JET divertor diagnostic upgrade for neutral gas analysis Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 10D728 (2012) Fuel ion ratio measurements in reactor relevant neutral beam heated fusion plasmas Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 10D916 (2012) Full toroidal imaging of non-axisymmetric plasma material interaction in the National Spherical Torus Experiment divertor Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 10E532 (2012) Snowflake divertor configuration studies in National Spherical Torus Experiment Phys. Plasmas 19, 082504 (2012) Diagnostic options for radiative divertor feedback control on NSTX-U Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 10D716 (2012) Additional information on AIP Conf. Proc.Abstract. The use of fusion devices as powerful neutron sources has been discussed for decades. Whereas the successful route to a commercial fusion power reactor demands steady state stable operation combined with the high efficiency required to make electricity production economic, the alternative approach to advancing the use of fusion is free of many of complications connected with the requirements for economic power generation and uses the already achieved knowledge of Fusion physics and developed Fusion technologies. Fusion for Neutrons (F4N), has now been re-visited, inspired by recent progress achieved on comparably compact fusion devices, based on the Spherical Tokamak (ST) concept. Freed from the requirement to produce much more electricity than used to drive it, a fusion neutron source could be efficiently used for many commercial applications, and also to support the goal of producing energy by nuclear power. The possibility to use a small or medium size ST as a powerful or intense steady-state fusion neutron source (FNS) is discussed in this paper in comparison with the use of traditional high aspect ratio tokamaks. An overview of various conceptual designs of compact fusion neutron sources based on the ST concept is given and they are compared with a recently proposed Super Compact Fusion Neutron Source (SCFNS), with major radius as low as 0.5 metres but still able to produce several MW of neutrons in a steady-state regime.