<html><head>
</head><body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">Hi Elton:<br>
<br>
nice work on the slides. A few comments.<br>
<br>
- p4: length is 3.9m if you want to be picky<br>
<br>
- p5: following our discussion, I thought about the stand more. We can
mount the pivot attachment to the centre holes, so that the Mini Cal has
the SiPMs outside the beam and to the side. The pivot will be used to
orient it so that the electrons are coming in on a plane perpendicular
to a plane bisecting the module along its principal axis. We can then
rotate the entire device with its stand, to achieve angles from 90-20,
ie go from 15X0 to 44X0. In other words, we would not need to make a
transition piece.<br>
<br>
-p6: at 5 pass, we have 5.542 GeV, and at the 30% E/E0 point that is
almost 1.67 GeV. You have 1.2 GeV. <br>
<br>
The rest looks peachy.<br>
<br>
Cheers and have fun in the presentation, Zisis...<br>
<br>
<blockquote type="cite" cite="mid:4F369F83.2080000@jlab.org">
<div class="__pbConvHr"><div>         <div><img width="25px" height="25px" src="cid:part1.05050709.04030502@uregina.ca"></div> <div>
        <a href="mailto:elton@jlab.org">Elton Smith</a></div> <div>
<font color="#9FA2A5">February 11, 2012
11:04 AM</font></div></div></div>
<div class="__pbConvBody" __pbrmquotes="true"><div>Dear collaborators,<br><br>I
have put together some slides to summarize our request for parasitic <br>running
in Hall B with the mini-Bcal<br><a href="http://argus.phys.uregina.ca/cgi-bin/private/DocDB/ShowDocument?docid=1901">http://argus.phys.uregina.ca/cgi-bin/private/DocDB/ShowDocument?docid=1901</a><br><br>Comments
are more than welcome. Considering time constraints, I will try <br>to
incorporate your suggestions.<br><br>Cheers, Elton.<br><br></div></div>
</blockquote>
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