Rachel repeats her process of taking apart the cryocubes one by one, where the assistant 'Ryan' promptly welds them onto four points on the tubing she had. Of course with constant direction by the scientist herself.
As she was finishing up the last cube, with a CRASH, the table collapses under the weight and the magnetism pulling the components down. Muttering out a few curse words under her breath, she powers everything off and inspects the pieces to make sure nothing was damaged.
On the piece that she wanted out of the machine, she spots a small chink in the metal. Shaking her head, she grabs a soldering iron and some solder. "Current should be flowing throu-.. Bah.." This was going to take an hour. And quite a bit of solder. Stupid mistakes, it's a shame nobody is perfect.
An hour later, she finishes with the repairs, seeming satisfied with her work. Motioning for Ryan to begin the welding process on the final spot on the tubing, she stands up and checks the notes she wrote in with a pencil a while ago. Reading over the list twice, she exits the lab area to retrieve more of the materials she ordered.
A Carbon Laser. The key component in her system, other than the actual sensors of course. Lasers are not given as much credit as they should get. Their effects if powered high enough is quite interesting upon the subatomic features of whatever the other end is placed on. Even under 'very' certain circumstances, you can have an atom ride the distortion field a laser leaves a few micrometers around the light.
That's what Rachel was planning on. Bringing the laser back on a cart to her lab room, she sets it on a table with some help. "Alright.. Put simply, this is going to go into the structure in the center. Let me do the aligning, although you're going to need to weld the metal to the casing. The laser is going to be bouncing from the mirror quite a few times, before exiting through the right chamber into the tubing. Of course, that's going to be near impossible to guess where it would go, so we're going to need to just keep trying until it exits. The more bounces, the better. Although I can live with anything more than ten. From a viewpoint above, put it down at a 48 degree angle to the right."
Ryan gave her a blank look, before she explained it once more in a little.. easier terms.
This process was going to take the longest, and perhaps being the most important one... Rachel is going to need a nap after this.