CTD Operator’s Duty List

(CTDOperator Duty List2017.doc 08/09/2017 - CURRENT VERSION)

These instructions are designed for use by CalCOFI CTD operators and describe our step-by-step protocol for CTD operations at sea. They outline our preferred method but are not considered "gospel" - there are many techniques that result in good data from the Seabird 911+ CTD. But based on our long history of using Seabird hardware & software, we've established these guidelines for our CTD operators to follow. Standardizing our methodology between operator improves our data continuity, format consistency, and makes problems with our system easier to catch.

1). CTD Prep: ~20 minutes before station arrival, rally the troops for CTD prep. If weather-decks are secured because of rough weather, wait until arrival to station.

2). Prep Seasave on CTD Computer:

3). Upon station arrival:

4). Seasave Ops:

Please refer to CTD troubleshooting tips at the end of the document for information on dealing with CTD cast problems.

5). CTD recovery:

6). Sampling

CTD operators are responsible for sample-drawing correctness and completion so be sure to instruct sample drawers to check CESL for sample types and bottle #s.  CTD operators should verify all samples are drawn including phyto (Pooh samples), DICs, JOSI, & NCOGs (if done).  When stations come quickly, double-check with LTER personnel that all their samples are drawn before draining the bottles and re-rigging for next station.  If the next station is within 1-2 hours, you do not need to close the unfired bottles unless there is a risk of contamination.

7). CTD post-cast maintenance (if next station is more than 1 hour away)

8). Archiving:

NOAA ship operations are different since Fisheries Techs are watch leaders on NOAA ships. We still manage CTD logistics, working with the NOAA Survey Techs; hard-hats and work vests are required for everyone participating in deck ops

 

SIO-CalCOFI CTD-Ops Cookbook

  1. Prep the CTD ~20mins before sta. Pay attention to the “20 Minute Rule” – if the CTD cast will be within 20 minutes of the watch change, you should prep the CTD for the next watch.
    • Rig lanyards, valves, spigots
    • Pull caps, hoses, plug in ISUS, rinse transmissometer lens
  2. Prep Seasave:
    • Start Deck Unit
    • Start Seasave, fill out the header form, record deck depth
  3. Launch CTD and send it 10m
  4. Start 2min timer
  5. Check pump & sensors status & agreement
  6. Return to 10m & Start Archiving; hold for ~1min while recording start time, lat-lon, bottom depth.
  7. Send to depth, 515m depth permitting at 30m/min for 1st 100m then 60m/min weather-permitting.
  8. Downcast chl max determines cast type so select the appropriate form once past the chl max.
  9. At depth, record D, T, S, C (& Alt if shallow); mark then trip the bottle - create nav entry and CTDatDepth event for the deep bottle. Record time, lat-lon, bottom depth if changed.
  10. Raise it to next depth (+1 for remote depth box lag or -2 for SR wireout offset), log D, T, S, & C; mark & trip bottle
  11. After closure of the surface bottle, retrieve the CTD leaving Seasave running.
  12. Once CTD is on deck, record deck depth, stop data acquisition, turn off the deck unit, press <Ctrl><Alt>B.
  13. Turn off the Deck Unit; unplug the ISUS Battery; cover the pH sensor; secure the rosette, if rough
  14. Load sample log into CESL, change O2 case, salt case, nutrient rack color if necessary
  15. Take samples
  16. Add initials to CESL then save & print
  17. Filter chlorophylls
  18. Reset the CTD by rinsing etc (do it before chl filtering if weather is rough)
  19. Shake the O2 again, exchange cases, new sta labels
  20. Archive the cast

 
CTD Troubleshooting Tips

The cardinal rule is never doing anything to lose or overwrite the electronic data. Keeping an aborted cast’s duplicate data is a good idea. So if a cast is restarted after some data are collected, zip the original data files before overwriting – overwriting is preferred to preserve the data filename provided there is only one cast file. If there are multiple data files, use YYMM###A then YYMM###B...etc. Data files will be merged post-cast during processing - try to avoid gaps so if the data acquisition is interrupted, be sure to restart the cast so it overlaps the depth of signal interruption.

  1. Data Acquisition not started – if the CTD has started down and you discover data archiving was not started. Bring the CTD back to surface, start data archiving, wait ~1 minute, send back down. A 515m downcast takes ~12mins so this mistake usually takes that long to discover since you cannot trip a bottle. Since this is considered the best profile data, it is worth bringing the CTD back to surface and starting over unless shiptime is REALLY short.
  2. Interrupted cast – if the CTD has started down and there is a problem, here are some guidelines:
    1. If the CTD is going down and no bottles have been tripped, return the CTD to surface then stop data archiving. Go to Windows File Explorer and zip the data files to archive the aborted cast files (provided worthwhile data were collected). Re-start the data acquisition, overwriting the original data files. After ~1 minute at surface, send the CTD back down.
    2. CTD is going down and the winch stops, continue to log data until the problem is resolved. If the winch problem is not resolved within 15 minutes:
      1. if it is necessary to bring the CTD back onboard then log data until on deck;
      2. if the winch cannot move, stop data acquisition. Restart the cast from scratch when possble.
      3. if the winch comes back online and no bottles have been closed, return to surface, stop data archiving, zip the aborted cast files, then restart, overwriting the original data files (same protocol as a.)
    3. CTD is coming up and bottles have been tripped – be aware that stopping & restarting data archiving resets the carousel back to bottle #1. If you restart data archiving, be sure to rename the data file YYMM###B to preserve the first datafile & profile. You will have to re-trip the previous number of bottles so you are back in sync.
      If you tripped 6 bottles then stopped data archiving, when you restart, you will need to trip 6 "ghost" bottles & create 6 "ghost" markers, at whatever depth you happened to be when you resume. This will create a second marker "B" file so after the cast is completed. You will have to merge and edit the mrk files, deleting the 6 ghost markers, before pressing <Ctrl><Alt>B.
    4. If the Bottle Firing Sequence (main plot) resets to 1 or does not advance, continue to fire bottles until the right number fires. You do not need to make a new marker for each bottle – the number of markers should match the number of bottles fired successfully.
  3. Wire kink – if the CTD conductive wire catches on something and gets kinked. As long as the kink does not interrupt the signal, re-terminating may not be necessary. Move the cable-grip ("Chinese fingers") above the kink, looping & securing the extra wire along the top bottle ring.
  4. Bottle Closure Non-confirmations: on RV New Horizon, this was a conductive wire issue so it will be necessary to re-wire the termination. Only one good signal wire is needed so determine which wire is causing the problem and exclude it. Use the shield for ground/common.
  5. Significant Sensor Pair Disagreement – temperature, conductivity, and oxygen sensors are redundant. If they significantly disagree with each other, determine which sensor is faulty and replace it with a backup. This should be done asap although a CTD cast may be completed if one set of sensors is working properly. The faulty sensor should then be replaced before the next cast.
  6. Bottle mistrip(s) – if a position on the carousel is not closing properly, clean the trigger with a Q-tip to remove any debris that may be fouling it. If the position mistrips again, replace the trigger asap.
  7. Pumps do not come on or do not stay on – non-intuitively, this could be a conductivity problem. Check to conductivity value to be sure the sensor is behaving properly. It can be a bad cond sensor, bad cond cable, bad pump, or bad pump cable.
  8. ISUS signal gets extremely noisy - interesting problem on 1708SR, check the optical path for fouling. If clean, check the mirroring off the sensor optics - on 1708SR, the mirroring was lost somehow. Solution is to replace the sensor optical tip.