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Defense Technology® has announced the release of the 40mm Tactical 4-Shot Launcher

ONTARIO, Calif. Defense Technology® has announced the release of the 40mm Tactical 4-Shot Launcher, and 40mm eXact iMpact® and Direct Impact™ Adjustable Range Rounds at the 2016 SHOT (Shooting, Hunting, Outdoor Trade) Show at the Sands Expo Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, from January 19-22.

“These new additions to our product families further illustrate Defense Technology’s ongoing leadership in creating novel solutions to address tactical gaps in the market,” said Dave DuBay, Vice President, Less Lethal. “Defense Technology’s commitment to the men and women of the law enforcement, corrections and military communities has long been established with innovative products, coupled with superior training solutions. Domestically, Defense Technology has helped restore order in every major civil disturbance of the 20th century and has supported our troops from the second world war to today’s war on terrorism.”

Enhancing the family of launchers from Defense Technology, the 40mm Tactical 4-Shot Launcher, produced in collaboration with Lewis Machine & Tool, a precision gun manufacturer, provides an economical choice for the industry over traditional multi-launchers, while providing excellent tactical advantages. In addition to being the lightest weight tactical multi-launcher on the market, the Tactical 4-Shot is equipped with a quad rail and features an advanced pump action.

The 40mm eXact iMpact Adjustable Range Round and 40mm Direct Impact Adjustable Range Round have the ability to engage subjects from five feet to 70 meters to deliver the same energy throughout these distances, in a single round. Until now, this could only be accomplished through two independent munitions. The patented design allows velocity and kinetic energy to be adjusted for two design points for close-in and extended range engagements.  As tactical engagements are fluid in nature, the ability to transition from close to extended range in a single round, while providing point of aim, point of impact accuracy and energy is an industry first.

The 40mm Tactical 4-Shot Launcher (Model 1440) in a black anodized finish will be available in the second quarter this year with an MSRP of $1,899.00. The 40mm eXact iMpact Adjustable Range Round and 40mm Direct Impact Adjustable Range Round (Models 6325-A, 6320-A, 6322-A, 6323-A and 6326-A) available in the first quarter this year, will be offered  in the $29.00 to $35.50 MSRP range, depending upon payload.

Visit booth #12762 at the 2016 SHOT Show for a presentation.

About Defense Technology

Defense Technology® has a long history of providing less lethal solutions for the law enforcement market to protect life and restore the peace. With a complete line of duty aerosols, less lethal impact munitions, crowd management products and tactical deployment devices, Defense Technology products are designed to provide proven, less lethal tools to maximize safety and minimize injury.  Defense Technology is a part of The Safariland Group family of brands. For more information, visit www.safariland.com/defensetechnology.  

 About The Safariland Group

The Safariland Group is a premier global provider of trusted, innovative, high-quality law enforcement and security products for the public safety, military and outdoor recreation/personal protection markets. Offering many of the world’s most recognizable names in these markets, principal brands include Safariland®, ABA®, Second Chance®, Bianchi®, Break Free® and Mustang Survival®. Forensics brands include Identicator® and NIK®. The Safariland Group’s mission, Together, We Save Lives™, is inherent in the lifesaving products it delivers. The Safariland Group has its headquarters in Jacksonville, FL.

The Safariland Group is a trade name of Safariland, LLC.

Source: http://www.thegearlocker.net/2016/01/4892/

The director of the 13 Hours: “We were just saying the facts.”

The director of the 13 Hours movie, director Michael Bay, was asked about alleged political connotations inserted into a film which tells the story of the 2012 Benghazi attacks. His stunning answer comes in just six words:

“We were just saying the facts.”

Michael Bay was hosted at the Fox News Channel on Tuesday night. After said that the movie had received praise from those on both sides of the political spectrum, his host Bill O’Reilly started questions session.

“You didn’t even mention Hillary Clinton in the movie, did you?” O’Reilly asked after contending criticism the film is political was “unfair.”

“No, we did not,” the director said. “We were just saying the facts.”

“Here’s the thing,” Bay added. “The politics got in the way of this great human story that happened. And this is really to honor these type of men who do this every day, who put themselves in harms way — that’s what this movie is about.”

His host O’Reilly pressed him further.

“OK, but it makes the Muslims fanatics look terrible, villainous, awful, savages. And a lot of people object to that, you know?” he said.

“Well, they attacked. They attacked,” Bay replied. “This is the way I was told. This was the way it was written by the five guys on the ground.”

13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi recounts the true life events of six members of a security team who were sent to defend the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, after waves of terrorist attacks and siege which followed on September 11, 2012.

The overall story about Benghazi attacks was very painful for Americans and especially for the politicians, as the public opinion was that government reaction was awful. Some people going further, claiming that members of American diplomatic mission in Benghazi were literally betrayed, but still these are only speculations and rumors.

Source Article from http://www.special-ops.org/15710/the-director-of-the-13-hours-we-were-just-saying-the-facts.html

Romtes Short Circuit Targets

This isn’t Johnny 5, but these short circuit targets will let you know they are not alive after you put 5 in the A box.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/romtes-short-circuit-targets/

KRISS Vector 9mm

Did you think the vector was cool in .45? Well now they have one in 9mm in several different flavors. Taste the rainbow.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/kriss-vector-9mm/

Delta P Design Suppressors

Made from some of the best stuff on earth,Titanium and Inconel, but you won’t hear the Snap…ple.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/delta-p-suppressors/

Fix it Sticks

They’re sticks that fix things. What’s not to like? Light, portable, modular tools that are useful for just about anything!

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/fix-it-sticks/

Cobalt Kinetics Space Guns

Taking the trophy as the sexiest and cobaltiest guns at range day, these rifles have a number of features that are ideal for hard core competition shooters!

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/cobalt-kinetics-space-guns/

ESEE Knives

1095 carbon steel knives with a no questions asked, transferable lifetime warranty. What’s not to like about that?

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/esee-knives/

Mile High Shooting Accessories

Full service shop for just about any long range needs you may have. Sweet complete takedown rifles fit in a back pack.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/mile-high-shooting-accessories/

Faxon ARAK 21 FSL

The guys from Faxon are throwing states with an assault weapons ban a bone and releasing a Fifty State Legal (FSL) rifle.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/faxon-arak-21-fsl/

Lone Wolf, Alpha Wolf, Wolf Pack of Awesome

Lone Wolf makes lots of accessories for GLOCK based firearms. We have featured their conversion barrels in the past. They also make replacement barrels if you’re looking to shoot lead ammo or just shot out your old barrel.

However a whole new reason to buy barrels has been growing in popularity. Suppressed guns are growing in popularity the same way slide serration and RMR’s took over the EDC market. With Michigan recently allowing hunting with a suppressor you can expect to see an even bigger push to suppressed guns and this includes handguns.

Broken down with a Raven Concealment VG2 Advanced.
Broken down with a Raven Concealment VG2 Advanced.

With the SilencerCo fight the noise campaign, the hearing protection act and the countless gun groups going to battle for your right to have hearing safe shooting now is a perfect time to pick up that sexy suppressor.

IMG_2015
Original vs Alpha Wolf Threaded.

In line with this we have been working with a few different Silencer companies to start to bring suppressor reviews to our humble blog. The first step in this process was securing guns capable of running suppressors.

After I heard Lone Wolf was providing some barrels for booth guns in conjunction with Innovative GunFighter Solutions out of Wixom I had to get my hands on one.

The Alpha Wolf is offered in the same configurations as their standard barrels, standard length, threaded and conversion. However much like the R type versions of popular sedans the similarities stop there.

The Alpha Wolf represents the premiere brand for Lone Wolf offering tighter tolerance, higher quality and increased precision.

  • PROUDLY MADE IN THE USA!!
  • Fits all GLOCK generations
  • Designed for lead, plated, or jacketed ammunition
  • Certified, stress relieved 416 stainless steel
  • Button rifled, three stage honed bore
  • Industry recognized SBN premium coating (SBN is Salt Bath Nitride, similar to Tennifer)
  • Heat treated to RC 40-42, then SBN coating increases surface hardness to RC 60
  • Exacting tolerances allow for drop in installation
  • Fluting creates path for heat and debris to escape
  • Threaded models come with appropriate thread protector installed

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Lucid Optics Scopes

Lucid has a few new optics coming out this year, a 1-6x and a fixed 4x that have a really cool blue reticle. They also have a new spotting scope.

Source Article from http://welikeshooting.com/featured/lucid-optics-scopes/

I’ve talked with a spree killer…

I’ve talked with a spree killer…

That’s an odd thing to acknowledge having stood face to face with a man who has killed now seven people and an eighth’s life still far from certain.

What did we speak of? Guns… I was working so, of course, we talked about guns. I do that with dozens of people each day. I’ve spoken with and taught thousands of people at this point, and one thing about Dalton stands in stark contrast right now.

He was entirely unremarkable in any regard I can recall. I barely remember his face (it was his Uber picture that sparked familiarity), and that generally corresponds with a run of the mill conversation about any given firearms topic…

Nothing stood out.

I’ve spoken with people who throw up red flags. People who want to bury guns in some remote location to fight the “U.N. invasion”. People who you can tell immediately will fail a background investigation. People who project everything about themselves by their mannerisms, body language, and topics of conversation have been face to face with me across a counter, and I read deeply.

I’ve spoken to bigots and morons, and they are the minority, but they do exist… and they’re annoyingly loud about it.

Dalton, however, nothing stood out like I said. No oozing feeling of evil intent. No “creepy vibes”.

This close to home attack, both socially and geographically, has driven home a sharp point. You cannot predict evil. Good people do not understand evil. It is a more foreign and alien concept than any other in our lives. Political disagreement, even vastly differing views that result in heated debate and anger don’t begin to touch on the disparity of good and evil.

We cannot understand it, not truly, so we cannot predict it. That leaves good people with only one viable option.

We must react to it.

We cannot know where or when so it must be wherever and whenever. We must be ready to act with the virtue and righteousness of good people. Be ready to aid the injured, to comfort the mourning, to protect ourselves and each other, and to communicate as best able to warn each other.

And in that moment of tragic necessity, you should be ready to get violent.

Evil in this regard is not only foreign, alien, and terrifying; it is force laid bare. How do you react? How do you respond to that evil if it is right in front of you?

I can’t answer that for you. My answer is mine alone. I can share with you my answer and give my advice, but I do not choose for you.

But whatever your answer and in whatever form it takes make it a serious one. Do not ground it in hope or a fanciful notion of what you wish would or could happen. Answers to emergencies must be grounded in real solutions to effect the real situation… The hope of peace is a beautiful thing, but it is not a course of action.

Given the known facts of Dalton’s spree, it is entirely baseless and pointless to say either of the asinine arguments “get rid of guns” or “should have had a gun” they are equally intellectually empty and serve only to anger the political opposites. Just look at Facebook for six seconds.

Mourn the fallen.

Comfort the living.

Show kindness still to your neighbors.

And in the face of true unpredictable evil choose now, today, this very moment, choose to act. Whatever that action may be, cover, defense, escape, evade, evacuate, aid, or intervene. Act with purpose, decisiveness, and intelligence.

I’ve chosen for me and again only me, I choose for no one else. I chose 10 years ago.

In the face of Evil, of force terrifyingly laid bare before me, if I am alive, I will act.

And it will be violent.

Source Article from http://248shooter.com/index.php/ive-talked-with-a-spree-killer/

Riot Control Grenades

Riot control grenades take two basic forms, chemical and kinetic. Chemical grenades are designed to emit fumes that irritate or disable to the extent that they prevent persons from carrying out a chosen course of action, i.e. they quell rioters. The primary requirement demanded of such agents is that they irritate or disable, but also that they do no permanent damage. For many years, the chosen irritant agent in riot control  was tear gas, a relatively harmless substance that des little more than bring tears to the eyes and impart a general feeling of choking and helplessness. Tear gas  is now generally known as CN, but its proper chemical name is alpha chloroacetophenone.

Easily dispersed

The most significant failing of tear gas soon discovered once it had entered service as a riot.control agent was found to be that in the open area its vapour cloud generally dispersed so readily and so quickly that the tear gas  mist easily lost its disabling properties. Tear gas was also relatively easy to tolerate, especially after some experience of the substance and many fit young people could, therefore, carry on their disorderly activities after exposure to CN with only a minimum of inconvenience. Inside a building it was often another matter entirely as the wall, roof and floor of the building helped to contain the tear gas mist at a concentration that was still incapacitating, but in the open tear gas east soon seen to be relatively inefficient in its primary task as an anti-riot weapon. During the early 1950s, therefore, a new and more effective and persistent agent was demanded as a successor to tear gas. This led to the suggestion that e new chemical, rejoicing in the chemical name of orthocklorobenzalmalononltrile, be employed as an alternative to tearing gas with superior disabling capabilities.

Riot control units with special weapons

It was not long before this new substance was given the handier appellation CS. CS is normally a solid substance, but on contact with air forms a white or light grey vapour cloud with a general odour od pepper, and, for this reason, CS is sometimes known as pepper gas. He vapour can induce the usual tears, but with the addition of a general choking  sensation and a difficulty in breathing. The effect is distinctly unpleasant and experience has revealed that high concentrations of CS  can cause nausea and vomiting. To add to its effects, CS can be persistent, especially if vapour droplets adhere to clothing. CS is not totally disabling, however, and there are no long-term physical effects. CS was first used during the late 1950s and was soon found to be a remarkably efficient method of breaking up mobs. At first, the prime method of delivering the agent was the hand grenade, in exactly the same fashion that had been used previously for tear gas and smoke. While these grenades were easy to manufacture and use, they suffered from the same drawbacks as the earlier grenades: it took time for the vapour cloud to build up, range was limited by the strength of the thrower (who thereby came well into missile range of the offending crowd), and the grenades could readily be picked up by an adventurous rioter and thrown back. A redesign of the basic CS grenade has therefore taken place.

New grenade design

Modern CS grenades nearly all contain small multiple containers or pellets to emit the CS fumes. As it lands, the grenade body scatters these small containers or pellets (the British L11A1 grenade releases 23 pellets, for example) over a wide area, and the emission period is usually short so that any container or pellet thrown back by a rioter has little or no effect. The other design point is that it is now very rare for CS grenades to be thrown, for they are generally projected using a small propellant charge from a launcher to a range of 100 m (110 yards) or more the launcher usually being some type  of riot gun. When riot guns are used, the usual diameter of the grenade is 37-mm (1.456-in) but this is now generally regarded as being too small and the British army has opted for a grenade diameter of 66-mm (2.6-in) and uses a specialised launcher, the Grenade Discharger L1A1, rather than a riot gun to fire the grenade. CS is not the only modern form of the irritant agent, but it is certainly the type that is most widely used. Other irritant agents include mild hallucinogenic agents that impart a temporary feeling of panic or fear, but the use of such agent is disapproved by many on humanitarian grounds, and such weapons may thus be of the double-edged type, generating adverse publicity of more significance than any real advantage gained on basic riot-control terms. Moreover, some of these ‘mind’ agents have a nasty habit of being just as effective on their users as on their intended targets, even when a respirator is being used. Most police and para-military respirators are limited in their effectiveness, providing protection only against CS and CN, and some powerful modern agents could overcome the protective properties of such  equipment.

Kinetic grenades

Humanitarian considerations also come to the fore when kinetic grenades are considered. These are usually the baton rounds or the infamous ‘rubber bullets’ that are used to disable by stunning. Kinetic projectiles of this type were first mooted during the 1950s, when it started to become clear to authorities in several countries that the last-ditch but yet effective control of riots demanded not conventional firearms, whose use would lead to severe wounds and deaths, and therefore to a mass of adverse publicity, but rather something that was more powerful than the standard irritant agents in use at that time. At first disabling missiles of several types were considered,  these ranging from lead shot in thick bags to heavy rubber rings. Such munitions were usually fired from ordinary riot guns, but  it was  not long before the baton round is its present form appeared. At first wooden projectiles were used, but these were soon discarded as they were prone to splintering and causing the type of nasty wounds that drew adverse publicity. Then for some time rubber was used before it was discovered that under certain circumstances rubber was also likely to cause injuries that were too severe. The current baton rounds are flat-ended PVC slugs that are not as heavy as rubber but are nonetheless likely to impart a powerful blow on the recipient.

Occasional lethality

It cannot be denied that baton rounds can and indeed to cause serius injuries if used at very close ranges, and have also caused a nnumber of deaths. They are also very inaccurate and often have to be used as area weapons rather than as point target weapons. But around of this type can prove effective in breaking up hostile crowds, and when used with extreme care they can even disable ringleaders of a riot or other troublesome individuals. They can certainly keep crowds out of hand-thrown missile range. Espite this, the use of baton rounds has often resulted in a great public outery against their employment. But in the absence of anything better the baton round is an established anti-riot munition.

Source Article from http://www.special-ops.org/15694/riot-control-grenades.html

MeWe Founder Comments on Apple vs FBI


Mark Weinstein may not be a name you recognize but he is likely a name that has affected your life in the last 60 days. Mark is the CEO and founder of MeWe.

MeWe is not in the business of politics or censorship of law-abiding citizens, and has a clear Terms of Service that defines “acceptable use” and it is quite rigorous. And yes, absolutely the law-breakers, haters, and violence inciters, are to be dislodged, disinvited and banned, and that is what they do at MeWe. But not the law-abiders – that is the rub here. MeWe is for good, law-abiding Americans and world citizens. Censorship of law-abiding citizens is profoundly un-American, regardless whether one agrees or disagrees with an individual or group’s hobbies and legal activities.

Censorship is a slippery slope – as history and now most recently Facebook has demonstrated. What are tomorrow’s conversations that Mark Zuckerberg politicizes on Facebook and then censors those who oppose his views? Facebook has harassed and censored law-abiding people and groups who are concerned about GMOs in food, pro medical marijuana, against vaccines, sportsman and hunters, etc. They are censoring members based on Zuckerberg’s latest new opinion. That’s offensive to the very principles of our Constitution and freedom of speech in America.

You can see Mark understands the need for pricvacy and the expectation of the 4th amendment in our digital world via the below article printed on the Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-weinstein/fbi-vs-apple-defining-our_b_9260606.html

The landmark battleground lines have been drawn in the fight between the government and the private sector regarding encryption technology. The FBI wants to get into the technology business. Wait, strike that. They want to get into our business by cracking the code and being handed the key to unlock the heretofore-impenetrable privacy technology that protects our business, all of it. As Americans we cannot let this come to pass. It violates the essence of our democracy — our right to privacy.
But let’s step back for a moment. The recent, senseless terrorist tragedies in San Bernardino, Paris and so many places, are mind benders. In their investigation of the San Bernardino attack, the FBI, understandably, wants to look under ever rock to prevent anything similar from occurring in the future. Hence, the court order demanding that Apple create a technology to crack the code on their encryption technology to assist the FBI’s investigation; which includes iPhones with protected data the FBI cannot currently access.
Encryption protects us. That’s not just me ranting either. Back in July of 2015, some of the world’s top security technologists said the same thing, concluding that governments shouldn’t have special access to encrypted communications. Doing so would put the world in a whole lot of danger and give governments the kind of information that can be used nefariously to threaten, cleanse, control, prejudice, and violate their citizenry.
The Information Technology Industry Council (ITI), recognized as the global voice of the tech sector, agreed, declaring the following: “Encryption is a security tool we rely on everyday to stop criminals from draining our bank accounts, to shield our cars and airplanes from being taken over by malicious hacks, and to otherwise preserve our security and safety.”
That sounds pretty good to me. So does our Constitution’s Fourth Amendment. And for that matter you can throw in the United Nations Declaration of Rights, which states: “No citizen should be subjected to arbitrary interference of their privacy, family, home or correspondence.” Sure, okay, but that’s just the United Nations, right? Who cares?
We all must care. Make no mistake about it. This is a battle for our nation’s very soul. Victory is not an option but rather the only course, which is why it requires a general to lead us. This individual must be a voice of reason, savvy in technology, a scholar of constitutional law, and a defender of humanity. He must be willing to stand up for Americans and people the world over. Does such a person exist? The answer is a resounding “yes.” That man is Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Cook has taken what could have been a behind-the-scenes conversation and government demand about surveillance and placed it onto a national forum. Specifically, the FBI wants Apple to change its iPhone operating system, not to make it a better experience for users, but rather to make it an easier experience for the government to hack straight through a rogue back door to get your information. As Cook aptly explains, while the FBI portends that this is a one-time hack — the reality would be unimaginably and likely catastrophically far greater.
In an open letter to Apple’s customers, Cook outlines the situation in no uncertain terms. Smartphones are an essential part of our lives where people store a lot of personal information. Apple’s job is to protect that information from criminals. To date it has done that very well. If you remove that ownership and management from Apple and give it to the FBI, you take away Apple’s ability to control the situation. You breach the trust between Cook’s company and the consumer. You basically call into question the credibility of all business.
Do you really want to trust the government to be responsible as the gatekeeper and key master to your information? Did we learn nothing from Snowden and the NSA’s travails? As Cook points out, if you open Pandora’s Box here, you give anyone the potential to unlock any phone. That’s not a back door as the government projects it. It’s a multi-lane interstate freeway, a technology Autobahn for bad people to access your life. There simply isn’t any way to guarantee control, responsible handling, or accountability.
As Cook writes, information is only as secure as the protections around it. The government contends it would only use such an invasive tool once on one phone. “Trust me,” says the ghost of Richard Nixon. No thank you. If you create a master key, then all doors become vulnerable, not just the one you use it on. Every privacy policy listed anywhere simply becomes an exaggeration of the truth if not an outright lie. You’re not just giving the good guys access; you’re giving everyone a back door. It is absurd to think that the keys to the proverbial kingdom of information would somehow remain sacrosanct. Heck, the Pentagon is not even immune to hacks by the Chinese and Russians.
Our government would have you believe that such access is the difference between life and death for countless American lives. Yet the FBI admitted last year that the Patriot Act’s invasive snooping powers didn’t crack a single major terrorism plot. In 2014 I attended a conference where James Dempsey, Board Member, PCLOB (The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board), stated that “after 14 years of analyzing the nation’s phone call data collected because of section 215 of the Patriot Act (telephone metadata program), not even one terrorist or plot was discovered that wasn’t already known.”
So it’s not even a debate about the greater good as it is about the no good that comes from the FBI’s good intentions. As Cook says, “We can find no precedent for an American company being forced to expose its customers to a greater risk of attack. For years, cryptologists and national security experts have been warning against weakening encryption. Doing so would hurt only the well-meaning and law-abiding citizens who rely on companies like Apple to protect their data. Criminals and bad actors will still encrypt, using tools that are readily available to them.”
Remember during the McCarthy Era when we hunted down American citizens with rumors and hidden agendas? There was no precedent for such behavior. It went against the core of being American. Cook correctly points out that there is no precedent here either in using American business to expose customers to a greater risk of attack. We aren’t and can never be a totalitarian state.
If we give in here, where does it all end? It doesn’t. As Cook writes: “The government could extend this breach of privacy and demand that Apple build surveillance software to intercept your messages, access your health records or financial data, track your location, or even access your phone’s microphone or camera without your knowledge.”
America is a beacon to the world in freedoms of thought, action, and speech. We may not always agree with the results or see eye to eye with the ideas, but we defend the laws of our land and our rights as people.
Peggy Noonan has referred to our privacy as being connected to personhood. It’s how we think and feel about the world around us. So what happens when we know the government can see and read those thoughts? They no longer belong to us. We just become projections of what we think others reading it want to hear. Cook wants to protect our privacy not as an Apple advocate, but as an honorable American and wise human being. That’s why people such as Edward Snowden, and perhaps the king of data, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, are coming to his defense. Cook is to be commended for leading this war for all of us, a war we must help him win.
Steve Jobs handpicked Tim Cook to lead Apple, and by doing so, he may have left his most important mark on human civilization for years to come. Not because of the product rollout Cook has presided over, though that in itself is quite impressive. Rather, Tim Cook is heroic for his courage, integrity, and his standing for what defines our nation. Tim Cook is a great American. We must all rise, put our petty political differences aside, and take a stand with him for the good of our nation and the future of humanity.
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