Los Alamos National Laboratory is a participant in the Integral System Test (IST) program initiated in June 1983 for the purpose of providing integral system test data on specific issues/phenomena relevant to post-small-break loss-of-coolant accidents, loss of feedwater and other transients in Babcock and Wilcox (B&W) nuclear plant designs. The Multi-Loop Integral System Test (MIST) facility is the largest single component in the IST program. MIST is a 2 × 4 [two hot legs and steam generators (SGs), four cold legs and reactor coolant pumps] representation of B&W lowered-loop reactor systems. It is a full-height, full-pressure facility with 1/817 power and volume scaling. Efforts are under way at Los Alamos to assess TRAC-PF1/MOD1 against data from the MIST facility. Calculations and data comparisons for TRAC-PF1/MOD1 assessment are presented for three transients run in the MIST facility. The energy removal and depressurization mechanisms in these tests are identified and the phenomena occurring in these tests compared. The tests analyzed are MIST Test 3109AA, the nominal small-break LOCA, Test 330302, a feed and bleed test with delayed high-pressure injection; and Test 3404AA, an SG tube-rupture test with the affected SG isolated. TRAC was able to predict these phenomena although the timing and magnitude of events were not always in good agreement. The MIST test have demonstrated the thermal-hydraulic phenomena expected to occur during transients in B&W nuclear plants. Because of scaling atypicalities, test results cannot be extrapolated directly to plant conditions. Although the phenomena were demonstrated in the MIST tests, there may be differences in the timing, magnitude and sequences of events in plant transients. Assessment calculations, three of which are presented here, have shown that the TRAC computer code can predict the major trends and phenomena occurring during the MIST tests with reasonable qualitative agreement. This includes complex sequences of events. Reasonable qualitative agreement is defined as meaning that major trends are predicted correctly, although TRAC values are frequently outside the range of data uncertainty. These assessment results, taken with assessment results from other facilities at a wide range of scales, provide us with confidence that the TRAC code can adequately simulate the transient phenomena possible in B&W nuclear plants.