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Cold War GroupBuild 2008 (1/3/08 to 1/3/09).

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  • Member since
    August 2007
  • From: Peterborough, Ontario
Cold War GroupBuild 2008 (1/3/08 to 1/3/09).
Posted by Townsy11 on Monday, February 4, 2008 9:06 PM

Hey Everybody,

Without further adieu, I now present the:

Cold War GB 08 !

 This is an "all fields" GB meaning that all categories of military model building can be entered  Ex. Ships, Planes, Armour, Subs, Heli's and anything else that served in the Armed Forces from 1947 to 1991. The dates will run from March 1, 2008 to March 1, 2009.

The Rules:

1. As mentioned above the subject must fall into one of the categories of military modelling.

2. The subject must be the following:

A) In service with a NATO or Warsaw Pact country.

B) In service between the dates of 1947 and 1991

C) Not involved in any separate "proxy" wars or conflict (No Vietnam, Korea, Arab/Israeli wars, Falklands, Operation Desert Storm etc.)

3. The kit must be unstarted or with a minimum of parts assembled.(As long as there is no paint on it yet.)

4. Any scale, any manufacturer, all after-market parts and scratchbuilding is more than welcome. 

5. Please post pictures if possible.

6.You must complete your build before a badge can be awarded.

7.Multiple entries are not only allowed but encouraged!

8. Crossovers are fine with me.

Participants:

1.Townsy11: Russian T-72b--Zvezda, 1/35

2.Mucker: F-84F--Kinetic, 1/48

3.RaptorDriver: F-105D--Revell, 1/48

4.Jmart: USS Charles F. Adams DDG-2-- Dragon, 1/700

5.Bondoman: AN-12--Roden, 1/72

6.AJB93:USS Orleck 1968-Converted Skywave + USS Laffey 1968-Converted Skywave + USS Oriskany 1968-Converted Trumpeter/scratch + USS America 1968-Italeri + USS John F Kennedy 1971-Converted Italeri 

7.Jeaton01: F-101B --Monogram, 1/48 

8.Aggieman: P2V-7 Neptune-- Hasegawa, 1/72

9.Cdclukey: USS Ticonderoga-- Dragon, 1/350 + Aoshima aircraft carrier Minsk--1/700

10.Squeakie:RF4B --Hasegawa, 1/48

11.Moose421: USS Charles F. Adams-- Dragon, 1/700

12.Dupes: T-55A-- Tamiya, 1/35 + SA-6-- Trumpeter, 1/35 + F111/Mig-19?

13.SMJmodeler: T-55A--Tamiya, 1/35

14.Jthurston: TBD

15.Zokissima: TBD

16.Imperator-Rex: ASW Duguay-Trouin--Heller, 1/400 + USS Dallas-- Revell, 1/400

17.Dostacos: M41 Walker Bulldog--Tamiya, 1/35

18.Simon L: F-86D--Revell, 1/48

19.Telsono: Centurion Mk. 5/2--AFV Club, 1/35

20.Resultsmayvary: XF-85 Goblin--Special Hobby, 1/48

21.Darson: USMC FJ-4B Fury, 1/48 + T-72M1--Tamiya, 1/35

22.Ggatt_2: Supermarine Scimitar-- Dynavector,1/48 + Hunter-- Academy,1/48

23.Anthony2779: T-72M1--Tamiya, 1/35

24.Leonidman: M578--Verlinden, 1/35 + M88A1--AFV Club, 1/35

25.Chewybr: SR-71 Blackbird-- Testors, 1/48

26.Kg4kgp: M-109 Howitzer--

27.Bspeed: TU-22 Blinder-- Esci, 1/72

28.Scode68: M-108--Testors, 1/35

29.Lewbud: BRDM-1/U--Eastern Express, 1/35 + SS-6 --Maquette, 1/144

31.Gzt: Mig-23MF--Italeri, 1/48

32.Dougums: Rockwell B-1B Bomber--Revell-Monogram, 1/48

33.Hellcat Man: M151A2 MUTT--Academy, 1/35 + M551 Sheridan--Academy, 1/35

34.TBloyer: U.S.S. Defiance--?, 1/350

35.BGuy: U-2C--Airfix, 1/72

You can join at any time(before the deadline of course), anybody else wanting to do so, please don't hesitate to ask.

Here are the Badges, one for each category:

(please upload the badge to your own photobucket account so you are using your own bandwidth, thanks.)

Aircraft:

Submarines:

Ships:

Armor:

Helicopters:

Missiles:

Please collect the badge that corresponds with the type of model you are building. 

Alright, this looks like a great GB. Good luck to everyone.

 

Chris,

 

 

"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."-- General George S. Patton
  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Northern California
Posted by jeaton01 on Monday, February 4, 2008 9:46 PM
You can put the 1/48 Monogram F-101B next to my name.  Need one of those in my display.

John

To see build logs for my models:  http://goldeneramodel.com/mymodels/mymodels.html

 

  • Member since
    August 2007
  • From: Peterborough, Ontario
Posted by Townsy11 on Monday, February 4, 2008 10:06 PM
Alrighty John, Will do.
"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."-- General George S. Patton
  • Member since
    April 2007
  • From: Schroon Lake, NY
Posted by SMJmodeler on Monday, February 4, 2008 11:26 PM

Can anyone tell me if a T-55A would qualify for the time period of this GB?

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Los Angeles
Posted by dostacos on Monday, February 4, 2008 11:42 PM
well among others, the Israeli's used the Sherman up through the 80s so would that count? {cast hull 105mm gun}Cool [8D] or even 2 with the Israeli knocking out an Egyptian or Syrian SHERMAN Whistling [:-^]
Dan support your 2nd amendment rights to keep and arm bears!
  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: Maryland
Posted by usmc1371 on Monday, February 4, 2008 11:54 PM

Maybe?  I'll see...

Jesse

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Los Angeles
Posted by dostacos on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 1:33 AM

on a more serious note, would any of these fit your bill

M 24 Chaffee

M 26 Pershing

M 41 Walker Bull Dog 

M 48 Patton

M 60  Patton

 

Dan support your 2nd amendment rights to keep and arm bears!
  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Los Angeles
Posted by dostacos on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 1:38 AM
 SMJmodeler wrote:

Can anyone tell me if a T-55A would qualify for the time period of this GB?

the T-54 was designated the T-55 in 1955, the 1967  6 day war pitted the T 55s against, Israeli Super Shermans {105MM} M 48s & British Centurions.

how about you do a T-55A and I will do an M 60 { the M 60 was developed in part because of the T 55  Smile,Wink, & Grin [swg]

 

Dan support your 2nd amendment rights to keep and arm bears!
  • Member since
    October 2004
  • From: Katy, TX
Posted by jthurston on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 7:56 AM

Townsy, you can put me down for the GB, 1/35 kit TBD.

Probably something Russian and clunky-looking. Maybe a T62 if I can find one.

Thanks!

~Jerry

  • Member since
    July 2003
  • From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Posted by zokissima on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 8:28 AM
You can put me down as well. I'll be building something in 1/35, but have yet to figure out what.
  • Member since
    November 2004
  • From: Freeport, IL USA
Posted by cdclukey on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 9:46 AM
Thanks for giving me wiggle room on the Ticonderoga, Chris. What's the question mark next to the Minsk mean? I'll be glad to answer any question you've got. If the question is about the scale, it is 1/700. It's a waterline kit, so I'll be doing a water display for the first time.
  • Member since
    April 2007
  • From: Schroon Lake, NY
Posted by SMJmodeler on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 10:12 AM

dostacos,

Thanks for the info..I was wondering if the "55" was based on the year, it looks like it would just barely qualify for this GB.  Let me get back to you tonight to confrim this idea but it's soundin' pretty good!!!

  • Member since
    October 2004
  • From: Katy, TX
Posted by jthurston on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 11:39 AM
 SMJmodeler wrote:

dostacos,

Thanks for the info..I was wondering if the "55" was based on the year, it looks like it would just barely qualify for this GB.  Let me get back to you tonight to confrim this idea but it's soundin' pretty good!!!

I couldn't imagine the T55 not qualifying for this one (not my call, but throwing my My 2 cents [2c] out there and seeing what you guys think). While it's true that the T55 was designed (and I believe first fielded) in 1955 or thereabouts, either right at the beginning of or just before the Cold War, it was actually used by the USSR and many other Communist Bloc nations throughout much of the cold war. It's probably the world's most numerous main battle tank, having operated during most of the Cold War in the colors of something like 150 coutries. I think it's still in service in some parts of the world (old T55 hulks are laying all over Iraq, for instance).

Anyway, right now I'm leaning toward a Tamiya T62 with plenty of AM stuff.

  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Switzerland
Posted by Imperator-Rex on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 4:22 PM

Hello everybody,

 you can put me in the group for a nice (and rare) Revell 1/400 USS Dallas sub!

Best regards,

Chris 

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 4:22 PM

Jerry your post here got me to thinking again about the thread in Odds and Ends about 1968, which brought to mind Prague.

I wouldn't know a T-54 from a T-55 or probably for that matter a T-62, but these images stick in my head, classic Cold War.

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: San Francisco, CA
Posted by telsono on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 5:29 PM

I'll jump in with the AFV Club 1/35 Centurion 105mm NATO version. Its in my stash and I should reduce that a little.

Mike T.

Beware the hobby that eats.  - Ben Franklin

Do not fear mistakes. You will know failure. Continue to reach out. - Ben Franklin

The U.S. Constitution  doesn't guarantee happiness, only the pursuit of it. You have to catch up with it yourself. - Ben Franklin

  • Member since
    April 2007
  • From: Schroon Lake, NY
Posted by SMJmodeler on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 7:12 PM

bondoman,

Good to see you're jumping in on this one.  Hey, you going to Hobby Expo in Petaluma this Saturday?

  • Member since
    August 2007
  • From: Peterborough, Ontario
Posted by Townsy11 on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 7:45 PM

I've created a brief list of some of the vehicles that would qualify for this GB:

U.S.S.R.:

T-80 series

T-72 series

T-64 series

T-62 series

T-54/55 series

PT-76 series

MT-LB series

BMP-2 series

BMP-1 series

BMD-1 series

BMD-2 series

BRDM-1 series

BRDM-2 series

BTR-80 series

BTR-70 series

BTR-60 series

 

U.S.A.:

M1, IPM1 Abrams

M60 series

M48 series

M47 series

M41 series

Stingray and Stingray II LT's

M2 and M2A1 series

M113, M113A1 and M113A2 series

M2 Bradley

LVTP7 AAAV series

HMMWV series

M151 MUTT series

LAV-300 series

Ranger series

LAV-100, LAV-200, LAV-150 series

(my list doesn't include SPG's and artillery but, they can join.)

I'm not so sure about letting in WW2 vintage vehicles (i.e. Sherman) because they were not produced and used by either the USA or the USSR during the cold war (as far as I know).

SMJ: So yes, a T-55A would qualify.

Dostacos: They would all qualify except the M24 and M26.

Jthurston: Great, I'll put you on the list.

Zokissima: Great, I'll put you on the list.

Cdclukey: Yes I was just wondering the scale of your build, I'll change it now.

Imperator-Rex: Great, I'll put you on the list.

Telsono: I guess since your centurion has the 105 it will qualify. I'll put you on the list.

 

Chris,

 

 

 

"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."-- General George S. Patton
  • Member since
    August 2007
  • From: Peterborough, Ontario
Posted by Townsy11 on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 7:56 PM

Err... on second thought Telsono I'm not sure if the Centurion would qualify seeing as it wasn't made by the U.S.A. or the U.S.S.R.

I'm not sure, what does everyone else think?

Chris,

"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."-- General George S. Patton
  • Member since
    June 2006
  • From: Waiting for a 1/350 USS Salt Lake City....
Posted by AJB93 on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 8:50 PM

I'll be building the following ships:

USS Oriskany 1/700, converted Trumpeter

USS Orleck 

USS Laffey, both 1/700 converted Skywave, both barely started.

USS Jenkins converted 1/700 Tamiya Fletcher

And last, but most certainly not least, USS America or John F Kennedy from the Italeri 1/720 America kit.

I need motivation to get these going.

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: Carmel, CA
Posted by bondoman on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 9:04 PM
 Townsy11 wrote:

Err... on second thought Telsono I'm not sure if the Centurion would qualify seeing as it wasn't made by the U.S.A. or the U.S.S.R.

I'm not sure, what does everyone else think?

Chris,

It seems like that would work. You were looking for the US/USSR and their allies, which I would take to mean in the Cold War sense. So you would include a NATO Centurion or a CF-104, but maybe not an Isherman or any Mirages?(No slam against France but not part of NATO).
  • Member since
    August 2007
  • From: Peterborough, Ontario
Posted by Townsy11 on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 9:34 PM
 bondoman wrote:
 Townsy11 wrote:

Err... on second thought Telsono I'm not sure if the Centurion would qualify seeing as it wasn't made by the U.S.A. or the U.S.S.R.

I'm not sure, what does everyone else think?

Chris,

It seems like that would work. You were looking for the US/USSR and their allies, which I would take to mean in the Cold War sense. So you would include a NATO Centurion or a CF-104, but maybe not an Isherman or any Mirages?(No slam against France but not part of NATO).

True, It is a part of NATO and if the Cold war were to have happened NATO would have been majorly involved... still not sure

"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."-- General George S. Patton
  • Member since
    November 2004
  • From: Freeport, IL USA
Posted by cdclukey on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 12:02 AM
Thanks, Chris. Good to see we're off to the races.
  • Member since
    June 2007
Posted by squeakie on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:09 AM

put me down for something. The fields wide open on this, and may do the M-48 I've been gathering parts for. Another one that's always got my fancey is an F105 Wild Weasel, or an F4 wild weasel. Let me think on a selection, but for now count me in.

gary      

  • Member since
    June 2007
Posted by squeakie on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:14 AM
 dostacos wrote:

on a more serious note, would any of these fit your bill

M 24 Chaffee

M 26 Pershing

M 41 Walker Bull Dog 

M 48 Patton

M 60  Patton

 

you could use an M-41, M-47, M-48, M-60. As well as an M-56 & M-50 Ontos. Most varients of the M-113 series too. Also there are several U.S. SPG's that would fall in this catagory. If you find a M-56 please don't tell as my heart will be broken faster than a speeding bullet!!

gary

  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Los Angeles
Posted by dostacos on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 2:09 AM
 squeakie wrote:
 dostacos wrote:

on a more serious note, would any of these fit your bill

M 24 Chaffee

M 26 Pershing

M 41 Walker Bull Dog 

M 48 Patton

M 60  Patton

 

you could use an M-41, M-47, M-48, M-60. As well as an M-56 & M-50 Ontos. Most varients of the M-113 series too. Also there are several U.S. SPG's that would fall in this catagory. If you find a M-56 please don't tell as my heart will be broken faster than a speeding bullet!!

gary

I will be going with a M 48 or 60 unless I find a nice Israeli version of the same Smile,Wink, & Grin [swg]

Dan support your 2nd amendment rights to keep and arm bears!
  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Switzerland
Posted by Imperator-Rex on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 8:27 AM
 Townsy11 wrote:
 bondoman wrote:
 Townsy11 wrote:

Err... on second thought Telsono I'm not sure if the Centurion would qualify seeing as it wasn't made by the U.S.A. or the U.S.S.R.

I'm not sure, what does everyone else think?

Chris,

It seems like that would work. You were looking for the US/USSR and their allies, which I would take to mean in the Cold War sense. So you would include a NATO Centurion or a CF-104, but maybe not an Isherman or any Mirages?(No slam against France but not part of NATO).

True, It is a part of NATO and if the Cold war were to have happened NATO would have been majorly involved... still not sure

Indeed. Historically speaking, the Cold War is often defined as "the period of conflict, tension and competition between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies from the mid-1940s until the early 1990s". A war between the 2 superpowers would have been a world war involving most countries in the world: it would have been extremely difficult, if not impossible, to stay neutral under those conditions. Even Switzerland - a neutral country by tradition - decided to fight on NATO's side should such a war erupt.

Fact is that during the Cold War, the 2 superpowers fought each other indirectly by waging "proxy wars", usually involving their allies. The Korean War, Vietnam War and the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan are considered, for instance, as proxy wars. During the Korean War, the US, aided by a vast coalition of European and other countries, fought the North Koreans and eventually the Chinese, but not the Soviet Union. Anyway, historically speaking, Veterans of the Cold War would thus include "all those who have served both in actual conflicts and on inactive confrontation lines since 1945", such as "Soviet servicemen who served in Afghanistan and Korea, British servicemen from a number of conflicts and in West Germany, Chinese personnel in Korea and Vietnam, French personnel from Algeria, Vietnam, Lebanon and elsewhere, and U.S. personnel in Vietnam, Korea, Germany and elsewhere, along with all the other servicemen and women who served from many other countries in those conflicts and along the confrontation lines in Germany and elsewhere".

 

Of course, this would imply that anything (more or lesss) built between 1947 and 1989 would qualify for this GB; maybe you'd like to limit the GB to only the military equipment of the 2 superpowers. But if not, I'd be happy to build another kit, namely Heller's 1/400 Tourville, a French ASW destroyer that would have actively combed the sea in seach of Russian subs in the event of a world war.

What do you guys think about it? 

Chris 

  • Member since
    November 2004
  • From: Freeport, IL USA
Posted by cdclukey on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 12:55 PM

Chris, here are a few thoughts from a Cold War vet.

1. Some folks (including me) count the end of the Cold War as occurring in 1991. The August coup, the end of nuclear bomber alert and a Bush speech on Christmas declaring the official end of the war (which he made after a phone conversation on the subject with Boris Yeltsin) all occurred on that date. As dramatic as the fall of the Berlin Wall was, to me it wasn't over yet.

2. Also, I can give you a more definite start date. Some historians recognize 1947 as the start of the war because the Truman Doctrine was put in place to limit any further expansion of Communism. Others mark the 1948 Berlin blockade and the subsequent airlift as the opening of the war.

3. I'd say that a Cold War build without allies might be unnecessarily limited, but one with allies is problematic. For example, during a large part of the Cold War India's governments were very left-leaning and they bought lots of Soviet equipment, but were they really a Soviet ally? How abpout Switzerland, which was neutral, but probably would have fought a Soviet invasion of Western Europe? Do we include China?

I propose that we have three decisions to make, with multiple options available under some of them:

Decision 1: Does Tomnsy make the call, or do we vote?

Decision 2: What's the beginning point? 1947 (Truman Doctrine), 1948 (Berlin Crisis), 1949 (NATO is founded),  1950 (Korean War begins) or our current choice, 1955 (WArsaw Pact founded)? 

Decision 3: What's the end date? 1989 (The wall falls) or 1991 (Soviets join the anti-Saddam coalition/Nuclear alert ends/Soviet Union falls)?

Decision 4: What nations?

We could keep it to the U.S. and Soviet Union.

We could only include NATO and Warsaw Pact members. This would include France, which was a founding member of NATO at first and always was willing to fight alongside NATO in the event of an invasion, even after they left NATO.

We could include those countries and the countries in the "Pacific Theater" of the Cold War: Japan, the PRC, Taiwan, The Koreas, The Vietnams, Australia and New Zealand, etc.

We could do the above, but not include stuff involved in the region's shooting wars. 

We could include NATO & Warsaw Pact, all treaty allies similar to NATO and the Warsaw Pact (such as the Baghdad Pact and SEATO), Pacific "cold" allies, and all proxy war participants, including the Arab countries and Israel.

We could do the above, but consider the Israeli-Arab conflict a separate theater.

We could allow modeling of any equipment made by a Cold War nation even if it was used by a country that was not a Cold War ally. For example, Sweden and Switzerland were technically neutral, but used some NATO-origin equipment, while Finland was bound by a friendship treaty with the Soviets and flew MiGs but also had free market democracy and flew the Magister, Vampire, Bell 206 and Alouette.

Yeah, I know...could be pretty confusing!

  • Member since
    April 2007
  • From: Schroon Lake, NY
Posted by SMJmodeler on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:06 PM

Townsy11:  I'm in!!!, put me down for a 1/35 Tamiya T-55A...I knew I should have bought it from that vendor back in December...oh well...

dostacos:  You still goin' to build the M-60???

  • Member since
    June 2007
Posted by squeakie on Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:32 PM
 cdclukey wrote:

Chris, here are a few thoughts from a Cold War vet.

1. Some folks (including me) count the end of the Cold War as occurring in 1991. The August coup, the end of nuclear bomber alert and a Bush speech on Christmas declaring the official end of the war (which he made after a phone conversation on the subject with Boris Yeltsin) all occurred on that date. As dramatic as the fall of the Berlin Wall was, to me it wasn't over yet.

2. Also, I can give you a more definite start date. Some historians recognize 1947 as the start of the war because the Truman Doctrine was put in place to limit any further expansion of Communism. Others mark the 1948 Berlin blockade and the subsequent airlift as the opening of the war.

3. I'd say that a Cold War build without allies might be unnecessarily limited, but one with allies is problematic. For example, during a large part of the Cold War India's governments were very left-leaning and they bought lots of Soviet equipment, but were they really a Soviet ally? How abpout Switzerland, which was neutral, but probably would have fought a Soviet invasion of Western Europe? Do we include China?

I propose that we have three decisions to make, with multiple options available under some of them:

Decision 1: Does Tomnsy make the call, or do we vote?

Decision 2: What's the beginning point? 1947 (Truman Doctrine), 1948 (Berlin Crisis), 1949 (NATO is founded),  1950 (Korean War begins) or our current choice, 1955 (WArsaw Pact founded)? 

Decision 3: What's the end date? 1989 (The wall falls) or 1991 (Soviets join the anti-Saddam coalition/Nuclear alert ends/Soviet Union falls)?

Decision 4: What nations?

We could keep it to the U.S. and Soviet Union.

We could only include NATO and Warsaw Pact members. This would include France, which was a founding member of NATO at first and always was willing to fight alongside NATO in the event of an invasion, even after they left NATO.

We could include those countries and the countries in the "Pacific Theater" of the Cold War: Japan, the PRC, Taiwan, The Koreas, The Vietnams, Australia and New Zealand, etc.

We could do the above, but not include stuff involved in the region's shooting wars. 

We could include NATO & Warsaw Pact, all treaty allies similar to NATO and the Warsaw Pact (such as the Baghdad Pact and SEATO), Pacific "cold" allies, and all proxy war participants, including the Arab countries and Israel.

We could do the above, but consider the Israeli-Arab conflict a separate theater.

We could allow modeling of any equipment made by a Cold War nation even if it was used by a country that was not a Cold War ally. For example, Sweden and Switzerland were technically neutral, but used some NATO-origin equipment, while Finland was bound by a friendship treaty with the Soviets and flew MiGs but also had free market democracy and flew the Magister, Vampire, Bell 206 and Alouette.

Yeah, I know...could be pretty confusing!

I've always felt that the start of the Cold War was with the division of Germany in 1945 which brought on several closed borders (East Germany). The end of the Cold War was sometime after the Berlin Wall was brought down. Say the Revolution ejecting the Soviet dominance and the break up of many of the former USSR members. I might also add that you need to add the Soviet invasion of Iran in the list too; as this was the first promise after WWII to use the atomic bomb again by Truman.

good post

gary

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