The quoted overheads on the first spectroscopic exposure in a visit, or a spectroscopic exposure within a visit containing a change of grating or grating tilt, allow for the taking of a single automatic wavecal exposure to permit post-observation determination of the zero point of the wavelength (and spatial) scales. If you plan a series of exposures at a given grating setting which extends over 40 minutes in exposure time, then you need to include time for an additional automatic wavecal for each 40-minute period. However for certain types of observing programs, careful crafting of the Phase II proposal can force the additional automatic wavecals associated with long observations (greater than ~40 minutes) into occultation (see
Section 11.2.1).