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Hmmph... (Read 4406 times)
Jul 12th, 2011 at 4:26pm

skoker   Offline
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Well I finally find a car I like but the problem is its a manual transmition.  My mom won't let me get it like that... Undecided  How hard/much would it be to make it an automatic?
 


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Reply #1 - Jul 12th, 2011 at 5:37pm

Stubbedtoe18   Offline
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lol that's not going to happen.  You virtually never hear of anyone going through the process of converting a manual car into an automatic.  Tell your mom to not be so weird about it, you should just learn how to drive a stickshift.  Better mileage and more fun to drive, not to mention cheaper than an automatic car.
 
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Reply #2 - Jul 12th, 2011 at 9:01pm

Strategic Retreat   Offline
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LOL


Had I, here in Italy, bought an automatic car, back in the days when my mom dictated my life (ah, the good old days... NOT), she would have been totally, and I mean TOTALLY... ashamed of me, verging on complete disowning, had I insisted. Grin

We really live on different planets. Wink
 

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Reply #3 - Jul 13th, 2011 at 3:52am

expat   Offline
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skoker wrote on Jul 12th, 2011 at 4:26pm:
Well I finally find a car I like but the problem is its a manual transmition.  My mom won't let me get it like that... Undecided  How hard/much would it be to make it an automatic?



What is she afraid of, you will learn to drive properly  Grin Grin Grin

Matt

PS, More money that a down payment on a really nice new car.

PPS Maybe she knows about the Noz conversion on it that you have not told her about  Grin Grin
 

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Reply #4 - Jul 13th, 2011 at 5:59am

patchz   Offline
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Stubbedtoe18 wrote on Jul 12th, 2011 at 5:37pm:
lol that's not going to happen.  You virtually never hear of anyone going through the process of converting a manual car into an automatic.  Tell your mom to not be so weird about it, you should just learn how to drive a stickshift.  Better mileage and more fun to drive, not to mention cheaper than an automatic car.

That may be true where you are from. But here, it is not that uncommon, especially by builders of street rods.

But I suspect it is a lot more difficult when done on a late model, and in this case, not really practical.
 

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Reply #5 - Jul 13th, 2011 at 11:19am

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Just learn how to drive manual. It makes boring cars like my Neon actually kind of fun to drive, and it's a little cheaper than an automatic as well.

Although it's the opposite of what you want, my neighbor has converted a couple of his minivans from auto to manual over the years...to "make them more interesting." he said. Grin
 

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Reply #6 - Jul 14th, 2011 at 12:20am

beaky   Offline
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Forget it... I once helped a friend do a similar procedure (taking the engine and manual trans out of a wrecked Volvo P1800 and installing it in another, after removing the engine and automatic trans from that one), and even with proper tools, a lift, and more experience (none of which we had, LOL), it's a big job, and the labor bill would be scary. I was glad we didn't have separate either engine from its transmission, also... and we got lucky that one of the two drive shafts actually fit in the new installation.
And those were mid-70s cars... plenty of room and less wiring, etc. Working in the engine bay or underneath almost any car built after 1980 is like trying to build a brick BBQ pit inside a walnut shell. And if it's front-wheel drive, fageddabouddit!  Shocked

I don't get your mom's reasoning. Better fuel mileage, cheaper to maintain... and usually a lot more durable.
The only snag with some manuals is that while learning to shift properly, you might wear out the clutch. But it's not hard to learn to do it right, and a good clutch and transmission will take some abuse.

And yeah, it's more fun. More control; personally I think it enhances safety in many situations. I don't mind working a stick in stop'n'go traffic, either, even though my car's drivetrain is trucklike, and the left foot gets a good workout.

Tell her about the safety, the mileage, and the savings... and whatever you do, don't mention anything about hooning.  Wink  Grin

If you do wind up with the stick, however, remember about downshifting: brake work is cheap, clutch work is expensive!  Wink
 

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Reply #7 - Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:00am

expat   Offline
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What is your mother's reasoning against?

Matt
 

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Reply #8 - Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:10am

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I hate the thought of automatics. It's not real driving; it's just steering! I'd definately work on trying to convince the parents... It's the proper way to drive, it teaches you to drive the correct way, and I imagine in certain road conditions it's probably safer. On a slippy and slidey steep road in winter I was glad to be able to fix it in second gear whilst rolling down that  Grin
 

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Reply #9 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 12:25am

skoker   Offline
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expat wrote on Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:00am:
What is your mother's reasoning against?

Matt

She's afraid I don't know how to drive it, since when she was my age she borrowed her friends car and repeatedly hit a city bus because she couldn't figure out how to take it out of gear...  Roll Eyes

Also a few years ago she ruined the transmition on my uncles car when she accelerated at a light in neutral and jammed it into gear.  So she is pretty much totally against manuals. Tongue
 


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Reply #10 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 5:44am

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skoker wrote on Jul 16th, 2011 at 12:25am:
expat wrote on Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:00am:
What is your mother's reasoning against?

Matt

She's afraid I don't know how to drive it, since when she was my age she borrowed her friends car and repeatedly hit a city bus because she couldn't figure out how to take it out of gear...  Roll Eyes

Also a few years ago she ruined the transmition on my uncles car when she accelerated at a light in neutral and jammed it into gear.  So she is pretty much totally against manuals. Tongue

She probably learned to drive on an automatic. It's easy enough to convert from a manual to an auto but not so easy the other way round.

I've been driving for over 50 years & got my first automatic about 15 years ago. I would never willingly go back to manual.
 

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Reply #11 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 6:18am

expat   Offline
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skoker wrote on Jul 16th, 2011 at 12:25am:
expat wrote on Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:00am:
What is your mother's reasoning against?

Matt

She's afraid I don't know how to drive it, since when she was my age she borrowed her friends car and repeatedly hit a city bus because she couldn't figure out how to take it out of gear...  Roll Eyes

Also a few years ago she ruined the transmition on my uncles car when she accelerated at a light in neutral and jammed it into gear.  So she is pretty much totally against manuals. Tongue



So what she is say is, because she is hopeless with a manual, maybe she thinks the apple does not fall far from the tree Grin Grin Grin

Matt

PS, just noticed how old your are.......cough...18....cough, cough Wink
 

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Reply #12 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 6:39am

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Go for a manual, they're just so much easier and if you're anywhere near competent as a driver you're far less like to have a gear-related accident than in an automatic! E.g. you have full control of the car.
Also my mum has to use an automatic due to surgery and her left leg being very weak and I've seen the bills for clutch changes on that Shocked She is not a girl racer but holy moley they are expensive! Also if a manual goes tits up the box is a lot easier to swap than an automatic, you don't need weird tools to align strange things!
I've had one automatic and I have to say on short journeys and off the lights it was great, but for any decent amount of driving the fuel economy was pants!
 

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Reply #13 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 11:04am

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I drove a stick for 12 years, starting in 1976.  I chose the stick over an automatic for reasons of driving fun, gas mileage, and cost. 

I taught myself how to shift/clutch before I bought the car just by sitting in a chair and going through the motions, so when I got the car I was pretty much OK with driving it; took a few days to get comfy and about 2 weeks to shift without having to think about it.

It was fun for most of that time, but after 12 years I eventually tired of it.

In my opinion, manuals are not necessarily safer than automatics.  Driving safety and technique is up to the driver regardless of what trans you've got.   In today's Miami traffic, I prefer, and feel safer, with my automatic now, with both hands on the wheel. I have been in too many situations where I had to react and steer very quickly.   Besides, a manual doesn't do much good in a gridlock.

But there's nothing wrong with manual trans if that's what you prefer, actually, I'd say it's good to know how to drive them, it does take the boredom out of driving, and it can promote good driving technique.

Good luck.  Maybe you can talk to Mum again. 
 
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Reply #14 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 1:58pm

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Do you have any idea how hard it is to get the back end out on a wet roundabout in an automatic 3-series? In a manual I can do it in the dry! With the automatic you need a couple of bags of cement or a dead mafia boss in the boot Grin Grin Grin
 

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Reply #15 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 3:30pm

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Considerations about cultural bias and peer pressure aside (hereabout, even today, the drivers of a car with automatic gearbox are those who miss or can't use their right arm or left leg), or dearth of choice (some cars pretty much only have one kind of gear, so it's that... or another kind of car), I personally only once drove an automatic and the experience baffled me beyond description... I just, more than once, had the urge to shift, but couldn't, and had to rely on hoping the thing would do it sooner than my patience ran out... and it didn't happen. The admittedly (and fortunately) short experience only reinforced my conviction that is something not for me (beside that it just costs too much, even if compared to an optional six gears sports box). The only person in my family who owned an automatic car was my late uncle that in the 80ies bought a Jaguar XJS in England, where he had an import-export of peeled tomatoes, but we ALL know Englishmen are odd people so nothing new under the sun. Wink Grin

Your mother tried unsuccessfully to use a manual shift car most likely because no one bothered to teach her HOW to use it, and she herself never thought to learn either. I remember the first time I used my father's old FIAT 127, and even with all the cultural background I had, the very first time I tried, I did a poor job of it. In the end it's a matter of learning how to use CORRECTLY the clutch (and the handbrake in hill starting) and to choose when to shift and in which direction, listening to the engine's revs (someone looks to the revs counter... IF a revs counter is contemplated in the dashboard... but I strongly advise against this practice, as it distract from the MORE IMPORTANT duty... which is looking at where you're going)... and I can say that if I, of all people, learned it in a half a hour, everyone can in even less, if he or she wants. With time it becomes a second nature and you must not even think about it anymore, you just do it. Wink

This said, I can see and even considered often, in the years, the merits of an automatic in traffic jams... the problem though remains that outside very congested city streets, automatic is... pretty much unnecessary. Letting a mechanical gizmo (or computerized one, in modern cars) decide for you if and when to shift is not always a good idea, and most of the time a waste of petrol too, and using the stick manually to select gears in the automatic cars because the mechanical or computerized servo makes a mess of it pretty much defies the having to pay more to have the automatic gearbox in the first place. Smiley

That is not to say that if you really want an automatic you shouldn't get one. Tastes are a personal matter that should never be discussed... it's just that... well, unless you cannot do otherwise for reasons explained above, as someone else has already said, it pretty much takes away the fun of driving. Tongue

Talk with your mom, tell her you'll get the instructions in properly using a manual gearbox she never did and ask her to give you the benefit of the doubt. If your mom is a reasonable person, she'll see reasons. Wink
 

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Reply #16 - Jul 16th, 2011 at 7:05pm

Craig.   Offline
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I drive an auto beemer. yes in the UK. I live in a city, and do mostly motorway driving inbetween, I wouldn't contemplate an manual. Simply have no use for it. I'm either sat at 5 to 30mph or at 70+ either way I am not using the gearbox to any effect that would warrent a manual. 
By the same token I am a left foot braker. manual or auto, it was something I picked up very quickly, and my driving instructor absolutely hated it. Driving manuals it became almost a dance going from brake to clutch with the left foot and then the right coming over to cover the brake and also blip the throttle on downshifts, with the auto though, its left foot glued to the brake and right to the throttle pedal. Some people get the impression you might hit the gas when you want to go for the brake, but its never happend, and I have found the reaction time to braking is much quicker.
 
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Reply #17 - Jul 17th, 2011 at 6:09pm

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You know Craig, reading your message I had the most peculiar mirage of Jeremy Clarkson reading your words and then commenting about your driving habits (and if you know him and his point of view... ouch... just ouch). Grin

No offense intended at any level. It is I that should get off the excessive use of Top Gear. Wink

As about your habit to brake with the left foot... just be careful around corners, especially WET corners, and absolutely BE CAREFUL, even in straight as an arrow roadways, with a rear wheel drive car (had I had such an habit on my old BMW... I would be one of those sleeping the eternal rest right now, instead of being here annoying you Wink). Know that your habit would be ground for immediate driving license annulment here in Italy (they would just make confetti of your license in your face on the spot, should they discover it), so take care and remember it if you ever come hereabout and want to drive EVEN an automatic... Undecided
 

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Reply #18 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 6:07am

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Can you explain why they would take your license away from you for that??
As for beemers in the wet, its not the brake pedal I need to worry about its the shouty pedal on the right thats the offender.  Grin Found that more than a couple of times while looking at oncoming traffic through the side windows. Lips Sealed
 
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Reply #19 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 7:41am

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Craig. wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 6:07am:
Can you explain why they would take your license away from you for that??


It's the law. I did not make it. I only acknowledge it. Undecided



Craig. wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 6:07am:
As for beemers in the wet, its not the brake pedal I need to worry about its the shouty pedal on the right thats the offender.  Grin Found that more than a couple of times while looking at oncoming traffic through the side windows. Lips Sealed


Try to accelerate and brake at the same time, even in a front wheel drive, while on a wet corner, and you'll see why I'm worried... actually DON'T DO IT! Especially don't do it in a rear wheel drive car (don't, please, I do not want to be blamed of your untimely demise anything). Shocked

As for the fact you can say you never use both pedals at the same time... it remains that using both feet of both pedals it's easier to mistake than when using only one to operate both, and this is the foundation of the law I told you before. It's maybe something that it can be accepted on a track during a race, for particular reasons... but not on a common road. Tongue
 

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Reply #20 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 7:46am

expat   Offline
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Craig. wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 6:07am:
Can you explain why they would take your license away from you for that??
As for beemers in the wet, its not the brake pedal I need to worry about its the shouty pedal on the right thats the offender.  Grin Found that more than a couple of times while looking at oncoming traffic through the side windows. Lips Sealed



Last winter, on a open country road that was four inches of compact snow I found myself all on my own, so I turned of the DSC (I am also a BMW driver) and gave the "loud pedal" a press. The car did an impersonation of a drunk Lee Evans trying to dance as I first went towards a large ditch and then a five metre drop to a lower field on the other side. I soiled myself several times in a very short period of time and decided that I was not being big or clever. After I managed to turn on the seat heating and the PDC I finally stabbed the correct button to turn the DSC back on. The brakes did their own thing and I found the car once again travelling in a strait line down the road..................all be in the opposite direction Huh

Matt
 

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Reply #21 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 8:08am

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Huh!!! Unlucky you. my dad let me drive his car when i was 7. don't worry we had a large compound and he would sit in the passenger seat as we used to drive our manual Cheesy car round trees and learn throttle control. Ah. good times Good times. that was 6 years ago and we didn't have to worry about oil prices Wink. And age is just a number
 

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Reply #22 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 1:34pm

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expat wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 7:46am:
Last winter, on a open country road that was four inches of compact snow I found myself all on my own, so I turned of the DSC (I am also a BMW driver) and gave the "loud pedal" a press. The car did an impersonation of a drunk Lee Evans trying to dance as I first went towards a large ditch and then a five metre drop to a lower field on the other side. I soiled myself several times in a very short period of time and decided that I was not being big or clever. After I managed to turn on the seat heating and the PDC I finally stabbed the correct button to turn the DSC back on. The brakes did their own thing and I found the car once again travelling in a strait line down the road..................all be in the opposite direction


Ah, the lovely character of a BMW... much less pronounced on todays ones than like in my old and mourned 318i registered December 1984, where you had to keep the tail from wagging at times... and there was no traction control nor anti-lock brakes on it too... actually there wasn't a lot beside the sole electrically controlled external left rear mirror... but it had a ventilation so powerful that in summer you could do without air conditioning with windows close shut, if only for the forward seats occupants... Cheesy

Wheels alignment and tires health were critical and always looked after... only the engine, not used to today's 95 octanes petrol suffered a lot, if the throttle was used with liberality... and in fact it died on me, that horrible, horrible rainy April 2010... Sad

Now I must make due with my father's FIAT Punto Multijet... oh, how the mighty have fallen... Cry
 

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Reply #23 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 1:58pm

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Strategic Retreat wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 1:34pm:
expat wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 7:46am:
Last winter, on a open country road that was four inches of compact snow I found myself all on my own, so I turned of the DSC (I am also a BMW driver) and gave the "loud pedal" a press. The car did an impersonation of a drunk Lee Evans trying to dance as I first went towards a large ditch and then a five metre drop to a lower field on the other side. I soiled myself several times in a very short period of time and decided that I was not being big or clever. After I managed to turn on the seat heating and the PDC I finally stabbed the correct button to turn the DSC back on. The brakes did their own thing and I found the car once again travelling in a strait line down the road..................all be in the opposite direction


Ah, the lovely character of a BMW... much less pronounced on todays ones than like in my old and mourned 318i registered December 1984, where you had to keep the tail from wagging at times... and there was no traction control nor anti-lock brakes on it too... actually there wasn't a lot beside the sole electrically controlled external left rear mirror... but it had a ventilation so powerful that in summer you could do without air conditioning with windows close shut, if only for the forward seats occupants... Cheesy

Wheels alignment and tires health were critical and always looked after... only the engine, not used to today's 95 octanes petrol suffered a lot, if the throttle was used with liberality... and in fact it died on me, that horrible, horrible rainy April 2010... Sad

Now I must make due with my father's FIAT Punto Multijet... oh, how the mighty have fallen... Cry



Well, I have been a BMW driver since 1993 and never looked back. Front wheel drive.........The work of a PC save the gay whale, tree hugging devil  Grin Grin

Matt
 

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Reply #24 - Jul 18th, 2011 at 4:53pm

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SR. It was a trick I actually learnt in Karts and have used for over 6 years in my road car without ever having an issue. Dunno how a country can make a law for which foot you use on which pedal, but hey ho you learn something new every day lol.

Matt, my 3 series has no TC, and my ABS is rattling like a bb in a tin can these days. add in its the compact 1995 model which has no weight over the rear wheels, it provides some of the best driving ever 90% of the time, but the other week when I drove round a local road that had just had roadworks done on it, I about filled my trousers, had been raining the whole day, so that mixed with the oils in the tarmac, turned onto the road, the front end went light and in the good old words of Martin brundle, it understeered like a cross channel ferry, then after gathering that, went to pull away the backend decided even with barely 2000 on the rpm's that it wanted to arrive before the front.  Shocked
 
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Reply #25 - Jul 19th, 2011 at 7:58am

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Craig. wrote on Jul 18th, 2011 at 4:53pm:
SR. Dunno how a country can make a law for which foot you use on which pedal, but hey ho you learn something new every day lol.Shocked


More to the point, unless you are driving ..., how would you prove it Grin

And even with all the electronics, my 5 could still do with a half hundred weight of spuds in the boot during the snowy season here on the North German Plain Grin

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Reply #26 - Jul 23rd, 2011 at 1:56pm

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skoker wrote on Jul 16th, 2011 at 12:25am:
expat wrote on Jul 14th, 2011 at 4:00am:
What is your mother's reasoning against?

Matt

She's afraid I don't know how to drive it, since when she was my age she borrowed her friends car and repeatedly hit a city bus because she couldn't figure out how to take it out of gear...  Roll Eyes

Also a few years ago she ruined the transmition on my uncles car when she accelerated at a light in neutral and jammed it into gear.  So she is pretty much totally against manuals. Tongue


Pffft! Just tell her "Look, Ma, the problem there is that you're female. Now get back in the kitchen and make me a sandwich; I'm off to buy something with a stick."

Wink
 

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