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Immediate Report of Victoria University Of Wellington Antarctic Expedition 1987-88: VUWAE 32

9-19 November Work on Erebus

9-19 November Work on Erebus

A welcome change from the 1986/87 season was that VXE-6 resumed flying helicopters to the lower hut, thus reducing our dependence on toboggans to get equipment up the mountain. In a last-minute switch, however, they delivered our Grizzly to Fang Glacier, when we had all expected to be air-lifted from Fang acclimatisation camp to the hut. After some difficulty starting it because the switch was stiff, the page 16 Grizzly easily climbed the mountain with 2 people and their survival bags aboard. It was also used to take the replacement TV camera box and test equipment to the crater rim. The new box had a 2 watt heated window constructed from a 75 × 50 mm microscope slide with an evaporated gold film connecting between electrodes of circuit board material cemented along the ends. It was coated with Epithane 343 2-pot Polyurethane clear plastic to protect the fragile gold film, and sealed onto the main plate glass window with the gold surface on the outside, using silicon rubber, so that sealed air space was present between the two sheets of glass. The objective was 100% efficiency in evaporating an ice film which was presumed to be the cause of the fogging of the TV picture in 1987, but in fact the window had turned white due to corrosion by volcanic gases. Fortunately, the Epithane 343 resisted this corrosion efficiently.

Terry Ball tried to cure the faults in the camera which had nearly defeated us in 1986/87, by changing components as described in a manual belatedly supplied by Philips. Unfortunately, the instructions did not apply to our camera, and the original components had to be replaced with the fault uncured. Briefly, if the supply voltage drops momentarily, the camera locks into a stable inoperative mode.

While Terry wrestled with this, Ray Dibble, Steve Lassky and Brian Anderson (surveyor) were shifting the TV transmitter and antenna 70 m closer to Scott Base and adding 0.8 m to the mast so as to improve the ground reflected RF signal, and Susan Ellis was making infrared temperature measurements of the lava lake, and warm ground inside and outside of the craters.

Sunshine and shelter from the wind were important for comfort on the rim, and while Ray, Steve and Brian sweltered, Terry, Susan and their equipment 200 m away got cold, and the infrared measurement became unreliable. A further problem with the TV was that transmissions from the Tait radios near the camera also caused it to lock into inoperative modes, necessitating extra trips back to the summit, opening the camera box, and disconnecting/reconnecting the power. Perhaps it was one too many such actions which weakened the power connection so that it failed on 6 December after we had descended. We were greatly indebted to Bill McIntosh of S081, who found and cured the fault for us.

The type LX06002D infrasonic microphones at EI and CON were replaced by type LX0503A barometric pressure sensors to cure intermittent operation. Over most of the first half of 1987, the microphones operated only in the afternoon, seeming to work only in the sunshine, despite the very wide operating conditions of temperature (to −50°C) and pressure. Ice blocking the pin hole pressure ports was a possible cause, although the microphones had been entirely sealed inside condoms in 1985/86 to prevent this, and also corrosion by volcanic gas. The condoms were still in excellent condition, but the resistance of the strain gauge bridge in the microphones had changed for some reason. No explanation for the intermittent operation could be found, but it appears that the page 17 reliable life on Erebus of these comparatively cheap devices is only about 2 years. We already knew that expensive microphones would have a short life, so cheap ones are still the best.

At E1 we also reinstalled the long period horizontal seismometer provided by NIPR in 1986/87 in a niche in the lava dike, 2 m from the previous site, in order to reduce the tilting which had stopped it operating. The component was again radial to the lava lake.