Freeview: Emley Moor (Kirklees, England) Full Freeview transmitter
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Full Freeview on the Emley Moor (Kirklees, England) transmitter

Google StreetviewGoogle mapBing mapGoogle Earth53.611,-1.666 or 53°36'41"N 1°39'57"WHD8 9TF

This transmitter has no current reported problems

The BBC and Digital UK report there are no faults or engineering work on the Emley Moor (Kirklees, England) transmitter. Click to recheck

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The symbol shows the location of the Emley Moor (Kirklees, England) transmitter which serves 1,550,000 homes.

Other maps:Emley Moor (U) DABEmley Moor (U) AM/FMEmley Moor regionBBC NorthYorkshire (Emley Moor micro region)

Radiation patterns

Radiation patterns withheld

Map key

The bright green areas shown where the signal from this transmitter is strong, dark green areas are poorer signals. Those parts shown in yellow may have interference on the same frequency from other masts.


List by multiplex|List by channel number|List by channel name|See terrain plot

Emley Moor transmitter Freeview broadcasts

If you have any kind of Freeview fault, follow this Freeview reset procedure first.

Digital television services are broadcast on a multiplexes (or Mux) where many stations occupy a single broadcast frequency, as shown below.

MuxAerial positionFrequencyHeightModeWatts
PSB1
BBCA
 horizontal -0.6dB
C47 (682.0MHz)578m64QAM 8K 2/3
24.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
174,000W
Channel icons
1 BBC One North, 2 BBC Two England, 7 BBC Three, 9 BBC Four, 70 CBBC Channel, 71 CBeebies, 80 BBC News, 81 BBC Parliament, 301 301, plus 12 others

PSB2
D3+4
 horizontal -0.6dB
C44 (658.0MHz)578m64QAM 8K 2/3
24.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
174,000W
Channel icons
3 ITV (Yorkshire (Emley Moor micro region)), 4 Channel 4 North ads, 5 Channel 5 The North ads, 6 ITV 2, 13 Channel 4+1 North ads, 14 More 4, 28 E4, 33 ITV +1 (Yorkshire Emley Moor),

PSB3
BBCB
 horizontal -0.6dB
C41+ (634.2MHz)578m256QAM 32KE 2/3
40.2Mb/s DVB-T2 MPEG4
174,000W
Channel icons
101 BBC One HD (England no regional news), 102 BBC Two HD (England), 103 ITV HD (ITV Granada), 104 Channel 4 HD North ads, plus 1 others

COM4
SDN
 horizontal -0.6dB
C51 (714.0MHz)566m64QAM 8K 3/4
27.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
174,000W
Channel icons
10 ITV 3, 20 G.O.L.D. (not free), 25 Dave ja vu, 26 Home (not free), 27 ITV 2 +1, 30 5*, 31 5USA, 34 ESPN UK (not free), 38 Quest, 39 The Zone, 44 Channel 5 +1, 72 CITV, plus 22 others

COM5
ArqA
 horizontal -0.6dB
C52 (722.0MHz)565m64QAM 8K 3/4
27.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
174,000W
Channel icons
11 PICK TV, 12 Dave, 17 Really, 29 E4+1, 32 Movie Mix, 46 Challenge, 48 Food Network, 82 Sky News, 87 Community Channel, plus 9 others

COM6
ArqB
 horizontal -0.6dB
C48 (690.0MHz)565m64QAM 8K 3/4
27.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
174,000W
Channel icons
15 Film 4, 18 4Music, 19 Yesterday, 21 VIVA, 24 ITV 4, 41 Sky Sports 1 (not free), 42 Sky Sports 2 (not free), 47 4seven, 83 Al Jazeera English, 85 RT English , plus 21 others



Regional news from the Emley Moor transmitter


BBC Look North (Leeds) 1.9m homes 7.4%
from Leeds LS9 8AH, 22km north-northeast
to BBC North region - 55 masts.

ITV Calandar 1.9m homes 7.4%
from Leeds LS3 1JS, 22km north-northeast
to ITV Yorkshire (Emley Moor) region - 59 masts.

Self-help relays

Derwent BActive deflector74 homes
Derwent CActive deflector (second level)
Dunford BridgeActive deflector14 km S Huddersfield15 homes
Hmp LeedsTransposer30 homes
ThixendaleTransposer25 km ENE York40 homes

How the transmission frequencies change over time

years1956~851984-971997-981998-20112011-132013-182013-18
aerial groupVHFB EB EB EB EB EW
C10ITV
600C32com7
C34com8
C37C5C5
C40-2
C41C4C4C4+BBCB+BBCB+BBCB
C43-A
C44BBC1BBC1BBC1D3+4D3+4D3+4
C46-B
C47ITVITVITVBBCABBCABBCA
C48ArqBArqBArqB
700C49-D
C50-C
C51BBC2BBC2BBC2SDNSDNSDN
C52+1ArqAArqAArqA
C56local

orange background for multiplexes names moregreen background for transmission frequencieslilac background for power levels in watts800MHz band: 4G mobile to start in 2013700MHz band: possible 4G in 2019 more600MHz band: new or moved digital TV services more
Notes: + and - denote 166kHz offset; aerial group are shown as A B C/D E K W
Italics for analogue, digital switchover was Wednesdays 7th September and 21st September 2011.

  • Ofcom have projected that a local television service for Leeds including Dewsbury, Halifax, Huddersfield, Wakefield could use an Interleaved Frequency on the Emley Moor transmitter using C56
  • COM7, COM8 projected for 2013-16. COM7 and COM8 to operate as Chesterfield, Emley Moor SFN.

Comparison of old analogue and current digital signal levels

Analogue 1-5 870kW
com7, com8(-6.4dB) 200kW
SDN, ARQA, ARQB, BBCA, D3+4, BBCB(-7dB) 174kW
Mux 1*, Mux 2*, Mux B*, Mux C*(-19.4dB) 10kW
Mux A*(-22.4dB) 5kW
PreDSO-BBCB*, Mux D*(-23.4dB) 4kW

History of Channel 3 in the Emley Moor transmitter area

May 1956-Jul 1968Granada Television†
May 1956-Jul 1968Associated British Corporation◊
Jul 1968-Oct 2002Yorkshire Television
Oct 2002-Dec 2014ITV
Feb 1983-Dec 1992TV-am•
Jan 1993-Sep 2010GMTV•
Sep 2010-Dec 2014ITV Daybreak•
• Breakfast ◊ Weekends ♦ Friday night and weekends † Weekdays only.


Your comments: most recent posts are at the bottom

firstFirst comments prevEarlier comments  ◊  Later commentsnext Latest commentslast

Your comments are always welcome. Please use the form below to add your thoughts or questions to this page. We will get back to you as soon as we can.

Briantist
Wednesday 3 August 2011 11:44AM
David: If you can receive the BBCA multiplex from Belmont, you can ALSO watch BBC North from Hill on 801.
David
Wednesday 3 August 2011 12:20PM
Brian, anyway for me to tell before a regional Look North is on, it will be sad if 1 is Hull and 801 Leeds.
Briantist
Wednesday 3 August 2011 12:23PM
David: Yes, watch at 18:30 and see...

Depending on your equipment, you may be able to find the frequency being used for 1 and 801.
David
Wednesday 3 August 2011 12:36PM
Just been in Set Up Menu and checked Signal of EPG 1 BBC1 and it is from ch22, (Belmont?)
EPG 800 BBC1 is on CH45.
I'm in Leeds area and aerial pionts at Emley Moor.
So looks like I will be on Hull Look North and no longer Leeds Look North.
Another nice mess from the BBC.
Briantist
Wednesday 3 August 2011 1:41PM
David: This has nothing to do with "the BBC". Your Freeview box allocates the channels on a "first come first stored" basis, and C22 is lower than C45.

If you can't deal with changing to 800 (which is usually pressing CH- from 1), clear your channel list and add in the Emley Moor frequencies by hand.
David
Wednesday 3 August 2011 2:41PM
I think it is giving the strongest signaled on into possition EPG 1, Belmont BBC1 is now far stronger than Emley Moor, remember Emley Moor does not get switch off for about 5 weeks. I think they turned up Belmont too soon.
Briantist
Wednesday 3 August 2011 2:47PM
David: There are a few Freeview boxes that will allocate the strongest channel, but most (95%) allow the channels in frequency order.

Freeview HD and the latest Freeview SD boxes will present a "multiplex regions found" menu.
Linda Buttery
Thursday 4 August 2011 7:39PM
after scaning for chanels,we now receive Look North from Lincolnshire instead of Yorkshire. How can we revert back?
David
Thursday 4 August 2011 8:36PM
You do a scan with aerial unplugged to clear the Belmont (Lincolnshire) ones out which you have got now.
Then reconnect aerial and use Manual Tune for each of the Emnley Moor channels, 52, 40, 39, 43, 46, 50 and 49.
It is because EM for BBC is 10k power and Belmont went up to 150k power this week.
Hamish Thorpe
Friday 5 August 2011 9:04PM
Typical. We in Nottinghamshire have been force fed useless Yorkshire news for a lifetime. We don't want to know what happens in Leeds or Hull. The poor Yorkshire folk have to watch our news for two days and they're already griping about it.
David
Friday 5 August 2011 10:19PM
Hamish Emley Moor transmitter is in Yorkshire and is Yorkshires main station, I wonder why you are not using the East Midlands transmitters.
Nigel Dixon
Friday 5 August 2011 10:34PM
Terrestrial Digital transmissions started around about the same time as SKY Digital transmissions in the UK. Why the heck is the terrestrial version of digital TV so ridiculous to set up! With sky you do nothing, as channels are added you get them, if frequencies change, you still do nothing, the change just happens. How can a 90 year old be expected to re-tune!!! Basically, Sky got it right, UK Digital stayed in the dark ages!
jb38
Saturday 6 August 2011 10:15AM
Nigel Dixon: Digital terrestrial broadcasting by its very nature of requiring a multitude of separate transmitters to cover the country, will always have problems compared to the whole country receiving a multitude of programmes all from the "same" source.

In other words, its much easier to arrange channel shuffling operations etc when its known that the whole of your viewing audience is responding to the same transmission platform, and likewise to use the expression, are "singing from the same hymn book", something quite impossible to achieve with any other mode of transmission involving anything other than say Long Wave transmissions. (e.g: BBC radio 4 on 198Khz) which covers most of the country, albeit Scotland having two fill in transmitters.
David
Saturday 6 August 2011 11:27AM
I think Sky got it right too.
All makes of boxes work in the same way and are alike apart from outward appearence.
All use the same Remote Control.
Sky control the box makers to ensure they comply with the transmission specs.
All changes take place with no user involvement.
They get the right area local program to the place box used in.
These things can't be said of Freeview (and Freesat)
Briantist
Saturday 6 August 2011 5:45PM

David: Sky and Freeview don't work in the same way. Freeview is just the name of the publicity for the DVB-T service. The makers of the Freeview equipment are not associated with this company, or the broadcasters, in any way.

Basically, Freeview works like this:


David
Saturday 6 August 2011 6:11PM
Yes Brian that is why Sky is far better than Freeview.
My old Mum used to say, "Too many cooks...."
dav
Sunday 7 August 2011 1:16PM
i am having problems with my freeview hd.
i can not get any hd channels .
i am in wombwell and have a digital arieland av normal freeview .
i have retuned the box 5 times now and cant pick up the channels.
i have tried to manually retune on channel 39
and th3e signal strength is very good but cant get the channels .
any ideas please.
Briantist
Monday 8 August 2011 7:38AM
dav : Do you have a Freeview HD receiver? See www.ukfree.tv link icon What does "Full HD Ready" actually mean? | ukfree.tv - independent free digital TV advice .

If you DO have DVB-T2 equipment, please see www.ukfree.tv link icon Single frequency interference | ukfree.tv - independent free digital TV advice for help.

It is hard to be more specific without a full postcode.
Briantist
Monday 8 August 2011 7:41AM
David: And it only costs you an extra £500 a year to be locked in.
David
Monday 8 August 2011 9:11AM
Not understanding that Brian.
It costs a one off £175 to have SKY free to veiw box, dish, card and installation.
P Howarth
Monday 8 August 2011 9:31AM
BBCB will be on Ch41+ from Emley Moor. What does the + denote, is it a frequency offset ?? There are also some transmitters eg:- Longwod Edge which will put out BBCB on 62-.
Also what will be the channel nombers from Emley Moor between 7-9-11 and 21-9-11.
Regards...Pete.
Briantist
Monday 8 August 2011 11:38AM
P Howarth: Yes, + and - denote a 166kHz ofset.

As it says above "Wednesday 7th September 2011
ITV-1 swaps to C51. BBC TWO C47 closes. BBCA starts on C47. "
Mike Dimmick
Monday 8 August 2011 11:40AM
P Howarth: Yes, the + indicates a positive offset of 167kHz. Your box should automatically detect this offset if you manually tune on C41. Likewise, the - indicates a negative offset of 167kHz.

These offsets are being applied to the channels bordering the regions being released, potentially for other services, to provide a small 'guard band', avoiding possible interference from those services. C41 may or may not actually get an offset, because C40 is now not being released. Sudbury, which also uses C41/C44/C47, is not using an offset on C41.

The channel numbers at Emley Moor between the 7th and 21st will be:

Analogue:

BBC One stays on C44
BBC Two shuts down
ITV1 moves to C51 replacing BBC Two
C4 stays on C41

Digital:

Mux 1 shuts down
BBC A starts up on C47 replacing ITV1
Mux A moves to C52 to release C43 for Sutton Coldfield, replacing Mux 1
Mux 2, B, C, D and low-power HD all stay on current channels (C40-, C46-, C50-, C49-, C39).
Mike Dimmick
Monday 8 August 2011 11:43AM
David: Only if you don't want to record or time-shift. Recording/time-shifting costs £120 per year, and it's difficult to get Sky to sell you this minimum package, they'd far rather sell you a subscription at £234 per year.
Mick C
Monday 8 August 2011 11:52AM
So here's a question.

I'm savvy with most things electronic (I build and fix PC's etc for a living) - what I want to know is this.

I live in Eckington (S21) - but I get (and I've always got) BBC1 Look North for the Lincolnshire region.

Any ideas why? As it's totally baffled me and it's also baffled the easily confused telephone operatives at the Digital Switchover helpline....lol

Thanks in advance.

Mick
Briantist
Monday 8 August 2011 12:08PM
Mick C: Can you provide a full postcode please?
KMJ,Derby
Monday 8 August 2011 12:25PM
Mick C: It is likely that you are using the Belmont transmitter for your TV reception. If the aerial points East this will be the case. To receive Look North from Leeds you would need to use Emley Moor, the most likely alternative in S21. Reception is very patchy from a number of transmitters in that general area, with more distant transmitters often providing the best signals.
Steve
Monday 8 August 2011 6:34PM
Mick in Eckington

I live nearby in Gleadless and go to Eckington a lot. Most aerials in the town point to Belmont so I am sure this is why you get BBC1 Lincs. To be fair, lots of homes in North Derbyshire and Sheffield do - it may be possible to fit an aerial for Emley Moor but if you live down at the bottom of the hill this might not be possible. It will cost you too
nonofyourbusiness
Wednesday 10 August 2011 7:04AM
No problems with ths transmitter?. Well if this is perfect broadcasting you can stick yout TV licence up your arse hole.
mike Roberts
Wednesday 10 August 2011 2:33PM Wigan
Hi a question for Briantist, I live in Aspull wigan postcode wn2 1sz and can recive some stations from the emily more transmiiter, some are weak and some are very weak, will i be able to get them at full strength when emily more switches over fully to digital. it is strange because according to the website Emily more is not in line of sight of my postcode but yet i can receive stations from there.
Mike Dimmick
Wednesday 10 August 2011 3:20PM
Mike Roberts: Yes, you're likely to get the channels more reliably than you do now, though this is never going to be all that reliable with the Pennines in the way. The commercial multiplexes will be co-channel with those from Moel-Y-Parc so are unlikely to work.
mike Roberts
Wednesday 10 August 2011 6:35PM Wigan
but are the Pennines an obstacle, with the hight and strength of emily more, I mean if they were, you wouldn't get it at all over here would you? also i get nothing from moel-Y-parc as my Ariel is pointing the wrong way, done many a rescan on my box and only got my own local ones and about 15 channels from Emily more.
Betamax_man
Wednesday 10 August 2011 8:32PM York
Mike Roberts: I live in the East Riding of Yorkshire Post Code YO42 2QG in a town at the foot of the Wolds and can receive Winter Hill, Bilsdale, Belmont, Waltham and of cause Emley Moor. Signal very weak from Winter Hill and Waltham though. Having problems with channels disappearing from Emley and having to manually retune again. This started to happen after the Belmont first stage switch over. Roll on Emley's switch over.
mike Roberts
Thursday 11 August 2011 1:24AM Wigan
wow didnt think winter hill went that far out Beatamax_man. yeah its strange like i said no moel y parc at all here yet Emily more is ok, do you also get channels breaking up from Emily more to Beatmax-man.
Gordon H
Thursday 11 August 2011 1:02PM Lincoln
Hi,
I completed a reset but no improvement. I have a recently installed high gain aerial on the roof. No problems with reception until 2-3 days ago.
Mike Dimmick
Thursday 11 August 2011 3:50PM
mike Roberts: You often see claims that line-of-sight to the transmitter is required. It isn't. You definitely get the best signal levels if you do, and the least reflections, but you still get some signal (not necessarily enough to be usable) from refraction over the terrain.

Line-of-sight is also suggested because it is easy to compute possible signal levels. Most predictors - other than Digital UK's - use a simple free-space equation which can overestimate levels.

Aerials have a fairly wide acceptance angle - how wide depends on the aerial. It's likely that it has enough gain in Emley Moor's direction, not enough in Moel-Y-Parc's direction. Briantist is completely wrong to claim that a Yagi-type aerial receives as much signal from behind as in front, it is in fact far less (though not none).
Mike Dimmick
Thursday 11 August 2011 4:05PM
Betamax_Man: It's likely that your box has an automatic retune function, and that it also stores the first version of the channels that it finds, rather than the strongest. I would turn off the automatic retune.

At switchover, the best approach is probably to unplug the aerial before doing a reset. You can then plug it in when the scan reaches about one-third of the way through, or leave it out until the end, accept that it hasn't found any channels, then manually tune on the appropriate frequencies. See above for the UHF channel numbers to use.
Thomas
Thursday 11 August 2011 6:53PM Leeds
Since Belmont and Sheffield started DSO stage 1, my analogue reception from Emley Moor has become very poor. On all channels, there is a significant ghost image (not always the same channel) being picked up as well, as if one of the other transmitters is outputting on the same frequencies as Emley's analogue.

Obviously with analogue being turned off next month it's not much of an issue (digital reception has been slightly worse as well but usually ok). It's just a LOT easier to spot problems such as ghosting, pre-echo and co-channel interference on analogue rather than digital.
Mike Myers
Friday 12 August 2011 10:21AM Brough
I have a quick question, at the moment I am living in postcode HU15 which is on the boarder between Belmont and Emley moor. My aerial is a good quality B band aerial and I get all channels fine with my aerial pointed at Emley.

After switchover it seems from the chart above I wont be able to receive C56 but should retain all the others with my aerial still at Emley.

What channels will I lose (or not get) on C56?

Thanks.
Adam B
Friday 12 August 2011 11:07AM Dunstable
Mike Myers: You won't lose any channels because CH56 is earmarked for new local services only at some point in the future, although bear in mind this may not come about

Hope this helps,
Adam.
jb38
Friday 12 August 2011 11:08AM
Mike Myers: Trade predictor charts only show what is presently known as being possible, and Ch56 isn't mentioned as its only a proposed channel and will not actually be transmitting as such at switchover, likewise knowing whether you will be able to receive it or not cant be forecast until then.
Mike Dimmick
Friday 12 August 2011 2:36PM
Mike Myers: The software here treats the groups as a hard cut-off. In fact, aerials still have some gain just above the official edge of the group and also just below - Ofcom have used this as part of their planning, though do note that the official edges of the aerial groups have already changed a bit, to accommodate Channel 5, so an older Group B might not work as well up at C56 than a newer one.

You can see some aerial gain graphs at www.aerialsandtv.com link icon ATV Stock Aerial Tests , which indicate that at least some aerials have as much gain at C56 as they do at C40.
Adrian Rodgers
Friday 12 August 2011 8:25PM Sheffield
Hello
My postcode is S25 2XS and I receive signals from Emley Moor. Since 10th August I have had no EPG data on BBC1, BBC2, BBC3 & Cebeebies, all of which, from what I have read, are on the same Mux and when I inspect channel information they all appear on channel 52. There is no problem with receipt of the channels and signal quality and strength for each hover around circa 82%.
Interestingly, 10th August is a first stage switchover date for the reasonably local Sheffield and Chesterfield transmitters but I have an aerial with horizontal panes which points directly to Emley Moor with no physical barriers in-between.
I have cleared my channels by running set up whilst the RF is disconnected and then re-run with the connection re-made in order to recreate my channel list but the problem persists.
Do any of you experts out there have any ideas what the issue may be?


Fingers crossed
Adrian Rodgers
Adrian Rodgers
Monday 15 August 2011 2:48PM
Briantist: Hello and thank you for taking the trouble to respond. Yes, I did refresh my channel list as a first action after browsing this site for self help before posting. I had a new aerial and cabling suitable for freeview installed about a year ago in readiness for the switchover but I do have a games console installed close by my freeview/PVR box. Your link indicates that as I've lost EPG data to each channel in group 1 that may be an issue so I'll try some rearranging.

Thanks again Briantist
mike Roberts
Monday 15 August 2011 7:14PM Wigan
I was having another play about with my freeview box last night, and I have found i can get upto 47 channels from Emily more, if i cut it off at about half way through its scan. I am surprised as i thought i wouldn't be able to get so many from that distance. they are all or less watchable to, but they keep apixalting every 5 minutes. signal levels are showing an amber colour and is about 50 percent I thought i could only get about 16 here. Which is Aspull in Wigan Post code WN2 1SZ
Adrian Rodgers
Tuesday 16 August 2011 12:51PM
Hello again
I stil have no EPG data on the BBC multiplexor despite completing all the checks indicated. I think I'll wait for the Emley Moor first stage switchover and hope retuning fixes it. I can still record via sky plus and, of course, manual recording on my PVR.
Thanks for the interest though, very grateful.

regards
Adrian Rodgers
Briantist
Tuesday 16 August 2011 5:12PM
Adrian Rodgers: If you are getting channels on the wrong numbers, this is most likley because the list is failing to clear itself.

I'm not sure if switchover will make much difference to a missing EPG.

Another possibility is that you are now getting signals from the Belmont or Sheffeld transmitters - see www.ukfree.tv link icon Digital Region Overlap | ukfree.tv - independent free digital TV advice - for details. If that's the case then you might be able to "work around" the problem by clearing the channel list and then adding in the six Emley Moor channels manually.
E.P.Cox
Wednesday 17 August 2011 7:50AM Gainsborough
Having just installed a new sony freeview hd box I find I have only moderate signal on std.freeview and very bad on HD(picture breakup or disappears totally.All dtv reception just on tv good.My aerial is aligned to emley moor.Post code DN21 3JX.Will I get hd after switch over?
David
Wednesday 17 August 2011 9:27AM
Wait and see what happens next month after switchover and higher powere starts.
Gainsborough is in Lincolshire so I do not understand why your aerial is not pionting at Belmont which is allready high power from today I beleive. I'm in Leeds region and Belmont is out powering my Emley Moor here.
Mick C
Wednesday 17 August 2011 1:32PM
Thanks for your comments guys, I thought as much - Belmont does seem to be the main transmitter round here. On Sky my dad gets Look North for this area but on Freeview I get totally irrelevant stuff from Peter Levy for Lincolnshire.

It's annoying but not annoying enough to pay for a new aerial as I've got a HUGE digital aerial on the side of my flat anyway as we're surrounded by trees!

Just another question too with regards to updates from this site - I set them for "email updates" and have had nothing (apologies for me only just coming back to check!).....anyone else have these problems?

Thanks for all your help.



Please post a question, answer or commentIf you have Freeview reception problems before posting a question your must first do this Freeview reset procedure then see: Freeview reception has changed, Single frequency interference, and Freeview intermittent interference.

If you have no satellite signal, see Sky Digibox says 'No Signal' or 'Technical fault'

If you have other problems, please provide a full (not partial) postcode (or preferably enter it in box at the top right) and indicate where if aerial is on the roof, in the loft or elsewhere.

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