Following the loss of the Hitomi x-ray astronomy satellite 38 days after its launch in early 2016, the US and Japanese space agencies (NASA and JAXA) agreed to fund a replacement mission, presently called XARM. XARM will include only the two soft x-ray instruments from Hitomi, the Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS), and the Soft X-ray Imager (SXI). For XARM, the spectrometer instrument named Resolve will be rebuilt to the original SXS design. It consists of a 6x6 array of silicon microcalorimeters cooled to 50 millikelvin by means of a 3-stage adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator (ADR) whose operation is supported by a 40 liter superfluid helium tank, a 4.5 K Joule-Thomson cryocooler and a number of 2-stage Stirling cryocoolers. These components were all successfully demonstrated on Hitomi before its failure. This talk will summarize the design of the XARM ADR and how it differs from the SXS version, and will briefly summarize on-orbit ADR performance during Hitomi's operational period.