View Full Version : Pump for bird bath?
Angela Marsh
June 15th 06, 06:36 PM
We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
bird bath in our yard near it.
Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
from the stream into the birdbath?
The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
Suggestions?
Lone Gunner
June 15th 06, 06:41 PM
Yes its possible to push pull water that distance and height, but its
not going to be that cheap with just using a simple small inexpensive
pump. It can be submersible or external. Unless you can divert water
closer to the birdbath itself I think a bucket would be the best
choice. Even just pushing water or pulling water over a 4 foot berm,
and then up into a fountain itself is not as easy or cheap as it may
seem.
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 12:36:35 -0500, Angela Marsh
> wrote:
>We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>bird bath in our yard near it.
>
>Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>from the stream into the birdbath?
>
>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>Suggestions?
>
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Lone Gunner
June 15th 06, 06:52 PM
Still yet again Caroyln Gulley aka Koi-Lo utilizes what others have
posted to make a post in her own name..
Perhaps a few facts did I say a few, well lets say perhaps some facts
are in order to fully understand Carol Gulley and her ways. Stay tuned
I'll post some later on today thats sure to get your interests sparked
;-)
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 12:53:22 -0500, "Koi-Lo" > wrote:
>
>"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
>> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>> bird bath in our yard near it.
>>
>> Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>> from the stream into the birdbath?
>
>What do you consider inexpensive and where will the overflow go?
>
>> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>> berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>That would take more than an inexpensive little pump. Do you have
>electricity available out by the stream?
>
>> Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>I think it would be hard to find an inexpensive pump to pull or push water
>over a 4' berm then 30 feet along the ground, then up a few feet into a
>birdbath. And you don't want a swamp around the birdbath so some kind if
>drainage is needed.
>
>> Suggestions?
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Koi-Lo
June 15th 06, 06:53 PM
"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
> bird bath in our yard near it.
>
> Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
> from the stream into the birdbath?
What do you consider inexpensive and where will the overflow go?
> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
> berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
That would take more than an inexpensive little pump. Do you have
electricity available out by the stream?
> Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
I think it would be hard to find an inexpensive pump to pull or push water
over a 4' berm then 30 feet along the ground, then up a few feet into a
birdbath. And you don't want a swamp around the birdbath so some kind if
drainage is needed.
> Suggestions?
--
Koi-Lo....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
~~~~ }<((((*> ~~~ }<{{{{(ö> ~~~~ }<((((({*>
Lone Gunner
June 15th 06, 07:50 PM
>"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
>> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>> bird bath in our yard near it.
>>
>> Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>> from the stream into the birdbath?
>> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>> berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>> Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>> Suggestions?
After a bit of thinking on pumps, there is a way that would be
relatively cheap but may be more trouble than its really worth. ONly
you can decide that.
Harbor freight makes a 1" clear water pump that will be more than
suitable for pulling or pushing water the height and distance you
recomended. It is an external pump, and costs less than $25.00 but can
usually be found on sale for about $22 . It can be hooked up close to
the fountain or at the stream itself. It only draws 4 amps so its not
all that expensive to run besides its only on for a short period of
time anyhow. Its easy enough to make a small pump vault to keep
thepump out of the weather, but the main concern is flooding
conditions if stream raises up, so take that into consideration.
next is the need for a flat switch to keep the bird bath filled and
not allow it to over flow. You can use a simple flaot switch and relay
to control the pump and this wold set you back about $15.00 or you can
buy a ready made float switch from Little Giant for about $30. The
rest of the expense would be wiring and PVC pipe. The pump would need
a strainer on the end and preferaby a check valve so it does not loose
its prime......so just the odds and ends for the pump not counting
wiring would set you back perhaps another $30 for strainer, pipe,
fittings check valve etc. Wiring coul dbe high or low priced as yu
make no mention of how far electrical supply is from where this bird
bath and stream is situated, but since its a low amperage draw pump
you may be able to get by on say 14 ga UF wire, you just have to
measure the distance and figure out voltage draw and loss to be
certain. Then again you may need a lot heaveir gauge wire. It all
depends on amperage draw and distance of electrical run.
OR you can build a hydraulic water ram and allow water movement to
push the water up tothe fountain. These devices are used n this area
for lifting and pushing water up toabout 10 feet in height from
streams and anywhere from a few feet to a hundred feet or so to cattle
watering troughs. Most of the cattlemen make their own devices but yu
can find plans on the internet or in magazines like Mother Earth News,
etc.
I still think a bucket would be a lot cheaper and easier overall but
thats just my opinion........
I have a bunch of those Harbor Freight clear water pumps i use around
my place for a few years now and have yet to have a problem with any
of them. They work just fine. I use them to pull water from larger
natural ponds and streams controlled by float devices to fill up
various other tanks and containers. I pull water from a manifold sort
of deal with multiple tapoffs for these pumps, that gravity feeds
water a distance of 250 feet from a stream through 10" PVC pipe. Last
count there is 8 of these 1" clear water pumps pulling water out of
that mianifold , all at various times of the day/ night, but they all
are attached to this common manifold. A similar manifold could be
made from common 4" PVC pipe for little cost in money, but for 30 feet
distance and less digging, it owul dbe easier to place pump near
stream in sheltered house / vault and push water that short distance
to bird bath.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Koi-Lo
June 15th 06, 10:14 PM
>wrote:
> Giddy blonde ****rag with saturated silk igloo and dainty breasticles
> hungers for run-down stretchy and the twins for nimble salami burying.
> Mail me at >
Koi-Lo
June 15th 06, 10:16 PM
Angela >wrote:
> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
> bird bath in our yard near it.
>
> Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
> from the stream into the birdbath?
>
> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
> berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
> Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
> Suggestions?
I have no idea what you are talking about, but I'll go ahead and waste
some bandwidth anyway. Maybe if someone else posts the answer, I'll
copy and paste their answer and pretend it was my answer.
--
Koi-Lo....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
Aquariums since 1952.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
I do not post from Earthlink.net
All rude and/or obscene messages posted in my
name are by my impersonator.
~~~~ <((((*> ~~~ <{{{{(ö> ~~~~ }<((((({*>}
Lone Gunner
June 15th 06, 10:33 PM
See what I told you about Koi lo.... Angela........she can be on
target sometimes and then just go bonkers and get very hostile and
disruptive. She is really a spastic individual and should be avoided
at all possible costs...She is a plague on the usenet community. If
you do not learn one thing other than Carol Gulley aka Koi Lo is a
slandering lying individual, you learned whats important.
A simple kill filter will eliminate the posts she makes so you do not
have to endure her outbursts of anger.
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 12:53:22 -0500, "Koi-Lo" > wrote:
>
>"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
>> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>> bird bath in our yard near it.
>>
>> Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>> from the stream into the birdbath?
>
>What do you consider inexpensive and where will the overflow go?
>
>> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>> berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>That would take more than an inexpensive little pump. Do you have
>electricity available out by the stream?
>
>> Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>I think it would be hard to find an inexpensive pump to pull or push water
>over a 4' berm then 30 feet along the ground, then up a few feet into a
>birdbath. And you don't want a swamp around the birdbath so some kind if
>drainage is needed.
>
>> Suggestions?
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
~ janj
June 15th 06, 11:09 PM
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 12:36:35 -0500, Angela Marsh >
wrote:
>We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>bird bath in our yard near it.
>
>Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>from the stream into the birdbath?
>
>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>Suggestions?
>
Sure, Danner or Beckett pump. Can't give you a gph, since you didn't say
how big the bird bath is, or where the water is going to flow after it
fills the bird bath. ~ jan
-----------------
(Do you know where your water quality is?)
Also ponding troll free at:
http://groups.google.com/group/The-Freshwater-Aquarium
Lone Gunman
June 16th 06, 03:04 AM
On rec.ponds, in
. 97.142>, "Angela
Marsh" wrote:
> We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to
> put a bird bath in our yard near it. Would it be possible to find
> an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water from the stream into
> the birdbath?
> The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a
> 4' earth berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
How high is the birdbath? If it's lower then the heigth of your berm
all you need to worry about it pumping the watter to that heigth.
I'd recomend built what is essentualy an aquaduct, since as long as
there is nothing to restrict it watter will find it's own level.
The easiest method woud be to use large pvc pipe, with a stack at the
berm end to recive watter from the pump and a underground tee with a
RV adapter & valve at the birdbath end, like so (fixed width font):
_
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|_| _
| \______________ ___________/ |_ @
\__|_____________ ~ _________|_____|-+---
The tee and valve go neat the birdbath, and should be placed inside
a box for easier access (for cleaning & draining). Dry fit everything
first before you start gluing and be sure to leave extra at the pump
end. After its all togeter fill it with some watter to make sure the
joints don't leak. Once it's all tested, burry and enjoy.
Parts:
- pvc "sewer" pipe
- recomended glue
- one elbow & one Tee fitting
- one end cap with screw in plug
- Sewage clean-out adapter (RV store)
- some hose that fits the RV adapter (to run into the bird bath).
You'll have to gauge the size of the pipe based on whatever size the
RV adapter is. At the local store they are 4", but I'm sure 6" is
avalable as well.
--
Anti-Troll FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/d8e4
Ignore the grassy knoll, there is only one Lone Gunman.
if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I wouldnt do it.
birds are dirty.
It might be easier to simply set up a hose with a timer on it to fill the bird bath
once a day .... use a cheap hose turn off to regulate how much water goes into the
bird bath. a nice drip will attract birds. Ingrid
Angela Marsh > wrote:
>We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>bird bath in our yard near it.
>
>Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>from the stream into the birdbath?
>
>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>Suggestions?
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
Lone Gunner
June 16th 06, 06:06 PM
So ex[alin the difference in when a bird gets the water in a bird bath
nasty that gets back into the stream and when bird use a stream and
make it nasty.....looks like the same thing to me. I am sure birds in
naaature do not have access to bird baths that are not able to corss
contaminate. You info is biased, and of course leans best towards the
fish side. but its full of holes just the same.
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 15:36:41 GMT, wrote:
>if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I wouldnt do it.
>birds are dirty.
>It might be easier to simply set up a hose with a timer on it to fill the bird bath
>once a day .... use a cheap hose turn off to regulate how much water goes into the
>bird bath. a nice drip will attract birds. Ingrid
>
>Angela Marsh > wrote:
>
>>We have a small stream running next to the house and would like to put a
>>bird bath in our yard near it.
>>
>>Would it be possible to find an *inexpensive* pump that could pump water
>>from the stream into the birdbath?
>>
>>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>>
>>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>>
>>Suggestions?
>>
>
>
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
>http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
>sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
>www.drsolo.com
>Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
>I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Derek Broughton
June 16th 06, 06:39 PM
wrote:
> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
if the water will flow back into the _stream_, I'd do it in a minute. The
birds will bathe somewhere, and if not in your birdbath, it'll be in your
stream _or_ pond. So you want to encourage that dirt to end up in the
stream.
You _do_ want to try to provide somewhere the birds will bathe that isn't
your pond.
> It might be easier to simply set up a hose with a timer on it to fill the
> bird bath once a day .... use a cheap hose turn off to regulate how much
> water goes into the
> bird bath. a nice drip will attract birds. Ingrid
>
> Angela Marsh > wrote:
>
>>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
You really only need either a small trickle, or as Solo suggests a refill
once or twice a day, so yes, a small pump can certainly do it.
>>
>>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
For your needs, submersible is cheaper.
--
derek
Angela Marsh
June 16th 06, 07:41 PM
wrote :
> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
Lone Gunner
June 16th 06, 08:00 PM
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 14:39:18 -0300, Derek Broughton
> wrote:
wrote:
>
>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>
>if the water will flow back into the _stream_, I'd do it in a minute. The
>birds will bathe somewhere, and if not in your birdbath, it'll be in your
>stream _or_ pond. So you want to encourage that dirt to end up in the
>stream.
>
>You _do_ want to try to provide somewhere the birds will bathe that isn't
>your pond.
>
>> It might be easier to simply set up a hose with a timer on it to fill the
>> bird bath once a day .... use a cheap hose turn off to regulate how much
>> water goes into the
>> bird bath. a nice drip will attract birds. Ingrid
>>
>> Angela Marsh > wrote:
>>
>>>The only problem is that it needs to go about 30 feet, and over a 4' earth
>>>berm. Can small inexpensive pumps do that?
>
>You really only need either a small trickle, or as Solo suggests a refill
>once or twice a day, so yes, a small pump can certainly do it.
>>>
>>>Does it have to be a submersible pond pump or can it be something else?
>
>For your needs, submersible is cheaper.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Lone Gunner
June 16th 06, 08:17 PM
You have to excuse Dr. Solo.....She went tothe same school as Koi Lo
and they are two of the same. ONly their way and opinion means adam
thing, and allothers is wrong..Derek Broughton on the other hand is
getting kind of bold and brash. Just last week he slapped down CArol
aka Koi Lo instead of kissingher ass like he is kown to do, and now
this week he slaps down Ingrid the "Dr" solo.........I seem to think
Derek is feeling a little randy since the weather warmed up. Probablay
just a passing thing as he will soon take his toys and go home and
pout and deprive the group of his presence in payback..........
Ya know there is just something about two women like Solo and her
other buddy with the orandas always wrapped up with each other in
more ways than fish and such. I bet a dollar to a donut you could tell
what they are up to if you smelled their breathe! Ya just might
smell a diesel dike there somewhere.
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 13:41:22 -0500, Angela Marsh
> wrote:
wrote :
>
>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>
>LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
>
>
>
>
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Köi-Lö
June 16th 06, 10:57 PM
These dumbasses n this group are too stupid to see that and realize
what they are doing. They assume allnbirds have a specified palce to
crap and wash at........Heck a rooster is a bird and one mean S O B.
He will eat his own **** and **** his momma without giving it a second
thought........and then you kill it and make fried chicken with
it.....good stuff huh!
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 13:41:22 -0500, Angela Marsh
> wrote:
wrote :
>
>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>
>LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
>
>
>
>
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Köi-Lö
June 16th 06, 11:03 PM
"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
> wrote :
>
>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>
> LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
==============
The birds on my property bathe in the spillway from one of my filters. I
just hope they don't carry more eggs of wild fish and drop them in the
water........
--
KL....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
~~~~ }<((((*> ~~~ }<{{{{(ö> ~~~~ }<((((({*>
Lone Gunman
June 17th 06, 12:59 AM
On rec.ponds, in
. com>, "Köi-Lö"
wrote:
>>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and
>>> pond I wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>>
>> LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it
>> pooping?
> The birds on my property bathe in the spillway from one of my
> filters. I just hope they don't carry more eggs of wild fish and
> drop them in the water........
Nature is nature... You can't blame a it for taking advantace of your
well cultivated efforts since it was there first.
--
Anti-Troll FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/d8e4
Ignore the grassy knoll, there is only one Lone Gunman.
if you have fish in there, it really isnt good to allow birds to have access where
they can crap in the water. it carries disease.
if the birds are already bathing drinking and pooping, why a bird bath?
Ingrid
Angela Marsh > wrote:
wrote :
>
>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>
>LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
>
>
>
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
Köi-Lö
June 17th 06, 02:14 PM
Sure change the subjects context.because you got slapped down, and its
not a concern of yours why this person wants a bird bath, unless of
course our being asked to finance it.....You ****ing bnozos think yu
have total control of what a person wants to do and adjust the post to
suit "YOUR" ****ing wants and desires and not the original posters.
Bunch of ****ing losers.
On Sat, 17 Jun 2006 12:32:51 GMT, wrote:
>if you have fish in there, it really isnt good to allow birds to have access where
>they can crap in the water. it carries disease.
>if the birds are already bathing drinking and pooping, why a bird bath?
>Ingrid
>
>Angela Marsh > wrote:
>
wrote :
>>
>>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>>
>>LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
>http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
>sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?hl=en&q=puregold&qt_s=Group+lookup
>www.drsolo.com
>Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
>I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Köi-Lö
June 17th 06, 02:15 PM
Well at least something is bathing on your trailer lot.....you greasy
little escapee carpet bagger from NYC
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 17:03:05 -0500, Köi-Lö <¤1¤ôx@ôÜ1Ô.ôôô> wrote:
>
>"Angela Marsh" > wrote in message
. 97.142...
>> wrote :
>>
>>> if the birdbath water will then flow back into the stream and pond I
>>> wouldnt do it. birds are dirty.
>>
>> LOL! You think they're not bathing in it now, and flying over it pooping?
>==============
>The birds on my property bathe in the spillway from one of my filters. I
>just hope they don't carry more eggs of wild fish and drop them in the
>water........
--
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