Day 26: The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 2018
26-12-2018
12:50 AM
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26-12-2018
12:50 AM
Day 26: The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 2018
This yacht race is a facinating and visually delightful event. The start is often spectacularand can be viewed for free by anyone who can get to a nice vantage point on the Harbour.
https://www.abc.net.au/radio/hobart/abc-hobart-covers-all-the-2018-sydney-to-hobart-action/10634974
http://www.rolexsydneyhobart.com/spectators/following-the-race/
If you are unable to view the start and are curious about the progress of the race, you can follow the race online with the Race Tracker
I have referenced my information from the major sponsors website as it is up to date and accurate, as well as from an Australian Government funded maritime museum as it is likely to be accurate as well.
Over the past 73 years, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race has become an icon of Australia's summer sport, ranking in public interest with such national events as the Melbourne Cup, the Australian Open tennis and the Boxing Day cricket test. No regular annual yachting event in the world attracts such huge media coverage than does the start on Sydney Harbour.
- Rolex Sydney Hobart 2016 start
- Horizon (CYC32) - Photo c/o ALAN CAMPBELL - CYCA Archives
- JANUS et Cie Sydney Race Village provides a great atmosphere for off water activities
The Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race and Cruising Yacht Club of Australia have had a marked influence on international ocean yacht racing. The Club has influenced the world in race communications and sea safety, maintaining the highest standards for race entry. The Club's members have also fared well in major ocean racing events overseas, with victories in the Admiral's Cup, Kenwood Cup, One Ton Cup, the Fastnet Race, the Clipper Race and the BOC Challenge solo race around the word, not to mention the America's Cup.
As well as the eclectic on-water racing, the Rolex Sydney Hobart provides various activities and events for people of all ages to be a part of.
Boxing Day each year is also Family Day in the JANUS et Cie Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Sydney Race Village. Face painting, popcorn, live streaming of the start and everything in between can be found in the Race Village on Family Day!
The Hobart Race Village comes alive even before yachts start to finish, with live music, food and drink stalls, interactive information and game screens, and many activities to keep everyone happy! In prime position to view the New Year's Eve fireworks, the Hobart Race Village provides the only outdoor festival on New Year's Eve in Hobart!
To find out more about the Race Villages in both Sydney and Hobart, click here.
Following the Race
- Past Sydney Hobart Video's
- Following the Race
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Whatever the results of the Rolex Sydney Hobart 2018, one thing is certain - when the race starts at 1300 AEDT on Boxing Day it will capture the imagination of sailors and spectators worldwide, as some 600,000 people converge on Sydney Harbour foreshore and millions more tune into the action on TV and online!
- Spectators can watch the race from South or North Head in Sydney
When the fleet for this year's race jostles for position on twin start lines just north of Shark Island, you'll want to be in prime position yourself. To get the full dose of race atmosphere you need to grab a spot on North or South Head, or even join the action on the water among the colourful spectator fleet (which includes craft of all shapes and sizes from ferries to kayaks and even the odd water taxi). But if you're not lucky enough to be there in person when the starting cannon fires, don't worry - there are plenty of ways to follow the race, no matter where you are.
JUST ANNOUNCED: The CYCA has added a second spectator vessel for the start on Sydney Harbour.
On Water
If you've got access to a boat then you can be on the water with the fleet for the start of the race. Spectator craft positioned in the eastern channel can watch the race begin and then follow the fleet down the harbour to the Heads and out to sea. Once underway the fleet can move fast, so if you want to catch the leaders sail through the Heads, it's advisable to get well down the harbour towards Middle Head before the start. At the Heads keep well clear of the rounding marks.
If you only plan on watching the start, and don't wish to follow the fleet, then stick to the western side of the harbour. Good vantage points for spectator boats include Taylors Bay, Chowder Bay, Obelisk Bay and North Head on the west and Rose Bay, Watsons Bay, Camp Cove and South Head to the east.
The harbour will be very crowded and traffic can be chaotic so stay alert, follow the advice of race officials and remember to keep well clear of the exclusion zone between 12pm and 2pm.
Just announced: the CYCA has chartered a second spectator vessel, Matilda III, for spectators to view the start on Sydney Harbour. Limited spaces are available, with Adults $140, children 4-15 $100, kids under 4 free. Click here to make your booking! (The Matilda III has been chartered following the sell-out of the M...
For further information please contact CYCA reception on +61 2 8292 7800 or email reception@cyca.com.au. To book online, click here.
On Television
The Seven Network, through 7Mate, will once again broadcast the start of the race live around Australia.
ABC TV will also be following the fleet down the eastern seaboard and provide all the in-race news footage that is used by the various Australian and International news networks.
On The Web
For those who can't get to watch the live broadcast of the start of the Race on the Seven Network across Australia, Seven West Media will webcast the program. You can also watch a webcast of the live broadcast on the...
If you miss the live webcast, don't worry, a replay of the start programme will be available on this site, and our friends at Seven West Media will be making a replay available shortly after the live webcast concludes and will be available for the duration of the race.
Included on the website is the complete list of yachts entered, along with a photograph and description of each boat, a crew list, and the boat's performance data, predicted finishing time and standing for both Line Honours and Handicap Division which is updated every 10 minutes.
There's also archival data including results of past races since the first in 1945, the weather they encountered; a summary of line and overall handicap winners of those races; historical reports and statistical information; designers of those line and overall winners; and profiles of some of the race luminaries over the years.
You'll also be able to follow the event on twitter for race updates http://twitter.com/rshyr and via Facebook https://www.facebook.com/RolexSydneyHobart
Yacht Tracker
The Yacht Tracker page allows viewers to track the entire fleet or a particular boat from start to finish. Yacht Tracker uses a specially designed tool that calculates the predicted results for each and every boat in the fleet, so you can see how each boat is performing.
Each yacht will be fitted with a tracker that will obtain a position using the GPS satellite network, and then transmit that position back to HQ using the Iridium satellite network.
Each yacht's position is then visualised on the race yacht tracker map or overlaid on Google Earth. In addition, the yacht tracker system also shows distance to finish line and progressive corrected time positions under the IRC, ORCi and PHS handicap divisions
To do this, the tracker is configured to automatically update the yacht's latitude, longitude, course over ground and speed over ground - and transmits that information via satellite to a land station. From there, the data is transferred to the website, which shows in text and graphics each yacht's position in the fleet, its place relative to other boats and known geographic features, and the speed currently being achieved over the land, as well as the direction in which the boat is sailing.
Viewers may view the yachts on a chart through Yacht Tracker or separately on Google Earth. Line honours and progressive predicted corrected times under the IRC, PHS and ORCi handicap categories are updated every 10 minutes.
Getting to the CYCA
The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia recommends using public transport when visiting the club, especially in the lead up to, and on Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, race day, 26 December. Please visit the Transport NSW website to plan your trip to the CYCA, at 1 New Beach Road, Darling Point.
Rail:
CYCA is a one kilometre walk from Edgecliff Station, which lies on the T4 Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra Line. Alternatively, it is a 1.3 kilometre (15 mins) walk via Bayswater Road from Kings Cross Station.Bus:
CYCA is situated within 150 metres of bus stops on New Beach Road, which are serviced by Route 328 between Bondi Junction and Darling Point. It is also located within 100 metres of bus stops on New South Head Road that are serviced by Routes 324 and 325 between the City and Watsons Bay.Please note that on 26 December only, between 5am and 1pm, the bus stop closest to the club will not be in operation and the bus will stop further down New Beach Road
Ferry:
CYCA is a one kilometre walk from Double Bay wharf, which lies on the F7 Eastern Suburbs Line.Taxi & Rideshare:
On 26 December only, the drop-off/collect point will be located opposite the club on New Beach Road. At all other times taxis and rideshare cars can pick up and drop off outside of the club.A taxi booking phone is located within the club itself.
A History of the Sydney to Hobart Race
[From the Sydney Maritime Museum; written in 2014]
In 2018, the Sydney to Hobart yacht race is now in its 75th year.
One of Australia’s most popular and enduring sporting events is the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. The race starts on Boxing Day and the passage down the east coast grabs national attention over the Christmas and New Year break, giving ocean racing an annual moment in the spotlight. It is internationally recognised as one of the three classic blue-water ocean races, along with the Fastnet Race in the UK and Bermuda Race on the east coast of the USA.
Rolex Sydney to Hobart
The 2014 race will be the 70th in the series. In a sign of the times the race has a contemporary sponsor, Rolex, but the heritage of the race is now strongly recognised by all who have taken part in the past as well as those involved in this year’s event, and it’s a much bigger story than just a three-to-four-day race down the coast.
Ocean racing is just that—racing yachts out on the open sea. It takes place in a natural environment and the crews and yachts have no control over what conditions the sea may provide. There are flat calms through to storm-strength gales, currents and tides, variable wave and swell patterns, and the ever-shifting wind, over day and night—the only constant is change. A race report from the first event describes it well: ‘those two irresponsibles—wind and wave’.
And there are no lanes, signposts or field markings to show the way. The boundaries of the course are the coastline and the landmarks that tick off milestones on the course. These days you can rely on GPS to pinpoint where you are, but in the past precise navigation depended on how accurate you were with sun, moon and star observations. This was a time when your direction and destiny very much relied on human-powered calculations and then, when the weather closed in, your best estimation.
'Ichi Ban' soon after the start of the 2002 Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
© ROLEX/CARLO BORLENGHI
There is no pit lane to pull over into for repairs, changes of personnel and refuelling—once you start, you have to be self-sufficient to the end. You are always working the yacht and can change the configuration while you are sailing—different sail trim and combinations allow the crew to adjust the boat to the conditions, and the winners monitor and optimise the boat constantly to keep it sailing at its full potential. But you’re working with very expensive and sometimes fragile gear and sail changes have to be done with care, especially in challenging conditions.
The backup to gear failure is how you react to incidents on board, making running repairs where possible or having something spare in reserve or a margin of safety that allows you to carry on despite damage.
Navigator Bill Lieberman on Wayfarer in the 1945 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
COURTESY CRUISING YACHT CLUB OF AUSTRALIA
The safety net as such is waiting off to one side, hopefully not needing to be initiated. Communications, flares, a life raft, EPIRBs, survival suits, even pre-race training and simulations—this is all secondary gear rigorously monitored and enforced, yet marking time until things go seriously wrong. Onshore emergency services are there to respond, but they too have their controls and limits, and self-help among the competing yachts is a code of practice that comes into play to help avoid a catastrophe. The risk of this is always there, and there have been notable times when it has played out in public view.
Teamwork and leadership are intrinsic qualities needed throughout to keep harmony among crew, to maintain their enthusiasm and ability to push on, and to keep it all under control and operating at a high level.
It’s a race full of intriguing contrasts: how the amateurs and Corinthian sailors mix with the professional sportspeople and Olympic representatives in the crews; the high-tech races against those of the previous generation; even down to the historic—how many other sports have such a diverse range of participants and equipment, all sent off at the same time, aiming for the same goal, on the same course? The top boats were all high-tech in their time, but those of today seem even more so—hugely expensive racing machines built with advanced materials to fine tolerances, carrying only what is needed to support the crew so they can operate efficiently, forcing them to live and work around the yacht and its gear.
Participants will experience a huge range of emotions over the journey, and require stamina to see it through. The extraordinary scenery along the way seems a contradiction to the serious racing intent, but the atmosphere can be uplifting and this feeling becomes part of the reason crews return to race in the open sea time after time.
Experience is a factor that helps enormously and only comes with time and determination, but come it does for the many sailors who feel the addiction of this sport and return each year to take on the Hobart race.
The crew of Ilina during the 1960s, with a young Rupert Murdoch third from the left leaning on the boom.
COURTESY CRUISING YACHT CLUB OF AUSTRALIA
The history of the race
The Sydney to Hobart race began in an off-the-cuff fashion. In the latter part of World War II, sailors on Sydney Harbour formed the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) to promote cruising and casual races in lieu of those suspended during the previous war years. Their first official event was in October 1944. During 1945 three of the members—Jack Earl, Peter Luke and Bert Walker—planned a cruise to Hobart in their respective yachts after Christmas. One evening Captain John Illingworth RN gave a talk to the club members, and afterwards Peter Luke suggested Illingworth might like to join the cruise. Illingworth’s reply was ‘I will, if you make a race of it’.
And so it was. The Sydney Morning Herald on 16 June 1945 noted that ‘Plans for a race from Sydney to Hobart, early in January 1946 are being made by the Cruising Yacht Club … five possible entries had already been received’.
Later, in the Australian Power Boat and Yachting Monthly of 10 October 1945, there is a more formal notice.
Yacht Race to Tasmania: It is expected that an Ocean Yacht Race may take place from Sydney to Hobart, probably starting on December 26, 1945. Yachtsmen desirous of competing should contact Vice President Mr P Luke … Entries close December 1 1945.
From these small beginnings the cruise became a race and Captain Illingworth helped with the arrangements, showing the club how to measure the boats and handicap the event. The plans, expectations, the probables and possibles of earlier reports—they all turned into reality at the entrance to Sydney Harbour just inside North Head on Boxing Day in 1945, when nine yachts set forth, including Illingworth in his recently purchased yacht Rani. Illingworth had previous experience of ocean racing from his homeland in England and in the USA, where he was a respected competitor, and he prepared Rani to race to Hobart, and not just sail there. The other sailors had a more relaxed attitude.
The crew of Wayfarer in the 1945 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race: (Left to right) Geoff Ruggles, Len Willsford, Brigadier A.G. Mills, Peter Luke (at rear), Bill Lieberman, Fred Harris.
COURTESY CRUISING YACHT CLUB OF AUSTRALIA
That first race encapsulated many features now associated with the event, and in hindsight was a warning of things to come. A strong southerly gale hit the fleet on the first day, and many were unprepared for the rough seas that scattered the fleet. Some boats hove to, one retired and the others sought shelter. Wayfarer’s crew went ashore twice to phone home before resuming the race, including a stop at Port Arthur. According to Seacraft magazine of March 1946, ‘Licensee of the Hotel Arthur put on a barrel of beer specially for Wayfarer’s crew, and they enjoyed their first drink of draught beer since they left Sydney on Boxing Day. A local resident treated the ship’s company to a crayfish supper, which was the gastronomic highlight of the voyage’.
Meanwhile the experienced Illingworth, who had prepared Rani and his crew well, had continued to race his yacht throughout. Before the race it was reported that the RAAF would put planes on patrol to keep the yachts under observation, but the weather had made that very difficult. When the gale eased and an aircraft was dispatched to look for the fleet, Rani was so far ahead that it was not located and was presumed missing. The press had the event as their headline article, and later the sudden reappearance of Rani off Tasman Island was a sensation. Rani won easily and the remaining seven boats gradually crossed the line in Hobart, bringing more stories of the race ashore for the public to enjoy.
This impressive coverage for the period ensured the race would continue, and by March 1946 media reports noted that the club secretary, A C Cooper, had said it would be an annual event starting on Boxing Day. As it went ahead in its second year the race included tighter regulations based on those used by the Royal Ocean Racing Club of Britain.
Spectators watching the start of the 2006 Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
© ROLEX/CARLO BORLENGHI
It has been run every year since, and the fortunes of the event have varied. There has been consistent strong public interest, and crowds line the harbour and its foreshores to watch the Boxing Day start, a tradition in parallel with the Melbourne Boxing Day Test match.
Media interest is not confined to the east coast; the race is followed throughout the country and the results are reported internationally. The attention is often on who will finish first, and the focus on this line honours contest has been encouraged to maintain the media interest. Vessels from overseas have raced regularly with the local fleet since the early 1960s, and the race has been won on handicap and line honours by a modest number of craft from outside Australia.
It quickly became recognised as one of the major offshore races, along with the famous Fastnet race in the UK and the Bermuda race starting in the USA, due to the tough and demanding conditions the fleet usually has to overcome. In response to this, the CYCA established good safety precautions quite early on, which for many years it updated in line with the evolution of the participating craft. It often established precautions or limits not enforced in other events. From 1951 onwards there has been a radio relay vessel accompanying the fleet, and safety items carried by the boats and crew remain a priority in the organisation of the race.
Start of the 1986 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
COURTESY CRUISING YACHT CLUB OF AUSTRALIA ARCHIVES
The 1998 race captured world attention when the most extreme conditions in the race’s history were encountered. A strong southerly-flowing current was mixed with a south-west gale caused by an almost cyclonic depression travelling east across Bass Strait. This had developed soon after the race began and was predicted by many weather forecasters. Winds of more than 80 knots were recorded, but the opposing wind and current directions produced difficult seas with an unusual number of enormous waves which caused the most damage. Yachts were knocked down beyond 90 degrees, and some rolled completely. Numerous yachts were unable to withstand the continuous battering and were forced to heave to or otherwise adopt survival techniques before retiring with damage. A small number were abandoned and later sunk, and six lives were lost off three boats in different circumstances.
The rescue effort was chaotic for a period as there were too many calls to respond to, but the heroic efforts by the civilian and service rescue helicopter crews, filmed by press helicopters working in the same extreme conditions, along with help provided by racing yachts standing by stricken competitors, combined to save many sailors and avoided a total catastrophe.
In the reviews and enquiries that followed a number of factors emerged that had contributed to the disaster. The race organisers then moved quickly to address the deficiencies in the equipment and experience which had been highlighted by the race conditions and the fleet’s inability to cope with them.
The race has had highlights in many areas, in particular the dash for line honours. Perfect conditions with a northeast breeze have helped establish race records. In 1973 the reinforced cement-hulled Helsal—referred to by some as the ‘floating footpath’—caught people by surprise to set a record, but it did not last long. In 1975, the world-beating maxi yacht Kialoa III came across from the USA, and owner Jim Kilroy steered it to a new record, well under three days. The 1999 the water-ballasted Volvo 60 class yacht Nokia was able to take maximum advantage of the strong north-east wind pattern. Nokia set a new race record of 1 day 19 hours and 48 minutes at an average speed of 14.39 knots. This was nine hours faster than Kialoa III ’s longstanding record from 1975, on which Morning Glory had briefly improved by 30 minutes in 1996, 21 years after Kialoa’s triumph.
A curious line honours winner was Nocturne in 1953, a 10.66-metre (35-foot) long sloop designed by Alan Payne, which mastered unusually light and fickle conditions to beat much larger craft in a slow race with no retirements.
Wild Oats XI about to finish the 2011 Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Taken from Sandy Bay, Hobart.
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS/JJ HARRISON
The record now stands at 1 day, 18 hours and 23 minutes, set by Wild Oats XI in 2012. Wild Oats XI has twice taken line honours, set the record and won on handicap (2005 and 2012). Rule changes since 1999 permitted vessels up to 30.48 metres (100 feet) in length, and with favourable conditions the new super-maxis built to this limit easily had the potential to improve on the record.
When Huey Long from the USA brought his aluminium yacht Ondine in 1962, one of the closest finishes occurred when Ondine narrowly beat the Fife-designed schooner Astor and the steel Solo across the line, but Solo won on handicap.
The handicap winner is the true winner of the race, a fact sometimes obscured to the public as the bigger boats dominate the headlines. A small number of boats have ‘done the double’ and won both, including Wild Oats XI in 2005, which scored a treble with the race record as well. However quite often the trophy has gone to a well-sailed yacht towards the middle of the finishing order, and sometimes the changeable weather patterns favour the smaller yachts towards the tail end. The most notable handicap winner is the Halvorsen brothers’ Freya, which achieved the remarkable feat of winning three races in succession, from 1963 to 1965. Love & War has also won the race three times, in 1974, 1978 and 2006. Screw Loose, at 9.1 metres LOA, won in 1979 and is the smallest yacht to have won the race.
The end of the race is marked with celebrations by all the crews, and the area around Hobart’s Constitution Dock is packed with spectators, crews and their families who have come down to join them. In the same tradition as at the start, the people from Hobart turn out to see the finish, and even when this occurs overnight there is still a strong contingent on and off the water waiting for the gun to go off.
For many yachtspeople the Sydney to Hobart race is the highpoint of their season and their sport. Some aspire to do it just once, while others come back year after year. The challenging conditions might appear to be the primary drawcard in many instances, but the attractions of blue-water sailing have seduced many competitors in the long run. The moods and atmosphere of the wind and ocean, and the satisfaction of sailing a yacht in these elements, are truly felt and understood by the great majority of the crews.
The combination of strong public interest and the enduring attraction of the race for the competitors would seem to ensure that the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race will remain a regular event, and continue to contribute to Australia’s maritime heritage.
The first yacht to finish receives a royal welcome in Hobart for the Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
© ROLEX/DANIEL FORSTER
- Spectators can watch the race from South or North Head in Sydney
26-12-2018
12:50 AM
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26-12-2018
09:41 PM
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26-12-2018
09:41 PM
Hi @Christine1; thanks for your information on the Sydney to Hobart race!
Although I now live in the Top End, it has always been a bit of a tradition to watch the start of the race, and some of the amazing footage as the boats travel down the coastline of Australia in the blustering winds and weather. Some of the footage and results over the years has been amazing, absolutely tragic and triumphant.
However one year in particular the memory was initially strong, but overshadowed....
On the morning of 26 Dec 1982 when I lived on the lower north shore, I was experiencing some “nasty” pain. My family doctor & friend came and visited and as I’m offering cake and coffee, he said to just sit while he thought... (old style doctoring back then)
He looked at Garry and thought he should take me up to the hospital with suspected appendicitis. Now Manly Hospital was situated on North Head, one of the stunning land marks for viewing the race, at the time. But it was limited...
I wasn’t impressed with his request on three counts.
1. It was a holiday - what a waste of a perfect summers day.....
2. Seriously? I want to watch the boat race on the TV, as we probably will have difficulty getting to the hospital due to spectators and road blockage.
3. I was 19 weeks pregnant with my first child and this is not suppose to happen!
He said you need to go: if they stop you, just tell them you must get through the blockade to the hospital.
So off we went. My Sydney to Hobart race was lost that year....
Prepped for surgery and going under pre-med, I kept stating, you know I’m pregnant right? What about placing a zipper there for later? Pretty embarrassing stuff....
But the timing was at its best. My appendix burst on removal and my health and pregnancy continued. The yacht race came and went that year without me....
But every year I’m reminded of an astute doctor who saved my daughter and I, and who upset my race spectating plans! Thank you.
A great race every year. A great reminder!
26-12-2018
09:41 PM
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27-12-2018
12:25 AM
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27-12-2018
12:25 AM
Wow, @Cathie19, how good is that story.
I like the race and what it stands for. It's very open to as many who can to participate. To me it's like the City to Surf fun run, but for sailors in sailing vessels of all shapes and sizes.
Many of the maxi yachts have assisted mechanics nowadays to manage their keel adjustments and shift things about, kind of like assisted steering. If the diesel engines fail, they can't function so well. So this is a situation that causes some contention.
When I was younger the race lasted almost till New Year and it was so interesting to listen keenly to the news radio for what ever information was able to be gleaned as the fleet was followed down the coast. Each vessel would call in on their radios at set intervals. In between we couldnt be certain where they were in relation to one another. With the previous situation they would try to find a favourable breeze and current and sneak around one another, unseen and spread out across the ocean.
The faster assisted yachts and satellite communications mean the race is over quicker and there is less anticipation as the jostling is over in a couple of days and the reporting eases back after the big yachts have sailed into Hobart.
The last stretch down the river can sometimes be a bit of a hoot if the wind dies down, race positions may change and the front runner is sometimes pipped at the post.
The scenes on the harbour can be spectacular if they have their spinnakers out at the start, cause they are all so uniquely colourful. But that only happend6
I'm sorry my post doesn't have pictures at this time.
27-12-2018
12:25 AM
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