The Extraction Story
What followed was one of the most intense experiences of our lives.
The system was still under high vacuum when we arrived. The lab was roughly 1,500 square feet of tightly packed accelerator hardware, beamlines, electronics racks, cabling, and decades of accumulated experimental infrastructure. The original operator had moved on from the university, so we had to piece together the system's configuration largely through our own technical knowledge, manufacturer documentation, and contacts through the SNEAP community.
Over three week-long trips to Arizona, Gianni and I disassembled the entire facility by hand. We removed every beamline component, disconnected and labeled hundreds of electrical connections, and carefully extracted the Cockcroft-Walton high-voltage multiplier from inside the SF₆ pressure vessel. We documented everything — every cable, every vacuum fitting, every configuration.
The hardest part was the accelerating column. Fourteen feet of floating glass tube sections, bonded to precision metal electrodes, embrittled after forty years of particle irradiation. Only one person we could find through the SNEAP community had ever attempted this extraction themselves, and their column broke. We spent days researching, designing custom support jigs, and building adjustable tables before attempting it. The extraction and column disassembly took sixteen hours straight, but we got it out intact.