Engineers working to free 33 miners trapped underground in Chile now expect to begin bringing the men to the surface on Wednesday.
The rescue team finished lining part of a narrow 625m rescue shaft with metal tubes today.
They will make test runs with special escape capsules and the Chilean government aims to start hoisting the men to freedom one by one on Wednesday.
They are installing the tubes to head off the risk of rocks from the side of the drill shaft falling down onto the capsules dubbed Phoenix after the mythical bird, and blocking them from reaching the surface.
'I'm so tired. It's been far too many days doing nothing, just sitting waiting,' said Alicia Campos, whose son Daniel Herrera is among the trapped miners.
She wants her son to take up another profession.
President Sebastian Pinera has said he plans to visit the mine tomorrow.
One of the 33 miners is a Bolivian national, and Bolivia's President Evo Morales has vowed to visit the mine for his rescue.
In a land still recovering from a devastating earthquake in February, celebrations broke out across Chile on Saturday when the drill broke through 65 days after the 5 August collapse at the small gold and copper mine in the far northern Atacama desert.
The men, who have set a world record for the length of time workers have survived underground after a mining accident, have been doing exercises to keep their weight down in time for their ascent.
They will journey to the surface in capsules just wider than a man's shoulders with their eyes closed and will immediately be given dark glasses to avoid damaging their eyesight after spending so long in a dimly-lit tunnel.
They will be given astronaut-style medical checks in a field hospital set up at the mine.
Then they will be able to spend some time with their families, before being flown by helicopter to nearby Copiapo to be stabilised at another hospital.
They are in remarkably good health, although some have developed skin infections.
Health Minister Jaime Manalich said at least two rescuers, one of them a paramedic, would travel down in the capsules to help prepare the men for their journey to freedom.
He said the government had chosen the most psychologically stable and experienced of the miners to be the first to enter the capsules and face the claustrophobic journey.
'They have to be psychologically mature, have a great deal of mining experience and be able to handle a quick training on how to use the harness and oxygen mask in the Phoenix capsule,' Mr Manalich said.
The government brought in experts from NASA to help keep the men mentally and physically fit during the rescue.