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News Wire: Union Pacific aims to boost profits, service with Precision Scheduled Railroading

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 6:12 PM

I use the fence and operate the DP apart from the head end going through those spots.  When Trip Optimizer and LEADER auto throttle are engaged, they immediately put up the fence and constantly make throttle adjustments on both head and dp consists as the train is moving.  More than is probably necessary.  

I've allowed T-O to run trains through those spots and it does pretty good.  I've heard stories where T-O didn't do too well.  Where it advised to set minimum service on the automatic brake on a 10000 plus manifest.  (It can only handle throttle/dynamic braking at this time.)  Then it advised to release the automatic.  Not the best advise considering where they were.  The engineer did has the computer said and the train broke in two.  

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Posted by Electroliner 1935 on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 2:03 PM

jeffhergert
Three big hogbacks and sags that can cause normal sized trains to tear apart if you're not careful.  We made it through OK.

Congratulations. Do you use different throttle settings (between leading units and DPU's) or do they all get the same setting? And does T.O. ceate different power settings for each power block or just the same power setting for all? It would strike me that you have to be making many mental calculations to maintain appropriate power settings while considering all the variables of weight, drawbar pull, grade, etc. 

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Posted by jeffhergert on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 12:24 PM

zardoz

 

 
jeffhergert
I had a 14850 ft manifest yesterday.

 

Cripes! How do you handle such a long train in hogback country? Also, what was the power distribution? And did you make it end-to-end in one piece?

 

Three engines on line (2 more dead) on the head end.  One DP about 8500 feet behind the 5th engine on the head end. 

We had working PTC with Trip Optimizer integrated, so the computer ran the thing for about 2/3rds of the trip.  It gave me back control through the terminal area in Omaha/Council Bluffs.  And the whole thing (PTC and Trip Optimizer) went belly up just as we were approaching the worst part of the territory.  Three big hogbacks and sags that can cause normal sized trains to tear apart if you're not careful.  We made it through OK.

Jeff    

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Posted by zugmann on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 11:44 AM

dehusman
Just because EHH liked it, doesn't mean it was right.

But on the other side of the coin, if you are reducing the number of employees working - you want to increase flexibility of those remaining employees.  RCLs (remote controlled locomotives) limit that.  You can only use engines equipped with RCO (remote control operator) gear.  You can only use designated tracks if using remote zones.  You need sufficient remote operators.

When things are super busy, yeah, RCl's can help.  But when you are trying to run the place on limited manpower - you can shoot yourself in the foot, depending on how the place is set up.  

We ran into this the other day.  They couldn't fill a local due to lack of available manpower.  So they sent us (2-man traditional switch crew) 10 miles down the mainline to serve an industry that was out of cars.  If all they had was RCO men or equipment - that customer would have been screwed.

And last ngiht, the RCLs we had stopped loading.  So they had to use other power - power not equipped for RCO operation. RCOs seem more like a set of handcuffs than anything else. And I've spent years running them.

 

 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by zardoz on Tuesday, November 6, 2018 9:46 AM

jeffhergert
I had a 14850 ft manifest yesterday.

Cripes! How do you handle such a long train in hogback country? Also, what was the power distribution? And did you make it end-to-end in one piece?

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Posted by dehusman on Monday, November 5, 2018 2:47 PM

The UP VP was walked out because the position was eliminated in the reorg and EVERYBODY that was eliminated was walked out, company policy.  He just retired early.  Actually that's pretty common.  A relative of mine was caught in a force reduction at an ethanol producer, and they told him his job was eliminated, walked him to the door.  He didn't even get to clean out the desk, they just emptied everything into a box and mailed it to him. 

RCL is at least a 33% reduction in personnell costs and the reports I've seen less than a 25% reduction in production.  When business was booming, that might have been an issue, but with railroads running with excess capacity, is it a problem?  If a 3 man crew can switch 1000 cars an shift and a 2 man crew can switch 800 cars a shift and you are handling 700 cars a shift, is the increased production worth a 33% increase in costs?

Just because EHH liked it, doesn't mean it was right.  

 

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Posted by PNWRMNM on Monday, November 5, 2018 2:07 PM

[quote user="jeffhergert"]

I heard a rumor that the remote control yard engines are going to go away.  That although an RC switch job lowers the cost per car handled, conventional switch crews tend to handle more cars.  

Jeff

[quote user="jeffhergert"]
 
Jeff,
 
As a greedy stock holder I am glad to hear that the remotes are going away in yard service. I have always suspected that cars per engine hour was less than half what a competent two man crew could do. Sounds like somebody determined that I was right.
 
Mac

 

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Posted by jeffhergert on Monday, November 5, 2018 12:54 PM

The monster sized manifests predate the new plan.  Even some intermodals are often in the 10000ft or more range.  I had a 14850 ft manifest yesterday.

I heard a rumor that the remote control yard engines are going to go away.  That although an RC switch job lowers the cost per car handled, conventional switch crews tend to handle more cars.  

Jeff

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Posted by Ed Kyle on Sunday, November 4, 2018 11:52 AM

In the past few weeks here in Glen Ellyn, IL on the former C&NW Chicago-Omaha mainline, I've been thwarted in travel by an enormous mid-day manifest.  One day it stopped and blocked all crossings in town for two or three hours.  Another day it crawled through at 10 mph, creating angry gridlock in all directions for the better part of a half-hour.  It looked like a combination of a grain train, an autorack train, and a manifest train, with mid-train remotes.  Whatever it was, it was a disaster for locals trying to live their lives.

I've read about similar blockages by freights down in Normal, Illinois on the ex-Alton line to St. Louis.  Apparently, UP has recently begun to do some kind of block swapping in the Bloomington Yard there, causing freights to block many street crossings north of the yard.

 - Ed Kyle

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Posted by jeffhergert on Wednesday, October 24, 2018 8:04 PM

One person also said Lance was gone, another that he had 90 days.  There was a town hall meeting scheduled later this week.  We'll see if he's there for it.  

North Platte service unit survives. Twin Cities was merged into the Chicago SU.  The other service units gone are Denver, St Louis, Livonia, and the Sunset.  The Chicago SU is almost what was the CNW.  Only one or two segments are in other SUs.  

I wouldn't think they could do much more than block swapping at Rochelle.  In the early 2000s they had section 6 notices to rearrange runs.  Rochelle was to have become the home terminal for pools running from there to Boone, Missouri Valley, Mason City, and Des Moines.  The unions were able to get the railroad to keep the Rochelle-Boone pool home terminal at Boone.  After awhile the railroad lost interest and nothing ever came of the proposals.  At the time crews were lucky to make Clinton on hours of service.  I don't know how they thought they could go another 70 some miles to Rochelle.

I expect if they ever build the Mississippi River bridge and/or the yard at Nevada IA, they may change runs.  With them not wanting to spend money on such projects at this time, I don't think I'll see it happening.

Jeff

 

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Posted by CShaveRR on Wednesday, October 24, 2018 3:04 PM

Nope, Jeff--not a chance.  

I just heard rumors today (scoot conductor):  Fritz is gone and Ms. Sanborn will be in charge.  I heard that the excort-off-the-property thing happened at Omaha.

And, accordng to this guy, Proviso will be closed and completely converted to an intermodal facility.  My old hump will be gone.  Flat switching will be done at, of all, places, Rochelle.  

I heard that Twin Cities, St. Louis, and North Platte are three of the service units that were consolidated out of existence. 

Couldn't tell from the markets...UP is continuing its tumble to below where it was before the spike, and my 401K is going to take a hit.  I would have expected a jmp if the shockhlders had gotten wind of a Hunter-type move.  

So...Boone to Rochelle on your east end, Jeff?


Carl

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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, October 24, 2018 2:28 PM

jeffhergert
Yesterday there was some consolidations and a few shake ups.  They consolidated some service units, eliminating a few.  They eliminated the Western Region, so now we have two, Northern and Southern.  Word going around is that a VP was walked off the property.  As were some other service unit officers as their positions were eliminated by the consolidation.  A few kept jobs, but have been demoted.  Talk is Mr. Fritz is on short time.

Sometime back they consolidated yardmasters.  Yardmasters would take care of yards at other locations as well as their own.  The talk is yardmasters at Clinton, who had also been taking care of the Cedar Rapids yard, are going to be eliminated.  Proviso will take care of Clinton and Des Moines will take care of Cedar Rapids.  

You know Carl, if you were still working, you might've eventually been in charge of controlling cars going over the hump at North Platte as well as Proviso.

Jeff 

The VP walked out wasn't from CSX formerly????

Yardmaster consolidations had been the flavor at CSX long before PSR.

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Posted by jeffhergert on Wednesday, October 24, 2018 2:15 PM

ns145

 

 
 
 

 

 

 

The only discernible rays of sunlight were Lance Fritz's commitments to keep service levels high for premium intermodal and to not shut down any hump yards.  The Wall Street people on the call were noticeably underwhelmed that the OR guidance wasn't revised downward.  Mr. Fritz might be looking for another job soon.  Record quarters aren't enough.  Your railroad has to be the anorexic OR queen of the block to get any props from Wall Street these days.  The financial people still don't understand that CP and CSX were just short-term hatchet jobs.  

 

Yesterday there was some consolidations and a few shake ups.  They consolidated some service units, eliminating a few.  They eliminated the Western Region, so now we have two, Northern and Southern.  Word going around is that a VP was walked off the property.  As were some other service unit officers as their positions were eliminated by the consolidation.  A few kept jobs, but have been demoted.  Talk is Mr. Fritz is on short time.

Sometime back they consolidated yardmasters.  Yardmasters would take care of yards at other locations as well as their own.  The talk is yardmasters at Clinton, who had also been taking care of the Cedar Rapids yard, are going to be eliminated.  Proviso will take care of Clinton and Des Moines will take care of Cedar Rapids.  

You know Carl, if you were still working, you might've eventually been in charge of controlling cars going over the hump at North Platte as well as Proviso.

Jeff 

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Tuesday, October 2, 2018 10:15 AM

Electroliner 1935

 

 
Shadow the Cats owner
We do pay for reserved parking at any truck stop they need us to pay it for them. This driver repeatedly refused to utilize what we offered him to prevent HOS problems that could happen.  His refusal to obey company policies is why he ended up getting chewed out. 

 

Have truck stops always charged for overnight parking and what do they charge? If you buy fuel, do they discount parking? What about Interstate Highway rest areas, do they allow it? I don't drive a rig but I have stopped at truck stops and have seen a large number of trucks parked and drivers obtaining showers and meals. Always thought the parking was a perk for buying fuel.

 

 

Some truckstops in major metro areas have charged for decades.  My husband knows he paid to park in the LA basin in Ontario several times Atlanta a couple Memphis around Chicago Philly New York City Boston Dallas Houston.  Those places will give free parking with a certain quantiy of fuel bought or so much spent in the stores.  However what is new in these areas is what is called Reserved parking where for a fee a truckstop will hold a space open for a driver coming in.  They literally will have a place held with his truck number and carrier listed on it and will tow anyone else that parks in it after telling the other truck to remove themselves from it.  Those are the spots we pay for near the major cities for our drivers that need it for their clocks no questions asked we actually call the truckstops and reserve the spot for the driver.  

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, October 1, 2018 6:11 PM

Electroliner 1935
 
BaltACD
 
CMStPnP 
BaltACD
I am certain the cost of the tow was not insignificant. 

According to that Canadian "Highway to Hell" series a tow of a big rig out of the ditch runs on average about $4 to 5,000.00.    I think that is because of the specialized equipment they use as well as the 4-5 men in crew and because it is on a congested highway. 

 

This may be a dumb question by why not get a qualified driver to move the truck or do they not exist? Why tow?

I don't know the specific answer to your question. 

I suspect in the videoed example, it may be a Owner/Operator - not a 'company' driver.  O/O's lease themselves and THEIR equipment to the company needing the cargo hauled.  Under the circumstance I doubt that there is another driver for the O/O to send for.

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Posted by Electroliner 1935 on Monday, October 1, 2018 5:34 PM

BaltACD

 

 
CMStPnP
 
BaltACD
I am certain the cost of the tow was not insignificant. 

According to that Canadian "Highway to Hell" series a tow of a big rig out of the ditch runs on average about $4 to 5,000.00.    I think that is because of the specialized equipment they use as well as the 4-5 men in crew and because it is on a congested highway.

 

 

This may be a dumb question by why not get a qualified driver to move the truck or do they not exist? Why tow?

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Posted by Electroliner 1935 on Monday, October 1, 2018 5:12 PM

Shadow the Cats owner
We do pay for reserved parking at any truck stop they need us to pay it for them. This driver repeatedly refused to utilize what we offered him to prevent HOS problems that could happen.  His refusal to obey company policies is why he ended up getting chewed out. 

Have truck stops always charged for overnight parking and what do they charge? If you buy fuel, do they discount parking? What about Interstate Highway rest areas, do they allow it? I don't drive a rig but I have stopped at truck stops and have seen a large number of trucks parked and drivers obtaining showers and meals. Always thought the parking was a perk for buying fuel.

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Posted by Yesterdays Gone on Sunday, September 30, 2018 6:51 AM

Hello xboxtravis7922, I am an active railroader with lots of years of experience. I have seen lots of changes and to be very honest with you I feel like they were for the worst and not the better. The whole thing of moving trains is being able to get them out of the originating terminal thru the intermediate terminals and into the final destination terminal. One certain carrier has implemented what they call a STAGING PLAN. we make our way across our route at a whopping 14 mph average speed. When we get to our crew change point we are staged for at least an 1hr sometimes up to 2hrs before our crew ever goes on duty. With the New Breed of workers being hired they are Not going to get to work early it will either be right on the minute or they will be LATE. The management at the terminals are new themsevles and DO NOT HAVE A CLUE ABOUT RAILROADING. They allow these new workers to dictate when they are ready to get on their train instead of telling them to GO GET ON IT NOW !!! . So with all this being said until the carrier learns how to get trains thru terminals the PSR is a bunch of bull. The 14mph average that they are so proud of will remain or probrably get worse. 

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, September 21, 2018 8:42 PM

CMStPnP
 
BaltACD
I am certain the cost of the tow was not insignificant. 

According to that Canadian "Highway to Hell" series a tow of a big rig out of the ditch runs on average about $4 to 5,000.00.    I think that is because of the specialized equipment they use as well as the 4-5 men in crew and because it is on a congested highway.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Friday, September 21, 2018 7:54 PM

BaltACD
I am certain the cost of the tow was not insignificant.

According to that Canadian "Highway to Hell" series a tow of a big rig out of the ditch runs on average about $4 to 5,000.00.    I think that is because of the specialized equipment they use as well as the 4-5 men in crew and because it is on a congested highway.

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Friday, September 21, 2018 7:53 PM

I know what's our corporate policy is regarding the 14 hour rule of the hos for our drivers. In my time here there's been 1 driver we have done this to he's no longer employed by this company in anyway.  I personally was the one the ordered him off the property and then DACCED his employment chances with other carrier's.  It's very hard to get a job when other carrier's find out you were fired for open container of alcohol then refused a drug test. 

 

We do pay for reserved parking at any truck stop they need us to pay it for them. This driver repeatedly refused to utilize what we offered him to prevent HOS problems that could happen.  His refusal to obey company policies is why he ended up getting chewed out. 

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Posted by zugmann on Friday, September 21, 2018 7:28 PM

So now the story changed completely.  Ok then.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Friday, September 21, 2018 7:05 PM

In the time I've been here I can remember 1 driver that had to be talked to in this manner.  The rest of the fleet knows to find a safe parking spot. The one driver we had to ream out refused to pay to park in Atlanta at the Petro truck stop.  He instead decided to go over his 14 and went to a strip club and got robbed while parked there on top of it.  So not only was he robbed of his money fuel cards and other things he got us in trouble. Hence he got his butt chewed off when he made it back to the yard.  Zugman we take pride in having one of the lowest out of service rates in the industry.  This driver was one of our biggest screw ups in the fleet.  He has moved on why violations of other company policies that required immediately termination of his employment.  We found a 5th of Jack Daniels opened in his bunk. This was 1 year ago .

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Posted by zugmann on Friday, September 21, 2018 6:05 PM

Shadow the Cats owner
How long do you think a company can stay in business with fines that large.

If I do something wrong, I can be disciplined.  But to brag about yelling at employees?  Immature and unprofessional. Unless you were speaking metaphorically.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, September 21, 2018 4:55 PM

Shadow the Cats owner
Zugman when it costs us aka the carrier 25 grand for each time they break 14 hours the butt chewing they get is worth it.  That is why we pay for reserved parking for our drivers so we can avoid the fines from the FMCSA.  25 grand per occurance is what the fine is and they can ramp it up if your a repeat offender to 250 grand per occurance.  How long do you think a company can stay in business with fines that large.

From a railroad perspective in dealing with HOS.  Sometimes you have to see reality for what it is and not try to get the last minutes work from the train crew - if you do you end up with a dead train on the Main waiting for their relief crew.  Put the train in a 'hiding place' out of the way until a relief crew can be obtained and transported to the train.  If you are running your railroad efficiently, you may end up from time to time with a recrew on duty for a train that actually completes its run and the recrew was your insurance policy.

While I doubt drivers have any clout when dealing with the shipper/consignee plants they deal with - perhaps they should be fully rested before showing up at the plant even if it mean delaying their arrival 14 hours.  The trucking industry needs to get together where all carriers have the same kind of responses to the same kind of HOS situations.  I know full well the shipper/consignees will try to whiplash the carriers by trying to find one that doesn't care about HOS to the same extent as the others and offer them the business.  Railroads are subject to the same kinds of customer warfare so it is nothing new, just a diffent place for the battlefield.  As long as customers can drive wedges between the carriers they will.

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Friday, September 21, 2018 3:18 PM

zugmann

 

 
Shadow the Cats owner
hat is the company rule and if you break it when you get back to the yard first I chew your butt out then the Safety manager tears you a new one then you have to go see the Owner of the company and he proceeds to ream you out so badly you feel like your going to need depends for a month.

 

That seems unprofessional and borderline harrassment.

 

 

Zugman when it costs us aka the carrier 25 grand for each time they break 14 hours the butt chewing they get is worth it.  That is why we pay for reserved parking for our drivers so we can avoid the fines from the FMCSA.  25 grand per occurance is what the fine is and they can ramp it up if your a repeat offender to 250 grand per occurance.  How long do you think a company can stay in business with fines that large.

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Posted by Shadow the Cats owner on Friday, September 21, 2018 3:15 PM

The fine for violation of the 14 hour rule to the carrier aka my boss is 25 grand for each time it happens.   Why do we hate that 14 hour clock shippers and recievers that delay our drivers for hours then refuse to have parking for them when they have run out their clocks for the day.  With Elogs the drivers are stuck sitting on On Duty not driving waiting to get loaded or unloaded.  That is why at least here we have hammered detention time so hard on our customers.  The idiots at the FMCSA that decided that all trucks be forced into this situation needs to be drawn and quarted or better yet sat in a truck have his clock run out in Needles CA at noon in a truck he can not idle in and be told you have to sleep in this 150 degree metal box for the next 10 hours before you can move again.  Or now that winter is coming throw him in Upstate NY say around Syracuse and NYS does not allow trucks to idle in any weather either.  So throw him in a truck in below zero weather and say stay warm in this thing.  Then tell us why a clock we can not stop is such a great idea for this industry.  We have APU's on all our equipment so our drivers can stay warm or cool as needed.  However the main issue with our HOS is a clock that can not be restarted until 10 hours of sleeper time or off duty time has happened.  

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, September 21, 2018 1:54 PM

Shadow the Cats owner
Per the Federal regulations 10 hours in the sleeper berth or off duty combined.  Most of my drivers around here are getting around 8 hours a night the other 2 are used for eating showering and relaxing before going to sleep and then waking up in the morning and having breakfast.  But then again my boys are spoiled when it comes to how we treat them aka do what ever it takes so they can get the rest they need.  I think last week alone we paid out over 3 grand in parking alone so our drivers had a spot to park.  They are told if they hit the 13th hour in the clock find the closest truck stop and park it for the night.  That is the company rule and if you break it when you get back to the yard first I chew your butt out then the Safety manager tears you a new one then you have to go see the Owner of the company and he proceeds to ream you out so badly you feel like your going to need depends for a month.  The only time we do not apply as we call it the reaming is if your held at a shipper an accident or weather forces your hand.  We had a few drivers get caught in that Ice storm that hit Arkansas a few years back.  That was not fun for us or them.  Even the DOT officers knew why they where over the clocks and over everything.  

Reason I was asking - saw a video of a driver that went HOS just outside of the shipper/consignee (I don't know) plant.  A tow truck was called to move the rig from where it was to the lot of a truck stop several miles away.

Makes me wonder what the value of the fine is vs. the cost of having a tow truck come to move the rig to a truck stop?  I am certain the cost of the tow was not insignificant.

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Posted by zugmann on Friday, September 21, 2018 11:43 AM

Shadow the Cats owner
hat is the company rule and if you break it when you get back to the yard first I chew your butt out then the Safety manager tears you a new one then you have to go see the Owner of the company and he proceeds to ream you out so badly you feel like your going to need depends for a month.

That seems unprofessional and borderline harrassment.

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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