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  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Monday, November 14, 2011 8:32 PM

Yep, think of all the work it would save if one person fell for it....

Amazon is a bit of a pill sometimes. I've seen the same item 's price go up and down % 500 in  a month. I mean the SAME item, from the same seller. These guys set web bots that report back when there's "chatter", like on this forum, and the price goes right up. Report that you just got a box of them at a fire sale, price goes down....

Over in Shipmodelforum we were having fun with the "definitive" Arizona book by Stillwell. Price went from $ 100 to about $ 350-$700 depending. Finally I got tired of it and called Honolulu, talked to a sweet lady at the Memorial gift shop and got one new in shrink wrap (long OOP) for $ 60.00 list plus shipping. Reported back to the other mates that they had two more. Amazon next day- $ 65.00.

Yeah I know, shudda bought all three and kept my trap shut, but I'm not like that....Devil

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Sunday, November 13, 2011 1:01 PM

PT Barnum knew why...Wink

  • Member since
    February 2007
Posted by mitsdude on Saturday, November 12, 2011 6:11 PM

I know Amazon isnt ebay but many here shop both.

I've noticed some sellers on Amazon list a really insane price on a book like $999 when most others sellers of that same book are below $100. Why do they do this?

 

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Friday, November 11, 2011 9:06 PM

Forgot to mention that I bought "started" kit (Italeri GMC Duece & a Half) and was quite surpised at it when I opened it... 

First, It wasn't in the box, rather the kit-box was in another box, which was in turn in the shipping box...  Some parts were glued together, some others had paint on them, and there were loose parts all over the place... However, by the time I got the sprues sorted out, separated, and inventoried,  I discovered that I had not one, not two, but three complete (almost, anyway)  kits of the truck in that box...  Some easily replaced parts were missing, like a gear shift and a steering colum, and I had to resin-cast two front tires and their wheels)

11.00 bucks, shipped...

Another time, I found two complete Sherman ARV kits in one box of a "Started" kit... One was started, the other hadn't been touched, still bagged...

That one was around 16.00 IIRC... 

'Course, there WAS that Monogram Corsair too... I actually missed the words "Started" in my zeal to have found one with the original 1960s box-art... And for a 1.50 bid, won it... Shipping was four or five bucks...

Opened it, and it was a mess... Silver paint all over it, wing mid-sections were glued together with tube glue, intakes on wrong wings, canopy with glue smears, couple broken parts... You get the idea..

The only thing that was salvagable was the prop...  Which turned out to be a good thing, since I ended up using it to replace a P-47D prop since my cat decided that Hamilton-Standard prop blades were fun to chew on, and left my Jug's prop with two blades a full scale-foot shorter than the other two...

Then there was the "Baa-Baa Black Sheep" F4U-1 that I got as a "started kit"... I took a hit on that one... 25.00 and it was so effed-up with a rattle-can gloss blue that I DX'd it right after I opened it up, 'cept for the engine and prop...

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Huntington, WV
Posted by Kugai on Friday, November 11, 2011 3:51 PM

Rob Gronovius

I agree that started kits are often quite a steal, yet it is always "buyer beware". 

I almost never get pre-started kits, and when I have it's either been part of a lot with other stuff I wanted or had pictures of the sprues I could check to see if everything's there on a very rare kit.

My luckiest buy was a lot of FineMolds Star Wars kits that included a pre-started 1:72 X-Wing.  I figured the rest of the set would be worth it ( won the auction for less than half the best retail prices I could find for the unstarted kits) and in my usual "hope for the best, plan for the worst" thinking expected the started one to be useful for parts at best.  It turned out that whoever had started the kit had actually done a great job on it, no mixed-up parts or anything else that would need to be fixed.  I honestly couldn't see any reason why someone would have sold something that they did so well on starting off, but I'm not going to complain about a nicely pre-started spare.

http://i712.photobucket.com/albums/ww122/randysmodels/No%20After%20Market%20Build%20Group/Group%20Badge/GBbadge2.jpghttp://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y211/razordws/GB%20Badges/WMIIIGBsmall.jpg

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Thursday, November 10, 2011 11:28 PM

Oh, absolutley it's "Buyer Beware".  I always contact the seller and ask what's actually been "started" and how far they went,  is there paint on anything, if they inventoried the kit with the instruction sheet, etc... Sometimes those kits are put out there by folks who haven't a clue about models... So ya gotta "help" them out...

I too learned the hard way on a "Started" kit... It was an M109A2 (Testor's/Italeri) and the turret was built, poorly, and I had a tough time un-effing it...  The seller failed to mention that the kit had been built that far, only that it had been "opened"... 

 

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Thursday, November 10, 2011 9:23 PM

I agree that started kits are often quite a steal, yet it is always "buyer beware". I've scored great deals on "started" kits that weren't started on all per se. They just had several main parts removed from sprues for dry fitting. Technically, someone started, but never put glue to plastic.

Other times I've gotten massively constructed projects that got away from the original builder. Only one time did I think I overpaid, on a Tamiya T-72, but since I had scored the Verlinden hull and turret for a song, the started kit contained virtually everything I needed that was untouched.

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Thursday, November 10, 2011 12:14 PM

ajlafleche

 Hans von Hammer:

any showing of a Hakenkruez is a no-no..  

 

I just did a quick search for "Bf 109" and at least a third to half had clearly visible Hakenkruez on their tailfins, including models. boxart and book covers. .

I know, it doesn't apply that kinda stuff.. I meant 1933-45 German military items that have the Hakenkruez on them, like insignia, medals, badges, etc...... 

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Bethlehem PA
Posted by the Baron on Thursday, November 10, 2011 11:36 AM

ajlafleche

 Hans von Hammer:

any showing of a Hakenkruez is a no-no..  

 

I just did a quick search for "Bf 109" and at least a third to half had clearly visible Hakenkruez on their tailfins, including models. boxart and book covers. .

Hi, Al, I think eBay relies on user complaints, to enforce the policy, that is, you have to flag the auction as offensive, and they'll follow up.  Kind of like the Stasi used to do.

The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.

 

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Massachusetts
Posted by ajlafleche on Thursday, November 10, 2011 10:56 AM

Hans von Hammer

any showing of a Hakenkruez is a no-no..  

I just did a quick search for "Bf 109" and at least a third to half had clearly visible Hakenkruez on their tailfins, including models. boxart and book covers. .

Remember, if the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy.

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Thursday, November 10, 2011 10:26 AM

Rob Gronovius

I agree with Bondo, if you see a flood of formerly hard-to-find kits that once went for big bucks, rest assured a re-release or even a new tooled, more up-to-date kit is coming soon.

Believe it or not, those of you who only visit this site are fairly well behind the power curve in terms of learning about the latest and greatest kits coming down the pipe. Many of the other sites have modelers who are involved in the research and development of models and discussion begins, test shots shown long before a kit even becomes available for pre-order or news worthy.

Heh.. THAT'S when I get happy... I'm tickled that the bottom drops out of those kits, since I'm so far removed from the "Latest & Greatest" crowd that I'd need a Keyhole-Sat to see 'em...  Just wish Revell would get new molds for their 1/32 Mitsubishi "Jack" so the bottom would drop on what is about the rarest kit in their entire 1/32 line-up... 'Course, the bids start at around 20.00 when the kit appears, but it only takes a couple days and the bids are up to 100.00 or more...   Damn collectors ruin it for builders...

I've had issues trying to sell WW2 German stuff there,  since any showing of a Hakenkruez is a no-no.. I understand their point, but then again, "editing" the Hakenkruez out is PITA, and I often wonder how many buyers pased it up because of the "edit" (read: Censor)...   I've had badges kicked back even though I'd censored the symbol... I think it's a personal decison made by some various minimum wage clowns that have no knowlege of what's going on, since sometimes they fly, and sometimes they don't...  Been trying to unload an Infantry Assault Badge for two years without success, and it's browning me off... THAT one gets kicked back EVERY time...

However, I digress...

I've sold on bay for a long time, made a pretty fair bit of coin, but turn around an sink it back into models, lol.. So, yah.... "EvilBay", for me anyway,  comes from the fact that it sucks away my money quicker 'n one of my ex-wives... 

Rob: If I'm not getting the kit for 40-60% off of retail, I'm not bidding. That percentage includes shipping. I'm not going to try to bid on something that delivered would be marginally less than buying it locally.

Big ditto... I'm as cheap a bassige as they come, and I ain't paying close to retail for anything on Ebay...
I hunt for Monogram, Hawk, Lindberg, Frog, Arii, Otaki, and the like, but I use Ebay's Search Parameters to do it...

I just set the search for something like, "Monogram, 1/48, Airplanes, and set the search price at .99 to 19.99"... Then I click the Email Notification option, and Ebay sends me a list of sellers with kits everyday that match those parameters...

If it's over 19.99, I ain't interested in hearing about it...  'Course, there ARE exceptions, but generally, those emails are enough...  But I managed to get three kits last month for that price, in one lot... 1/48 Frog kits, a Jack, Oscar, and Frank... With shipping, it came to about 28.00, but that kinda deal is what I'm talking about with Ebay..

All the Trumpeter, Tamiya, Dragon, and Hasegawa stuff I got is from good ol' kit-huntin' though... They cheaply-priced higher-end kits are in there, you just gotta look...

And don't "poo-poo" kits that have been started... I nailed a number "started" kits over the years for 10-15% of what an unbuilt, sealed copy of it sells for, and most of them have only a couple parts glued, and some other sparts may be off the sprues, sure.... Some have a bit more done but generally, ain't much wrong with 'em...  Decals might be missing (spares box or AM fixes that), or some paint might have to covered up or removed (Soak in Simple Green cleaner overnight), but most of us have had to do that with our OWN kits anyway, at some point...

Evilbay is Okay...

 

 

 

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Huntington, WV
Posted by Kugai on Thursday, November 10, 2011 1:36 AM

bondoman

 

 Kugai:

 

As far as the prices aspect some have mentioned, the only times I've regretted paying a lot for a kit was when a re-release came out later on.

 

In fact, so much so that I have come to the conclusion that if you see a sudden flood of old kits of a certain subject, there must be a re-release just around the corner.

I've seen that a few times, especially with Star Trek kits.  Since the incident with the Monster, I've started looking for any hints outside of eBay of re-pops of certain kits.

http://i712.photobucket.com/albums/ww122/randysmodels/No%20After%20Market%20Build%20Group/Group%20Badge/GBbadge2.jpghttp://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y211/razordws/GB%20Badges/WMIIIGBsmall.jpg

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Wednesday, November 9, 2011 12:10 PM

I agree with Bondo, if you see a flood of formerly hard-to-find kits that once went for big bucks, rest assured a re-release or even a new tooled, more up-to-date kit is coming soon.

Believe it or not, those of you who only visit this site are fairly well behind the power curve in terms of learning about the latest and greatest kits coming down the pipe. Many of the other sites have modelers who are involved in the research and development of models and discussion begins, test shots shown long before a kit even becomes available for pre-order or news worthy.

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Wednesday, November 9, 2011 9:38 AM

Kugai

As far as the prices aspect some have mentioned, the only times I've regretted paying a lot for a kit was when a re-release came out later on.

In fact, so much so that I have come to the conclusion that if you see a sudden flood of old kits of a certain subject, there must be a re-release just around the corner.

Plastic models aren't so bad, because they're not easy to counterfeit and are cheap to begin with. Sure, there's the occasional "empty box" story. But in other things like fashion, accessories and jewelry; watch out. Even by eBay's own estimates, well over half of the stuff like Juicy Couture clothes or Hermes scarves or Fossil watches is possibly counterfeit. Usually it's not too hard to tell, from the price which is about half what it should be. There's a bunch of tips on the site worth reading through.

  • Member since
    August 2003
  • From: Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan
Posted by bilbirk on Wednesday, November 9, 2011 12:43 AM

I think its called Evil Bay because of the evil we create. I go through the items and see all kinds of models I just have to have! It makes me evil! I have scored some great models on there with really low bids. I think one of my best scores was the Trumpeter 1/35 Leopold  for $50! That was a couple years ago though cause now it seems like all the items are Buy it now which I don't bother with.

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Huntington, WV
Posted by Kugai on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 11:50 PM

Aside from the "too easy to spend money there" reasoning, I'd say the "evilBay" thing comes from good, old-fashioned remembering the bad experiences more than good ones.

One of the things that might be too obvious is to check is the feedback on the seller.  That can give a heads-up on potential problems from other people's experiences.  The few times a problem came up with something not arriving, the seller was willing to make up for it to my satisfaction.

As far as the prices aspect some have mentioned, the only times I've regretted paying a lot for a kit was when a re-release came out later on.  The biggest example I can think of was the 1:200 scale HWR-00 from Macross that I won for an $80 bid.  About 6 months later the kit was re-issued for the first time in 20+ years for $20.  I figure that the other bargains I've found ( sometimes after waiting for months for a good deal on a particular kit ) have more than made up for that.

http://i712.photobucket.com/albums/ww122/randysmodels/No%20After%20Market%20Build%20Group/Group%20Badge/GBbadge2.jpghttp://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y211/razordws/GB%20Badges/WMIIIGBsmall.jpg

  • Member since
    June 2007
  • From: Oakbank, MB
Posted by GregFK on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 11:37 AM

www.snipeswipe.com

 

I have used it for years and it has NEVER let me down. I think they still offer your first trial snipe for free too!

  • Member since
    April 2010
  • From: Green Bay, WI
Posted by redraider56 on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 11:37 AM

Had me an interesting experience recently with ebay.  I won a Verlinden update set for the 1/48 B-17 for $17, and I was pretty happy since retail is around $30.  I waited a week and it didnt ship, but the guy said he usually ships the first weekend after the auction ends, so I figured it would ship that weekend.  He emails and said he apologizes for being late and that he'll ship it first thing monday morning.  Before ya know it, saturday rolls around and it still hasn't shipped so I contact him about it.  He gets back to me saying he can't find the set because he has a big stash and it must've gotten somewhere and he doesn't feel like searching through everything.  I was disappointed at this point, but then he said he gave me a full refund and then said asked what scale I was in to since he would be sending something out for free.  So, now I'm waiting to see what he's gonna send

-Matt

On The Bench: 1/48 HK B-17G "Man-O-War II"

On Deck: 1/48 Tamiya P-38H, 1/48 Revell PV-1

 

 

 

  • Member since
    June 2010
  • From: Austin, TX
Posted by DoogsATX on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 11:16 AM

Hmm...this snipe thing is relevant to my interests...

Anybody got another reco besides bidslammer? Their site is hating me.

On the Bench: 1/32 Trumpeter P-47 | 1/32 Hasegawa Bf 109G | 1/144 Eduard MiG-21MF x2

On Deck:  1/350 HMS Dreadnought

Blog/Completed Builds: doogsmodels.com

 

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 10:13 AM

Here's how snipes work for me. You see the item you want. It's worth $ 25.00 to you. Subtract the $ 6 that the seller wants for shipping and you set a high limit of $ 19. And if there are multiple auctions over a period of time for the same thing, you can set a group.

When the first auction matures, and you are off at the track or whatever, the bid-slam site puts in a bid for you that's $ 0.50 higher that the current high bid, with about 3-4 seconds left. Unless of course the bidding has already passed your maximum. I've seen all kinds of games sellers play, like hidden reserves and phantom bids, but as long as you set a maximum you can live with, you don't get hurt.

And if you are unsuccessful, your sniper moves onto the next auction. As soon as it wins an item in your group, it stops.

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 8:26 AM

mitsdude

What will really  make you want to throw something across the room is when you hit the final bid confirm  button with 3 seconds left and are informed you need to "login"!!!!!! aarrrrrrggggghhhh.

Here's a hint, randomly chose something to add to your watch list a couple minutes before you need to bid. If you are at a point where you need to re-log in, you'll get the log in message when you go to watch the other item and not when you go to bid. That way you'll have a "fresh" log in when it's time to bid.

Back in the old days, I remember snipers would bid some insane amount, like in the hundreds, just to better insure a win. I remember two guys doing the exact same thing on the same auction and the item selling for well over a hundred dollars more than it was worth. It may have been the old Ampersand Publishing's Modeler's Guide to the M4 Sherman. I seem to remember the final auction price ending over $200.

As far as fees go, unless you are a dedicated seller with items for sale 365 days a year, eBay offers free listings quite regularly for a finite amount of items. It often lasts an entire month, but sometimes only one day. I plan my auction sales during these time periods.

For example, today only (Nov. 8th) you may list up to 1,000 free auctions. There were identical days with smaller numbers (150, 250) in September and October and will probably be some in December. Like any money making venture, you just need to stay abreast of the market.

  • Member since
    February 2007
Posted by mitsdude on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 2:49 AM

I believe the majority of the negative comments about ebay comes from sellers.

At one time many sellers were upset about all the different fees and fee increases. A fee for listing, a fee for a photo, a percentage of the sell price, a fee for the payment handler, etc.

If you aren't careful you could actually be just giving away what you are selling after all the fees are deducted.

  • Member since
    February 2007
Posted by mitsdude on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 2:28 AM

I'm one of those that waits until the last few seconds (3-4) to bid. Doing it this way limits how far the price can "ping-pong" up to a higher price. You just have to gamble that your bid is the highest when time runs out and the other guys bid doesn't have time to up the ante.

What will really  make you want to throw something across the room is when you hit the final bid confirm  button with 3 seconds left and are informed you need to "login"!!!!!! aarrrrrrggggghhhh.

Also, there have been times when the powers that be decide thats its time for my connection or my system to have a "hiccup" right after I hit the confirm bid button and I get the little rotating arrow!

Some of the best deals I've gotten were those that end in the early AM's as in 2:00 or 3:00.

Mispellings/Iistings can also be your friend. I recently scored a large lot of "Sci-Fi and Fantasy Modeller" magazines because of this mistake.

  • Member since
    March 2003
  • From: Rain USA, Vancouver WA
Posted by tigerman on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 1:20 AM

Rob Gronovius

If I'm not getting the kit for 40-60% off of retail, I'm not bidding. That percentage includes shipping. I'm not going to try to bid on something that delivered would be marginally less than buying it locally.

That's my logic as well.

   http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y269/wing_nut_5o/PANZERJAGERGB.jpg

 Eric 

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Tuesday, November 8, 2011 12:18 AM

Rob Gronovius

 

 ajlafleche:

 

2. Bid once with the maximum you're willing to pay for a given item. Never look back nd NEVER get involved in a bidding war.

 

 

That ensures you are more likely to pay the most for a given item or you get outbid and lose. I agree that you should bid the maximum you're willing to pay, but the way I do it, there's no looking back. I generally bid with 10 to 6 seconds left unless I won't be available at the end of an auction (like asleep, on the road, etc.).

For example, seller lists a $50 kit for $10 + $10 s/h. Let's say your LHS sells it for $50 + 6% sales tax or $53 total out the door. The most you'd like to pay would be less than $53 delivered, because if the final bid was $43, you could get the kit at the store for the same amount and get it right now.

If you place a $40 bid, the opening bid shows $10. A newbie comes by and decides to bid as well. These newbies will up the bid by .50 to a dollar at a time until the price goes out of his range, he loses interest or he finally outbids you.

But if you let the newbie be the first bidder, he's probably going to lowball the bid and maybe only bid $15. Sometimes they just bid the opening amount. Once the kiddies are done playing and upping the bid by nickle and dime amounts, it's either at a high price and you move on to another great deal or they finished messing around and stopped, let's say around $20.

A few minutes before the auction end, you long on and place your $40 bid. Most likely you'll get the item for a minimal amount over the current bid of $20, probably around $21.

If I'm not getting the kit for 40-60% off of retail, I'm not bidding. That percentage includes shipping. I'm not going to try to bid on something that delivered would be marginally less than buying it locally.

If you still actively bid, look into snipes. Bidslammer is the one I used in the past. They cost $ 1 a successful bid, but snipes go on sale two-fer all the time.

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Monday, November 7, 2011 6:31 PM

ajlafleche

2. Bid once with the maximum you're willing to pay for a given item. Never look back nd NEVER get involved in a bidding war.

That ensures you are more likely to pay the most for a given item or you get outbid and lose. I agree that you should bid the maximum you're willing to pay, but the way I do it, there's no looking back. I generally bid with 10 to 6 seconds left unless I won't be available at the end of an auction (like asleep, on the road, etc.).

For example, seller lists a $50 kit for $10 + $10 s/h. Let's say your LHS sells it for $50 + 6% sales tax or $53 total out the door. The most you'd like to pay would be less than $53 delivered, because if the final bid was $43, you could get the kit at the store for the same amount and get it right now.

If you place a $40 bid, the opening bid shows $10. A newbie comes by and decides to bid as well. These newbies will up the bid by .50 to a dollar at a time until the price goes out of his range, he loses interest or he finally outbids you.

But if you let the newbie be the first bidder, he's probably going to lowball the bid and maybe only bid $15. Sometimes they just bid the opening amount. Once the kiddies are done playing and upping the bid by nickle and dime amounts, it's either at a high price and you move on to another great deal or they finished messing around and stopped, let's say around $20.

A few minutes before the auction end, you long on and place your $40 bid. Most likely you'll get the item for a minimal amount over the current bid of $20, probably around $21.

If I'm not getting the kit for 40-60% off of retail, I'm not bidding. That percentage includes shipping. I'm not going to try to bid on something that delivered would be marginally less than buying it locally.

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Monday, November 7, 2011 6:29 PM

ajlafleche

....Bid once with the maximum you're willing to pay for a given item. Never look back nd NEVER get involved in a bidding war.

I used to do that by placing snipes. That way you don't have to be there when the auction ends. I've heard complaints that snipes "aren't fair', but then a lot of buyers started using them, so I stopped bidding and stick to buy-it-now. And yes, a lot of the vendors i like online sell stuff on eBay, including OOP stuff they don't list in their regular stores.

It's always worth an eBay search before you buy elsewhere, just like I usually step outside and check prices online on my iPhone before I grab a kit at the LHS.

  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: AusTx, Live Music Capitol of the World
Posted by SteveM on Monday, November 7, 2011 4:48 PM

The nickname might stem from amateur sellers back in the day... I remember when eBay first began enforcing the use of Paypal exclusively. If you preferred an alternate form of payment, this was a problem.

People learned to get around that, if they wanted. Or they just got a Paypal account. I do think I've had a sale listing kick back because I did not designate Paypal for payment.

 

Steve M.

On the workbench: ginormous Kharkov dio

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Massachusetts
Posted by ajlafleche on Monday, November 7, 2011 3:51 PM

So let's recap...Ebay=Evil-bay to some peopel because they can't control themselves. Seems like some people need a refresher course in personal responsibility.

Ebay rules are easy.

1. Check shipping prices BEFORE bidding.

2. Bid once with the maximum you're willing to pay for a given item. Never look back nd NEVER get involved in a bidding war.

3. If there's a Buy It Now option at a reaonable price (including shipping) But It Then.

 

Remember, if the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy.

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