Often you just need to take note of the small scenes that make up daily life. Over the years I have made an effort to photograph these scenes, there is so much richness in our everyday existence that too many do not notice…
Analog ammeters indicate the motor current
A collection of keys
A dense bit of temporary wiring in the Keck 2 SAA cabinet
The facility cooling lines that supply cold water to the K2AO electronics vault.
A pile of 3/8″ air hose in the supply room
Patching in an experimental control system to move the Keck 1 telescope, one step closer to a major upgrade.
A sample of the control wiring and circuitry in the Servo Amplifier Assembly
A scatter of tools at CSO
A bank of relays form the safety interlock system for the telescope.
A distribution video amplifier built around a THS7324
The usual mess littering a workbench in the Keck summit electronics lab in the midst of a project
Spools of wire await use in the electronics shop
Multiple cables enter the Keck 2 Adaptive Optics bench.
The Nasmyth Deck tool set in the Keck 2 dome
A section of the whiffle tree that supports each Keck primary segment
Tools and drawing lay on the table in the welding shop
The transformers for the Keck 2 telescope servo drives
A handheld radio used at Keck for daily communication.
Racks of wire available for use in the Keck summit electronics lab
An assortment of cable pass through the Keck 2 telescope elevation cable wrap
A Keck primary mirror segment jacked up out of the array
The control panel for the telescope hydraulic bearing system pumps
Part of the Keck 2 logic board, this PCB assembly controls the various control and safety logic for the Keck 2 telescope.
I/O cards and field wiring in the Keck 2 local controls PLC
A set of tools ready for use on the Keck 1 nasmyth deck
The new telescope control system servers take up much of a rack
A pile of power drills await use on a shelf in the supply room
Looking at the back of a segment with the radial support removed
Electronics test leads and patch cables hanging from the rack in the Keck summit electronics lab
A tangle of cables for the Keck 2 optical bench subsystem
A row of circuit breakers in the Keck 2 computer room
Bins full of stainless steel machine screws in the supply room
Fuses, relays, and contactors in the Keck 2 telescope control system
A tiny portion of the extensive cabling that connects the various elements of the Keck Interferometer
An electrician’s tool bag, complete with lockout tag
Bins of bolts in the Keck supply room
The many cables needed to operate the Keck 2 telescope thread through the azimuth wrap.
Hard hats ready for use just outside the Keck 1 dome
Author: Andrew
An electrical engineer, amateur astronomer, and diver, living and working on the island of Hawaiʻi.
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