "would give the courts to which application is made considerable latitude in refusing enforcement." S. Exec. Doc. E, supra, at 21. The memorandum further expressed the view that the exceptions to enforcement of awards provided in Article V(2) also would apply to the Article II(3) provision for enforcement of agreements to arbitrate. S. Exec. Doc. E, supra, at 19. The Senate's consent to accession should be viewed in light of the State Department interpretation that was before it at the time. /41/ As this Court has noted, such interpretations are entitled to great weight in interpreting a treaty. Sumitomo Shoji America, Inc. v. Avagliano, 457 U.S. 176, 184-185 (1982); Kolovrat v. Oregon, 366 U.S. 187, 194-195 (1961). It is therefore appropriate to conclude that the Senate, in consenting to accession, understood that the Convention would not require United States courts to enforce arbitration agreements in a limited class of matters as to which arbitration would interfere with fundamental policies of the United States. c. Although the Convention clearly contemplates the existence of certain subject matters as to which courts may decline to require arbitration, it does not specify what matters are within that category. In light of the general purpose of the Convention to encourage the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, we believe the category of subject matter determined to be nonarbitrable should be quite limited. /42/ In our view, Contracting States should identify "certain categories of claims (as) non-arbitrable" only when there is a "special national interest vested in their (judicial) resolution" (Parsons & Whittemore Overseas Co. v. Societe Generale de l'Industrie du Papier (RAKTA), 508 F.2d 969, 975 (2d Cir. 1974) (emphasis in original)) such that enforcement of agreements to arbitrate such claims would necessarily frustrate a national policy of fundamental importance. /43/ We believe that federal antitrust claims fall within this narrow exception to arbitrability under the Convention. /44/ We base our conclusion on the significant public interest role that private antitrust suits play in the enforcement scheme of a statute that is central to our nation's economic policy and the importance of having such claims adjudicated in federal court. See pages 9-14, supra. Requiring referral of federal antitrust claims to arbitration, conducted by foreign arbitrators pursuant to privately selected law, would frustrate a national policy of fundamental importance. This Court in Scherk v. Alberto-Culver Co., 417 U.S. at 516-517, expressed concern that refusal by United States courts to enforce an international arbitration agreement might lead to retaliatory steps by other countries. However, the 68 nations that have adopted the Convention have done so in the knowledge that there are certain matters that other Contracting States may determine to be nonarbitrable on the ground that arbitration of those matters would frustrate fundamental national policies. Indeed, several Contracting States already have identified particular matters that they decline to refer to arbitration. See note 43, supra. The Contracting States know that the Convention will not work effectively unless all signatories show mutual respect for other nations' infrequent, but important, judgments concerning nonarbitrability. As the court of appeals noted (Pet. App. A17), the world community is well aware of the importance the United States attaches to its antitrust laws. /45/ The United States' determination that federal antitrust claims are nonarbitrable under the Convention therefore is not likely to result in either surprise or recrimination on the part of other signatories to the Convention. CONCLUSION Insofar as it holds that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim should not be referred to arbitration, the judgment of the court of appeals should be affirmed. Respectfully submitted. REX E. LEE Solicitor General J. PAUL MCGRATH Assistant Attorney General LAWRENCE G. WALLACE Deputy Solicitor General CAROLYN F. CORWIN Assistant to the Solicitor General ROBERT B. NICHOLSON MARION L. JETTON Attorneys JANUARY 1985 /*/ The United States will not address the questions raised by the cross-petition, No. 83-1733, involving the arbitrability of claims under the federal Automobile Dealers' Day in Court Act, 15 U.S.C. 1221 et seq., the Puerto Rico Dealers Act, and the Puerto Rican antitrust laws. /1/ CISA, a Swiss corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Chrysler Corporation (Pet. App. A6). "Pet. App." refers to the appendix to the petition in No. 83-1569. /2/ Paragraph VI of the Sales Procedure Agreement provided (J.A. 52-53): All disputes, controversies or differences which may arise between (Mitsubishi) and (Soler) out of or in relation to Articles I-B through V of this Agreement or for the breach thereof, shall be finally settled by arbitration in Japan in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Japan Commercial Arbitration Association. /3/ The alleged breaches of contract included nonpayment for stored vehicles, nonpayment of contractual storage penalties, damage to Mitsubishi's warranties and goodwill, and failure to obtain financing as required by the Sales Procedure Agreement. Pet. App. A6, B2. /4/ Soler contended that Mitsubishi and CISA had unlawfully attempted to replace Soler with a Mitsubishi subsidiary and had allocated territories in a manner that unreasonably restricted the areas in which Soler could sell vehicles. Soler requested $10 million in damages in connection with its federal antitrust counterclaim. J.A. 91-96. /5/ The district court also ordered arbitration of Mitsubishi's contract claims and Soler's Dealers' Day In Court and Puerto Rican law counterclaims against Mitsubishi. CISA did not request arbitration of the counterclaims Soler filed against it. Thus, those counterclaims (including the federal antitrust counterclaim against CISA) were to follow their normal course in the district court. Pet. App. B11-B12. /6/ Following oral argument, the court of appeals invited the United States to submit a brief amicus curiae addressing the arbitrability of Soler's antitrust counterclaim under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. The brief filed by the United States in response to that request took the position that the antitrust counterclaim was not arbitrable. /7/ The text of the Convention is reprinted at Pet. App. F1-F7. It appears also in the note following 9 U.S.C.A. 201. /8/ The court of appeals affirmed the district court's judgment as to all other issues raised by the appeal. See Pet. App. A29. Thus, Soler's counterclaims based on the federal Dealers' Day in Court Act and the Puerto Rican Dealers Act and antitrust statute were to be referred to arbitration. While the petition and cross-petition were pending, the district court on remand determined that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim did not "permeate" the litigation. It therefore stayed litigation of that counterclaim and ordered that the arbitration proceed. See J.A. 6. /9/ Soler suggests in its cross-petition in No. 83-1733 that its agreement to arbitrate did not extend to antitrust claims. We assume for purposes of this brief that the courts below were correct in concluding (see Pet. App. A11-A13, B7) that Soler's federal antitrust counterclaim fell within the scope of its agreement to arbitrate disputes arising out of the Sales Procedure Agreement. /10/ Lake Communications, Inc. v. ICC Corp., 738 F.2d 1473, 1477-1480 (9th Cir. 1984); University Life Insurance Co. v. Unimarc Ltd., 699 F.2d 846, 850-851 (7th Cir. 1983) (Posner, J.); Applied Digital Technology, Inc. v. Continental Casualty Co., 576 F.2d 116, 117 (7th Cir. 1978); N.V. Mattschappij Voor Industriele Waarden v. A.O. Smith Corp., 532 F.2d 874, 876 (2d Cir. 1976); Varo v. Comprehensive Designers, Inc., 504 F.2d 1103, 1104 (9th Cir. 1974); Cobb v. Lewis, 488 F.2d 41, 47 (5th Cir. 1974); Helfenbein v. International Industries, Inc., 438 F.2d 1068, 1070 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 404 U.S. 872 (1971); Power Replacements, Inc. v. Air Preheater Co., 426 F.2d 980, 983-984 (9th Cir. 1970); A. & E. Plastik Pak Co. v. Monsanto Co., 396 F.2d 710, 715-716 (9th Cir. 1968); American Safety Equipment Corp. v. J.P. Maguire & Co., 391 F.2d 821, 825-828 (2d Cir. 1968). See also Fanchon & Marco, Inc. v. Paramount Pictures, 107 F. Supp. 532, 548 (S.D.N.Y. 1952), rev'd on other grounds, 202 F.2d 731 (2d Cir. 1953). Cf. Silvercup Bakers, Inc. v. Fink Baking Corp., 273 F. Supp. 159, 162-163 (S.D.N.Y. 1967). This Court recognized essentially the same principle in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334 U.S. 131, 176 (1948). The Court held that the district court had the power to establish an arbitration system for consenting movie distributors and exhibitors to settle certain licensing disputes, but it emphasized that such a system "would be merely an auxiliary enforcement procedure, barring no one from the use of other remedies the law affords for violations * * * of the Sherman Act" (ibid.). Cf. Paramount Famous Lasky Corp. v. United States, 282 U.S. 30 (1930). /11/ Mitsubishi contended only that the uniform rule stated by the courts of appeals should not be applied to international business transactions. See Mitsubishi C.A. Br. at 29-30. /12/ Indeed, Congress was so concerned with keeping treble damages suits in the federal courts that it rejected an effort to amend the proposed legislation to authorize similar suits in state courts. Senator Hoar, the floor manager of the bill, successfully argued that Congress should not (and indeed could not) allow state courts to hear private treble damages actions because such actions had "penal" and "punitive" characteristics and thus were proper for resolution only by federal judges. 21 Cong. Rec. 3146-3147, 3150 (1890). See also Blumenstock Bros. Advertising Agency v. Curtis Publishing Co., 252 U.S. 436, 440 (1920); Lyons v. Westinghouse Electric Corp., 222 F.2d at 189. /13/ Our research reveals only three other statutes that authorize private treble damages actions: 15 U.S.C. 72 (antidumping); Section 901(a) of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, 18 U.S.C. 1964; and 46 U.S.C. 1227 (discriminatory agreements among common carriers by water). The treble damages provisions of the antitrust laws are distinguishable from statutes under which triers of fact in their discretion may award punitive damages. See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. 2520; 15 U.S.C. 298(c). Under the antitrust laws, once a plaintiff has proved liability and actual damages, there is no automatic trebling of those damages. /14/ The public interest nature of an antitrust claim is not lessened by the fact that it involves a vertical rather than horizontal restraint (see Mitsubishi Br. 22 n.11). In either class of claims, the antitrust laws protect competition, not particular individuals. Anticompetitive vertical arrangements are illegal precisely because of their broader effect on the economy. See, e.g., Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp., No. 82-914 (Mar. 20, 1984), slip op. 7 (legality of vertical conduct to be judged primarily by "market impact"). /15/ See Pitofsky, supra, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. at 1077 (noting significant decisions of this Court in private antitrust suits that could have been diverted into arbitration); Loevinger, supra, 44 N.Y.U. L. Rev. at 1091-1093 (discussing antitrust decisions of this Court that probably would have been decided differently by arbitrators). /16/ Mitsubishi notes (Br. 25) that an agreement to arbitrate a pre-existing antitrust dispute is not regarded as contrary to the public interest. See Cobb v. Lewis, 488 F.2d at 47-48; Coenen v. R.W. Pressprich & Co., 453 F.2d 1209, 1215 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 406 U.S. 949 (1972). The rationale for allowing arbitration in such circumstances is that the parties to an antitrust dispute are always free to settle, and arbitration is an acceptable form of settlement agreement. Ibid. This case, in contrast, involves a sweeping, pre-dispute arbitration agreement, entered into before the alleged anticompetitive activities had taken place, and before the parties had any opportunity to evaluate the strength of their legal positions. /17/ See, e.g., Pet. App. A28-A29; Sam Reisfeld & Son Import Co. v. S.A. Eteco, 530 F.2d 679, 681 (5th Cir. 1976); A. & E. Plastik Pak Co. v. Monsanto Co., 396 F.2d at 716. /18/ See Pet. App. A28-A29; University Life Insurance Co. v. Unimarc Ltd., 699 F.2d at 851-853; Applied Digital Technology, Inc. v. Continental Casualty Co., 576 F.2d at 118; N.V. Maatschappij Voor Industriele Waarden v. A.O. Smith Corp., 532 F.2d at 876; Coenen v. R.W. Pressprich & Co., 453 F.2d at 1215-1216. /19/ Any suggestion that the only exceptions to the coverage of the Federal Arbitration Act are those expressly mentioned in the text of the Act or in other statutes is foreclosed by Wilko v. Swan, supra, in which this Court held that the federal arbitration statute must yield to the provisions for district court enforcement in the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq., despite the fact that the latter statute does not expressly mention either arbitration or the arbitration statute. /20/ Mitsubishi quotes at some length from this Court's opinion in Southland Corp. v. Keating. However, that case does not concern the arbitrability of federal antitrust claims; rather, it holds that the Federal Arbitration Act preempts contrary state law. The Court expressly distinguished the latter question from the question whether Congress itself intended an exception to the federal arbitration statute. See slip op. 13 n.11. /21/ We have not found any case prior to 1925 that addresses the arbitrability of private antitrust claims; however, we also have not discovered any case in which such a claim was arbitrated in the period between 1890 and 1925 -- presumably because there was a clear understanding during that period that Congress had not permitted such arbitration. /22/ Indeed, Section 2 of the Arbitration Act provides that an agreement to arbitrate shall be enforceable "save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract." 9 U.S.C. 2. In 1925, as now, a bargain contrary to public policy would be invalid and therefore revocable. See Pope Mfg. Co. v. Gormully, 144 U.S. 224, 234-237 (1892); 6A A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts Section 1375 (1962); 2 Restatement of the Law of Contracts Sections 512, 598 (1932). At the time, it was settled that some matters were not arbitrable for public policy reasons. For example, a complaining party's participation in a criminal action clearly was not subject to arbitration. See, e.g., Wise v. Johnson, 14 Ala. App. 396, 69 So. 986 (1915); Partridge v. Hood, 120 Mass. 403, 405 (1876); Mevay v. Edmiston, 1 Rawle 457 (Pa. 1829). In view of the punitive and deterrent functions of private antitrust actions (see pages 10-11, supra) and the criminal nature of Sherman Act violations, a private antitrust plaintiff is not unlike a complainant in a criminal case. /23/ Transactions that arise in an international setting may nevertheless be subject to the United States antitrust laws. The nationality of the parties is one of several factors that federal courts may weigh in deciding whether to assert subject matter jurisdiction over such claims, but it is not in itself a dispositive criterion. See Mannington Mills, Inc. v. Congoleum Corp., 595 F.2d 1287, 1297 (3d Cir. 1979); Timberlane Lumber Co. v. Bank of America, N.T. & S.A., 549 F.2d 597, 614 (9th Cir. 1976). /24/ Amicus ICC suggests (Br. 27) that the competitive concerns of the United States can be addressed adequately when a party seeks enforcement of an arbitral award. But unless the arbitral proceedings have resulted in a complete record and statement of the reasons for the award, a federal court would be required to engage in de novo consideration of the antitrust claim. That may or may not be possible, depending on how broad an interpretation is placed on the "public policy" exception contained in Article V(2)(b) of the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. See page 26, infra. Moreover, rather than having two forums decide the antitrust issue on two separate records, it would be far more efficient for a court to refer the nonantitrust issues to arbitration, where possible, and to retain jurisdiction of the antitrust claim. In cases in which the antitrust issue is asserted as a counterclaim, it may even be unnecessary to consider the antitrust issue once the initial dispute is settled. Cf. pages 14-15, supra. /25/ Mitsubishi (Br. 25) and amicus ICC (Br. 17) suggest that foreign arbitrators are more qualified to decide antitrust disputes than American juries. However, unlike foreign arbitrators, American juries receive detailed legal instructions from a court familiar with United States antitrust law. /26/ The contract in this case states that Swiss law will govern the agreement, as if the contract was entirely performed in Switzerland (J.A. 56). In an informal discussion with an official of the Swiss Embassy before we filed our amicus submission with the court of appeals, we were advised that, in that official's view, a Swiss court would be unlikely to apply United States antitrust laws to an agreement "entirely performed" in Switzerland. There is obviously no basis for assurances that a Japanese arbitrator would conclude otherwise. /27/ It is not clear that such a contract would be permissible if the foreign forum were a court, rather than an arbitral tribunal. This Court has stated that "(a) contractual choice-of-forum clause should be held unenforceable if enforcement would contravene a strong public policy of the forum in which suit is brought." The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co., 407 U.S. 1, 15 (1972). See also id. at 17. /28/ For purposes of the Sherman Act, Puerto Rico is treated as a state of the United States, not a territory. See Cordova & Simonpietri Insurance Agency Inc. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 649 F.2d 36, 38-44 (1st Cir. 1981). /29/ Obviously it remains for Soler to prove its allegations. We take no position on the merits of the federal antitrust counterclaim. /30/ The arbitration clause in Scherk provided that arbitration would take place in France, but that the substantive law of Illinois would apply. 417 U.S. at 508. /31/ The third concern mentioned by the Court in Scherk, courts and venue under the securities laws, is not relevant in the case of the antitrust laws. /32/ See United States v. South-Eastern Underwriters Ass'n, 322 U.S. 533, 558 (1944) (Congress intended the antitrust laws to extend to the utmost extent of its power to regulate interstate and foreign commerce). The potential application of the Sherman Act became even clearer once Soler alleged that Mitsubishi and CISA had allocated markets and prohibited Soler from selling automobiles to dealers in the continental United States. See, e.g., Timberlane Lumber Co. v. Bank of America, N.T. & S.A., 549 F.2d at 608-615; Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-290, Sections 401 et seq., 96 Stat. 1246-1247. In contrast to the agreement involved here, the contract in Scherk had only a minimal relationship to the United States. See 417 U.S. at 515 ("the subject matter of the contract concerned the sale of business enterprises * * * primarily situated in European countries, whose activities were largely, if not entirely, directed to European markets"). /33/ Although the securities laws that were at issue in Scherk are of substantial importance, the court of appeals correctly noted (Pet. App. A26) that they differ from the antitrust laws in significant respects. The securities laws were enacted in large part to protect individual investors (see United States v. Naftalin, 441 U.S. 768, 774-777 (1979); Wilko v. Swan, 346 U.S. at 431), while the antitrust laws exist to protect competition itself. Moreover, Congress has provided that private antitrust plaintiffs may recover treble damages, but has provided only for recovery of actual damages by securities plaintiffs. Thus, in the antitrust enforcement scheme private suits play a central role in vindicating the public interest. See Lake Communications, Inc. v. ICC Corp., 738 F.2d at 1478 n.3. /34/ Although the Court in Scherk referred to the Convention as providing general confirmation for its holding there, it did not specifically consider the scope of exceptions to arbitrability established by the Convention. See 417 U.S. at 520-521 n.15. /35/ The United States did not sign the Convention at the time it was adopted by the United Nations conference. However, support for the Convention grew in the United States, and in 1968 the President transmitted the Convention to the Senate for its advice and consent. In 1970, the Senate consented to United States accession to the Convention. Pursuant to Article I(3) of the Convention, Congress specified that only arbitration agreements and awards arising out of commercial legal relationships would fall under the Convention. 9 U.S.C. 202. The primary reasons the United States did not originally sign the Convention were a perceived "conflict with * * * domestic laws," traditional common law hostility to arbitration and lack of support in the business community. S. Exec. Rep. 10, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 1, 4 (1968). In his 1968 letter of transmittal to the Senate, the President stated that experience under the Convention had established that it contributed in many ways to the promotion of international trade and investment. The President also reported substantial support for United States accession among members of the business community concerned with international trade and in the legal community. S. Exec. Doc. E, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1968). /36/ Mitsubishi and its amici correctly point out that, at least in recent years, arbitration of a wide variety of complex international disputes has become a familiar practice that increasingly has gained general acceptance in the international community. /37/ See Rhone Mediterranee Compagnia v. Lauro, 712 F.2d 50, 53-54 (3d Cir. 1983); Ledee v. Ceramiche Ragno, 684 F.2d 184, 187 (1st Cir. 1982); I.T.A.D. Associates, Inc. v. Podar Bros., 636 F.2d 75, 77 (4th Cir. 1981); Parsons & Whittemore Overseas Co. v. Societe Generale de l'Industrie du Papier (RAKTA), 508 F.2d 969, 973-974 (2d Cir. 1974). /38/ Even when a dispute concerns arbitrable subject matter, Article II(3) allows a court to refuse to refer parties to arbitration if it "finds that the said agreement is null and void, inoperative or incapable of being performed." The court of appeals noted (Pet. App. A19-A20 & n.9) that these latter restrictions on referral appear to look not to the subject matter of the arbitration, but to the fundamentals of procedural fairness and feasibility. Accord, Rhone Mediterranee Compagnia v. Lauro, 712 F.2d at 53-54; Ledee v. Ceramiche Ragno, 684 F.2d at 187; I.T.A.D. Associates, Inc. v. Podar Bros., 636 F.2d at 77. But see G. Haight, Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards 27-28 (1958) (Haight) ("incapable of being performed" may be meant to include subject matter arbitrability). /39/ These limitations on enforcement of arbitral awards strongly suggest that Article II is properly read similarly to limit the requirement of referral to arbitration in the first place. The terms of Articles II and V are not identical, and there is no express linkage between the two, perhaps because initial drafts of the Convention dealt only with recognition of arbitral awards, while the provisions on recognition of arbitration agreements were added at a later stage. Some delegates expressed concern that lack of a specific provision in Article II relating the arbitration agreement to an arbitral award capable of enforcement might lead to disputes concerning nonarbitrable subject matter. See Haight 27-28. This perceived deficiency was never corrected. Haight suggests, however, that the courts may, e.g., link Articles II(3) and V(2)(b) by "find(ing) an agreement incapable of performance if it offends the law or the public policy of the forum." Haight 28. Some delegates argued that it was unnecessary to include both subparagraphs 2(a) and (b) of Article V, since nonarbitrability (Article V(2)(a)) was encompassed within the public policy exception of Article V(2)(b). See Haight 66-71. In the end, the delegates retained both grounds. The negotiating history reflects very little discussion about the sorts of subjects that might be considered nonarbitrable or awards that might be contrary to the public policy of a given country. See ibid. Cf., e.g., Waterside Ocean Navigation Co. v. International Navigation Ltd., 737 F.2d 150, 152 (2d Cir. 1984) (public policy defense of Article V limited to violations of "most basic notions of morality and justice"). /40/ There is no basis for Mitsubishi's suggestion (Br. 41) that the reference in the State Department memorandum to "laws in force" should be read to include only the text of statutes and not the judicial interpretation of those texts. /41/ The Senate report and the floor debate on the Convention are very abbreviated and shed no light on the issue now before the Court. See S. Exec. Rep. 10, supra; 114 Cong. Rec. 10487-10488, 29350-29353, 29605 (1968). /42/ Claims that are nonarbitrable in a domestic context would not automatically be nonarbitrable under the Convention. This Court's decision in Scherk makes that clear, even apart from the requirements of the Convention. /43/ For examples of matters that courts of other nations have held nonarbitrable, and therefore outside the scope of the Convention, see Audi-NSU Auto Union A.G. v. S.A. Adelin Petit & Cie (Cour de Cassation, Belgium, 1979), in 5 Y.B. Commercial Arbitration 257 (1980) (Belgian law precludes arbitration of disputes arising under a Belgian statute concerning unilateral termination of exclusive distributorships); Compagnia Generale Construzioni v. Piersanti (Corte di Cassazione, Italy, 1979), in 6 Y.B. Commercial Arbitration 229 (1981) (Italian law precludes arbitration of labor disputes). /44/ See Lake Communications, Inc. v. ICC Corp., 738 F.2d at 1479 n.5 (Convention does not require referral of antitrust claims to arbitration); Parsons & Whittemore Overseas Co. v. Societe Generale, 508 F.2d at 974, 975 (suggesting that under Article V(2)(a) of the Convention, a court sitting in the United States might be expected to decline to enforce an award involving arbitration of an antitrust claim); Societe Nationale pour la Recherche v. General Tire & Rubber Co., 430 F. Supp. 1332, 1334 (S.D.N.Y. 1977). See also A. van den Berg, The New York Arbitration Convention of 1958, at 369 (1981) (noting that classic examples of nonarbitrable subject matters include antitrust). Cf. La Societe Nationale pour la Recherche v. Shaheen Natural Resources Co., 585 F. Supp. 57, 63 (S.D.N.Y. 1983), aff'd, 733 F.2d 260 (2d Cir. 1984) (rejecting public policy defense based on antitrust considerations on the facts before the court). /45/ Similarly, the Federal Republic of Germany, which is also a signatory to the Convention, considers its antitrust rule to be part of the ordre public and explicitly prohibits a predispute agreement to arbitrate certain classes of antitrust claims that precludes alternative recourse to the courts. See Section 91(1) of the Act Against Restraints of Competition, reprinted in 1 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Guide to Legislation on Restrictive Business Practices (1980).
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## **Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer 2 (AMS-02) CDR PIA/ICD Splinter** For-the-Record AMS-02 Critical Design Review (CDR) Payload Integration Agreement (PIA)/Interface Control Document (ICD) Splinter - The following are 0Z2/Robert Miley\'s comments for-the-record concerning the AMS-02 CDR PIA (SSP 57113)/ICD (SSP 57213) Splinter that occurred on 5/15/03. ## SSP 57113 AMS-02 PIA \[1\] Provided an overview of the draft SSP 57113 AMS-02 PIA. \[2\] SSP 57113 PIA Attachment 1 -- Basic Payload Data table requirements for ISS and Shuttle were discussed in detail. The Shuttle Program PIM (JJ Conwell) concurred that the Shuttle Program with the appropriate integration documentation and process implementation can meet the requested AMS-02 requirements listed in SSP 57113 Attachment 1. \[3\] SSP 57113, Section 8.0 Program Management and Funding -- The Department of Energy (DOE) (John O'Fallon) and ASI (Fabio Bracciaferri) each requested a re-wording of this section as drafted. Accepted inputs and will incorporate into the final released version. ## SSP 57213 AMS-02 Hardware ICD \[1\] Carol Verret/Boeing PEI Verification Group provided a set of specific comments to Section 4.0 Applicability Matrix that will be incorporated. \[2\] Alicia Mooty/Boeing PEI Engineering Group discussed the SSP 57003 hardware requirements traceability to SSP 21000 and SSP 42004. \[3\] Vic Sanders/Boeing PEI Engineering Group provided a set of specific comments to Section 3.0 Attached Payload Interfaces, which will be incorporated. \[4\] ER3/Robotics Engineering Group at JSC provided a discussion of the Berthing Cues System (MDR-BCS-R-6024, Revision F) requirements. No action resulted. ----------------------- ----------------------- ----------------------- AMS-02 Critical Design Review (CDR) PIA/ICD Splinter Robert Miley AMS ISS PIM 281-226-4968 Johnny Mathis KSC 321-867-5869 Alicia Mooty Boeing/PEI Engineering 281-226-4605 Angus Hendrick ER3/NASA 281-483-1089 Don Langford LTMPF/JPL 818-393-2787 Rich Golick LTMPF ISS PIM 281-226-4453 Jim Bates AMS Mission 281-483-0657 Manager/NASA JJ Conwell Shuttle PIM/NASA 281-483-1178 Fabio Bracciaferri ASI 011-39-068-567-328 Gene Cook OZ3/NASA 281-244-8467 Vic Sanders Boeing/PEI Engineering 281-226-4266 LD Stevenson CB Payload Ops/Barrios 281-244-8890 John O'Fallon DOE Ann Vaughan ACO MODA DO54/USA 281-244-0257 Larissa Arnold ACO MOD DO54/NASA 281-483-0623 Chris Dunker Code S&Y GSFC/NASA 301-286-9833 Christine Collins Code S&Y GSFC/N 301-286-0531 Tim Urban ER3 EBCS/Lockheed 281-333-6008 Michael Eubanks ER3 EBCS/NASA 281-483-8136 Carol Verrett Boeing/PEI Verification 281-226-4376 Michael Fohey AMS-02 281-335-2783 Ken Bollweg AMS-02 281-335-2714 ----------------------- ----------------------- -----------------------
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rm -rf logs/blas.LOG; cd build; cp ../exsrc/src/blas* .; gunzip blas*gz; tar xf blas.tar; rm blas.tar; cd blas*; LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/cdat/Externals/lib -L/usr/X11R6/lib -L/usr/local/lib -Wl,-R/usr/local/cdat/Externals/lib -L/usr/local/cdat/Externals/HDF5/lib -L/usr/local/cdat/Externals/NetCDF/lib"; export LDFLAGS ; CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/cdat/Externals/include -I/usr/local/cdat/Externals/HDF5/include -I/usr/local/cdat/Externals/HDF5/include -I/usr/local/cdat/Externals/NetCDF/include" ; export CPPFLAGS ; CC="gcc" ; export CC ; FC="gfortran" ; export FC ; FCFLAGS="-g -O2" ; export FCFLAGS ;FCLIBS=" -L/usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/4.1.0 -L/usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/4.1.0/../../.. -lgfortranbegin -lgfortran -lm" ; export FCLIBS ; F77="gfortran" ; export F77;FFLAGS="-g -O2" ; export FFLAGS;FLIBS=" -L/usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/4.1.0 -L/usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/4.1.0/../../.. -lgfortranbegin -lgfortran -lm" ; export FLIBS ;CPP="gcc -E"; export CPP;CXX="g++"; export CXX ; EXTERNALS="/usr/local/cdat/Externals"; export EXTERNALS ; PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/cdat/Externals/lib/pkgconfig: ; export PKG_CONFIG_PATH ;PATH=/usr/local/cdat/Externals/bin:/usr/local/cdat/bin:/lgm/cdat/latest/bin:/lgm/cdat/Externals/bin:/lgm/cdat/Externals/NetCDF/bin:.:/usr/local/jre1.6.0_10/bin:/lgm/Externals/bin:/lgm/Externals/NetCDF/bin:/lgm/Externals/HDF5/bin:/usr/local/share/automake-1.9/:/usr/local/share/aclocal-1.9:/usr/local/share/autoconf:/usr/java/default/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/local/bin:/home/doutriaux1/bin:/home/doutriaux1/exec:/home/doutriaux1/google-earth:/usr/X11R6/bin ; export PATH; CFLAGS=" -I/usr/X11R6/include -g -O2"; export CFLAGS; FORTRAN=gfortran;export FORTRAN;; ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/cdat/Externals ; /bin/sh: ./configure: No such file or directory make; make[1]: Entering directory `/ext_drv/svn/cdat/trunk/build/blas' gfortran -O3 -c isamax.f -o isamax.o gfortran -O3 -c sasum.f -o sasum.o gfortran -O3 -c saxpy.f -o saxpy.o gfortran -O3 -c scopy.f -o scopy.o gfortran -O3 -c sdot.f -o sdot.o gfortran -O3 -c snrm2.f -o snrm2.o gfortran -O3 -c srot.f -o srot.o gfortran -O3 -c srotg.f -o srotg.o gfortran -O3 -c sscal.f -o sscal.o gfortran -O3 -c sswap.f -o sswap.o gfortran -O3 -c sdsdot.f -o sdsdot.o gfortran -O3 -c srotmg.f -o srotmg.o In file srotmg.f:140 GO TO IGO(120,150,180,210) 1 Warning: Obsolete: Assigned GOTO statement at (1) In file srotmg.f:146 ASSIGN 120 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file srotmg.f:158 ASSIGN 150 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file srotmg.f:171 ASSIGN 180 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file srotmg.f:182 ASSIGN 210 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file srotmg.f:191 IF (SFLAG) 250,230,240 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) gfortran -O3 -c srotm.f -o srotm.o In file srotm.f:69 IF (SFLAG) 50,10,30 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) In file srotm.f:108 IF (SFLAG) 120,80,100 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) gfortran -O3 -c sgemv.f -o sgemv.o gfortran -O3 -c sgbmv.f -o sgbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ssymv.f -o ssymv.o gfortran -O3 -c ssbmv.f -o ssbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c sspmv.f -o sspmv.o gfortran -O3 -c strmv.f -o strmv.o gfortran -O3 -c stbmv.f -o stbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c stpmv.f -o stpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c strsv.f -o strsv.o gfortran -O3 -c stbsv.f -o stbsv.o gfortran -O3 -c stpsv.f -o stpsv.o gfortran -O3 -c sger.f -o sger.o gfortran -O3 -c ssyr.f -o ssyr.o gfortran -O3 -c sspr.f -o sspr.o gfortran -O3 -c ssyr2.f -o ssyr2.o gfortran -O3 -c sspr2.f -o sspr2.o gfortran -O3 -c sgemm.f -o sgemm.o gfortran -O3 -c ssymm.f -o ssymm.o gfortran -O3 -c ssyrk.f -o ssyrk.o gfortran -O3 -c ssyr2k.f -o ssyr2k.o gfortran -O3 -c strmm.f -o strmm.o gfortran -O3 -c strsm.f -o strsm.o gfortran -O3 -c idamax.f -o idamax.o gfortran -O3 -c dasum.f -o dasum.o gfortran -O3 -c daxpy.f -o daxpy.o gfortran -O3 -c dcopy.f -o dcopy.o gfortran -O3 -c ddot.f -o ddot.o gfortran -O3 -c dnrm2.f -o dnrm2.o gfortran -O3 -c drot.f -o drot.o gfortran -O3 -c drotg.f -o drotg.o gfortran -O3 -c dscal.f -o dscal.o gfortran -O3 -c dsdot.f -o dsdot.o gfortran -O3 -c dswap.f -o dswap.o gfortran -O3 -c drotmg.f -o drotmg.o In file drotmg.f:138 GO TO IGO(120,150,180,210) 1 Warning: Obsolete: Assigned GOTO statement at (1) In file drotmg.f:144 ASSIGN 120 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file drotmg.f:156 ASSIGN 150 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file drotmg.f:169 ASSIGN 180 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file drotmg.f:180 ASSIGN 210 TO IGO 1 Warning: Obsolete: ASSIGN statement at (1) In file drotmg.f:189 IF (DFLAG) 250,230,240 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) gfortran -O3 -c drotm.f -o drotm.o In file drotm.f:68 IF (DFLAG) 50,10,30 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) In file drotm.f:107 IF (DFLAG) 120,80,100 1 Warning: Obsolete: arithmetic IF statement at (1) gfortran -O3 -c dgemv.f -o dgemv.o gfortran -O3 -c dgbmv.f -o dgbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dsymv.f -o dsymv.o gfortran -O3 -c dsbmv.f -o dsbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dspmv.f -o dspmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtrmv.f -o dtrmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtbmv.f -o dtbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtpmv.f -o dtpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtrsv.f -o dtrsv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtbsv.f -o dtbsv.o gfortran -O3 -c dtpsv.f -o dtpsv.o gfortran -O3 -c dger.f -o dger.o gfortran -O3 -c dsyr.f -o dsyr.o gfortran -O3 -c dspr.f -o dspr.o gfortran -O3 -c dsyr2.f -o dsyr2.o gfortran -O3 -c dspr2.f -o dspr2.o gfortran -O3 -c dgemm.f -o dgemm.o gfortran -O3 -c dsymm.f -o dsymm.o gfortran -O3 -c dsyrk.f -o dsyrk.o gfortran -O3 -c dsyr2k.f -o dsyr2k.o gfortran -O3 -c dtrmm.f -o dtrmm.o gfortran -O3 -c dtrsm.f -o dtrsm.o gfortran -O3 -c scabs1.f -o scabs1.o gfortran -O3 -c scasum.f -o scasum.o gfortran -O3 -c scnrm2.f -o scnrm2.o gfortran -O3 -c icamax.f -o icamax.o gfortran -O3 -c caxpy.f -o caxpy.o gfortran -O3 -c ccopy.f -o ccopy.o gfortran -O3 -c cdotc.f -o cdotc.o gfortran -O3 -c cdotu.f -o cdotu.o gfortran -O3 -c csscal.f -o csscal.o gfortran -O3 -c crotg.f -o crotg.o gfortran -O3 -c cscal.f -o cscal.o gfortran -O3 -c cswap.f -o cswap.o gfortran -O3 -c csrot.f -o csrot.o gfortran -O3 -c cgemv.f -o cgemv.o gfortran -O3 -c cgbmv.f -o cgbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c chemv.f -o chemv.o gfortran -O3 -c chbmv.f -o chbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c chpmv.f -o chpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctrmv.f -o ctrmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctbmv.f -o ctbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctpmv.f -o ctpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctrsv.f -o ctrsv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctbsv.f -o ctbsv.o gfortran -O3 -c ctpsv.f -o ctpsv.o gfortran -O3 -c cgerc.f -o cgerc.o gfortran -O3 -c cgeru.f -o cgeru.o gfortran -O3 -c cher.f -o cher.o gfortran -O3 -c chpr.f -o chpr.o gfortran -O3 -c cher2.f -o cher2.o gfortran -O3 -c chpr2.f -o chpr2.o gfortran -O3 -c cgemm.f -o cgemm.o gfortran -O3 -c csymm.f -o csymm.o gfortran -O3 -c csyrk.f -o csyrk.o gfortran -O3 -c csyr2k.f -o csyr2k.o gfortran -O3 -c ctrmm.f -o ctrmm.o gfortran -O3 -c ctrsm.f -o ctrsm.o gfortran -O3 -c chemm.f -o chemm.o gfortran -O3 -c cherk.f -o cherk.o gfortran -O3 -c cher2k.f -o cher2k.o gfortran -O3 -c dcabs1.f -o dcabs1.o gfortran -O3 -c dzasum.f -o dzasum.o gfortran -O3 -c dznrm2.f -o dznrm2.o gfortran -O3 -c izamax.f -o izamax.o gfortran -O3 -c zaxpy.f -o zaxpy.o gfortran -O3 -c zcopy.f -o zcopy.o gfortran -O3 -c zdotc.f -o zdotc.o gfortran -O3 -c zdotu.f -o zdotu.o gfortran -O3 -c zdscal.f -o zdscal.o gfortran -O3 -c zrotg.f -o zrotg.o gfortran -O3 -c zscal.f -o zscal.o gfortran -O3 -c zswap.f -o zswap.o gfortran -O3 -c zdrot.f -o zdrot.o gfortran -O3 -c zgemv.f -o zgemv.o gfortran -O3 -c zgbmv.f -o zgbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c zhemv.f -o zhemv.o gfortran -O3 -c zhbmv.f -o zhbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c zhpmv.f -o zhpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztrmv.f -o ztrmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztbmv.f -o ztbmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztpmv.f -o ztpmv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztrsv.f -o ztrsv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztbsv.f -o ztbsv.o gfortran -O3 -c ztpsv.f -o ztpsv.o gfortran -O3 -c zgerc.f -o zgerc.o gfortran -O3 -c zgeru.f -o zgeru.o gfortran -O3 -c zher.f -o zher.o gfortran -O3 -c zhpr.f -o zhpr.o gfortran -O3 -c zher2.f -o zher2.o gfortran -O3 -c zhpr2.f -o zhpr2.o gfortran -O3 -c zgemm.f -o zgemm.o gfortran -O3 -c zsymm.f -o zsymm.o gfortran -O3 -c zsyrk.f -o zsyrk.o gfortran -O3 -c zsyr2k.f -o zsyr2k.o gfortran -O3 -c ztrmm.f -o ztrmm.o gfortran -O3 -c ztrsm.f -o ztrsm.o gfortran -O3 -c zhemm.f -o zhemm.o gfortran -O3 -c zherk.f -o zherk.o gfortran -O3 -c zher2k.f -o zher2k.o gfortran -O3 -c lsame.f -o lsame.o gfortran -O3 -c xerbla.f -o xerbla.o ar cr libblas.a isamax.o sasum.o saxpy.o scopy.o sdot.o snrm2.o srot.o srotg.o sscal.o sswap.o sdsdot.o srotmg.o srotm.o sgemv.o sgbmv.o ssymv.o ssbmv.o sspmv.o strmv.o stbmv.o stpmv.o strsv.o stbsv.o stpsv.o sger.o ssyr.o sspr.o ssyr2.o sspr2.o sgemm.o ssymm.o ssyrk.o ssyr2k.o strmm.o strsm.o idamax.o dasum.o daxpy.o dcopy.o ddot.o dnrm2.o drot.o drotg.o dscal.o dsdot.o dswap.o drotmg.o drotm.o dgemv.o dgbmv.o dsymv.o dsbmv.o dspmv.o dtrmv.o dtbmv.o dtpmv.o dtrsv.o dtbsv.o dtpsv.o dger.o dsyr.o dspr.o dsyr2.o dspr2.o dgemm.o dsymm.o dsyrk.o dsyr2k.o dtrmm.o dtrsm.o scabs1.o scasum.o scnrm2.o icamax.o caxpy.o ccopy.o cdotc.o cdotu.o csscal.o crotg.o cscal.o cswap.o csrot.o cgemv.o cgbmv.o chemv.o chbmv.o chpmv.o ctrmv.o ctbmv.o ctpmv.o ctrsv.o ctbsv.o ctpsv.o cgerc.o cgeru.o cher.o chpr.o cher2.o chpr2.o cgemm.o csymm.o csyrk.o csyr2k.o ctrmm.o ctrsm.o chemm.o cherk.o cher2k.o dcabs1.o dzasum.o dznrm2.o izamax.o zaxpy.o zcopy.o zdotc.o zdotu.o zdscal.o zrotg.o zscal.o zswap.o zdrot.o zgemv.o zgbmv.o zhemv.o zhbmv.o zhpmv.o ztrmv.o ztbmv.o ztpmv.o ztrsv.o ztbsv.o ztpsv.o zgerc.o zgeru.o zher.o zhpr.o zher2.o zhpr2.o zgemm.o zsymm.o zsyrk.o zsyr2k.o ztrmm.o ztrsm.o zhemm.o zherk.o zher2k.o lsame.o xerbla.o ranlib libblas.a make[1]: Leaving directory `/ext_drv/svn/cdat/trunk/build/blas' make install; make[1]: Entering directory `/ext_drv/svn/cdat/trunk/build/blas' make[1]: *** No rule to make target `install'. Stop. make[1]: Leaving directory `/ext_drv/svn/cdat/trunk/build/blas' cd ../..;
en
converted_docs
219905
**TECHNICAL NOTES** **USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service** **Boise, Idaho** TN AGRONOMY NO. 30 January 1994 By Floyd G. Bailey, State Conservation Agronomist, Boise, Idaho. Information for this Technical Note was gathered from successful Chisel-Plant Residue Management Potato Growers across southern Idaho. **USING CHISEL-PLANT RESIDUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS TO IMPROVE** **POTATO QUALITY AND PROTECT THE ENVIRONMENT** Most of Idaho's famous potatoes are grown on soils with high potential for soil erosion or soil compaction and water intake problems. During recent years, a number of growers have found when they maintain a blanket of crop residue on the soil surface during the potato crop they produce better quality potatoes and protect the quality of the soil, water and air resources associated with their farms. In order to maintain crop residue on the soil surface, they have abandoned the moldboard plow and switched to Chisel-Plant Residue Management systems for potato seedbed preparation. Commonly used rotations consist of potatoes in rotation with small grains. In the Chisel-Plant Residue Management System, chisels are the primary tillage implement used to prepare the seedbed for potatoes. Small grains generally produce four to six tons of straw per acre. Historically, small grain stubble has been fall moldboard plowed to bury the straw. Once the soil has been plowed, several additional tillage operations are needed to reduce clods and prepare the potato seedbed. It is common to use eight to ten tillage operations after plowing, leaving soils in a condition that is highly erodible and restricts water intake and plant root development. Chisel-Plant Residue Management Systems reduce tillage, provides an improved growing environment for the potato and protects the soil against wind and water erosion. The following steps can be used to guide producers into successful implementation of a Chisel-Plant Residue Management System. **Step One** It is important that straw be well-spread before tillage begins. Windrows and large clumps of straw plug chisels and planters. Combines should be equipped with straw spreaders. If the combine doesn't spread the straw, use a field chopper or other suitable equipment that will evenly spread the straw over the field. **Step Two** Fields should be irrigated soon after grain harvest to maximize germination of volunteer grain and weeds before fall tillage begins. **Step Three** Fall tillage should be done with high clearance chisels. The chisel may be equipped with straw choppers or a light disking used when heavy residues are present. When a disk is used, it should be set to chop straw with little residue burial. Most producers chisel twice in the fall with the second opera­tion at right angles to the first. The object of the chisel operations is to get about half of the straw mixed into the soil to start decaying during the winter. The remaining straw should be maintained on the soil surface. The goal should be to keep about 80 percent of the soil surface covered with residue during the winter to reduce soil erosion, trap winter moisture and reduce evaporation. When conditions permit, it is best if fields are bedded in the fall. **Step Four** Fields not bedded in the fall will have to be bedded in the spring. Spring tillage should be kept to a minimum because it exposes soils to wind erosion. The best rule of thumb is, "If it is not needed, don't do it." When spring weeds are present, control with a burn down herbicide. **Step Five** Where fields have been fall bedded, most producers prefer to inject fertilizer, plant potatoes, incorporate pesticides and hill up the potatoes all in one operation. Straw plugging of the planter is generally not a problem where the straw has been properly spread. If problems are encountered, a coulter should be placed in front of the planter to cut straw and allow it to flow around the planter. It is best to maintain at least 70 percent of the soil surface covered with residue after planting. **Step Six** Cultivation during the potato growing season should be kept to a minimum to reduce residue burial. The goal should be to main­tain at least 60 percent of the soil surface covered with residue during the growing period. This will moderate soil temperatures and moisture evaporation during the crop growth period, reducing plant stress and helping produce better quality potatoes. **Step Seven** While the crop is growing, fertilizers, pesticides and irrigation water should be applied through the sprinkler when possible. Producers using Chisel-Plant Residue Management Systems claim they harvest better quality potatoes, their potatoes grow larger and more uniform in size and have significantly fewer knobs. Reducing plant stress also helps the potato resist insect and disease infestations that reduce plant growth and potato quality. Chisel-Plant Residue Management Systems have many advantages. They control soil erosion and help growers meet the requirements of the Food Security Act (FSA). They also produce a significant change in soil organic matter and soil tilth. Soils become mellow and easier to work. Clods are softer and break down easier during harvest, resulting in cleaner potatoes and less tare. Production costs are reduced because time and machinery requirements are less than in moldboard plow systems. Idaho growers have also found that with careful management they can maintain grain straw on the soil surface completely through the potato year to reduce soil erosion during the critical erosion period following potato harvest. Growers not already using a Chisel-Plant Residue Management System should be encouraged to do so. It is best if they start with a small acreage. Once they experience the many benefits, they will find ways to expand Chisel-Plant Residue Management systems to the rest of the farm.
en
all-txt-docs
263510
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THE ATLANTA COMMITTEE FOR THE OLYMPIC GAMES, INC., THE METROPOLITAN ATLANTA OLYMPIC GAMES AUTHORITY, AND THE STONE MOUNTAIN MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION UNDER THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT OF 1990 CONCERNING THE OLYMPIC TENNIS CENTER INTRODUCTION 1. This Agreement (the "Agreement") is made and entered into by the United States of America (the "United States"), the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, Inc.("ACOG"), the Metropolitan Atlanta Olympic Games Authority ("MAOGA"), and the Stone Mountain Memorial Association ("SMMA") (collectively, the United States, ACOG, MAOGA, and SMMA will be referred to hereinafter as the "Parties"). 2. This Agreement resolves an investigation conducted by the United States Department of Justice of ACOG, MAOGA, and SMMA under Titles II and III of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, 42 U.S.C. SS 12131-12189 (the "Act" or the "ADA"), concerning the Olympic Tennis Center (the "Tennis Center", including but not limited to the Olympic Tennis Stadium ("the Tennis Stadium") located in Stone MountainPark, Georgia. 3. The resolution of this matter through this Agreement serves the Parties' interests in securing the rights of individuals with disabilities by designing and constructing an accessible Tennis Center. 4. The Parties agree as follows: THE PARTIES 5. The term "Respondents" refers to ACOG, MAOGA, and SMMA and their parent companies, subsidiaries, departments, and/or agencies. 6. The term "the Department" refers to the United States Department of Justice, and, because the Department is the designated enforcement authority for the ADA under Titles II and III of the ADA, "the Department" is used interchangeably with "United States." 7. ACOG is a private corporation created to organize, conduct and stage the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games (the "Olympic Games"). Pursuant to a contractual agreement between ACOG and SMMA, ACOG will manage the construction of the Tennis Center and will occupy the Tennis Center during the Olympic Games. During construction of the Tennis Center and the hosting of the Olympic Games, ACOG will be an operator of the Tennis Center, and ACOG has contracted with and provided program specifications to the design team for construction of the Tennis Stadium, with SMMA having only a right of review. Within the meaning of this Agreement only, the Parties agree that, with respect to its role in regard to the design, construction, operation, and occupation of the Tennis Center, ACOG is an operator of a place of public accommodation within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. 01-04922  12182(a), and is a public accommodation within the meaning of 28 C.F.R. 36.104, and is subject to Title III of the ADA. 8. MAOGA is a political subdivision created by the State of Georgia in 1989 for the purpose of "conducting and staging the Olympic summer games in conjunction with the local organizing committee, . . . and to that end, of acquiring, constructing, equipping, maintaining, and operating any facilities within the state necessary or useful in the conduct of the Olympic Games." Metropolitan Atlanta Olympic Games Authority Act, Ga. L. 1989 at 5078. As a result, MAOGA is a public entity within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. 12131(1)(B) and 28 C.F.R. 35.104 and is subject to Title II of the ADA. 9. In order to undertake its responsibility to maintain and operate facilities within the State of Georgia needed to conduct the Olympic Games, MAOGA has approval responsibility regarding expenditures of $250,000 or more for the construction and alteration of facilities. MAOGA has exercised its right of approval for the construction of the Tennis Stadium. As a result of its approval authority, the Department contends that MAOGA is responsible for the design and construction of the Tennis Center in accordance with 28 C.F.R.  35.151. See Paragraph 52 herein. 10. SMMA is an instrumentality and public corporation of the State of Georgia, established for the purpose of "acquir[ing] Stone Mountain and such surrounding area as the association may deem necessary for the proper development, management, preservation, and protection of Stone Mountain. . ." and of "mak[ing] such contracts and agreements as . . . may be necessary or convenient in the management of the affairs of the association or in the operation of the project. . . ." Ga. Laws 12-3-194. Because SMMA is an instrumentality of a State government, SMMA is a public entity within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. 12131(1)(B) and 28 C.F.R. 35.104 and is subject to Title II of the ADA. 11. SMMA has fee simple title to the site of the Tennis Center and has, pursuant to an agreement with ACOG, participated cooperatively in the design, construction and development of the Tennis Center. Upon substantial completion of construction, ACOG delivered the permanent facilities of the Tennis Center, including the Tennis Stadium to SMMA and transferred title to these facilities to SMMA. SMMA has leased the Tennis Stadium and the rest of the Tennis Center to ACOG for the period of July 15, 1996, through the completion of all removal activities, but not later than September 15, 1996. 12. The Tennis Stadium is the Center Court and the Tennis Center is the Tennis Stadium, the fifteen other tennis courts, and the security building. Because SMMA owns the Tennis Stadium and those parts of the Tennis Center that will remain in the post-Olympic configuration, and has played a part in its design and construction, SMMA is subject to Title II's requirements for newly constructed and altered facilities including, but not limited to, those set forth at 28 C.F.R.  35.151 and the Standards, 28 C.F.R. Part 36, Appendix A. 2 01-04923 THE TENNIS VENUE 13. The Tennis Center is a sports facility presently under construction in Stone Mountain Park, Georgia. It is designed for use as the tennis venue for the Olympic Games (the "Olympic configuration"). The Tennis Center is designed to be modified, after the Olympic Games are completed. The modification is that ACOG, pursuant to its contractual agreement with SMMA, will remove where applicable temporary and portable facilities from the Tennis Center that were needed for the staging of the Olympic Games. This modification will result in a smaller facility with respect to seat count with regard to the Tennis Stadium and will result in the removal of other parts of the Tennis Center ("the post-Olympic configuration"). The Parties agree that ACOG's responsibility for changing the Tennis Center to its post-Olympic configuration, including any alterations that may be made during this process, (see Paragraph 26) will be limited solely to any modifications made or undertaken by ACOG. 14. As to ACOG, the Tennis Stadium and each of the other Tennis Center courts that have spectator seating is a "stadium, or other place of exhibition or entertainment," and is, therefore, a public accommodation within the meaning of Title III, 42 U.S.C. 12181(7)(C), and a place of public accommodation within the meaning of 28 C.F.R.  36.104. Because the Tennis Center is a non-residential facility whose operations affect commerce, it is also a commercial facility within the meaning of Title III, 42 U.S.C.  12181(2), and 28 C.F.R. 36.104. 15. As to SMMA, the Tennis Stadium and each of the other structures constructed on the facility is a building, structure, site, or complex, and is, therefore, a "facility" within the meaning of 28 C.F.R. 35.104 and is covered by Title II. 16. The Tennis Stadium and Center, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, are being designed and constructed for first occupancy after January 26, 1993, and are, therefore, newly constructed facilities within the meaning of Title III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C.  12183(a)(1) and 28 C.F.R.  36.401. 17. Construction of the Tennis Stadium and the Tennis Center began after January 26, 1992, and the Tennis Stadium and the Tennis Center are, therefore, newly constructed facilities within the meaning of Title II of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12134(c) and 28 C.F.R. 35.151(a). 18. The physical modifications that will be undertaken to change the Tennis Center from its Olympic to its post-Olympic configuration constitute alterations as defined by Titles II and III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12183(a)(2) and 28 C.F.R. 35.151 and 36.402. See 42 U.S.C. 12132. 3 01-04924 THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE INVESTIGATION 19. The Department has informed the Respondents that this matter was initiated by complaints filed with the Department by people with disabilities from the Atlanta metropolitan area alleging that the Tennis Center was not being designed and constructed in compliance with the ADA. The complaints were investigated by the Disability Rights Section (formerly known as the Public Access Section and the Office on the Americans with Disabilities Act) and the Coordination and Review Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, under the authority granted by Sections 203 and 308(b)of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12133 and 12188(b). 20. From 1993 through the present, the Department conducted an in-depth investigation (the Department's File No. DJ 202-19-14) into the design of the Tennis Center. The investigation included several meetings, many telephone conferences, and the review of a vast number of design documents which were at various stages in the development process. 21. The Parties acknowledge that the design and construction of the Tennis Center has lasted a period of years and has involved modifications and refinements during the design and construction process. Notwithstanding such ongoing changes, Respondents cooperated with the Department's investigation by providing extensive design documents, some of which Respondents assert were interim "progress" drawings which had not yet been finalized. As a result, Respondents contend that a number of the issues raised by the Department during the investigation as asserted violations, would not have been included in the final construction of the Stadium. 22. The Department asserts that the Respondents have violated the new construction and alterations provisions of Titles II and III of the ADA, respectively, by designing, or by contracting with others to design the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, it would not in all respects comply with the new construction and alterations provisions of: (a) Titles II and III of the ADA; and (b) the Department's implementing regulations for Titles II and III, including the Standards for Accessible Design ("the Standards") incorporated into the regulations and found at 28 C.F.R.Part 36, Appendix A. 23. Notwithstanding the assertions made by the United States, the Respondents deny that they have violated the new construction or alterations provisions of Titles II and III of the ADA with respect to the Tennis Stadium. Further, the Respondents deny that they have violated the implementing regulations, including the Standards. Nothing in this Agreement shall constitute an admission of liability by Respondents. 24. Neither the making of this Agreement nor anything contained herein shall, in anyway, be construed or considered to be an admission by any of the Respondents, or by any officials, contractors or agents of any of the Respondents, of violation of any federal, state or local statute, any State or municipal fire safety or building code, or of any other wrongdoing 4 01-04925 or liability whatsoever. 25. The Parties have agreed to the terms of this Agreement in order to resolve the Department's investigation, to avoid litigation, and to resolve their disagreements concerning the interpretation of the ADA, which was enacted in 1990 and became effective in 1992. AGREEMENT WITH RESPECT TO THE NEW CONSTRUCTION AND ALTERATIONS PROVISIONS OF TITLES II AND III 26. The Respondent(s) agrees to the following provisions: Restrooms a. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, each restroom that contains 6 or more stalls contains, in addition to the standard accessible toilet stall that is 60 inches wide, a toilet stall that is 36 inches wide and is equipped with grab bars and a self-closing, outward swinging door in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.22.4, 4.26 and Figure 30(d) of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 1. b. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, each restroom contains a lavatory that has clear floor space that is not interfered with by the swing of a toilet stall door in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.2.4, 4.19.3, 4.22.2, and 4.26 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 2. c. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, each toilet room that contains urinals contains an accessible urinal with sufficient clear floor space that is not interfered with by the swing of a toilet stall door in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.2.4, 4.18.3, 4.22.2, and 4.22.5 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 3. d. To alter Toilet Room 140 at the Tennis Center by moving the east wall twelve inches out, in its post-Olympic configuration, so that sufficient turning space is provided in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.2.3, and 4.22.3 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 4. e. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, the toilet paper dispensers in each of the accessible toilet stalls are located not more than 36 inches from the back wall in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.17.3, and 4.22.4 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 5. f. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its pic 5 01-04926 Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, all of the accessible lavatories provide clearance of at least 29 inches above the finish floor in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.19.2, and 4.22.6 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 6. g. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, each standard designated accessible toilet stall is equipped with grab bars configured and mounted in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(11), 4.16.4, 4.17.6, 4.22.4 and 4.26 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 7. Signage h. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, the permanent building signage designating the location of permanent toilet rooms will contain raised san serif or simple serif type between 5/8 inches and 2 inches in height in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(16)(a) and 4.30.4 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 8. i. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, the permanent, building signage for permanent restrooms on the Plaza Level will be located on the latch side of the doors in accordance with Sections 4.1.2(7), 4.1.3(16)(a), and 4.30.6 of the Standards and as set forth in the drawings attached as Exhibit 9. Alarms j. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, visual alarms are provided in all single user toilet rooms and in other general usage areas (except as noted in Exhibit 10b) where audible alarms are provided, as referenced by Sections 4.1.3(14), 4.28.1, and 4.28.3 of the Standards and, as set forth in Exhibit 10. Accessible Seating k. To construct and alter the Tennis Center so that, in both its Olympic and post-Olympic configurations, each of the courts with stands contains wheelchair seating locations in a number equal to at least one percent of the total number of seats at that court, in accordance with Sections 4.1.3(19)(a), 4.33.2, 4.33.3, 4.33.4, and 4.33.5 of the Standards and as set forth in the attached Exhibit II. 6 01-04927 General 1. To construct those portions of the Tennis Center not specified in Paragraphs 26.a. through 26.k. and the attachments thereto, in accordance with the Standards and as set forth in the baseline drawings (as defined in Paragraph 31) unless otherwise indicated in Paragraphs 26.a. through 26.k. and the exhibits attached thereto. 27. The United States contends that the Standards' requirement that persons seated in wheelchairs be afforded lines of sight comparable to those afforded members of the general public includes a requirement to provide wheelchair users with a line of sight over standing spectators in assembly areas where spectators tend to stand during events. Respondents dispute that contention. Nevertheless, the Department recognizes that the customs, traditions, and rules of tennis prohibit spectators from standing during match play. As a result, the Parties agree that the wheelchair seating locations in the Tennis Stadium and the other courts with spectator seating in the Tennis Center provide persons seated in wheelchairs with comparable lines of sight as required in Sections 4.1.3(19)(a) and 4.33.3 of the Standards. 28. The United States consent to this Agreement: a) Does not constitute any acknowledgement by the Department that the design of the ramp handrails complies with Section 4.8.5 of the Standards. Specifically, the United States does not agree that these handrails are designed to fulfill the requirement that, if they are not continuous, they extend at least 12 inches beyond the top and bottom of the ramp segment. The Parties acknowledge that the disagreement concerning the ramps in question pertains solely to the direction of the handrails; and b) Does not constitute any acknowledgment that failing to provide visual alarms in the rooms or spaces exempted by Paragraph 26.j. and Exhibit 10 complies with Sections 4.1.3(4) and 4.28 of the Standards. 29. Neither the making of this Agreement nor anything contained herein shall in any way be construed or considered to be an admission by the Respondents that the ultimate design of the Tennis Center, as constructed consistent with this Agreement, does not satisfy in every regard the requirements applicable to said Center pursuant to Titles II and III of the ADA and the applicable regulations. IMPLEMENTATION AND ENFORCEMENT OF THE AGREEMENT 30. The Department may review compliance with the Agreement at any time until the Agreement's expiration. If the Department believes that this Agreement or any provision of it has been violated, the Department shall promptly advise the Respondents in writing of the nature of that violation, and, within thirty days of receipt by Respondents of said written notice from the Department, the Parties shall meet and confer in a good faith attempt to resolve the issue. In the event the Parties are not able to resolve this issue to the reasonable satisfaction of the Department, the Department may seek enforcement of the Agreement or any provision thereof, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of 7 01-04928 Georgia, pursuant to Paragraph 35 of this Agreement. 31. During its investigation, the Department has reviewed drawings of the Tennis Stadium forwarded by ACOG in January 1995 and May 1996. Moreover, drawings for the Olympic configuration are incorporated as exhibits in the appropriate subparagraphs of Paragraph 26. The Parties agree that the level of accessibility provided by the design drawings submitted to the Department on May 7, 1996, and the Bulletins dated July 31, 1995, submitted to the Department as SD-A11.2, SD-A3.2.3, SD-A9.1, SD-A3.2.4, SD-A11.2, SD-A10.2, SD-A10.1, SD-A3.2.2, SD-A3.1.2, and SD-A10.1A, respectively ("the baseline drawings") as modified by the provisions and exhibits incorporated in Paragraph 26 constitute compliance with the Standards, except as referenced in Paragraph 28 of this Agreement. Respondent(s) agrees not to decrease accessibility in the event that different drawings are used in the actual construction of any room or area, except as addressed under Paragraph 32. 32. In the event that Respondent(s) plans to make any changes in the design of any aspect of the Tennis Center that (1) are covered by the baseline drawings as modified by Paragraphs 26 and 28 of this Agreement and (2) may materially reduce the level of accessibility for individuals with disabilities provided by the design of the Tennis Center (as reflected in the baseline drawings and the provisions of exhibits to, and drawings incorporated in Paragraphs 26 and 28), Respondent(s) shall notify the Department of the changes being planned, the expected timing of the changes, and a very brief description of the reason for making the change. Respondents shall make every reasonable effort to notify the Department of the planned changes as promptly as possible. Included in the planned design changes that are covered by this section are changes that could reasonably be considered to materially reduce the level of accessibility required by the baseline drawings as modified by Paragraphs 26 and 28 of this Agreement and its underlying interpretations, even if Respondent(s) does not believe that the change would actually have that effect. Changes covered by this paragraph are those that occur or will occur after the commencement of the Agreement and during the effective dates of the Agreement with respect to ACOG only, and with respect to SMMA only, through six months after completion of the post-Olympic modifications. The basis for determining whether a change takes place or the effect of such a change are the baseline drawings as modified by the provisions of Paragraphs 26 and 28 and the design drawings referenced herein. 33. In notifying the Department about any changes being planned, Respondent(s) may request an expedited review by the Department and the Department will make every reasonable effort, subject to its other work demands, to advise Respondent(s) as promptly as possible whether the Department views the changes as a breach of this Agreement that it would seek to prevent. As soon as the Department determines it will not object to a particular planned design change, it will notify Respondent(s) as promptly as possible of that determination. In the event the Department determines that such a change would amount to a breach of the Agreement, said change will be subject to Paragraph 35 of the Agreement. 8 01-04929 34. Respondent(s) may, but are not required to, wait for the Department to decide whether it will object to a particular planned change before making the change; however, in the event that a change is made before the Department's determination and the Department subsequently objects, the Parties agree that this will be treated by the Department as an asserted breach of the Agreement, and the Parties will follow the procedures set forth in Paragraph 30 of the Agreement. In the event that Respondent(s) decides to go forth with construction of a planned change prior to receiving the Department's determination regarding that planned change, or in spite of the Department objecting to such change, such action by Respondent(s) shall not in any way impact or be used as a presumption to limit the remedies available to the Department to ensure that the Respondent(s) meets the requirements of the Agreement, including, inter alia, reconstruction. Nor shall Respondent(s) proceeding to make the change prior to receiving the Department's determination, or despite the Department objecting to the change, constitute evidence of any bad faith on the part of the Respondent(s). This paragraph does not apply to design modifications covered by Paragraph 35 of this Agreement. Respondent(s) remains committed to the design and construction of an accessible Tennis Stadium that meets the requirements of the ADA and the Standards and will make every reasonable effort to minimize changes that diminish the accessibility of the Tennis Stadium, or which require invocation of this paragraph. 35. The Department recognizes that hosting the Olympic Games will require some operational flexibility. In the event that the operation of the Olympic Games requires the Respondents to make modifications of either a part of the design of the facility or an operational policy or procedure, such modifications will not be deemed by the Department to violate the Agreement, provided the new design or policy: 1) continues to complywith all relevant provisions of the ADA and its implementing regulations, consistent with the interpretations thereof underlying the baseline drawings and Paragraph 26 and itexhibits; and 2) results in the provision of equal or greater accessibility to people with disabilities. The Department agrees that it will not consider the removal by ACOG of temporary facilities or items from the Tennis Center after the Olympic Games as a decrease in accessibility under this Paragraph so long as it includes the removal of all such temporary facilities. 36. In the event the Department seeks enforcement of this Agreement or any provision of it in the United States District Court, the Parties agree and hereby stipulate: a. That the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia has personal and subject matter jurisdiction over this Agreement, the matters set forth in it, and the Parties to it; b. That, as to Respondents' Agreement to undertake the actions expressly described in the baseline drawings and Paragraph 26 of this Agreement, the Department shall be entitled to enforcement of said terms of the Agreement and, in the event the Court concludes that Respondents, or any of them, have failed to fulfill their commitments in Paragraph 26 hereof to construct the Tennis Center in accordance with the baseline drawings as modified by the provisions and design drawings referenced in Paragraph 26, 9 01-04930 hereof, such breach shall be treated as if it had been a violation under Subsection 308(b)(2)(C)(ii) of the ADA, and said Respondents shall be liable, in the Court's discretion, to the United States for such equitable and/or monetary relief as is appropriate under Section 308(b)(2)(A) and (B) of the ADA, and, also in the Court's discretion, for a civil penalty under Subsection 308(b)(2)(C)(ii). In considering what amount of civil penalty, if any, is appropriate, the Court shall consider the Respondent(s)' good faith efforts or attempts to comply with the ADA, as articulated in Section 308(b)(5) of the ADA. 37. Failure by any one of the Parties to enforce this entire Agreement or any provision of it with regard to any deadline or any other provision contained herein shall not be construed as a waiver by that Party of any right to do so. 38. This Agreement is a public document. A copy of this document or any information contained herein may be made available to any person. The Respondents, at their option, shall either provide a copy of the Agreement upon request or refer any person who inquires about obtaining a copy of this Agreement to the Department at the address and telephone number indicated after the Department's signature lines on this document. Notwithstanding any other language in this Agreement, the Parties acknowledge that, because of security reasons, design and construction drawings of the Tennis Center which are referred to herein and attached hereto as exhibits will not be released by the Department pursuant to this paragraph until after the expiration of this Agreement pursuant to the Department's letter of November 9, 1994, attached hereto as Exhibit 12. The Parties to this Agreement acknowledge (i) that SMMA is a state authority subject to the Georgia Open Records Act, O.C.G.A.  50-18-70 et seq., and (ii) the Open Records Act will govern all of SMMA's responses to requests to SMMA for disclosure of the Agreement or its exhibits, including exceptions to disclosure. SMMA acknowledges that ACOG may assert exceptions to disclosure under the Act to the extent permitted by law. In addition, SMMA agrees to notify ACOG of any request made under the Open Records Act for the Agreement or its exhibits prior to SMMA's disclosure of the documents or notification to the requesting party that disclosure is not required. Such notice to ACOG shall identify the information requested and SMMA's anticipated response to such request. However, such notice from SMMA to ACOG is only required for requests made to SMMA prior to September 15, 1996. 39. This Agreement shall be binding on the Respondents and their successors in interest, and each Respondent has a duty to notify all such successors in interest, if any, of these obligations and to include in all future documents transferring any right or interest in the Tennis Center any obligations to comply with this Agreement not retained by the Respondent(s). 40. If any provision of this Agreement is affected by any future proceeding in bankruptcy, the Parties shall jointly apply to the Bankruptcy Court for withdrawal to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for resolution of the matter. 41. This Agreement, including the exhibits attached hereto and the drawings 10 01-04931 referenced herein, constitutes the entire Agreement among the Parties on the matters raised herein, and no other statement, promise, or agreement, either written or oral, made by either party or agents of either party, that is not contained in this written Agreement, shall be enforceable. In the event a court of competent jurisdiction concludes that any part of this Agreement is unenforceable, such portion shall be severed from this Agreement and all other portions shall remain enforceable. 42. This Agreement is limited to the Tennis Center and does not apply to any other design or construction project of any Respondent. The Agreement covers all aspects of the design and construction of the Tennis Center, including all additions or changes made during the term of this Agreement. This Agreement does not affect any continuing responsibility of the Respondents, or any one of them, to comply with the ADA, where applicable, concerning: (a) any duties of the Respondents with regard to other venues being designed, constructed, modified or operated for use during the Olympic Games; (b) any responsibilities the Respondents may incur toward their employees under Titles I and II of the Act; and (c) any ADA responsibility the Respondents have for the Tennis Center where said responsibility is not covered by the provisions of Paragraphs 26, 27, or 28 of this Agreement, except any changes or modifications in the design of the Tennis Center after the execution but during the term of this Agreement. With respect to any litigation between the Parties to this Agreement which may arise over any of the issues described in Subparagraphs (a) or (b) of this Paragraph 41, the Parties shall be free to argue any principles of law and shall not be bound by the terms or underlying principles of this Agreement. 43. The Parties hereby represent and acknowledge that this Agreement is given and executed voluntarily and is not based upon any representation by any of the Parties to another Party as to the merits, legal liability, or value of any claims of the Parties or any matters related thereto. 44. The Parties acknowledge that they have been afforded an opportunity to consider this Agreement and the terms and conditions set forth herein, and that they have read and understood the terms of the Agreement and have been given an opportunity to consult with their respective counsel prior to executing this Agreement. 45. Where the same reduced-sized and full-sized design drawings are attached hereto as an exhibit, the reduced-sized drawings are merely representative of the full-sized design drawings, copies of which are to be maintained by each party. In the event of a discrepancy between a full-sized design drawing and a reduced-sized version of the same document, the full-sized version is to be considered authoritative. 46. Provided no changes are made after the date hereof to the design contained or referenced in an exhibit set forth in Paragraph 26, if there is any disagreement between the Parties concerning the requirements of the Agreement with respect to (1) the referenced sections of the ADA, its implementing regulations or Standards and (2) any listed exhibit, then the exhibit shall govern. 11 01-04932 47. A signer of this document, in a representative capacity for MAOGA, ACOG, SMMA, or the Department, represents that he or she is authorized to bind such entity to this Agreement. 48. In any instance where notice is required to be given to any or all of the Parties to this agreement, such notice shall be provided in writing, sent via certified or registered U.S. Mail, return receipt requested, to the following individuals in their capacity as representatives of the Parties to this agreement: ACOG: Josie A. Alexander, Esq. Alexander & Associates 230 Peachtree Street, N.W. Suite 1400 Atlanta, Georgia 30303 Horace H. Sibley, Esq. King & Spalding 191 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30303-1763 MAOGA: C. Geoffrey Weirich, Esq. Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker Suite 2400 600 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30308 The SMMA: Stone Mountain Memorial Association Attn: G. Curtis Branscome P.O. Box 778 Stone Mountain, Georgia 30086 with a concurrent copy to: Cheryl A. Janson, Esq. Assistant Attorney General Georgia Department of Law 40 Capitol Square Atlanta, Georgia 30334-1300 12 01-04933 The Department: John L. Wodatch, Section Chief Disability Rights Section Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice P.O. Box 66738 Washington, D.C. 20035-6738 49. This Agreement may be executed in several counterparts, each of which shall be an original and shall constitute one and the same instrument. All exhibits hereto are hereby incorporated by specific reference into this Agreement, and their terms are made a part of this Agreement as though fully recited herein. 50. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement as between the Department, MAOGA, and ACOG only, this Agreement shall remain in effect until six months after ACOG's post-Olympic modifications to the Tennis Stadium are completed and shall expire at that time. ACOG agrees to notify the Department of this completion. In the event of any failure to provide the Department with this notification within two weeks of the date of the completion of the modifications, as between the Department and ACOG only, this Agreement shall remain in effect for six months after the date on which the Department receives such notification, and shall expire at that time. 51. As between the Department and SMMA only, so long as no alterations, as defined by the Act, are performed on the Tennis Center after ACOG's completion of the post-Olympic modifications, and the terms of this Agreement are met fully this Agreement shall be deemed to resolve all outstanding issues relating to compliance with the new construction provisions of Title II of the Act at the Tennis Center, and the Department shall be forever prohibited from further investigating or pursuing any complaints or claims against SMMA for alleged violations of the Act's new construction or alterations provisions pertaining to the Tennis Center. 52. As a result of its approval authority, the Department contends that MAOGA is responsible for the design and construction of the Center. MAOGA denies that it is responsible for either the design or construction of the Center within the meaning of Title II of the ADA. Notwithstanding this dispute between MAOGA and the Department over MAOGA's alleged legal responsibility for the Center's design and construction, and in order to avoid litigation over this coverage issue notwithstanding the resolution of the substantive issues described herein, the Parties have agreed that MAOGA will execute this Agreement, but will reserve all its rights to argue that it has no Title II responsibility regarding the Center in the event there is any enforcement litigation concerning this Agreement. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, in the event of any such enforcement litigation the Department expressly agrees that: (1) there shall be no prejudice to MAOGA from executing this Agreement, and (2) the Department shall make no argument therein that MAOGA is estopped or otherwise prevented from arguing that it is not legally responsible for the accessibility of the Center. 13 01-04934 53. By executing this Agreement jointly, no Respondent commits to undertake or be responsible for actions which are beyond that Respondent's authority as an owner or operator of the Tennis Center at the relevant point in time. Respondent(s) acknowledges that, as to each undertaking in this Agreement, at least one of them is responsible. 54. All Parties to this Agreement shall support it fully. To the extent that the Department receives a complaint under Title II or Title III of the ADA which challenges an aspect of the design, construction, alteration, or operation of the Tennis Center which is permitted under this Agreement, the Department shall not seek relief on behalf of such individual under either Title II or Title III. 55. The date this Agreement commences is the date of the last signature below. 56. The failure by any one party to sign this Agreement does not void the Agreement as between the parties who are signatories. 14 01-04935 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Parties have caused this Agreement to be executed and sealed. READ CAREFULLY BEFORE SIGNING. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA JANET RENO Attorney General U.S. Department of Justice (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/11/96 By: ________________________________ DEVAL L. PATRICK Assistant Attorney General KERRY ALAN SCANLON Deputy Assistant Attorney General Civil Rights Division (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/11/96 ________________________________ JOHN L. WODATCH Chief L. IRENE BOWEN Deputy Chief JOSEPH C. RUSSO Trial Attorney D.C. Bar No. 432249 TROY R. JUSTESEN Paralegal/Investigator Disability Rights Section Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice P.O. Box 66738 Washington, DC 20035-6738 (202) 307-2229 15 01-04936 [signatures continued from previous page] ATLANTA COMMITTEE FOR THE OLYMPIC GAMES, INC. (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/9/96 By: ______________________________ A.D. FRAZIER, JR. As: Chief Operating Officer 250 Williams Street, Suite 6000 P.O. Box 1996 Atlanta, Georgia 30301-1996 USA (404) 224-1996 [signatures continued on next page] 16 01-04937 [signatures continued from previous page] Approved and Recommended for the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, Inc.: (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/10/96 By: __________________________________________ JOSIE A. ALEXANDER, ESQ. Georgia Bar No. 008886 ALEXANDER & ASSOCIATES 230 Peachtree Street, N.W. Suite 1400 Atlanta, Georgia 30303 (404) 614-0001 MARVA JONES BROOKS, ESQ. Georgia Bar No. 85150 ARNALL GOLDEN & GREGORY 2800 One Atlantic Center 1201 W. Peachtree Street, N.W. Atlanta, Georgia 30309-3400 (404) 873-8500 HORACE H. SIBLEY, ESQ. Georgia Bar No. 644800 KING & SPALDING 191 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30303-1763 (404) 572-4600 [signatures continued on next page] 17 01-04938 [signatures continued from previous page] METROPOLITAN ATLANTA OLYMPIC GAMES AUTHORITY (Signature) Date:______________ By: _______________________________ RICHARD MONTEILH As: Executive Director 250 Williams Street Suite 6200 Atlanta, Georgia 30303 (404) 332-9791 Approved and Recommended for the Metropolitan Atlanta Olympic Games Authority: (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/10/96 By: ________________________________ C. GEOFFREY WEIRICH, ESQ. Georgia Bar No. 746455 WILLIAM E. EASON, ESQ. Georgia Bar No. 237600 PAUL, HASTINGS, JANOFSKY & WALKER Suite 2400 600 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30308 (404) 815-2400 [signatures continued on next page] 18 01-04939 [signatures continued from previous page] STONE MOUNTAIN MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION (Signature) Date:(handwritten) 7/9/96 By: _______________________________ G. CURTIS BRANSCOME As: General Manager of Stone Mountain Memorial Association P.O. Box 778 Stone Mountain, Georgia 30086 (Signature) Attest: _______________________________ Name: CAROL H. WILLIAMS Title: SECRETARY 19 01-04940
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Board of Contract Appeals General Services Administration Washington, D.C. 20405 ________________ March 10, 2005 ________________ GSBCA 16564-RELO In the Matter of THOMASINE P. ROSS Thomasine P. Ross, Albuquerque, NM, Claimant. Maurice McDonald, Chief, Fiscal Support Branch, PCS Relocation Travel Team, Products and Services, National Business Center, Department of the Interior, Denver, CO, appearing for Department of the Interior. GOODMAN, Board Judge. Claimant, Thomasine P. Ross, an employee of the Department of the Interior, has asked this Board to review the agency's denial of reimbursement of various expenses she incurred during her relocation to begin employment as a new appointee. Background Claimant was issued travel orders dated January 28, 2003, to relocate from her residence in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to her new official duty station in Albuquerque, New Mexico. She was authorized to accomplish en route travel by privately owned vehicle (POV) for herself and two dependents, and was also authorized shipment of household goods (HHG) via the government bill of lading (GBL) method. In February 2003, claimant drove by POV to and reported for duty in Albuquerque, but her claimed dependents remained in Oklahoma City. She leased a residence (first residence) which she considered to be temporary and accomplished a partial move of her HHG into this residence. She stored the remainder of her HHG in Oklahoma City. In July 2004 claimant moved to another residence in Albuquerque (second residence), which she considered permanent. She rented a truck and moved her HHG from the first residence to second residence. In August 2004 she traveled by air from Albuquerque via Denver to Oklahoma City. Due to inclement weather in Denver she was required to stay in a hotel and resume travel the next day. Upon arrival in Oklahoma City, she rented a truck and brought the remainder of her HHG to the second residence. At that time her claimed dependents traveled by air from Oklahoma City to Albuquerque. She was reimbursed for various relocation costs and denied payment for her claim for $1080 for storage of HHG in the first residence. She was also denied reimbursement for the costs of the rental truck for moving HHG from the first residence to the second residence ($238.64), transportation for a granddaughter from Oklahoma City to Alburquerque ($282.40), her airfare to return to Oklahoma City ($100.10), and her hotel for the return to Oklahoma City ($44.91). Discussion Storage of HHG in First Residence Under the Federal Travel Regulation (FTR), a new appointee may be authorized reimbursement for temporary storage of HHG. 41 CFR 302-7.1(b) (2002) (FAR 302-7.1 (b)). Claimant was reimbursed for temporary storage of the HHG which she left in Oklahoma City after moving to Albuquerque. Claimant seeks additional payment for storing the HHG which she moved into her first residence at the new official duty station. The agency maintains that claimant had use of the HHG and therefore did not "store" it. Claimant does not rebut this allegation. She characterizes the presence of her HHG in the first residence as "temporary storage" because she intended to occupy this residence temporarily. She requested payment of $1080 -- $60 per month for the eighteen-month period during which she occupied the first residence. She did not incur this cost, but asserts she would have if she had stored the HHG in a storage facility. Claimant confuses the concept of "temporary storage of HHG" with her placing her HHG in a residence at the new duty station that she considered temporary. Even though claimant intended to occupy the first residence temporarily, it was still her residence. [Foot # 1 ] She is not entitled to compensation for storage of HHG located in her own residence, whether she used the HHG or not. Claimant did not incur storage costs for having her HHG at her first residence. The agency properly denied payment of the amount claimed. ****************** Footnote Begin ********** [Foot # 1 ] 1 The FTR provides that Government employees who are transferred from one duty station to another are entitled to reimbursement for certain expenses if it is necessary to occupy temporary quarters during the transfer. FTR pt. 302.6. The FTR makes no determination as to whether quarters are considered temporary or permanent when occupied by a new appointee reporting for duty at the new duty station, as new appointees are not entitled to reimbursement for temporary quarters expenses. FTR 302-6.5. ****************** Footnote End ************ Moving HHG from First to Second Residence FTR 302-7.6(b) authorizes reimbursement of the costs of transporting a new appointee's HHG from the place of actual residence to the new official duty station. Claimant was reimbursed for transportation of her HHG from Oklahoma City to the first residence in Albuquerque. In July 2004 claimant incurred costs of $238.64 for a rental truck to move her HHG from the first residence to the second residence. As she had previously been reimbursed the costs for transporting her HHG to the new official duty station, she is not entitled to reimbursement of expenses incurred thereafter when moving her HHG to a second residence at the new official duty station. The agency properly denied reimbursement of the costs of the rental truck. Transportation for Granddaughter Claimant was authorized reimbursement for the expenses of her dependents traveling to her new official duty station. The agency denied reimbursement of claimant's expenses for her granddaughter's transportation because claimant could not establish that she was the legal guardian of her granddaughter when she reported for duty in February 2003. The record contains a court order which confirms that claimant became the legal guardian on August 20, 2004. Statute provides that an agency shall pay from government funds the travel expenses of an employee and the transportation expenses of the employee's immediate family when the employee is transferred in the interest of the Government from one official station or agency to another for permanent duty. 5 U.S.C. 5724 (2000). It is left, however, to implementing regulations to define precisely who constitutes the employee's "immediate family." The FTR specifies which members of the employee's household at the time he or she reports for duty at the new permanent duty station constitute the employee's immediate family. Among those listed are the employee's spouse and children. The regulation further provides: The term "children" shall include natural offspring; stepchildren; adopted children; grandchildren, legal minor wards or other dependent children who are under legal guardianship of the employee or employee's spouse; and an unborn child born and moved after the employee's effective date of transfer. FTR 300-3.1. Pursuant to this regulation, in order for a grandchild to be deemed a member of the immediate family for purposes of reimbursment of travel expenses, the grandchild must be under the employee's legal guardianship when the employee reports for duty at the new duty station. Steven Fuller, GSBCA 16337-RELO, 04-1 BCA 32,363. As claimant did not establish that her granddaughter was under her legal guardianship at that time, and the record contained evidence to the contrary, the agency properly denied reimbursement of this expense. Airfare and Hotel Expenses Claimant's travel orders authorized en route travel from Oklahoma City to Albuquerque by POV. She accomplished this in February 2003 and was reimbursed her expenses. Her travel orders did not authorize additional travel to return to Oklahoma City. The agency properly denied reimbursement of $100.10 for air travel and $44.91 for hotel expenses incurred when she returned to Oklahoma City in August 2004. Decision The claim is denied. ___________________________________ ALLAN H. GOODMAN Board Judge
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# ![](media/image1.png)*Sandia National Laboratories* Staff Augmentation Pre-Bidders Conference Questions and Answers **Updates** **to this FAQ:** Answer to Question 35 updated on 08.24.2007 Answer to Question 75 updated on 08.24.2007 +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | **QUESTIONS** | **SNL RESPONSE** | +===================================+===================================+ | 1\. Please let us know if having | A security clearance is not | | security clearance is mandatory | required to submit a proposal, | | to participate in this RFP | but it will be required to win an | | process? | award. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 2\. Does Sandia pay the cost of | Yes. | | all clearances? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 3\. What forms are needed to | To process an initial clearance | | process the security clearance | for a contractor the following | | for potential contractors? | forms are required: | | | | | | - DOE F 472.1C - Clearance | | | Re | | | quest/Recertification/Suitability | | | Form | | | | | | - SF 7643-CEC - | | | Contractor/Consultant | | | Badge/Clearance Request Form | | | | | | - HSPD-12 - HSPD12 Badge | | | Request Form | | | | | | SF-2730-CIV, Contractor | | | Pre-Processing Investigation | | | Verification Form | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 4\. What is the process to | The process is referred to as | | convert a Top Secret or Secret | reciprocity. Individuals with | | Clearance to a Q or L DOE | active clearances from other | | clearance without the contracting | agencies may qualify for | | personnel losing their current | reciprocity, which will shorten | | clearance? | the processing time of receiving | | | a DOE clearance. Please contact | | | the Sandia Clearance Office for | | | additional information. SNL/NM | | | (505) 845-8270 or SNL/CA (925) | | | 294-2061. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 5\. What is the process for a | Provide Sandia with the company | | company to obtain the appropriate | CAGE code and security will | | DOE facility clearance if they | request reciprocity of the DOD | | are a Top Secret cleared | facility clearance from DOE. | | facility? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 6\. Reference Clause 26, "Interim | You are correct. The AAAP is | | Q Clearance." We have been told | being discontinued. Therefore, | | the AAAP program is being | the RFQ will be amended to delete | | discontinued by DOE.  This action | the clause and the AAAP form. | | would eliminate the need for AAAP | | | consent forms altogether. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 7\. Does a new entity, comprising | The company that has been formed | | of companies which currently (and | is considered a \"new\" | | separately) possess FOCI | contracting entity and DOE would | | clearances, need to apply for | need a FOCI package showing who | | FOCI clearance prior to proposal | owns and controls the new entity | | submittal? | itself. DOE would have to review | | | and approve as an initial filing. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 8\. In order to bid on the | If the prime contractor has a | | proposal, do all Partners (Sub | facility clearance we can award | | contractors/ Joint Ventures) have | them a contract. If they don't or | | to have a Facility Clearance? | can't obtain a facility | |  Can the Sub Contractor do the | clearance, we cannot award them a | | clearing if the prime does not | contract. Subcontractors that | | have clearance? Would an Interim | don't have a facility clearance | | clearance be acceptable? | cannot provide candidates for | | | staffing requisitions that | | | require a security clearance | | | until that subcontractor receives | | | a facility clearance. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 9\. Our company currently holds a | Since the contracts for all three | | DOD secret facility clearance and | labor segments require Q | | has had a successful DOE FOCI | clearances, a new FOCI package | | determination in the past 5 years | will be required to upgrade your | | (it was closed 2 years ago when | company's facility clearance for | | our contract ended), would there | this award. | | be a problem with award of this | | | effort to us?  | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 10\. Our sole owner currently has | A. Personnel security clearances | | a DOD secret clearance, but was | take an average of 9-13 months to | | born outside of the country.  | process. The processing time is | | | subject to increase on a case by | | a\. How long could it take to get | case basis due to the amount of | | him a DOE Q clearance on | time it takes to conduct | | average?  | extensive background checks on | | | individuals. Individuals with | | b\. Does our owner need to | active clearances from other | | receive the Q clearance prior to | agencies may qualify for | | us bringing on Q cleared staff?  | reciprocity, which will shorten | | | the processing time of receiving | | c\. Does our owner need to | a DOE clearance. | | receive the Q clearance prior to | | | us being awarded the contract? | B. The company will need to have | | | a facility clearance (go through | | d. What happens if we win the | the FOCI process) before staff | | award, but then it takes a long | can be cleared. | | time to get either the facility | | | or the personnel clearance?  Does | C. No, but the company must be | | the incumbent keep the contract | granted a facility clearance | | during this period or can we | before the award of the contract | | start work? | and work requiring DOE clearances | | | can begin. | | | | | | D. Any work that can be performed | | | with a gray badge/uncleared | | | status can begin while pending | | | the grant of a facility | | | clearance. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 11\. If our subcontractor has a Q | No, prime contractor employees | | facility clearance and currently | [must]{.underline} be | | has Q staff, can they hold the Q | cleared/badged under the company | | cleared staff under this | that employs them, | | assignment while we wait for our | [not]{.underline} under the | | Q facility clearance? | subcontractor company. The | | | facility clearance for the | | | subcontractor will not be | | | recognized by DOE until the prime | | | contractor is granted a facility | | | clearance. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 12\. Since this topic is not | No. A facility clearance is not | | listed under the \"mandatory | required to submit a proposal, | | requirements\" RFP section, are | but it is required to win an | | we to assume this can all be | award. | | taken care of after award? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 13\. What candidate prescreening | The Contractor Pre-Processing | | steps, if any, are deemed | | | mandatory by Sandia? (Clause 1, | Investigation Verification form | | 3.2.1, pg 26) | must be completed when the | | | contractor submits an individual | | | for their initial personnel | | | security clearance. Personnel | | | security clearances are required | | | when duties of a position | | | requires access to classified | | | information or matter, or Special | | | Nuclear Material. HR Staffing | | | checks a Federal database called | | | EPLS to determine the individual | | | has not been barred from Federal | | | employment. They also check the | | | HR PeopleSoft record for a No | | | Re-contract flag as referenced | | | above. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 14\. May Contractors use H1 (non | Yes. Non-U.S. Citizens must be | | US citizen) employees as Contract | approved by a Sandia Vice | | Associates to Sandia? | President or higher prior to | | | beginning work at any Sandia | | | site. Contact the Sandia Foreign | | | Interactions Office for | | | additional information. SNL/NM | | | 505-844-8263 or SNL/CA | | | 925-294-3740. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 15\. Does a new entity, | The company that has been formed | | comprising of companies which | is considered a \"new\" | | currently (and separately) | contracting entity and DOE would | | possess FOCI clearances, need to | need a FOCI package showing who | | apply for FOCI clearance prior to | owns and controls the new entity | | proposal submittal? | itself. DOE would have to review | | | and approve as an initial filing. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 16\. Instruction 16 -- Q or L | No, non-DOE agency clearances may | | Cleared -- Would comparable DOI | not be used as an interim | | and DOD clearances be acceptable | clearance. Individuals must be | | for the DOE "Q" and "L" clearance | granted a DOE clearance. | | requirement? Would they be | Individuals with active | | acceptable as interim clearances | clearances from other agencies | | until comparable DOD clearances | may qualify for reciprocity, | | are obtained? | which will shorten the processing | | | time of receiving a DOE | | | clearance. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 17\. Admin Quote, Criterion Two | Contact information only. | | (page 12) -- Is the Offeror to | | | provide data on subjects to be | | | discussed, or simply contact | | | information? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 18\. Does the cover letter fall | Proposal Cover letters shall be | | into Section 1 of the Quote (no | included with the Representations | | page limitations) or is it | & Certifications & Other | | outside of Section 1? | Disclosures Submittal. The RFQ | | | will be amended to address this | | | change. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 19\. Instruction 26 -- New Mexico | NMGRT Limited Agency Agreement | | Gross Receipts Tax \-\-- where is | applicability shall be included | | this information to be placed in | with the Representations & | | the Quotation? | Certifications & Other | | | Disclosures Submittal. The RFQ | | | will be amended to address this | | | change. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 20\. In reference to Instruction | Sandia will rely on self | | 19, item #1 on page 7, what will | certification by the Offerors. | | be the primary basis for SNL to | | | determine if an Offeror meets the | | | NAICS small business size | | | standard?  Is it the Offeror's | | | Current Annual Revenue?  If a | | | Joint Venture is formed, is the | | | size standard independently | | | determined per team member or | | | collectively as one?   | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 21\. Are there other | There are no other | | representations and | representations and | | certifications beyond those | certifications or other | | specifically delineated in the | disclosures required other than | | RFQ? | those specifically delineated in | | | Instruction 20 of the RFQ as | | - If the answer is no, do we | amended. Online Representations & | | submit an entire RFQ document | Certifications Application is not | | with the rep/cert pages | an acceptable response. Offerors | | filled in, or do we just | may just submit the specific | | submit the specific pages? | pages and/or specific | | | instructions rather than entire | | Would an ORCA (Online Reps & | RFQ with the rep/cert pages | | Certs Application) entry suffice | filled in. | | for representations and | | | certifications? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 22\. Instruction 3 -- Is it | Online Representations & | | necessary to provide | Certifications Application is not | | Representations & Certifications | an acceptable response. | | if these have already been placed | | | on file through ORCA? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 23\. I20 II (1) - Does Part 1, | Offerors may just submit the | | Representations and | specific pages and/or specific | | Certifications and Other | instructions rather than entire | | Disclosures include the | RFQ with the rep/cert pages | | | filled in. | | entire RFQ? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 24\. Is the Mandatory Information | Yes. | | evaluated as part of the first | | | step (Cost Evaluation)? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 25\. Reference RFQ Instruction 2, | The RFQ will be amended to | | page 2, "All Offerors who intend | indicate that iSupplier | | to submit quotations and who are | registration is desired, but not | | not registered in Sandia\'s | required for submittal of a | | Oracle web portal entitled | proposal, but it will be required | | iSupplier are required to | for successful Offerors who win a | | register at this portal in order | contract. | | to receive the Request for | | | Quotation (RFQ). Otherwise, the | | | Offeror may be ineligible to | | | submit a quotation for any/all | | | Staff Augmentation contracts" | | | | | | - The instructions on the | | | iSupplier Website limit | | | registrations to those | | | companies with existing | | | contracts with Sandia. Plus, | | | it appears that Sandia | | | emailed the solicitation to | | | all interested parties | | | regardless of their status | | | with iSupplier. The email | | | addresses for proposal | | | submission do not appear to | | | be linked in any way to | | | iSupplier. | | | | | | - What role does the iSupplier | | | portal play in the response | | | to this RFQ? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 26\. Does a new entity (LLC or S | As described in the preceding | | Corp.) comprising of member | Q&A, the RFQ will be amended to | | companies which are already | indicate that iSupplier | | separately registered in Sandia's | registration is desired, but not | | Oracle web portal iSupplier, need | required for submittal of a | | to register in iSupplier prior to | proposal. | | proposal submittal? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 27\. Attachment IV (HIPAA) is | It is not required to be | | effective upon Contract Award, | submitted with the proposal. It | | but it is unclear if this is to | is only required at Contract | | be completed at that time, or is | award by successful offerors. It | | it part of the Reps & Certs and | is only provided with the RFQ for | | Other Disclosures submission? | informational purposes. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 28\. Attachment V is to be | Attachment V is only applicable | | submitted with each resume.  Does | at contract award for submitting | | this include the qualifications | candidates for Contract | | of the Supplier Manager as | Associates. It is only provided | | required by the RFQ, and if so, | with the RFQ for informational | | is it part of the page limit for | purposes and is not applicable | | the Administrative portion of the | for the Supplier Manager. | | quotation? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 29\. What section of the proposal | Yes. Instruction 20 of the RFQ | | do instructions 25, 26 and 28 go | already states that Instruction | | into; Representations and | 25 is required to be submitted | | Certifications? | with Reps and Certs and Other | | | Disclosures. The RFQ will be | | | amended to state that 26 and 28 | | | are also to be included with this | | | submittal. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 30\. Instruction 19 -- Can SNL | No. | | provide space at Sandia and | | | Livermore for the contractor | | | management offices that the | | | contractor would rent from the | | | Labs? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 31\. Does the Prime have to | The Prime is required to have | | establish offices in New Mexico | such offices. Sandia does not | | and California, or is it | have privity of contract with | | sufficient enough for the | Subcontractors. | | subcontractors to have them? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 32\. Please define what is meant | We want the latest available. | | by "current" in the request for a | | | Balance Sheet per Instruction | | | #18. Would a year-end statement | | | for CY 2006 suffice? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 33\. Per Item III. "Quotation -- | Yes. | | Page Limitations" on page 20 of | | | the RFP, Charts are not subject | | | to font restrictions. Do tables | | | and figures fall in the category | | | of charts; i.e., no font | | | restrictions apply to tables and | | | figures? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 34\. In the RFQ Instruction 26, | Sandia will not clarify specific | | titled "NMGRT Limited Agency | questions regarding how NMGRT | | Agreements," discusses the | applies to this upcoming | | potential impact of the | solicitation. Please check with | | relationship between the | the State of New Mexico Taxation | | Contractor and any of their | and Revenue Department and/or a | | contractors on the applicability | tax attorney/accountant regarding | | of the New Mexico Gross Receipts | this question. | | Tax (NMGRT) on but does not | | | discuss the impact of the | | | relationship between the | | | Contractor and Sandia. Is there | | | anything about that relationship | | | between the Contractor and Sandia | | | that exempts the Contractor from | | | the NMGRT or will the Contractor | | | be required to pay the NMGRT? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 35\. SI# 20 III, Quotation Page | The RFQ has been revised via | | Limitations indicates 30 pages | Revision 3 to exclude the table | | for Part 4, Administrative | of contents from the 30 page | | Information. Can certain items, | limitation. | | such as table of contents, be | | | excluded from the page count? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 36\. Quotation Part 2, Response | Yes in accordance with | | to Mandatory Requirements: Are | Solicitation Instruction 20, | | the signed copies of Attachment | paragraph III, (2). | | VI, Subcontractor/Teaming Partner | | | Consent Form(s), excluded from | | | the maximum page count for this | | | Part? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 37\. Instruction 20, Quotation | PDF format is acceptable for Part | | Instructions, Format, and Due | 1 and 4. However, Part 3 must be | | Date: Is PDF an acceptable format | in Excel Spreadsheet format. | | for electronic (email) submittal | | | of Parts 1, 3 and 4? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 38\. Would Sandia please confirm | In accordance with Solicitation | | that for each labor segment being | Instruction 20, paragraph II (3) | | bid the contractor shall submit | | | to the appropriate email address | | | one copy of its quotation | | | (including price as an embedded | | | copy of Attachment II) plus one | | | copy of Attachment II in Excel | | | format? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 39\. Is it acceptable to Sandia | Yes. | | for a contractor to submit its | | | financial information (RFQ | | | Instruction 18) as a separate PDF | | | file and reference the file in | | | the contractor's quote? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 40\. Does Sandia want to see four | We don't care as long as the | | separate electronic file | documents comply with page | | submissions, one for each of the | limitations. | | four Criterion? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 41\. Clause 1, 8.1.2 -- Does the | Yes. | | continuous service provision | | | apply to employees exempt from | | | SCA and FLSA? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 42\. Based on the job titles and | Yes in accordance with Clause 1 | | wages identified in Attachment 1, | -- Statement of Work, paragraph | | many of these positions could be | 1.2.1 | | considered exempt.  Will | | | contractors be required to | | | provide exempt personnel? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 43\. Are job descriptions or | The Staffing Requisitions will | | summaries of job duties available | provide the required information. | | to aid in determining the exempt | | | / non-exempt job classification | | | under the Fair Labor Standards | | | Act? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 44\. Regarding Solicitation | The relevant experience may | | Instruction 19 -- Mandatory | include predecessor company | | Requirements, Item 2. Does the | experience as long as it is | | minimum five years of documented | verifiable | | relevant experience in providing | | | staffing personnel and recruiting | | | have to be with our current | | | organizational entity? Or can it | | | include relevant experience with | | | predecessor companies? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 45\. Under Mandatory Information, | The narrative explanation is all | | Paragraph 2, Page 8, does the | that is required as long as it is | | phrase "provide documentation" | verifiable. Additional | | (with regard to 5 years | information may be requested | | experience) mean to explain in a | through discussions. | | narrative what experience is | | | relevant, or is the Offeror to | | | provide some type of original | | | source document such as a | | | contract award cover sheet or | | | other "documentation?" | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 46\. In looking at the Excel | You only counted the total number | | Attachment-Staff Aug Historical | of Contract Associates for the IT | | Labor Data there are 224 lines of | category. Pages 96 through 105 | | information.  Are we correct that | shows the total number of | | this correlates to 224 active | Contract Associates for the | | contractors? | Professional labor segment and | | | pages 140 -- 152 lists the total | | | number of Contract Associates for | | | the Support labor segment. All of | | | these correlate to active | | | Contract Associates as of the | | | date that report was compiled. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 47\. What does the X axis | Each dot on the graph charts | | represent in all of the graphs?  | represents a single Contract | | | Associate and the x number axis | | | represents the total population | | | for that labor category. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 48\. We are attempting to get | Sandia does not track this type | | updated medical insurance quotes | of information and it is subject | | but it is impossible without a | to the Privacy Act. | | \"census\" of potential | | | employees.  | | | | | |   | | | | | | Would it be possible to get any | | | of the following | | | information\...even if it was | | | aggregated somehow? | | | | | |     - Age of each | | | contractor\...or perhaps number | | | of contractors grouped by 5-year | | | age groups | | | | | |     - Married/Single\...or | | | perhaps total number of married | | | contractors, single contractors? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 49\. What is the average age of | Sandia does not track this type | | the preselect contract | of information and it is subject | | associates. This information is | to the Privacy Act. | | pertinent to determine | | | approximate premiums for | | | disability insurance | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 50\. Healthcare plan costs can | Sandia does not track this type | | vary widely based upon the | of information and it is subject | | demographics and geographical | to the Privacy Act. | | location of the population being | | | insured. Can Sandia provide | | | baseline information on the | | | current and anticipated contract | | | population (numbers, age, | | | percentage married/single, etc.) | | | of pre-selects in order to | | | provide a basis for bidders to | | | obtain accurate quotes from | | | insurers? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 51\. How many contract associates | We don\'t track this | | are part-time? | specifically, but we do know that | | | the predominate majority are | | | full-time. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 52\. The RFP states that there | We don\'t track this | | are 1016 total subcontractor | specifically, but we do know that | | personnel. How many fulltime | the predominate majority are | | equivalent subcontractor | full-time. | | personnel are there (FTE's)? Will | | | you please provide this for each | | | of the Labor Segments. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 53\. Are all the staffing | Not all Contract Associates are | | requirements under this contract | full-time, but the predominate | | intended to be for personnel who | majority are. | | will work a standard work week (8 | | | hours per day and 40 hours per | | | week) and not part time? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 54\. How many Contract Associates | We do not maintain centralized | | (by labor segment) are required | tracking of this metric. It is | | to travel, and how often? (Clause | tracked by the individual Sandia | | 1, 2.9, g 25) | organizations the Contract | | | Associates report to. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 55 Will there be a contact or | The Sandia Delegated | | resource at Sandia through which | Representative will notify the | | the Contractor can determine | Contractor if the candidate has | | whether a candidate has been | been flagged for a No Recontract | | terminated for cause by Sandia in | recommendation. | | the last seven years? (Clause 1, | | | 3.2.1, pg 26) | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 56 Historically, by labor | We do not track this metric. | | segment, how many, or what | However, because of the fairly | | percentage of Contract Associates | stiff finder\'s fee, most Sandia | | have been hired by Sandia within | organizations try to avoid it. | | the first year. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 57 What percentage of Contract | The RFQ will be amended to delete | | Associates (by labor segment) | the professional development | | have made use of the professional | benefit in Clause 1, paragraph | | development benefit of Clause 1, | 8.5. | | section 8.5? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 58\. Attachment 1 -- For the | The effective date as shown. | | direct labor rates and effective | | | dates of SNL labor categories | | | shown in attachment 1, does the | | | direct labor rate reflect today's | | | rate, or is the rate shown the | | | rate in effect as of the | | | effective date shown. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 59\. Regarding the FAQ.doc, and | That information was presented on | | referenced Power Point | our website as a snapshot in | | presentation entitled "SNL/NM | time. Refer to Attachment I for | | Staff Augmentation Actions | more current information which is | | Actual, Average & Forecast | broken out by labor segment. | | Fy2006": | | | | | | a) are updated statistics | | | available? | | | | | | b) Are these statistics | | | available by labor segment? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 60\. RFP  states there are 1.024 | The 30% figure was an estimate | | staff aug personnel | presented on one of the FAQs on | | | our website. Refer to Attachment | | Also, we understood that about | I for more current information | | 30% of that number is IT | which is broken out by labor | | personnel?   Is that true? | segment. | | | | | Furthermore, what is the | | | approximate % of Prof Services?  | | | (or just point me to this info in | | | the RFP) | | | | | | Obviously, Admin is whatever | | | remains. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 61\. How many positions are there | See Attachment I to the RFQ. | | on this effort? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 62\. What is the breakdown of | See Attachment I to the RFQ. | | positions for New Mexico and | | | California? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 63, Clause 8 (RFQ Page 29) | This information is not tracked | | Minimum benefits. Can SNL provide | by Sandia because benefits are | | detailed claims experience for | managed by the incumbent | | all of the benefits listed for | Contractors, not Sandia. | | current staff augmentation | | | contractor employees? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 64\. Without demographic or | This information is not tracked | | claims experience information for | by Sandia because benefits are | | the existing staff augmentation | managed by the incumbent | | personnel, it is difficult to | Contractors, not Sandia. | | obtain a competitive rate for the | | | health insurance benefits.  Can | | | SNL provide offerors with this | | | information so that we may use it | | | to solicit quotations? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 65\. Will Sandia provide a copy | No. | | of the attendee list for the | | | pre-bidders conference to the | | | prospective offerors? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 66\. For on-call personnel, does | Sandia provides such equipment. | | the respective contractor provide | | | the pager or radio or is this | | | equipment furnished by SNL? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 67\. Clause 1, 3.1 -- Please | Clause 1.3.1 and Attachment V | | provide documentation on SNL's | provide adequate details for | | requisition system. | purposes of preparing a quote. | | | Additional information if | | | appropriate may be provided to | | | successful offerors after | | | contract award. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 68\. Clause 1, 4.4 -- Will SNL | No. | | provide space at Sandia and | | | Livermore for contractor new hire | | | orientation? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 69\. SF6432-TM (12-04) in section | Section I takes precedence over | | TM-16 (h) specifies that Sandia | Section II. Refer to Clause 4, | | \"prompt payment\" discounts.  | paragraph C. | | Are these anticipated for this | | | contract and if so, what is the | | | anticipated discount? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 70\. Regarding Contractor | Any of these options are | | Policies (Clause 1, 2.7.1, pg | acceptable as long as they are | | 23), is it permissible to: | made available to all Contract | | | Associates working for the | | a) provide a written recap of | Contractor. | | company policies, or | | | | | | b) make access to full written | | | policies available at the | | | local office, and/or | | | | | | c) provide access to policies | | | via a secure, online web | | | site? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 71\. In paragraph 2.7.12 of the | Only if and when allowed by the | | Statement of Work, you mention | contract. | | the ability to pay contract | | | associates in Organization 1700 a | | | shift differential or salary | | | allowance for a deviated | | | workweek.  Will this also apply | | | to other organizations in Sandia | | | that have similar deviated | | | workweeks? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 72\. Are all these services | Yes and yes. | | exempt from the New Mexico Gross | | | Receipts Tax? Will SNL provide a | | | \"Non Taxable Transaction | | | Certificate"? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 73\. What is the period of | Five years after contract period | | performance? | of performance begins. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 74\. Clause 2.7.7 (RFQ Page 24) | No. Refer to Clause 11 -- | | states SNL can direct the removal | Independent Contractor | | of any or all contract | Relationship and Contractor | | associates. If the associate | Personnel. | | files an EE/OC claim due to | | | dismissal, will SNL provide legal | | | defense support to offeror? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 75\. Clause 3.2.3 (RFQ Page 26) | No. | | If potential applicant prefers to | | | work for another staff | | | augmentation contractor for | | | reason of better or preferred | | | benefits package (but at a higher | | | multiplier rate or higher DL rate | | | to SNL) will SNL direct applicant | | | to accept offer from "respective | | | " staff augmentation contractor? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 76\. Once a contract associate is | Sandia will pay for all approved | | assigned to Sandia, does Sandia | hours worked in accordance with | | pay for all time at work? If an | that Contract Associates approved | | employee is at work, is there any | work schedule. | | non-productive time at the | | | facility which is not billable to | | | Sandia? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 77\. Since Sandia National | FAR requirements apply, but only | | Laboratories are operated by the | to the extent stated in the RFQ. | | Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed | | | Martin business entity, is this | | | contract subject to the Federal | | | Acquisition Regulations (FAR)? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 78\. What is the job description | Clause 1 -- Statement of Work, | | for the Supplier Manager? What | paragraph 2.8 describes the | | about for the other positions? | contract responsibilities for the | | | Supplier Manager. Refer to Clause | | | 1, paragraph 2.1 for work | | | assignment descriptions for | | | Contract Associates. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 79\. Will there be an issuance of | No, contract awards will be based | | a RFP for successful offerors in | on initial offers, so all | | the RFQ process? | Offerors should offer their most | | | favorable proposal at the onset. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 80\. SI #9 - Regarding the price | Sandia has not predetermined the | | downselect process, does Sandia | number of offerors that will be | | have a certain number of offerors | included in the down-select | | | range. We may or may not conduct | | that will be included in the | oral presentations or discussions | | downselect range? After your | therefore; there is no specific | | price downselect process, how | predetermined timeframe for | | | either oral presentations or | | soon thereafter do you | discussions. | | contemplate either oral | | | presentation or discussions? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 81\. SI10 - Do you anticipate any | If it is possible to award | | form of oral presentations with | without discussions we will do | | the downselected offerors? | so. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 82\. In the RFQ, Instruction 5, | That is correct. | | titled "Right to Split this RFQ | | | into Multiple Contracts," it | | | states that "Sandia intends to | | | award a total of three contracts | | | for the following three labor | | | segments ..." Please clarify, | | | does this mean one and only one | | | award will be made in each of the | | | three labor categories? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 83\. If a single company were to | In that case the labor segment | | qualify as the best value to the | awarded will be based on the | | Government in more than one | labor category for which that | | category, how will Sandia | Offeror was rated the highest | | determine which specific contract | through the technical evaluation | | that company would be awarded? | process with price being a | | | substantial consideration. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 84\. In reference to Instruction | Sandia will not disclose the | | 9, specifically on the RFQ | specific details as to how the | | statements: "A down select | down select process will be | | process based on price will be | conducted. | | used prior to performing | | | technical evaluations.  Technical | | | evaluations will not be performed | | | for Quotations beyond the down | | | select quantities", please | | | explain how the Down Select | | | process will work and what will | | | be the criteria in determining if | | | a quotation is beyond the down | | | select quantities? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 85\. How many vendor bids will be | Sandia will award one contract | | selected to supply staff | for each of the three labor | | augmentation resources to Sandia | segments for a total of three | | for each of the three categories? | contracts. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 86\. REFERENCE: Clause 10 | No. Compliance with the Service | | | Contact Act is a Contractor | | "...wage determination ...shall | responsibility. | | apply to all non-exempt | | | Contractor personnel supporting | | | this contract." Will Sandia | | | provide the location and Wage | | | Determination labor category | | | equivalents for these positions? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 87\. The SBA Mentor-Protégé | The SBA Mentor-Protégé program is | | Program is fully defined within | not recognized under Sandia's | | 13 C.F.R. 124.520. The purpose of | prime contract with DOE. | | any Mentor Protégé Agreement is | | | to enhance the development of the | | | protégé and encourage approved | | | mentors to provide various forms | | | of assistance to eligible 8(a) | | | participants to ensure | | | contracting opportunity | | | experience and overall financial | | | viability. The assistance may | | | include technical, | | | administrative, managerial, | | | financial (in the form of equity | | | investments, bonding and/or | | | loans), subcontracting, and | | | performance with prime | | | contractors in the form of joint | | | venture arrangements. Please | | | confirm that the SNL Staff | | | Augmentation solicitation does | | | recognize the SBA Mentor-Protégé | | | Program allowing a small and 8(a) | | | firm to leverage its approved SBA | | | Mentor-Protégé Agreement as we | | | implement a proposal strategy for | | | this procurement. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 88\. The RFQ asks questions about | A number of incumbents have | | a new vendor handling "incumbent" | registered on our bidders list, | | personnel at Sandia. Are | so presumably they are interested | | incumbent vendors bidding on the | in submitting bids. We don't | | RFQ? And, does Sandia know of | specifically know of any | | current vendors who do not plan | incumbents who will not | | to re-bid? | participate in bidding on the | | | requirement. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 89\. Will rates be adjusted for | Direct Labor Rates may be | | inflation during the life of the | adjusted annually based on the | | contract? If so, what general | GII/DOL. Refer to Clause 5 -- | | indexes will be used to gauge | Allowable Charges | | those adjustments? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 90\. On page 22, item 2.5, the | 2.5 states that Sandia may hire | | RFQ talks about the ability of | Contract Associates at anytime. | | Sandia to hire a Contractor's | The one year of service refers to | | employee. It states that this can | the point of time that Sandia | | take place after one year of | does not have to compensate the | | service. Please confirm that the | Contractor for hiring their | | one year of service applies to | Contract Associate. Refer also to | | each Contractor employee and not | Clause 5 -- Allowable Charges, | | to the service period of the | paragraph H (2). | | Contractor company. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 91\. On page 27, item 3.3.4, the | No the Contractor proposes the | | RFQ states that Sandia will make | initial direct labor rate for | | the determination of the rate | their Contract Associate | | that will be paid for any | candidates for consideration by | | particular position. Does Sandia | Sandia. | | make that determination without | | | input from the Contractor | | | concerning the direct labor rate | | | of the candidate? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 92\. Which of the medical | None are considered direct costs. | | services in Section 2.7.11 are | | | considered direct costs and which | | | medical services are considered | | | indirect costs? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 93\. Reference Instruction 17, | Instruction 17 of the RFQ will be | | "Furnish Name(s) of | amended to indicate that Offerors | | Subcontractors or Team Members of | are not required to submit | | an LLC or JVC" Sandia requires | pricing information for | | that an offeror submit data | subcontractors or other team | | justifying the Offeror's | members beyond the overall | | rationale for selecting a | pricing multiplier for the team. | | subcontractor, naming price as | | | one of the components of the | | | required documentation.  Are you | | | seeking information on the | | | subcontractor that is normally | | | considered proprietary, i.e., the | | | components of subcontractor | | | pricing?  What exactly is sought | | | with regard to subcontractor team | | | member "price?" | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 94\. Will subcontractors be | Yes. | | required to provide the same | | | level of minimum benefits | | | identified in Section I, Clause | | | 1, paragraph 8.0 - Minimum | | | Benefits as the prime contractor? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 95.  Will teams be able to add | Justifiable changes may be made | | additional team members/companies | to teaming partners after | | after award? | contract award subject to Sandia | | | Contracting Representative | | | approval. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 96\. Instruction 18 -- In a | For the primary contractor only. | | teaming arrangement with a prime | | | and subcontractors, is a balance | | | sheet required for just the | | | primary contractor or for all | | | subcontractors as well? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 97\. Will pre-select Contract | Depending on the timing of | | Associates' pay rates remain the | contract award, the Direct Labor | | same under the new agreement? | Rates paid to existing Contract | | | Associates may be eligible for a | | | DOL/DRI cost of living | | | adjustment. (Refer to Clause | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 98\. Is the 1,000 plus number of | The number of Contract Associates | | existing Contracts Associates a | is subject to change. Attachment | | reasonable total number to be | I illustrates the latest | | transitioned as either | compilation; however, Sandia | | pre-selects or replaced as | doesn't guarantee any specific | | non-pre-selects, and if not what | number or mix of Contract | | is the anticipated size of the | Associates. | | Contract Associate pool for first | | | year of the new contract? Can you | | | provide an estimate of the | | | distribution of this total across | | | the Professional Services, | | | Support Services, and IT | | | contacts? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 99\. On page 25, item 2.9, Sandia | Sandia will provide full | | describes the possible | reimbursement for all allowable | | requirement for Contractor | and reasonable travel expenses as | | personnel to travel on behalf of | specified by the Federal Travel | | Sandia. Should we assume that | Regulations. Refer to Clause 5 -- | | Sandia will provide full | Allowable Charges, paragraph G | | reimbursement for all allowable | for the applicable travel | | and reasonable expenses? And, | provisions for the contracts. | | will Sandia provide Contractor a | | | document outlining their travel | | | policies? | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 100\. RFP Section I, Clause 1, | We want all offerors to bid on | | 8.0. The RFP requires Contractors | the same requirements. Allowing | | to provide a very defined set of | the offerors to determine their | | benefits. Why doesn't SNL allow | own packages makes the technical | | vendors to determine their own | evaluation process too subjective | | packages? | and difficult because then you | | | are comparing apples to oranges | | | rather than apples to apples. | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | 101\. REFERENCE: Clause 5, E. | You are correct. The Allowable | | Formula for DLR Adjustments - The | Charges clause has been revised | | formula for calculating future | to correct the formula. | | years DLR is incorrect. The total | | | amount should not be divided by | | | 2. Only \[GII + DOL\] should be | | | divided by 2. | | +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
en
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725049
Federal Funding Report Volume 16, Number 33 (Period of August 14, 2006 -- August 18, 2006) ![](media/image1.png){width="4.757638888888889in" height="5.729861111111111in"}1 United States House of Representatives Office of the Chief Administrative Officer House Information Resources Web Systems Branch **FEDERAL FUNDING REPORT TABLE OF CONTENTS** This Federal Funding Report is a weekly compilation of items published in the Federal Register which affect Federal domestic assistance programs. No attempt is made to include Federal Register notices not directly related to Grants and Loans programs. The summary consists of three parts: (1) Federal Register Summary, (2) Early Warning Grants Report, and (3) Disaster Loan Applications. Periodically, a Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number will not be listed in the announcement. There are two (2) basic reasons for this: 1) a CFDA number has been applied for and not yet received, or 2) the CFDA number has not been put in by the agency yet. Please call the contact person listed in the Federal Register announcement for the correct CFDA number. The new number should appear in the next edition of the CFDA, which is published in June and December of each year. PART 1. FEDERAL REGISTER SUMMARY > (Each week, HIR summarizes information from Federal Register > announcements that may significantly affect grants programs. The > Federal Register is available online from GPO Access at > http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/aces140.html.) The House of > Representatives\' Federal Funding Report contains the following > sections: I. Availability of Funds - An expansion of the highlights, including synopsis on > Notice, CFDA, and Federal Register references II\. Notice of Rules - Synopsis of rule-making notices affecting Grants with CFDA and Federal Register References > III\. Other Federal Register Notices - For items not falling into the > Rules or Availability sections PART 2. EARLY WARNING GRANTS REPORT (Listing of programs for which applications are being especially solicited and which have been mentioned in the Federal Register in recent weeks, listed in order of expiration date). PART 3. DISASTER LOAN APPLICATIONS > (Listing of areas for which Disaster Loan Programs are open, those > with the most immediate closing dates listed first, those with the > most recent disasters at the end. This part is divided into two > sections, reflecting type of loan.) I. Economic Injury Loans - For business losses > II\. Physical Disaster Loans - For repair and replacement of real and > > personal property VOLUME 16, NUMBER 33, GRANTS AND CONTRACTS INFORMATION SERVICE HOUSE INFORMATION RESOURCES WEEK OF: August 14, 2006 -- August 18, 2006 **FEDERAL REGISTER SUMMARY** This section contains summaries of those Federal Register entries appearing during the last 2 weeks, which may significantly affect Federal domestic assistance programs. For detailed information about a specific assistance program, the program can be found in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) by looking it up by its 5-digit program number. Each summary represents H.I.R.\'s interpretation of the major import of an entry and does not reflect the full content of the Federal Register announcement. Consult the Federal Register for the full text of items of interest. I. AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Small Business Administration **CFDA#:** 59.008 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Physical Disaster Loans **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47859 **DEADLINE:** 10/03/06 **CONTACT:** Disaster Area 3 Office, (Ft. Worth, Texas) **SUMMARY:** Declaration of Physical Disaster #10565 for Lower Kuskokwim Regional Education Attendance Area; Lower Yukon Regional Education Attendance Area; and Yukon-Koyukuk Regional Attendance Area in the State of Alaska, constitute a disaster area due to damage caused by snow melt and ice jam flooding occurring on May 13, 2006 through May 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Rob Adler, Region I **TELEPHONE:** 617-918-1396 **CONTACT:** Jerry Potamis, Region I **TELEPHONE:** 617-918-1651 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region I \-- Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Hampshire. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Cyndy Kopitsky, Region II **TELEPHONE:** 212 637-3832 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region II -- New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Ralph Spagnolo, Region III **TELEPHONE:** 215 814-2718 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region III -- Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and Washington, DC. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** William L. Cox, Region IV **TELEPHONE:** 404 562-9351 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region IV \-- Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, and Tennessee. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Paul Thomas, Region V **TELEPHONE:** 312 886-7742 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region V -- Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Brad Lamb, Region VI **TELEPHONE:** 214 665-6683 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region VI -- Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and New Mexico. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Jaci Ferguson, Region VII **TELEPHONE:** 417 575-8028 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region VII -- Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Gary Kleeman, Region VIII **TELEPHONE:** 303 312-6246 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region VIII -- Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Sam Ziegler, Region IX **TELEPHONE:** 415 972-3399 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region IX -- Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, American Samoa, Mariana Islands, and Guam. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Environmental Protection Agency **CFDA#:** 66.439 **AMOUNT:** \$16,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Targeted Watershed Grants **FR Date:** 08/15/06 **PAGE:** 46901 **DEADLINE:** 11/13/06 **CONTACT:** Bevin Reid, Region X **TELEPHONE:** 206 553-1566 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for EPA; Funding Opportunity Title: FY2006/2007 Targeted Watersheds Grant Program; Funding Opportunity Number: EPA-OW-OWOW-06-3; Availability of Funds and Request for Proposals for Targeted Watershed Implementation Projects. This program is a competitive grant program designed to support the protection and restoration of the country's water resources through a holistic watershed approach to water quality management, for the following states in Region X -- Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. The electronic submission of your proposal package must be made by an official representative of your institution who is registered with Grants.gov, and authorized to sign applications for Federal assistance. Applicants who wish to submit their materials electronically through Federal Government's Grants.gov Web site at [http://www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/), or Hard copy and Compact Disc (CD), sent by express mail or courier service, or hand delivered, on or before the November 13, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Education **CFDA#:** 84.132A **AMOUNT:** \$154,046 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Centers for Independent Living **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47787 **DEADLINE:** 09/18/06 **CONTACT:** Thomas Kelley **TELEPHONE:** 202 245-7404 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services; Overview Information; Centers for Independent Living; for New Awards, for fiscal year 2006. Funding to the American Samoa of \$154,046. This program provides support for planning, conducting, administering, and evaluating centers that comply with the standards and assurances in section 725 of the Act, consistent with the design included in the State plan for establishing a statewide network of centers. Application for grants under this competition may be submitted electronically using the Grants.gov Apply site at [http://www.Grants.gov](http://www.Grants.gov/), or in paper format, (if you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission requirement), by mail or hand delivery, on or before the September 18, 2006 deadline date. Therefore, we strongly recommend that you do not wait until the application deadline date to begin the application process through Grants.gov. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Education **CFDA#:** 84.235V-1 **AMOUNT:** \$2,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Rehabilitation Services Demonstration and Training Program **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 48440 **DEADLINE:** 09/18/06 **CONTACT:** Jeremy Buzzell **TELEPHONE:** 202 245-7319 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services; Overview Information; Special Demonstration Programs -- Model Demonstrations for Assistive Technology (AT) Device Reutilization; for New Awards, for fiscal year 2006. The purpose of the Special Demonstration Program is to provide financial assistance to eligible entities to expand and improve the provision of rehabilitation and other services for individuals with disabilities. Application for grants under this competition may be submitted electronically using the Grants.gov Apply site at [http://www.Grants.gov](http://www.Grants.gov/), or in paper format, (if you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission requirement), by mail or hand delivery, on or before the September 18, 2006 deadline date. Therefore, we strongly recommend that you do not wait until the application deadline date to begin the application process through Grants.gov. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Education **CFDA#:** 84.235V-2 **AMOUNT:** \$258,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Rehabilitation Services Demonstration and Training Program **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 48443 **DEADLINE:** 09/18/06 **CONTACT:** Jeremy Buzzell **TELEPHONE:** 202 245-7319 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services; Overview Information; Special Demonstration Programs -- National Assistive Technology (AT) Device Reutilization Coordination and Technical Assistive Center; for New Awards, for fiscal year 2006. The purpose of the Special Demonstration Program is to provide financial assistance to eligible entities to expand and improve the provision of rehabilitation and other services for individuals with disabilities. Application for grants under this competition may be submitted electronically using the Grants.gov Apply site at [http://www.Grants.gov](http://www.Grants.gov/), or in paper format, (if you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission requirement), by mail or hand delivery, on or before the September 18, 2006 deadline date. Therefore, we strongly recommend that you do not wait until the application deadline date to begin the application process through Grants.gov. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Education **CFDA#:** 84.938H **AMOUNT:** \$50,000,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Hurricane Education Recovery **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47785 **DEADLINE:** 09/19/06 **CONTACT:** David Johnson **TELEPHONE:** 202 502-7877 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Office of Postsecondary Education; For Hurricane Education Recovery Awards Under Title II of the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, The Global War on Terror and Hurricane Recovery, 2006. These Hurricane Education Recovery Awards can be used only to defray expenses, including expenses that would have been covered by revenue lost as a direct result of a hurricane, expense already incurred, and construction expenses directly related to damage resulting from the hurricanes. Pre-Applications for Institutions intending to submit an application for a Hurricane Education Recover award; complete the form and fax it to David Johnson at 202-502-7877, by the Pre-Application September 1, 2006 deadline date. Electronic Submission of this competition must be submitted electronically using e-Application available through the Department's e-Grants system at the e-Grants portal page at [http://e-grants.ed.gov](http://e-grants.ed.gov/), on or before September 19, 2006 deadline date. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.228 **AMOUNT:** \$350,000 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Indian Health Service -- Health Management Development Program **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47234 **DEADLINE:** 09/11/06 **CONTACT:** Michelle Bulls (Info regarding the electronic process) **TELEPHONE:** 301 443-6528 **CONTACT:** Ramona Williams (Program Contact) **TELEPHONE:** 301 433-2038 **CONTACT:** Martha Redhouse (Grants Specialist Contact) **TELEPHONE:** 301 433-5204 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Indian Health Service; Mental Health and Community Safety Initiative for American Indian and Alaska Native Children, Youth and Families. Funding Opportunity Number: HHS-2006-IHS-MHC-001; for fiscal year 2006. For limited competition for MHCSI Grants to implement innovative strategies that focus on mental health, behavioral, substance abuse, and community safety needs of AI/AN young people and their families. Applications for grants under this competition may be submitted electronically using the Grants.gov Apply site at [http://www.Grants.gov](http://www.Grants.gov/), on or before the September 11, 2006 deadline date. E-mail applications will not be accepted under this announcement. Therefore, we strongly recommend that you do not wait until the application deadline date to begin the application process through Grants.gov. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.773 **AMOUNT:** Not Listed **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Hospital Insurance **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47230 **DEADLINE:** 10/02/06 **CONTACT:** Sandra Bastinelli **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-3630 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Supplier Accreditation Applications From Independent Accrediting Bodies. Any independent accreditation organization that can show evidence of the ability to accredit at least one supplier category, as identified by the National Supplier Clearinghouse (NSC), and within the time frames set forth by CMS, is eligible to apply. Information on the NSC can be found at [http://www.palmettogba.com](http://www.palmettogba.com/). Applications are to be sent to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in Baltimore, Md.; for more information, contact Sandra Bastinelli, at (410) 786-3630. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.774 **AMOUNT:** Not Listed **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Supplementary Medical Insurance **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47230 **DEADLINE:** 10/02/06 **CONTACT:** Sandra Bastinelli **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-3630 **SUMMARY:** Applications are invited for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Supplier Accreditation Applications From Independent Accrediting Bodies. Any independent accreditation organization that can show evidence of the ability to accredit at least one supplier category, as identified by the National Supplier Clearinghouse (NSC), and within the time frames set forth by CMS, is eligible to apply. Information on the NSC can be found at [http://www.palmettogba.com](http://www.palmettogba.com/). Applications are to be sent to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services in Baltimore, Md.; for more information, contact Sandra Bastinelli, at (410) 786-3630. II\. NOTICE OF RULES **[DEPARTMENT]{.underline}**: Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.773 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Hospital Insurance **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47870 **CONTACT:** Marc Hartstein, (Operating Prospective Payment etc.) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-4548 **CONTACT:** Melinda Jones, (Loan Forgiveness Criteria) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-7069 **CONTACT:** Corinne Axelrod, (Acquisition Pgm. for Part B Drug) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-5620 **CONTACT:** Angela Mason, (Outpatient Drugs & Biological Issues) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-7452 **SUMMARY:** Final rule and interim final rule regarding Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 2007 Rates; Fiscal Year 2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Health Care Infrastructure Improvement Program; Selection Criteria of Loan Program for Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care and Forgiveness of Indebtedness; and Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under the Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the Average Sales Price (ASP). **[DEPARTMENT]{.underline}**: Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.774 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Supplementary Medical Insurance **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47870 **CONTACT:** Marc Hartstein, (Operating Prospective Payment etc.) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-4548 **CONTACT:** Melinda Jones, (Loan Forgiveness Criteria) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-7069 **CONTACT:** Corinne Axelrod, (Acquisition Pgm. for Part B Drug) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-5620 **CONTACT:** Angela Mason, (Outpatient Drugs & Biological Issues) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-7452 **SUMMARY:** Final rule and interim final rule regarding Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems and Fiscal Year 2007 Rates; Fiscal Year 2007 Occupational Mix Adjustment to Wage Index; Health Care Infrastructure Improvement Program; Selection Criteria of Loan Program for Qualifying Hospitals Engaged in Cancer-Related Health Care and Forgiveness of Indebtedness; and Exclusion of Vendor Purchases Made Under the Competitive Acquisition Program (CAP) for Outpatient Drugs and Biologicals Under Part B for the Purpose of Calculating the Average Sales Price (ASP). **[DEPARTMENT]{.underline}**: Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.773 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Hospital Insurance **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 48354 **CONTACT:** Susanne Seagrave, (New IRF PPS Payment Policies) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-0044 **CONTACT:** Sandra Bastinelli, (Accreditation of DMEPOS Suppliers) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-3630 **SUMMARY:** Final rule regarding Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Prospective Payment System for Federal Fiscal Year 2007; Certain Provisions Concerning Competitive Acquisition for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS); Accreditation of DMEPOS Suppliers. **[DEPARTMENT]{.underline}**: Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.774 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Medicare -- Supplementary Medical Insurance **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 48354 **CONTACT:** Susanne Seagrave, (New IRF PPS Payment Policies) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-0044 **CONTACT:** Sandra Bastinelli, (Accreditation of DMEPOS Suppliers) **TELEPHONE:** 410 786-3630 **SUMMARY:** Final rule regarding Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; Medicare Program; Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Prospective Payment System for Federal Fiscal Year 2007; Certain Provisions Concerning Competitive Acquisition for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS); Accreditation of DMEPOS Suppliers. III\. OTHER SIGNIFICANT FEDERAL REGISTER HIGHLIGHTS (NOTICES) **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Transportation **CFDA#:** 20.205 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Highway Planning and Construction **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47861 **CONTACT:** Donald E. Davis, District Engineer, FHWA, Texas Division **TELEPHONE:** 512 536-5960 **SUMMARY:** Notice of intent regarding Federal Highway Administration, to advise the public that an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) will be prepared for the proposed U.S. Highway (U.S.) 69/Loop 49 North Lindale Reliever Route (LRR) project in Smith County, Texas. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Education **CFDA#:** 84.235V **PROGRAM TITLE:** Rehabilitation Services Demonstration and Training Programs **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 48436 **CONTACT:** Jeremy Buzzell **TELEPHONE:** 202 245-7319 **SUMMARY:** Notice of final priorities regarding Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services; Special Demonstration Programs -- Model Demonstrations for Assistive Technology Reutilization. This notice announces two priorities -- a priority for model demonstrations for assistive technology (AT) device reutilization and a priority for a National Assistive Technology Device Reutilization Coordination and Technical Assistance Center (Center). The Assistant Secretary may use one or more of these priorities for competitions in fiscal year 2006 and later years. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Health and Human Services **CFDA#:** 93.570 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Community Services Block Grant -- Discretionary Awards **FR Date:** 08/18/06 **PAGE:** 47815 **CONTACT:** Thom Campbell **TELEPHONE:** 202 401-5483 **SUMMARY:** Notice regarding Office of Community Services; Community Economic Development Program; Administration for Children and Families; Replacement Grant. The purpose of the Community Economic Development (CED) grants is to create new employment and business development opportunities for low-income individuals. The Office of Community Services (OCS) awarded a \$663,263 CED grant to Hall Neighborhood House in Bridgeport, Connecticut, on September 29, 2005. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.030 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Community Disaster Loans **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.031 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Cora Brown Fund **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.032 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Crisis Counseling **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.033 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Disaster Legal Services **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.034 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Disaster Unemployment Assistance **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.036 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Public Assistance Grants **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.039 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Hazard Mitigation Grant **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.046 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Fire Management Assistance Grant **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.048 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Federal Assistance to Individuals and Households - Housing **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.049 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Federal Assistance to Individuals and Households -- Disaster Housing Operations **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **[DEPARTMENT:]{.underline}** Homeland Security **CFDA#:** 97.050 **PROGRAM TITLE:** Federal Assistance to Individuals and Households -- Other Needs **FR Date:** 08/16/06 **PAGE:** 47239 **CONTACT:** Magda Ruiz **TELEPHONE:** 202 646-2705 **SUMMARY:** Major Disaster and Related Determinations regarding the damage in certain areas of the State of Alaska, resulting from snow melt and ice jam flooding during the period of May 13 -- 30, 2006. **EARLY WARNING GRANTS REPORT** Below are deadlines for the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Programs that have appeared in the Federal Register in the past several weeks. DEADLINE CFDA NUMBER PROGRAM TITLE 09/11/06 93.228 Indian Health Service -- Health Management Development Program 09/18/06 84.132A Centers for Independent Living 09/18/06 84.235V-1 Rehabilitation Services Demonstration (Model Demonstrations) 09/18/06 84.235V-2 Rehabilitation Services Demonstration (National Assistive Tech.) 09/19/06 84.938H Hurricane Education Recovery 10/02/06 93.773 Medicare -- Hospital Insurance 10/02/06 93.774 Medicare -- Supplementary Medical Insurance 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region I) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region II) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region III) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region IV) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region V) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region VI) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region VII) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region VIII) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region IX) 11/13/06 66.439 Targeted Watershed Grants (Region X) > **DISASTER LOANS** **59.002 ECONOMIC INJURY DISASTER LOANS** **CLOSING DATE**: None. **59.008 PHYSICAL DISASTER LOANS CLOSING DATE**: Alaska -- various areas 10/03/06
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![](media/image1.png){width="2.375in" height="1.0020833333333334in"} **OFFICE OF VETERANS BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT** **U.S. Small Business Administration** **[\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\--]{.underline}** **[Frequently Asked Questions]{.underline}** 1. **When is a reservist considered a veteran?** > According to the *Center for Veteran Enterprises* of the Department of > Veterans Affairs (VA) in concurrence with U.S.C Title 38, a reservist > attains veteran status when he or she has been called to active duty > and serves in an active duty capacity for a 60 day timeframe. 2. **What is the definition of a veteran?** > The term veteran as defined by the Department of Veterans Affairs in > concurrence with U.S.C. Title 38 is a person who has served on active > duty in the military, naval or air services; and who has been > discharged or released under conditions other than dishonorable. 3. **How do I become certified as a veteran-owned business owner?** > The documentation that the VA provides to service members who have > been discharged or released from the armed forces under anything other > than dishonorable conditions is the documentation that self-certifies > you as a veteran or service-disabled veteran. This also is the > documentation that self-certifies you as a veteran or service-disabled > veteran business owner. 4. **How do I become certified as a service-disabled veteran-owned business owner?** > The same answer for **Question 2** above applies in this case as well. > Hence to reiterate, the documentation that the VA provides to service > members who have been discharged or released from the armed forces > under anything other than dishonorable conditions is the documentation > that self-certifies you as a veteran or service-disabled veteran. 5. **Does SBA certify veteran-owned businesses?** > The Small Business Administration does not certify a business owned by > a veteran or service-disabled veteran as such in either case. The SBA > has relied upon and continues to rely upon the documentation provided > by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in concurrence with U.S.C. > Title 38, as proof of veteran status, which is itself self-certifying. > SBA, therefore, does not require certification beyond the VA > documentation for both veteran and service-disabled veteran-owned > small business concerns. 6. **Are there grants for starting businesses?** > SBA is not aware of any grant funding opportunities for starting a > small business. The Agency has never provided grant funds for business > startups, expansions or diversifications. It has, however, through it > various loans programs provided funding to **creditworthy** > individuals, small business owners and entrepreneurs to aid them in > their efforts to start and grow successful small business concerns. > > Grant opportunities do exist within the federal sector, and you may > respond to such solicitations. To review grant opportunities for the > various federal agencies, as well as for some state agencies, visit > [www.grants.gov](http://www.grants.gov/). This website provides links > to outside grant opportunities as well. 7. **What requirements must I meet to qualify for an SBA loan?** > The most important requirements that you must meet to secure a loan > from the Small Business Administration are (1) your credit history, > (2) your ability to repay the loan, (3) collateral for investment in > the business venture (4) and equity. > > (1). Credit history is an important aspect of a loan application > because the bank uses this information to determine whether your > personal credit is good. That is if you pay your bills on time and if > you are delinquent on payments. > > (2). The ability to repay the loan and must be justified in your loan > package. Banks want and need to see two sources of repayment, i.e., > cash flow from the business and a secondary source such as collateral. > For a new business, the cash flow data is reflected in your business > plan through a thorough explanation of how the business will be able > to repay the loan. For an established business, the bank will examine > the business's financial statements, which reflects both cash inflows > and outflows. If the business has consistently made a profit and that > profit can cover the payment of additional debt, then it is likely > that the loan will be approved. If, however, the business has been > operating marginally and now has a new opportunity to grow of if that > business is a start-up, then it is necessary to prepare a thorough > loan package with detailed explanation addressing how the business > will be able to repay the loan. > > \(3\) Collateral is typically the second source of repayment for which > financial institutions look on loan applications. Collateral are those > personal and business assets that can be sold to pay back the loan. > Every loan program, even many mciroloan programs, requires at least > some collateral to secure a loan. If the potential borrower has no > collateral to secure a loan, he or she will need a co-signer who has > collateral to pledge. Otherwise it may be difficult to obtain a loan. > > \(4\) Equity applies on a loan application for established businesses > only. Financial institutions want to see a certain amount of equity in > a business. Equity can be built up in a business through retained > earnings or the injection of cash from either the owner or investors. > Most banks what to see that the total liabilities or debt of a > business is not more than 4 times the amount of equity. 8. **What procurement programs exist for non-service disabled veterans?** > There are no special procurement programs for non-service disabled > veterans. As a result, small business concerns owned and controlled by > veterans must complete as all other small business owners for > government contracts that are not part of specified set-aside > programs, such as 8(a), HUBZone, Small Disadvantaged Business, > service-disabled veterans and women-owned businesses 9. **How do I secure a federal contract?** > The key to securing a federal contract stems primarily from how > effectively you market your small business. Being on the GSA Schedule > or in the CCR does not necessarily mean that by default you will > secure a federal contract. You have to establish working relationships > with the appropriate contracting officer(s) and market your product > and services to them. They need to be aware of your business, what > products or services you offer, performance capabilities, and business > references. > > Your marketing program should include conventional marketing > techniques, such as a professionally generated brochure, business > cards, networking, letters of introduction sent periodically to > contracting officers in the federal agencies with which you desire to > do business, cold calls to introduce yourself to the contracting > officer(s) and schedule an appointment to meet with them and introduce > yourself, advertisements in the various media (print, radio, > television -- extremely expensive; use only when affordable) and > e-business advertising --development/maintenance of a website, > meta-tags, affiliate programs, trade links, testimonials, etc, e-zines > (electronic or Internet-based magazines). 10. **How do I identify procurement opportunities with a specific agency, such as DLA?** > To identify procurement opportunities with a federal government > agency, you will need to work directly with that Agency. This requires > that you establish a working relationship with contracting officer > through introduction and assistance from the OSDBU specialist or small > business specialist within that Agency. To identify the OSDBU > specialist or small business special with in a specific government > agency, go to the respective agency's website and browse through the > programs hyperlink, which should provide a brief summary and mission > of each program office. Locate the link for the OSDBU or SB Office. **11. Is a formal certification required from the SBA, or any other federal agency,to participate in the SDVOSBC procurement program?** > No. A SDVOSBC will be able to "self-represent" its status as a SDVOSBC > to the contracting activity as part of its offer. However, for sole > source procurements, the SBA or the contracting officer may protest > the proposed awardee's service-disabled veteran status, and for > competitive set-asides, any interested party may protest the apparent > successful offeror's SDVOSBC status. **12. What are the basic requirements for business concerns to participate in the** **SDVOSBC procurement program?** - The SDVOSBC must be a small business; - 51 percent of the SDVOSBC must be unconditionally and directly owned by one or more service-disabled veterans; and - The management and daily business operations of the SDVOSBC must be controlled by one or more service-disabled veterans (or in the case of a veteran with permanent and severe disability, the spouse or a permanent caregiver of such veteran). **13. What is SBA\'s definition of a small business concern?\ ** > A small business is a concern that is organized for profit, with a > place of business in the United States, and which operates primarily > within the United States or makes a significant contribution to the > U.S. economy through payment of taxes or use of American products, > materials or labor.  Further, the concern cannot be dominant in its > primary field, on a national basis.  Finally, the business concern's > size can not exceed the size standard established for its industry in > the North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) code. The > most common size standards are as follows: - **[Construction]{.underline}** -- General building and heavy construction contractors have a size standard of \$28.5 million in average annual receipts.  Special trade construction contractors have a size standard of \$12 million.  ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` - **[Manufacturing]{.underline}** -- For approximately 75 percent of the manufacturing industries, the size standard is 500 employees.  A small number have a 1,500 ­employee size standard and the balance have a size standard of either 750 or 1,000 employees.  - **[Mining]{.underline}** -- All mining industries, except mining services, have a size standard of 500 employees.  - **[Retail Trade]{.underline}** -- Most retail trade industries have a size standard of \$6 million in average annual receipts.  A few, such as grocery stores, department stores, motor vehicle dealers and electrical appliance dealers, have higher size standards.  None are above \$24.5 million.  - **[Services]{.underline}** -- For the service industries, the most common size standard is \$6 million in average annual receipts.  Computer programming, data processing and systems design have a size standard of \$21 million.  Engineering and architectural services have different size standards, as do a few other service industries.  The highest annual receipts size standard in any service industry is \$30 million.  Research and development and environmental remediation services are the only service industries with size standards stated in number of employees.  - **[Wholesale Trade]{.underline}** -- When acting as a dealer on Federal contracts the small business size standard is 500 employees. In addition, on procurement set-aside for small business over \$25,000, the firm must deliver the product of a small domestic manufacturer, as set forth in SBA's non-manufacturer rule, unless waived by the SBA for a particular class of product.  However, for those procurements made under the Simplified Acquisition Procedures of the FAR and where the purchase does not exceed \$25,000, the non-manufacturer may deliver the goods of any domestic manufacturer.  - **[Other Industries]{.underline}** -- Other industry divisions include: Agriculture; transportation, communications, electric, gas, and sanitary services; and finance, insurance and real estate.  Because of wide variation in the structure of the industries in these divisions, there is no common pattern of size standards.  For specific size standards refer to the size regulations in 13 CFR § 121.201 or the table of small business size standards.  **14. Who is a service-disabled veteran?** > A service-disabled veteran is a person who served in the active > military, naval, or air service, and who was discharged or released > under conditions other than dishonorable, and whose disability was > incurred or aggravated in line of duty in the active military, naval, > or air service. > > The definitions of the terms "veteran" and "service-disabled veteran" > are derived from Title 38 U.S.C. § 101. **15. What percentage of a concern must be owned by a service-disabled veteran for it to be qualified as a SDVOSBC?** > At least 51 percent of the small business concern must be directly and > unconditionally owned by service-disabled veteran(s). > > In the case of a small business concern which is a partnership, at > least 51 percent of every class of partnership interest must be > unconditionally owned by one or more service-disabled veterans. The > ownership must be reflected in the small business concern\'s > partnership agreement. > > In the case of a small business concern which is a limited liability > company, at least 51 percent of each class of member interest must be > unconditionally owned by one or more service-disabled veterans. > > In the case of a small business concern which is a corporation, at > least 51 percent of each class of voting stock outstanding and 51 > percent of the aggregate of all stock outstanding must be > unconditionally owned by one or more service-disabled veterans. > > Stock options, held by non service-disabled veterans, are given > present effect. Any unexercised stock options or similar agreements > held by service-disabled veterans will be disregarded. However, any > unexercised stock options or similar agreements (including rights to > convert non-voting stock or debentures into voting stock) held by > non-service-disabled veterans will be treated as exercised. **16. Who does SBA considered to control a SDVOSBC?** > Control is not the same as ownership, although both may reside in the > same person. Control is regarded as including both the strategic > policy setting exercised by boards of directors and the day-to-day > management and administration of business operations. A SDVOSBC's > management and daily business operations must be conducted by one or > more service-disabled veterans, or in the case of a veteran with a > permanent and severe disability, the spouse or permanent caregiver of > such veteran. > > Service-disabled veterans managing the service-disabled veteran owned > small business concern must have managerial experience of the extent > and complexity needed to run the service-disabled veteran owned small > business. However, a service-disabled veteran individual need not have > the technical expertise or possess a required license to control a > service-disabled veteran owned small business concern if he or she has > ultimate managerial and supervisory control over those who possess the > required licenses or technical expertise. > > Finally, a service-disabled veteran, or in the case of a veteran with > a permanent and severe disability, the spouse or permanent caregiver > of such veteran, must hold the highest officer position in the > concern. - Control over a partnership -- in the case of a partnership, one or more service-disabled veterans, or in the case of a veteran with a permanent and severe disability, the spouse or permanent caregiver of such veteran, must serve as general partners with control over all partnership decisions. ```{=html} <!-- --> ``` - Control over a limited liability company -- in the case of a limited liability company, one or more service-disabled veterans, or in the case of a veteran with a permanent and severe disability, the spouse or permanent caregiver of such veteran, must serve as managing members with control over all decisions of the limited liability company. - Control over a corporation -- in the case of a corporation, one or more service-disabled veterans, or in the case of a veteran with a permanent and severe disability, the spouse or permanent caregiver of such veteran, must control the Board of Directors. **18. How does SBA view the management and daily business operations of a SDVOSBC controlled by the spouse or permanent caregiver of a veteran with permanent and severe disability?** > The management and daily business operations of an SDVOSBC may be > controlled by a spouse or permanent caregiver (the spouse, or an > individual, 18 years of age or older, who is legally designated, in > writing, to undertake responsibility for managing the well-being of > the service-disabled veteran) of a service-disabled veteran with a > permanent and severe disability (a veteran with a service-connected > disability that has been determined by the U.S. Department of Veterans > Affairs to have a permanent and total disability for purposes of > receiving disability compensation or a disability pension). **19. What documentation should I have to confirm my status as a service-disabled veteran?** > Contact the National Archives and Records Administration at > **[http://www.archives.gov](http://www.archives.gov/)** to request > certified copies of your Department of Defense discharge papers that > demonstrates a service-incurred disability. Additionally, if you have > been adjudicated by the Department of Veterans Affairs as having a > service-connected disability, contact your local VA regional office > for appropriate documentation.
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ABAK02 PANC 100018 STPAK Alaska Temperature and Precipitation Bulletin National Weather Service Anchorage AK 413 PM ADT Wed Jul 09 2003 Highest temperature last 12 hours. Lowest temperature last 24 hours. A "-" indicates temperatures below zero. Precipitation for 24 hours ending at 3 PM AST. .B PAFC 0709 Z DH00/TXK/TN/PPD/SD : : ID STATION HI LO PCPN SNOW : DEPTH PAFC : NWS ANCHORAGE : 76 / 62 / 0.00 / PANT : ANNETTE : 67 / 51 / 0.00 / PABR : BARROW AIRPORT : 50 / 37 / 0.00 / PABE : BETHEL ASOS : 63 / 52 / T / PABT : BETTLES : 77 / 52 / 0.00 / PABV : BIRCHWOOD : 75 / 55 / 0.00 / PACD : COLD BAY : 55 / 52 / 0.07 / PACV : CORDOVA : 74 / 45 / 0.00 / PADL : DILLINGHAM : 60 / 54 / 0.00 / PADU : DUTCH HARBOR : 61 / 52 / 0.00 / PAFA : FAIRBANKS AIRPORT : 84 / 56 / 0.00 / PAGK : GULKANA : 80 / 42 / 0.00 / PAHO : HOMER : 74 / 52 / 0.00 / PAJN : JUNEAU : 72 / 57 / 0.00 / PAEN : KENAI : 66 / 53 / 0.00 / PAKN : KING SALMON AIRPORT : 60 / 50 / T / PADQ : KODIAK : 60 / 50 / 0.00 / PAOT : KOTZEBUE : 65 / 52 / T / PAMC : MCGRATH : 77 / 55 / 0.00 / PAOM : NOME : 56 / 47 / 0.00 / PAOR : NORTHWAY : 82 / 50 / 0.00 / PAAQ : PALMER : 79 / 53 / 0.00 / PAPG : PETERSBURG : 64 / 54 / 0.00 / PASN : SAINT PAUL ISLAND : 50 / 44 / T / PAWD : SEWARD : 65 / 54 / 0.00 / PASI : SITKA : 63 / 57 / 0.02 / PATK : TALKEETNA : 83 / 57 / 0.00 / PAVW : VALDEZ : 75 / 50 / M / WSLA2 : WASILLA RAWS : 79 / 58 / M / PAWR : WHITTIER : 70 / 54 / M / PAYA : YAKUTAT : 62 / 47 / 0.00 / : : Alaska Temperature Extremes. : Highest Temperature Last 12 Hours. : 88 at Ft. Wainwright : Lowest Temperature Last 24 Hours. : 37 at Barrow : .END
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# Presentation: 922410 ## Heavy Ion Physics at Collider Energies **Introduction to heavy ion physics** **Experimental approach and RHIC at BNL** **Global observables, hadron spectra, strangeness production** **Lepton pairs and heavy flavor** **High pt phenomena** ## Fundamental Forces in Nature **Gravity**** **** **** **** **** **** ****general relativity** **Electro-weak**** **** **** **** **** ****standard model** **Strong interaction **** **** **** **** ****QCD** **Although we have fundamental theories for all forces we need ~20 parameters, constants of unknown origin to describe nature.** _**Two outstanding puzzles:**_ - **unseen quarks** ** ****broken symmetries ******** existence of massive particles** **Both connected to complex structure of vacuum** - Axel Drees ## Vacuum low resolution - Axel Drees ## Vacuum high resolution **Vacuum is see of ********qq pairs (+ gg pairs + ..)** **Vacuum expectation value for u or d quarks <********qq > ~ - (230 MeV)****3** **Vacuum density of u and d pairs**** **** ~ 3 fm****-3**** ** - Axel Drees ## Quarks and gluons carry color the charge of QCD In nature only color neutral objects exist Bag model: **In nature only color neutral objects exist** **Bag model:** **Confinement** **qqq**** **** **** **** ****baryons** ******qq**** **** **** **** ****mesons** **0.8 fm** **Pressure of vacuum (B) compensated ** **by internal pressure** **bag constant B****1/4**** ~ 200 MeV** - Axel Drees ## String Models **String with tension ******** ~ 1 GeV/fm** **QCD potential:** ** ** **Need infinite energy to separate quarks** ** ******** ****confinement** **(relation to <********qq> ??)** **charmonuim and bottonium states** **explore QCD potential** - Axel Drees ## Chiral Symmetry **Chirality (handedness) or helicity** ** **** **** ****for massless particles chirality is conserved** ** ** **QCD with 3 massless quarks (flavors)** ** **** **** **** **** **** **** ****symmetry** ** **** **** ** ** **** **** **** ****q****R**** does not couple to q****L** **Masses break symmetry** ** **** **** ** ** **** **** **** **** ****if mass ******** 0 q****R**** couples to q****L** - Axel Drees ## Masses of Quarks **spontaneous breaking of electro-weak interaction** ****** ****current mass of quark**** ** **for **** ****u & d quarks**** **** ****m****o****u**** ~ m****o****d**** ~ 5 MeV ** ** **** ****s quark **** **** **** ****m****o****s ****~ 175 MeV** **explicitly breaking of chiral symmetry ** ** **** ** **spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry** ****** **** ****constituent mass of quarks ** ** **** ****for **** ****u & d quarks**** **** ****m****u**** ~ m****d**** ~ 300 MeV (~1/3 m****proton**** ) ** ** **** ****s quark **** **** **** ****m****o****s ****~ 500 MeV** **spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry ** ******qq** **q** **q** - coupling G **q couples to********qq see** - Axel Drees ## Symmetry Breaking **Spontaneously** **Explicit** **potential symmetric** **ground state symmetric** **potential symmetric** **symmetry broken ** ** ****for ground state** **massless Goldstone bosons** ** ****here **************************** (2 flavors)** **massive **************************** ** **V** **potential asymmetric** **Mass small ~ 140 MeV** - Axel Drees ## Consequences of Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking **1) ****all hadrons have well defined parity ** ** ****chiral symmetry ********q****R****q****R**** = ********q****L****q****L**** ******** expect J******** doublets** **characteristic mass scale of hadrons** ** **** **** **** **** ** ** ****1 GeV mass gap to quark condensate** ** ** ** ****except pseudoscaler mesons** ** ****Goldstone bosons: ********and ******** ** **Consequences of Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking ** - Axel Drees **Notes:** Waehrend der confinement/deconfinement uebergang sehr intuitive ist der zusammenbruch der Chiralensymmetrie sehr viel abstrakter. Chirale symmetrie ist eine fundamentale eigenschaft der QCD und fuehrt im Fall von drei masselosen quarks zu einer SU3r x SU3l Symmetrie. dh rechts und linkshaendige quarks , wo der spin entweder mit oder gegen den impuls ausgerichtet ist, wechselwirken nicht mit einander. Diese symmetry wird gelich mehrfach in der Natur gebrochen. Der spontane bruch der electroschwachen wechselwirkung gibt den quarks eine kleine masse, diese bricht die chirale symmetry explicit. Waehrend der Hadron synthese wird die chirale sysmmetry aber selbst auch spontan gebrochen wodurch die quraks ihre constituenten masse von etwa 300 MeV erhalten. Das die chirale sysmmetrie gebrachen ist fuer zu einem von null verschiedenen vaccuums erwartungswert, anders ausgedrueckt es fuehrt daszu das das vakuum alles ander als lehr ist sondern voller qbarq paare. experimentell zeigt sich der zusammen bruch der chiralen Symmetry an zwei stellen. Zum einen haben alle Hadronen wine wohl definierte Paritaet. In einer chiral symmetrischen Welt koennte man aber nicht zwischen qbarq-r und qbarq-l mesonen unterscheiden, dh man wuerde drehimpuls-paritaet doublets erwarten. zum Beispiel diesen 1+- Zustand der in der Natur in rho und a1 meson aufgespalten ist. Ausserdem fuehrt die grosse constituenten masse der quarks zu schweren hadronen. Dabei gibt es eine Energieluecke von etwa 1 GeV zwischen condensate und den leichtesten hadronen. Mit ausnahme der Goldstone bosenen pi,eta,K die ohne den expliciten bruch der chiralen symmetry genau masselos waehren. ## Fundamental Puzzles of Hadrons **Confinement** **Quarks do not exist as free particles** **Large hadron masses** **Free quark mass ~ 5-7 MeV ** **Quarks become “fat” in hadrons constituent mass ~ 330 MeV** **Complex structure of hadrons** **Sea quarks and anti quarks** **Gluons** **“****spin crisis” ** ** ****Spin of protons not carried by quarks!** **These phenomena must have occurred with formation of hadrons** **nuclear matter ** ** ****p, n** - Axel Drees - Axel Drees **Notes:** Hier zeige ich Ihnen die Entwicklung des Universums vom Urknall zur heuting Zeit. In dieser Entwicklung spielt die Starken Wechselwirkung eine Endscheidende Rolle fuer das Erscheinungsbild von Materie - die uns umgibt. Besonders wichtig in dieser Entwicklung sind zwei Eregnisse: (i) hadron synthese (ii) Nucleon synthese Die Theorie der starke Wechselwirkung ist die QCD. Sie gibt uns zwei Raetzel auf die beide mit der Hadronsynthese zusammen haengen. (i) confinement (ii) Zusammenbruch der Chiralen Symmetrie ## Electroweak Transition explicit breaking of chiral symmetry - ~ **100 ps after Big Bang**** ****T ~ 10****14**** GeV** ** ****Electroweak Transition **** explicit breaking of chiral symmetry** - inflation - Axel Drees **Notes:** Hier zeige ich Ihnen die Entwicklung des Universums vom Urknall zur heuting Zeit. In dieser Entwicklung spielt die Starken Wechselwirkung eine Endscheidende Rolle fuer das Erscheinungsbild von Materie - die uns umgibt. Besonders wichtig in dieser Entwicklung sind zwei Eregnisse: (i) hadron synthese (ii) Nucleon synthese Die Theorie der starke Wechselwirkung ist die QCD. Sie gibt uns zwei Raetzel auf die beide mit der Hadronsynthese zusammen haengen. (i) confinement (ii) Zusammenbruch der Chiralen Symmetrie ## “Travel” Back in Time **QGP in Astrophysics** **early universe after ~ 10 ********s** **possibly in neutron stars** **Quest of heavy ion collisions** **create QGP as transient state in heavy ion collisions** **verify existence of QGP** **Study properties of QGP** **study QCD confinement and how hadrons get their masses** - Axel Drees **Notes:** Lassen Sie mich diesen einleitened Teil meines Vortrags nun an hand des QCD phasendiagrams zusammen fassen. Aufgetragen ist temperatur gegen baryo-chemisches potential (wenn ihnen das nichts sagt stellen sie sich vor es waehre baryon dichte). kern materie by proton masse oder dichte 1 und temperatur 0. quarkmaterie bei hohen dichten und temperature getrennt von hadronischer materie durch diesen phasenuebergang getrennt. Das fruehe universum hat den phasenuebergang vermutlich laengst der temperatur achse durchlaufen und moeglicherweise sind die dichten im inneren von neutroensternen hoch genug um jenseits des pahsenuebergangs zu kommen. In diesem bereich gibt es moeglicher weise noch ander phasen, zum beispiel farbsupraleidende -das wird zz rege erforscht. Ziel der Schwerionen Physik ist es in Schwerionen kollision voruebergehend Quarkmaterie zu erzeugen. Um (i) existence zu verifizieren dann aber Quarkmaterie und die folgende hadron synthese zu untersuchen um mehr ueber confinement und die entstehung der hadron massen zu lehren ## Phase Diagram of Nuclear (QCD) Matter - T >> QCD: weak coupling  deconfined phase (Quark Gluon Plasma) - T << QCD: strong coupling  confinement -  phase transition at T~ QCD? - e.g. two massless flavors (Rajagopal and Wilczek, hep-ph/-0011333) - Axel Drees ## Estimating the Critical Energy Density ** ****normal nuclear matter ********0** ** ****critical density: ** ** ****naïve estimation ** ** ****nucleons overlap R~r****n** **distance of two nucleons:** **2 r****0**** ~ 2.3 fm ** **size of nucleon** ** ****r****n**** ~ 0.8 fm ** - Axel Drees **Notes:** Protonen & Neutronen sind aus drei Quarks, den farbladungstraegern der Starken Wechselwirkung aufgebaut. Man kann die Kraefte zwischen diese Quarks durch ein potential beschreiben. Diese Potential ist hier als Function des Abstands zweier Farbladungen dargestellt. Mit zunehmendem Abstand waechst das Potential linear an. Dies fuehrt zu einer starken attraktiven Kraft und damit zur bindung von quarks in farbneutralen hadronen - baryonen und mesonen. Kompremiert oder erhitzed man nucleare Materie verschwimmen die Grenzen zwischen den hadronen, die farbladungen schirmen sich gegenseitig ab - aehnlich wie bei der plasmabildung in dichter Atomarer Materie. Das potential verschwindet fuer grosse Abstaende. Quarks koennen sich frei bewegen. ## Critical Temperature and Degrees of Freedom **In thermal equilibrium relation of pressure P and temperature T** **Assume deconfinement at mechanical equilibrium ** **Internal pressure equal to vacuum pressure B = (200 MeV)****4** **Energy density in QGP at critical temperature T****c** **Noninteracting system of ****8**** gluons with ****2**** polarizations** ** **** **** ****and ****2**** flavor’s of quarks (m=0, ****s****=1/2) with 3 colors** - Axel Drees ## QCD calculations **Critical energy********C**** = 6********2 T****C****4** **critical temperature T****C**** ** **QCD calculations** **perturbative QCD calculations applicable only for ** ** **** ****large momentum transfer ******** small coupling** **for small momentum transfer ******** large coupling only solution ** ** **** ****numerical QCD calculations on lattice** **results from lattice QCD establish ** **the QCD phase transition** **T****C**** ~ 155-175 MeV ********C**** ~ 0.3-1.0 GeV/fm****3**** ** **** **jump in energy density:** - Axel Drees **Notes:** Theoretische Rechnungen sind sehr schwierig in der QCD. Bei grossen Impulsuebertraegen kann man Steurungstheorie anweden, weil die kopplung klein ist. Fuer kleine Impulsuebertraege wird die Kopplung gross und man muss auf numerische Berechnungen zurueckgreifen. Solche Methoden sind in der form von der sogenannten Gittereichtheorie in den letzten 20 Jahren immer weiter entwickelt worden. QCD gitter rechnungne bestaetigen den Phasenuebergang. Hier zeige ich ein neueres ergebniss: Energiedichte/T4 als funktion der Temperatur in einheiten von Tc. Man sieht den Sprung in der Energiedichte bei der kritichen temperature. Der Anstieg signalisiert die zunahme der freiheitsgrade beim uebergang confinement zu freien quarks. Die kritische Temperatur ist relative genau bekannt 155-175 MeV. Sie haengt etwas davon ab ob man rechnungen mit 2 oder 3 masslosen quarks durch fueher und die realitaet liegt vermutlich dazwischen. Die kritische Temperatur legt dann relative unabhaenig von allen Annahmen die kritische Energiedichte fest was zu einer kritischen energie dichte von 0.3-1 GeV/fm3 ## The QCD phase transition **The QCD phase transition ** **Change of order parameter:** ** ****deconfinement: Polyakov loop**** **** L ~ e****-F****q** ** ****chiral symmetry: Quark condensate ********qq****** **chiral restoration and deconfinement ** **at same critical temperature T****C ****~ 170 MeV** **temperature** **deconfinement** **chiral symmetry restoration** **Polyakov loop** **response function** **chiral susceptibility** **different quark mass m****q** **165 MeV** **175 MeV** - Axel Drees **Notes:** Eine Phasenuebergang kann durch einen Ordnungsparameter beschreiben werden der seinen wert beim Uebergang sprunghaft aendert. Fuer den deconfinement phasenuebergang wird als typischerweise die sogenannte Polyakov Loop L verwended. Dies ist in etwa die e hoch - die frei Quark energy. L ist 0 im falle von confinement und nimmt einen endlichen Wert an wenn sich quarks frei bewegen koennen. Fuer den Bruch der chiralen Symmetry wird der Vaccums erwartungs wert qbarq als ordnungs parameter verwendet. Dieser wird haeufig als quark kondensat bezeichnet. Ich zeige hier die ableitung des ordnungsparameters als fkt der temperatur. Die sogenannte Polyakov loop response function und die chirale susceptibilitaet. Fuer verschiedene annahmen ueder die Quark massen finden beide uebergaenge mit grosser genauigkeit bei der gleichen Temperatur statt. Beachten sie den kleinen dargestellten Temperaturbereich. ## QCD Potential from Lattice Calculations **As temperature increases towards T****C**** ** **the QCD potential vanishes at large distances** - Axel Drees ## Restoration of Chiral Symmetry **Restoration of Chiral Symmetry** **Temperature axis: ** **sharp transition at T****C ****(similar to lattice QCD results)** **baryon density axis: ** **smooth transition** **at nuclear matter density** **In hot and dense matter chiral symmetry is restored** **model calculation (Nambu, Jona-Lasinio)** **approaching of chiral symmetry restoration should ** ** ****strongly modify hadron properties like ******** and m** - Axel Drees **Notes:** In heisser und dichter materie wird die chirale symmetrie wieder hergestellt. Waehrend variation der Temperature mit gittereich rechnungen erforscht werden koennen ist man fuer Aenderungen der dichte auf modelrechnungen angewiesen. Hier ist ein aelteres bild welches zeigt wie sich das qbarq mit temperatur und baryon dichte aendert. laengst der temperatur achse gibt es einen abrupten abfall consistent mit QCD gitterrechungen. Laengst der dichte Achse aendert sich das kondenstat eher graduell zunaechst mal linear mit der dichte. Sodass beriets in normaler kern materie ein 30% abfall sichtbar sein sollte. Obwohl immer noch umstritten ist wie sich die anderung des kondenstates auf die hadron eigenschaften auswirkt ist klar dass mit annaeherung an chirale symmetry sich brieten und massen der hadronen significant aendern sollten. ## The Hadron Level Diagram **The Hadron Level Diagram ** **Increasing number ** **of hadrons** - Axel Drees ## Hagedorn’s Limiting Temperature (1965) **Discovery of the QCD phase transition *****before *****quarks ** **were understood as underlying constituents** **requires T < T****H** - Axel Drees ## Slide 24 - Axel Drees ## Au-Au Event in STAR summer 2001 - Axel Drees **Notes:** Das man in diesen Kollisionen ueberhaupt irgentetwas lehren kann ist ein Wunder in sich. Hier ist eine Au-Au kollision aufgezeichnet mit STAR experiment am RHIC. Sie sehen tausende von Teilchen in der Spurkammer von STAR. Und daraus gilt es nun was zu lernen. Und mit vielen Jahren Erfahrung ist dies tatsachlich moeglich! ## Detecting the QGP “matter box” **“****ideal” experiment** **Rutherford experiment**** **** ******** ******** atom**** ****discovery of nucleus** ** ****SLAC electron scattering **** **** e ******** proton**** ****discovery of quarks** **Experiments with QGP not quite that simple ** **QGP created in nucleus-nucleus collisions can not be put in “box”** **Thousands of particles produced during collision** ** **** ** **penetrating beam** **absorption or scattering pattern** - Axel Drees ## Space-time Evolution of Collisions **Space-time Evolution of Collisions** **e** **** **space** **time** ****** ****Expansion ****** ******** - Axel Drees
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# Presentation: 243262 ## Identifying Grand Challenges in Climate Change Research: Guiding DOE’s Strategic Planning: - Report on the DOE/BERAC workshop - 25-27 March - Crystal City - For BERAC meeting - 20 May ## Meeting summary - About 60 Participants – about half from DOE labs and half from universities and other Federal labs. - Mix of plenaries and breakout sessions. - Organized based on Orbach’s charge letter – seen in agenda in appendix but not repeated as not used as framing for the challenges recommended. ## Process of report preparation - Initial content agreed to by a drafting group meeting the afternoon following the workshop - Written by the co-chairs and iterated many times with a subset of the workshop participants. - The reports overall message appears to have converged. - However, it still needs to be looked at by the BERAC and the other workshop participants who have not yet seen it (comments through the latter better done from a closed interactive website). ## Background to the meeting - Climate change from use of fossil fuel energy recognized by DOE as a major constraint on the Nations future development and use of energy. - IPCC 2007 reported that this climate change already highly visible and expected to continue unabated for at least the next several decades. - Since that report, a number of further studies showing some changes happening even faster than anticipated. - A chorus of voices asking for more detailed local information on what has and will change for their planning horizons - NOAA planning on providing a “Climate Services” to meet this need with there yet being little of the research being done that such a “Services” would have to be built upon. ## Grand Challenges Identified by the Workshop **Improve the characterization of Earth’s climate, and its evolution through the last century to its present state.** **Predict regional climate change for the next several decades.** **Simulate Earth System change over centuries.** ## Translation into DOE science strategy - Report implies that much of DOE’s current climate science program needed . - But shift in emphasis called for to realign to fit current scientific and political reality of need for useful climate information. - Obtaining and disseminating such information is a hugh task with a large practical component – “climate services” – but such needs to be informed by a research program that DOE can be a major contributor to. ## Improve the characterization of Earth’s climate, and its evolution through the last century to its present state. - A high-dimensional dynamical system – individual observations are snapshots of components are particular times and place - do not recognize the interconnectedness. - NWP provides a prototype what is needed. Through statistical modeling, combine multiple streams of observations with model predictions to optimally describe system. - Reanalyses go back in time using a single consistent model. - Provide global system research data sets and initial conditions for future projections. - Improves with improvement of the model process descriptions. ## Predict Regional Climate Change for the Next Several Decades - Much more climate detail can be provided by - Use of latest high performance computational tools. - limiting time frame to decadal and processes to those that are important on that time frame. - Additional information if initial state adequately constrained by observations – expected product from the first Challenge. ## Simulate Earth System change over centuries - On century time scales many feedbacks affect climate system that are not yet modeled or adequately so (e.g., involving biogeochemical cycling, dynamic vegetation, and atmospheric chemistry) . - Carbon cycle feedbacks have large control on how much atmospheric CO2 over this time. ## Research areas needed to address Grand Challenges- each area has 3-components - Characterize the Earth’s present climate. - Predict climate over the next several decades. - Simulate Earth System change over centuries. ## Characterize impacts of radiatively active constituents-aerosols and atmospheric chemistry - Current radiative forcing-regionally specific -attribution of current observed patterns? - How affect clouds? - Analysis and assimilation of observations into models. - How will forcing change regionally in the next several decades? - Changes over century of aerosols and other radiative forcing from human and natural causes and feedbacks with climate change. ## Interactions between ecosystems and climate - What are the appropriate state variables for Earth System models? - What and how do natural and managed ecosystems contribute to atmospheric composition? - Spatial data sets needed to represent in Earth System models. - How will ecosystems be impacted by and contribute to climate change and air quality change regionally over next few decades? - Changes and feedbacks on century time scale? ## Interactions between climate change and management of hydrological systems - Regional climate impact of land use/land cover change? - How incorporate impacts of climate change on water management? - Eliminate persistent biases in simulated regional predictions. - quantitative measures of ability to predict changes in extreme precipitation probabilities. - Changed frequencies of floods and droughts? - How temperature change affected by changing soil moisture and land cover? ## Earth System Modeling - Plan and develop next/multiple generations - Incorporate advances in process understanding to further model complexity and improve parameterizations-e.g. clouds. - Develop and improve/validate initialization procedures. - Resolve cloud processes. - Provide regional details to integrated assessment models. - Use next generation of emission scenarios to project Earth System on century scale. ## Energy Systems and Climate Change - Most promising near term strategies for reduction of carbon emission? - How will climate change and mitigation efforts impact national economies over the next several decades? - Vulnerable sectors of society? - What adaptation strategies should we be putting in place? ## Emphases implied for DOE climate program - Better inform modeling activities through DOE’s climate observational programs (ARM, aerosol, carbon, ecology...) needed interfaces currently missing? - Connect integrated assessment modeling to climate modeling – recognize in general major human dimensions elements that involve research questions. - Will require training/education of many more scientists. ## Directions Highlighted - Grand Challenges include the integration and communication of many improved and improving kinds of scientific information into overall assessment of how climate is changing. - Physical processes, options for mitigation and adaptation. - New research, computational, observational, and experimental directions needed. - Directly related to and facilitated by enhanced computing capabilities. - Large multiyear field program needed? - Several workshops to develop more details.
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# Presentation: 209198 ## OBPG Status Report **OBPG Status Report** - Chuck McClain & Gene Feldman - Ocean Biology Processing Group Leaders - NASA Carbon Cycle & Ecosystems Joint Science Team Meeting - Ocean Breakout Session - May 1, 2008 **Notes:** monitoring harmful blooms from space gives coastal communities ability to take precautionary measures fishing bans beach closures image shows true color (top) and chlorophyll (bottom) views of bloom in mouth of Mississippi similar information was used to monitor a red tide bloom off coast of Texas last fall **OBPG Data Set & Mission Support Activities** - SeaWiFS - MODIS/Aqua: Ocean Color & SST* - MODIS/Terra: Ocean Color & SST* - NPP/VIIRS: Ocean Color & SST - Sensor & EDR algorithm performance - Launch in 2010 - Aquarius (data system): Launch in 2010 - Historical data - CZCS - OCTS - Sensor & mission concept development - Ocean Radiometer for Carbon Assessment (ORCA) - Aerosols, Clouds, Ecology (ACE) - *Primarily data - processing & - distribution ## SeaWiFS - Internal telemetry anomaly on Spacecraft on Dec. 31, 2007 - Resulted in loss of GPS and attitude data in downlinked data stream. - SeaWiFS instrument unaffected - Data could not be processed - GeoEYE recovery plan - Switch to the B-side computer: imaging on March 11 for 1 day. - Spurious GPS position caused the spacecraft safehold. - Return to "nominal" imaging operations was restored on April 4 and continues. - Current status - The GPS receiver has intermittent autonomous resets - Results in time shifts in the data stream & navigation failures - Approximately 30% of the GAC orbits affected - Discussions underway with GeoEye to identify source of problem - Option for 1 year of GAC exercised on April 12. - The NOAA data buy for HRPT coverage of U.S. coastal waters not being renewed. - Orbit drift impacting calibration (presumably thermal sensitivity) - Effects evident in lunar calibration ## SeaWiFS Orbit Drift ## Reprocessing: Primary Improvements - CZCS, OCTS, SeaWiFS, MODIS (Terra & Aqua) - Revise band centers & related algorithms - E.g., MODIS 551 nm band center to 547 nm - Switch to K(490) based on Morel or Lee - Update aerosol models based on AERONET analyses - NO2 corrections using global NO2 satellite products - MODIS/Terra - Updated on-board calibration - SeaWiFS-based vicarious calibration of polarization & RVS - Franz presentation later provides details - MODIS/Aqua - Updated on-board calibration - SeaWiFS - Revised prelaunch and lunar calibrations - Expand glint and straylight masks - Update PAR and calcite algorithms - Candidate new products: - POC (Stramski) - PAR (Frouin): MODIS - Lwn(678): MODIS - FLH: MODIS - Euphotic depth (Lee) - Kpar (Morel) ## OBPG Refereed Publications **OBPG Refereed Publications** - Eplee, R. E., F. S. Patt, R. A. Barnes, and C. R. McClain, SeaWiFS long-term solar diffuser reflectance and sensor signal-to-noise analyses, *Appl. Opt.,* 46(5), 762-773, 2007. - Franz, B. A., S. W. Bailey, P. J. Werdell, and C. R. McClain, Sensor-independent approach to the vicarious calibration of satellite ocean color radiometry, *Appl. Opt.*, 46(22), 5068-5082, 2007. - Ahmad, Z., C. R. McClain, J. R. Herman, B. A. Franz, E. J. Kwaitkowska, W. D. Robinson, E. J. Bucsela, and M. Tzortziou, Atmospheric correction of NO2 in retrieving water-leaving reflectances from the SeaWiFS and MODIS measurements, *Appl. Opt.*, 46(26), 6504-6512, 2007. - Werdell, P. J., S. W. Bailey, B. A. Franz, A. Morel, C. R. McClain, and S. B. Hooker, The on-orbit vicarious calibration of ocean color sensors using a sea surface reflectance model, *Appl. Opt.*, 46(23), 5649-5666, 2007. - Eplee, R. E., Jr., F. S. Patt, B. A. Franz, S. W. Bailey, G. Meister, C. R. McClain, SeaWiFS on-orbit gain and detector calibrations: impact on ocean products, *Appl. Opt.*, 46(27). 6733-6750, 2007. - Gordon, H. R., B. A. Franz, Remote sensing of ocean color: Assessment of the water-leaving radiance bidirectional effects on the atmospheric diffuse transmittance for SeaWiFS and MODIS intercomparisons, *Remote Sens. Environ.*, 112, 2677-2685, 2008. - Bailey, S. W., S. B. Hooker, D. Antoine, B. A. Franz, and P. J. Werdell, Sources and assumptions for the vicarious calibration of ocean color satellite observations, *Appl. Opt*. 47, 2035-2045, 2008. - Franz, B. A., E. J. Kwiatkowska, G. Meister, and C. R. McClain, Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on Terra: Limitations for Ocean Color Applications, *J. Appl. Remote Sens.,* in press.
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