This disclosure describes a shoulder-pad system and subcomponents thereof, including an impact-attenuation sub-layer.
Shoulder pads are utilized in various contexts to provide protection from impact to a wearer. For example, shoulder pads are often worn in American style football, hockey, lacrosse, and motocross, among other activities. Some styles of shoulder pads include various drawbacks, such as restricted range-of-motion, which may limit the ability of a wearer to fully extend or rotate his or her arms upward. In addition, some styles of shoulder pads may be too bulky or may necessitate constant readjustment after being impacted. These are only some of the exemplary issues presented by some typical shoulder pads.
The present invention is described in detail herein with reference to the attached drawing figures, which are incorporated herein by reference, wherein:
Subject matter is described throughout this disclosure in detail and with specificity in order to meet statutory requirements. But the aspects described throughout this disclosure are intended to be illustrative rather than restrictive, and the description itself is not intended necessarily to limit the scope of the claims. Rather, the claimed subject matter might be practiced in other ways to include different elements or combinations of elements that are similar to the ones described in this disclosure and that are in conjunction with other present, or future, technologies. Upon reading the present disclosure, alternative aspects may become apparent to ordinary skilled artisans that practice in areas relevant to the described aspects, without departing from the scope of this disclosure. It will be understood that certain features and subcombinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and subcombinations. This is contemplated by and is within the scope of the claims.
Generally, aspects of this disclosure describe a shoulder-pad system having various subcomponents, such as a base layer garment, an impact-attenuation sub-layer, and an impact-plate assembly. In addition, the system may include one or more garments that are wearable to secure the base layer garment, the impact-attenuation sub-layer, the impact-plate assembly, and any combination thereof. The impact-attenuation sub-layer is wearable over the base layer and may be combined with the base layer to provide a first amount of impact attenuation (e.g., during light-contact practice). Additionally, the base layer and the impact-attenuation sub-layer may be layered beneath an impact-plate assembly to provide another amount of impact attenuation (e.g., during full-contact engagement and/or competition).
Among other features, the impact-attenuation sub-layer includes discrete lateral elements. For example, the impact-attenuation sub-layer includes a left lateral component and a right-lateral component that are not connected directly to one another. Further, the discrete lateral elements are not directly coupled with an impact-plate system layered directly atop the discrete lateral elements. As such, the discrete lateral elements are movable independent from one another and from the impact-plate assembly, such as when the athlete moves or when the system absorbs an impact.
In one aspect, the disclosure includes an impact-attenuation sub-layer for a shoulder-pad system, the impact-attenuation sub-layer including a first impact-attenuation component and a second impact-attenuation component. (The first and second impact-attenuation components may be described as mirror-images of one another, such that a description of one of the components may equally apply to the other component. For ease of readability, in some instances only one of the components may be described.) The first and second impact-attenuation components each include a cushioning component, which has a first surface and a second surface opposing, and facing away from, the first surface. The cushioning component includes a thickness between the first surface and the second surface, the second surface having a releasable fastener. In addition, the cushioning component also includes a perimeter edge forming a boundary around the cushioning component, the perimeter edge of the cushioning component of the first impact-attenuation component being discontinuous with the perimeter edge of the cushioning component of the second impact-attenuation component. The first and second impact-attenuation components also each include a shoulder-cap component coupled to the cushioning component and extending outward, and away from, the perimeter edge. The shoulder-cap component has a third surface facing in a same direction as the first surface and an impact plate that comprises at least part of the third surface.
In another aspect, the disclosure describes a garment including a shirt body. The shirt body has an anterior portion (e.g., front), a posterior portion (e.g., back), a first shoulder yoke, and a second shoulder yoke. The anterior portion, the posterior portion, the first shoulder yoke, and the second shoulder yoke are constructed of one or more textile layers, and the first and second shoulder yokes connect the anterior portion to the posterior portion and form a neck-receiving opening. The garment also includes a first anterior releasable fastener coupled to the anterior portion on a first lateral side of the shirt body, a second anterior releasable fastener coupled to the anterior portion on a second lateral side of the shirt body, a first posterior releasable fastener coupled to the posterior portion on the first lateral side of the shirt body, and a second posterior releasable fastener coupled to the posterior portion on the second lateral side of the shirt body. A first impact-attenuation component having a first cushioning component is connectable to the shirt body. The first cushioning component includes a first-cushion anterior portion, a first-cushion posterior portion, and a first-cushion shoulder yoke connecting the first-cushion anterior portion to the first-cushion posterior portion. The first-cushion anterior portion includes a first-cushion anterior releasable fastener that releasably mates with the first anterior releasable fastener, and the first-cushion posterior portion includes a first-cushion posterior releasable fastener that releasably mates with the first posterior releasable fastener. The first-cushion shoulder yoke at least partially covers the first shoulder yoke of the shirt body when the first-cushion anterior releasable fastener mates with the first anterior releasable fastener and the first-cushion posterior releasable fastener mates with the first posterior releasable fastener. The garment also includes a second impact-attenuation component having a second cushioning component, and the second impact-attenuation component is also connectable to the shirt body in a manner similar to the first impact-attenuation component. The second cushioning component includes a second-cushion anterior portion, a second-cushion posterior portion, and a second-cushion shoulder yoke connecting the second-cushion anterior portion to the second-cushion posterior portion. The second-cushion anterior portion includes a second-cushion anterior releasable fastener that releasably mates with the second anterior releasable fastener, and the second-cushion posterior portion includes a second-cushion posterior releasable fastener that releasably mates with the second posterior releasable fastener. The second-cushion shoulder yoke at least partially covers the second shoulder yoke of the shirt body when the second-cushion anterior releasable fastener mates with the second anterior releasable fastener and the second-cushion posterior releasable fastener mates with the second posterior releasable fastener.
A further aspect of the disclosure is related to a shoulder-pad system having an impact-attenuation sub-layer positionable underneath an impact-plate assembly, the impact-attenuation sub-layer and the impact-plate assembly making up at least part of the shoulder-pad system. The shoulder-pad system includes a first lateral side and a second lateral side, the first and second lateral sides being substantially mirror-image constructions of one another. The first and second lateral sides each include the impact-attenuation sub-layer comprising a cushioning component and a shoulder-cap component. The cushioning component includes a first surface, a second surface, and a thickness between the first surface and the second surface, the first surface facing towards the impact-plate assembly when the impact-attenuation sub-layer is positioned underneath the impact-plate assembly. The cushioning component also includes an anterior cushion portion, a posterior cushion portion, and a shoulder yoke, the shoulder yoke connecting the anterior cushion portion to the posterior cushion portion. The shoulder-cap component is hingedly coupled to the shoulder yoke. The impact-plate assembly also includes an anterior plate assembly, a posterior plate assembly, and a shoulder assembly, the shoulder assembly including an arched frame connecting the anterior plate assembly to the posterior plate assembly. The arched frame includes a convex, crown-side surface, and a concave surface opposing the convex, crown-side surface. The shoulder yoke of the cushioning component is nested within the arched frame, and the first surface of the cushioning component is layered against the concave surface of the arched frame. The first surface of the cushioning component may not include any fasteners for coupling the impact-attenuation sub-layer directly to the impact-plate assembly.
Having generally described various aspects of the disclosure, reference will now be made to the various figures.
As previously indicated, this disclosure generally describes a shoulder-pad system that may be used to attenuate impact in various contexts, such as in American-style football, lacrosse, hockey, motocross, and the like, and an exemplary shoulder-pad system 100 is illustrated in
Referring now to
When describing various aspects of the shoulder-pad system 100, relative terms may be used to aid in understanding relative relationships. For instance, the shoulder-pad system 100 may be divided into an anterior region 102 that generally corresponds with a chest and/or abdomen of a wearer, and a posterior region 104 that generally correspond with a back of a wearer, such as a cervical region, thoracic region, lumbar region, and or scapula region. Both the anterior region 102 and the posterior region 104 may include medial portions and lateral portions, the medial portions being positioned relatively more towards a vertical mid-line (based on the orientation of the system as depicted in
The relative areas 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112 are not intended to demarcate precise areas of the shoulder-pad system 100. Rather, the relative areas 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112 are intended to represent general areas of the shoulder-pad system 100 to aid in understanding the various descriptions provided in this disclosure. In addition, it is understood that a portion of the shoulder-pad system 100 may include multiple regions or areas. For example, the anterior region 102 may extend through both the right-lateral side 112, the medial area, and the left-lateral side 110. And the left-lateral side 110 may include portions of both the anterior region 102 and the posterior region 104. The relative areas 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, and 112 are provided for explanatory and illustrative purposes and are not meant to depend on a human being for interpretive purposes. Accordingly, some aspects herein may be described as corresponding to a left front quadrant, a right front quadrant, a left rear quadrant, and/or a right rear quadrant.
Referring now to
In addition, the shoulder-pad system 100 includes various garments that fit onto, and at least partially around, different portions of the shoulder-pad system 100 in order to at least partially secure the portions of the shoulder-pad system together. In this sense, the garments may at least partially encase, wrap, or enclose portions of the shoulder-pad system. In addition, the garments may function to secure portions of the shoulder-pad system 100 to an athlete. For example, the shoulder-pad system 100 includes a securing garment 500 that is positionable over the impact-plate assembly 200 and that may be securable to the impact-plate assembly 200 and to one or more other garments (e.g., pants, belt, base layer(s), etc.). Furthermore, the shoulder-pad system 100 includes a pair of discrete shoulder sleeves 600A and 600B that are detached from other garment portions, such as the securing garment 500, base-layer garment 400, or other upper-body garments (e.g., uniform jersey), and that are attachable to other portions other portions of the system (e.g., to an epaulette plate). The various subcomponents depicted in
Turning briefly to
In some aspects, the securing garment 500 may include one or more second lateral panels 524 affixed to the anterior panel 506, posterior panel 508, or a combination thereof. The exemplary securing garment 500 in
Although the one or more first lateral panels 520 and the one or more second lateral panels 524 have each been described as configured to wrap in a certain arrangement around the securing garment 500 and/or around the impact-plate assembly 200, it is understood that the described positioning and coupling is not the only suitable way for providing same. For example, the anterior and posterior panels on a same lateral side of the garment may releasably connect to one another. For example, the right-side anterior panel may releasably connect to the right-side posterior panel, using any of a variety of releasable fasteners, such a hook-and-loop fastener, a buckle, a clip, a male-and-female fastener (e.g., stud and socket, snap, etc.), button, and the like.
The subcomponents in
The impact-plate assembly 200 and the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 may be substantially retained in a particular position or arrangement using various features. For example, the securing garment 500 may be overlaid atop the impact-plate assembly 200 and coupled to other portions of the shoulder-pad system 100, to other garments (e.g., pants, belt, base layers, etc.), to the athlete, or any combination thereof. The securing garment 500 is depicted as a bib garment (or a tank-style garment), and other aspects of the disclosure may include a number of other suitable upper-body garments for securing the impact-plate assembly 200. The securing garment 500 may then be attached to one or more various anchor points on the impact-plate assembly 200, on other garments (e.g., pants, belt, etc.), on the athlete, or any combination thereof. In addition, the discrete shoulder sleeves 600A and 600B are each securable around a portion of an arm of the athlete, as well as to a respective portion of the impact-plate assembly, such as to an epaulette plate (e.g., 204) of the impact-plate assembly, a respective shoulder-cap (e.g., 304) of the sub-layer, or both the epaulette plate and the shoulder-cap. In this respect, the discrete shoulder sleeves 600A and 600B are also securing garments that function to couple various portions of the shoulder-pad system 100 together and to the athlete.
Referring briefly to
The shoulder-pad system 100 may be described as modular, in that the various subcomponents may be added to, and/or removed from, the system when it is desirable to do so. In addition, the system is modular in the sense that one or more subcomponents may be selectively repositioned within the system without necessarily affecting a portion or function of other subcomponents. As such, the system may include one or more layers or sub-layers that are modular.
The one or more subcomponents of the shoulder-pad system 100 may be utilized in various contexts. For instance, the entire system 100 may be worn in certain circumstances, and in other occasions, only some of the subcomponents may be worn. For example, the base-layer garment 400 might initially be positioned onto an athlete, and one or more subcomponents may or may not be layered onto the base-layer garment 400 depending on the activity. If the athlete is engaging in warm-ups, conditioning, or non-contact drills, then the athlete may not layer the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 onto the base-layer garment 400. Further, it may be desirable in other instances to include the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 without the impact-plate assembly 200, such as in a 7-on-7 drill or other light-contact drills.
The various subcomponents each includes certain features and functionality that arise from the sub-component independently, as well as the synergistic interaction of the sub-component with one or more other subcomponents. Some of these aspects of the technology are generally described in this portion of the disclosure, and they will be described in more detail in other portions of the Specification. For example, one or more of the subcomponents may provide an amount of range of motion for a wearer, such as a shoulder range of motion or an arms-overhead range of motion. In addition, one or more of the subcomponents may provide system-stability features that improve the ability of the subcomponents to attenuate an impact and to remain in, or easily return to, a pre-impact state or arrangement. Additional features of the subcomponents may reduce or alleviate some maintenance often performed on more traditional padding systems, as well as improve the launderability of the subcomponents. Furthermore, one or more of the subcomponents may be customizable to a particular athlete or group of athletes. These features and functionality, as well as others, of the shoulder-pad system 100 and the various subcomponents will be described in additional detail in other parts of this disclosure.
Having provided an overview of the aspects described herein, the impact-attenuation sub-layer will now be described in more detail. As shown in
In some aspects, the impact-attenuation components 320 and 340 are mirror images of one another, such that a description of one of the components may equally apply to the other component. For ease of readability, in some instances only one of the components may be described, and it is to be understood that the same description may also apply to the other one of the impact-attenuation components.
Each of the first and the second impact-attenuation components 320 and 340 includes a cushioning component coupled to a shoulder-cap component. For example, the first impact-attenuation component 320 includes a cushioning component 322 coupled to a shoulder-cap component 304. The cushioning component 322 may include various features and may be constructed of various materials. For example, the cushioning component may include various polymer foam materials that return to an original shape after being compressed. Examples of suitable polymer foam materials include polyurethane, ethylvinylacetate, polyester, polypropylene, and polyethylene foams. Moreover, both thermoplastic and thermoset polymer foam materials may be utilized. In some configurations, cushioning component 322 may be formed from a polymer foam material with a varying density, or solid polymer or rubber materials may be utilized. Fluid-filled chambers may also be utilized. Further, the cushioning component 322 may include one or more layers of cushioning material that is coupled between outer textile layers, and the cushioning component 322 may include apertures or grooves to enhance breathability and flexibility.
The cushioning component 322 may be interposed beneath the impact-plate assembly 200 when the shoulder-pad system is assembled, such that the cushioning component 322 may dampen forces imparted on the impact-plate assembly 200 during an impact, as well as provide other functionality. Also, different pad components, or portions of pad components, may be formed from different materials, or may be formed from similar materials with different densities. By selecting thicknesses, materials, and densities for each of the various cushion components, the degree of impact force attenuation may be varied throughout the system to impart a desired degree of cushioning or protection. For instance, the cushioning component 322 includes various portions or regions bound by a perimeter edge 316, such as a first padding portion 308 and a second padding portion 309. The padding portions may be disposed at locations that commonly receive impact, for example, at a location corresponding to the shoulder, chest, latissimus dorsi, trapezius, and the like. In addition, the padding portions 308 and 309 may include respective thicknesses or other properties that are selected to provide a particular amount of force attenuation in a particular region. For example, the second padding portion 309 may be thicker than the first padding portion 308 in instances or contexts in which the shoulder region is expect to receive larger, or more frequent, impacts than the chest region.
The cushioning component 322 includes the perimeter edge 316 that forms a boundary around the cushioning component 322. The perimeter edge 316 may be heat sealed, stitched, or otherwise finished to form a discrete padding component. In an aspect of this disclosure the perimeter edge 316 of the cushioning component 322 is discontinuous with, and not connected to, the perimeter edge 316 of the cushioning component 342. As briefly described hereinabove, these discrete units may allow one portion of the system 100 to move independently of other portions of the system, and this independent movement may positively affect range-of-motion and system-stability features (e.g., upon impact).
In
As previously explained, the impact-attenuation components 320 and 340 also include a shoulder-cap component. As such, the first impact-attenuation component 320 includes a shoulder-cap component 304 coupled to the first cushioning component 322, and the second impact-attenuation component 340 includes a shoulder-cap component 306 coupled to the second cushioning component 342. The shoulder-cap component 304 is coupled to the cushioning component 322 by a hinge attachment mechanism 305, or other suitable attachment mechanisms. For example, the hinge attachment mechanism 305 may be a material strip constructed from a durable and flexible material, such that the shoulder-cap component 304 may hingedly flex relative to the cushioning component 322. Furthermore, the shoulder-cap component 304 is coupled to the cushioning component 322 such that the shoulder-cap component 304 extends outward and away from the perimeter edge 316 of the cushioning component 322. The shoulder-cap may be padded or cushioned, similar to the cushioning component 322, to dampen impacts at the upper arm and shoulder of the athlete. Additionally, the shoulder-cap component 304 includes an impact plate 303, which may be constructed of a rigid material(s), similar to those used for the impact-plate assembly 200, and the impact plate 303 makes up part of the outward-facing surface of the first impact-attenuation component 320. Absent the present technology, in which the shoulder-cap component 304 is coupled to the cushioning component 322, the shoulder-cap component is sometimes attached to the impact-plate assembly 200. However, attaching the shoulder-cap component 304 to the cushioning component 322 can reduce binding and movement restriction that sometimes occurs when the shoulder-cap component 304 is coupled to the impact-plate assembly 200 as an athlete raises his or her arms overhead.
Referring now to
As mentioned above, the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 may include one or more releasable fasteners that are effective to releasably couple the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 to the base-layer garment 400, and in one aspect, releasable fasteners may be positioned on the inward-facing surfaces 314 and 315 of
Referring to
The base-layer garment 400 includes one or more releasable fasteners that correspondingly mate with the releasable fasteners of the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300. As shown in
The base-layer garment 400 includes releasable-fastener components that are configured to, and positioned to, releasably mate with the releasable-fastener components of the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300. For example, the garment 400 includes a first anterior releasable fastener 418 at the first lateral side 408, and a second anterior releasable fastener 420 at the second lateral side. The first anterior releasable fastener 418 releasably mates with the first-cushion anterior releasable fastener 328, and the second anterior releasable fastener 420 releasably mates with the second-cushion anterior releasable fastener 348 (see
In one aspect, the garment 400 may include one or more sensors (e.g., 480) configured to measure one or more biometric indicators (e.g., heart rate, body temperature, perspiration amounts, perspiration content, hydration levels, etc.), and the sensors may be integrated with the releasable coupling of the garment. Furthermore, the cushioning components 322 and 342 may include telemetry (e.g., including wiring 375) that is integrated with the releasable coupling of the cushioning components and that is configured to transmit electronic signals to one or more processing units and/or data-storage devices. For instance, the shoulder-pad system may include an electronic controller coupled to the posterior plate of the impact-plate assembly. As such, the male-and-female coupling provides a signaling conduit between one or more biometric sensors and the telemetry.
In another embodiment, cushioning components 322 and 342 may include one or more fluid-communication channels for transferring a fluid from a fluid source to various regions of the pad. For example, the fluid-communication channels may be configured to transmit conditioned air or moisture (e.g., water) to various parts of the system 100 to aid in cooling or warming a skin surface, to aid in physiological recovery, or for some other benefit. For example, the grooves may be constructed into the inward facing surfaces 314 and 315 in a manner similar to that described in co-owned application U.S. Ser. No. 13/747,974, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Additionally, the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 may include one or more extension cushioning components 360. The extension cushioning components 360 may include releasable fasteners, similar to those described hereinabove with reference to cushioning components 322 and 342. The releasable fasteners may be configured to mate with one or more base-layer extension cushioning component releasable fasteners 460. Additionally, a lumbar extension cushioning component 364 is depicted. The base-layer garment 400 may be constructed from one or more textile layers.
Referring now to
The impact-plate assembly 200 includes an anterior plate assembly 207, a posterior plate assembly 211, and a shoulder assembly 220. In one aspect, the shoulder assembly 220 includes an arched frame 226 connecting the anterior plate assembly 207 to the posterior plate assembly 211, the arched frame 226 including a convex crown-side surface 216, and an opposite concave surface that opposes the convex crown-side surface (e.g., the opposite concave surface 218 of the right lateral shoulder assembly is labeled and the left lateral shoulder assembly would include a similar opposite concave surface underneath the convex surface 216). Accordingly, when the impact-plate assembly 200 is placed on top of the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300, the shoulder yoke 332 of the cushioning component is nested within the arched frame 226. Further, the first surface 312 of the cushioning component is layered directly against the concave surface of the arched frame 226.
As discussed hereinabove, in an aspect of this disclosure, the first surface 312 of the cushioning component 322 does not include any fasteners for coupling the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 directly to the impact-plate assembly 200. As such, when the impact-plate assembly 200 shifts, such as upon impact, the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 does not necessarily shift with the impact-plate assembly 200. Rather, the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 is anchored to the garment 400, such that the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 may not need to be adjusted post-impact (to the extent possibly needed had the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 been affixed directly to the impact-plate assembly). The discrete nature of the impact-attenuation sub-layer may provide additional benefits as well that allow portions of the shoulder-pad system 100 to move independently of one another. For example, when an athlete raises a right arm in a throwing motion (or otherwise to perform a movement), the impact-attenuation component 340 corresponding to the right side of the athlete's body may also be raised, while the impact-attenuation component 320 corresponding to the left side of the athlete's body may remain in pre-arm-raise position.
Other releasable coupling mechanisms may be utilized to connect the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 to the garment 400. Referring now to
As briefly mentioned hereinabove, the various subcomponents of the shoulder-pad system may be customizable to a particular athlete or group of athletes. For example, it may be desirable for an interior lineman to have larger and/or thicker impact-attenuation sub-layer components than those used by skill position players. Accordingly, the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 may include one or more sub-layer extension cushioning component fasteners 336, such that one or more extension cushioning components 360 may be added to the impact-attenuation sub-layer 300 to increase the thickness.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
In
In an aspect of the disclosure, by incorporating impact-attenuation components having different characteristics into the same shoulder-pad assembly, the assembly can be customized for a particular athlete. For example, if an athlete performs a throwing motion with a right arm more than a left arm, then a right-side cushion component having a size and/or shape different from the left-side cushion component might be selected and used in the system to reduce possible equipment impediments to desired range of motion. In addition, if an athlete has an injured area on one side of his or her body, such as the left side, then a left-side cushion component having a size and/or shape different from the right-side cushion component might be selected and used in the system to provide additional protection to the injured area. These are examples of how an aspect of the disclosed subject matter might be modular.
Referring now to
Although a male-and-female coupling is depicted for attaching the impact-attenuation sub-layer, any of the various other coupling mechanisms described herein might be utilized. In addition, although the garment 401 depicts a sleeveless upper-body portion, the garment 401 might include any length of sleeve, including short sleeves, three-quarter sleeves, or long sleeves. Similarly, the lower-body portion might include short pant-leg portions (as depicted), long pant-leg portions, or any length in-between.
From the foregoing, it will be seen that aspects herein are well adapted to attain all the ends and objects hereinabove set forth together with other advantages, which are inherent to the structure. It will be understood that certain features and subcombinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and subcombinations. This is contemplated by and is within the scope of the claims. Since many possible aspects may be made without departing from the scope thereof, it is to be understood that all matter herein set forth or shown in the accompanying drawings is to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/319,662, filed Apr. 7, 2016, titled “Impact-Attenuation Sub-Layer for a Shoulder-Pad System,” and further claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/319,660, filed Apr. 7, 2016, titled “Securing Garment for a Shoulder-Pad System,” and further claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/319,664, filed Apr. 7, 2016, titled “Discrete Shoulder Sleeve for a Shoulder-Pad System.” The entireties of the aforementioned applications are incorporated by reference herein.
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