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Single-speed bike brand says it could lose 30% of business due to post-Brexit tariffs; Susannah Constantine considers cycling six months after apologising for "joke" about killing cyclists; Sidis on the catwalk; Racing the tide + more on the live blog

It's the start of a new week and Dan Alexander is here with your cycling fix on the live blog...
01 February 2021, 19:45
A bit of a puddle
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by road.cc (@road.cc)

Would you go for it? We'll be asking the road.cc staffer who was faced with this earlier today how they got on... 

01 February 2021, 17:00
Note left on lamppost thanking scooter driver for helping daughter who fell off bike

This is a nice touch spotted on Cycleway 9 in Chiswick this afternoon by Jeremy Vine. The parent of a girl who fell off her bike while using the newly-opened segregated cycle lane wrote to "Mr Scooter Driver" who helped following the fall. The note also says: "thank God we were on the protected cycle path away from large vehicles."

01 February 2021, 11:57
Quella Bicycles set to lose up to 30% of business due to tariffs on sales to the EU, according to its co-founder

Single-speed bike brand Quella predicts it will lose up to 30 per cent of its business due to tariffs on sales to the EU. The Gloucester-based bike company's co-founder, Mike Mellor, told Punchline the 14% post-Brexit tariff applied to bikes that fall outside the 'sale origin rule' and anti-dumping tariffs up to 45% will seriously impact their business. As Quella's bikes use frames and components that are built in China and Taiwan, the company will have to pay the 'sale of origin' tariff as only bikes that are at least 55% made and produced inside the UK and EU can move between UK and EU tariff-free.

"Our tariff-free Brexit is blatantly not a tariff-free Brexit," Mellor told Punchline. "We sell bicycles into Europe, it's about 30 per cent of our turnover. There is duty on almost every single sale that is going through. Our bicycles are designed in the UK but the majority of the componentry and all the frames are made in the Far East, in Taiwan and China.

"We pay duty when the goods land in the UK. In the past we've popped those bikes to a courier and they arrive in Europe a couple of days later. Now, the bikes are arriving up to seven days later and we are getting charged another set of duty — 14 per cent if they're just applying the goods not manufactured in the country of origin tariff. And up to 45 per cent if they apply anti-dumping as if the goods have been imported from China, when we've already paid the duty.

"It's not what we were promised. About 30 per cent of our sales for 2021 were budgeted for the EU. We just cannot sell to wholesalers at the current rates. It's just not sustainable. We will lose between 0 and 30 per cent of our business."

Ten days ago Ribble announced they would refund the 14 per cent tariff for its EU customers who ordered between 1st-17th January. The announcement came after a would-be Ribble customer in Germany contacted road.cc and warned about "surprises" at checkout for EU residents ordering from the UK. 

01 February 2021, 15:14
"Hopefully she will become a voice to convince other women to take up travel by bicycle": Your thoughts on the Susannah story
Live blog comments 1/2/2021

 

01 February 2021, 15:11
Junior Alaphilippe coming soon
01 February 2021, 14:18
"It was a bit sad": How did Mathieu van der Poel celebrate his fourth cyclo-cross world title? With a pizza and a bottle of wine
Mathieu van der Poel on way to winning 2021 CX Worlds (picture credit Alex Whitehead, SWPix.com).JPG

Mathieu van der Poel wasn't in as jubilant a mood as you might expect for someone who had just won their fourth cyclo-cross rainbow jersey. He told Belgian outlet Sporza that he found yesterday's win a bit sad without the normal party atmosphere. "There was a strange vibe without fans," Van der Poel said. "Everyone just went home. That was a bit sad. The euphoria was different than usual. You can't do anything with your team or with your friends. It was very strange. How did I celebrate? A bottle of wine and a pizza with my girlfriend."

Having won his third consecutive world title in the discipline, Van der Poel admitted that cross is becoming less important to him and that it is the rivalry with Wout van Aert that keeps him motivated more than the sport itself. The 26-year-old also suggested he may leave the Tour de France after the second rest day in order to properly prepare for the Olympics.

Take a closer look at the bike that Van der Poel powered to victory in Oostende...

01 February 2021, 13:59
Tom Pidcock is officially an Ineos Grenadier

With the cyclo-cross season finished Tom Pidcock is officially an Ineos Grenadier. The team shared the first pictures of the 21-year-old in their kit on social media this morning. Pidcock has already trained with the team at their winter camp in Gran Canaria, but can now turn his full attention to racing on the road. The last of his cyclo-cross commitments, the World Championships in Oostende, finished in disappointment for the rider from Leeds who finished just outside the medals in fourth having been badly held up on the opening lap.

Pidcock's calendar for his opening professional road season is varied and includes the opening weekend of the cobbled classics in Belgium, a couple of Ardennes classics and the Vuelta a España.

01 February 2021, 13:12
Positive data from cycling infrastructure in Enfield
01 February 2021, 11:27
Philippe Gilbert sets sights on Milan-San Remo

Phil Gil has made his goal for 2021 pretty clear with this video posted on his Twitter yesterday. The five-time Monument winner is a Milan-San Remo short of completing the set and becoming only the fourth man in cycling history to win all five of the sport's most prestigious one-day races. If Gilbert can add the illusive San Remo win to his palmarès then he'll join an elite club alongside fellow Belgians: Eddy Merckx, Rik Van Looy and Roger De Vlaeminck.

When he's not training to win San Remo, Gilbert offers personalised video messages to fans on celebrity messaging website Cameo for £37.50. You can check out the other famous cycling Cameoers here...

01 February 2021, 10:24
Watford Junction Station's bicycle rack removed due to thefts
Watford Junction Station (wikimedia commons)

Watford Borough Council has removed a bicycle rack at Watford Junction Station following a series of thefts. The council says the decision was made to reduce the number of bikes being stolen. The Watford Observer reports that cyclists have instead been asked to use a secure custom-built facility near one of the platforms that is monitored by CCTV.

On their Facebook page, the council explained the decision: "Due to a number of bike thefts, the bike rack to the left of Watford Junction station entrance is being taken out of action. Cyclists are being asked to use the secure custom-built bike facility at the side of platform 6. This undercover facility has 300 spaces and is monitored by CCTV which feeds into the station's control room."

01 February 2021, 10:16
Sidis on the catwalk

Well, this is...interesting. It appears to be a triathlon-ready outfit including, I've been reliably informed, a pair of goggles from the Aqua Sphere x Michael Phelps Xceed range. The running shorts over the suit jacket and what looks like a clown shirt underneath are nice touches. However, the star of the show is undoubtedly the Sidis...Unfortunately it doesn't look like they went all the way and added cleats too. Then again negotiating the catwalk in cleats is probably too much to ask. One member of the road.cc news team speculated it could be part of the Robin Lynch x Rapha collection...

01 February 2021, 09:58
Best of the action from a day at the Belgian seaside

It lived up to the hype, if slightly dampened by an inopportune puncture for Wout van Aert. The course in Oostede certainly gave the TV cameras some great shots...It was Mathieu van der Poel's day with the 26-year-old winning his fourth cyclo-cross rainbow jersey and third in a row.

01 February 2021, 08:51
Susannah Constantine considers cycling six months after apologising for "joke" about killing cyclists...but only because she's about to lose her licence for repeat speeding offences

Susannah Constantine is close to coming full circle six months on from apologising for a "joke" about killing cyclists. The former TV stylist told Jeremy Vine that she's about to lose her driving licence after getting two speeding fines in one journey..."'I’m about to lose my licence I think so I might have to take up a bicycle," she explained on Jeremy Vine on 5. "I have too many speeding fines and what's known as a totter – I keep getting points on my licence. I got two in one journey when I was going down to Cornwall on the A3O3 and I was only 2mph over on one stretch and 4mph over on another."

In July, Susannah found herself in hot water over comments she made about cyclists during an episode of her My Wardrobe Malfunction podcast. She said: "Oh I hate cycling.  I won’t cycle. No, I fucking hate cyclists. My husband is a cyclist and if I see him on the road on his bicycle, I’m going to run him over. And the day when I know I’m about to die, I’m going to get in my car, aged 90, and I’m going to drive into cyclists wearing Lycra, kill the lot of them and go and die in jail."

There was little sympathy on social media for Susannah likely losing her licence...

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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65 comments

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wtjs | 3 years ago
0 likes

she might be banned from driving after totting up too many speeding offences

Deadbeats like this live to publicise themselves, so the whole story may be a con. However, I reflect that court cases are now running at least 18 months to 2 years behind, so don't the shyster lawyers employed by such people just advise them to decline the police offer of some reduced punishment and tough it out in the hope the courts collapse under the weight, or there's a massive amnesty to clear the backlog? The police would certainly love that.

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wtjs | 3 years ago
0 likes

Would you go for it? We'll be asking the road.cc staffer who was faced with this earlier today how they got on... 

Yes! I think you'd get through that flood, especially with the excellent mid-calf waterproof socks!

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Rick_Rude | 3 years ago
2 likes

How much 'design' goes into a fixie?

Fixies fall into two categories mostly. One is the artisan frame sort with high-end components for hipsters who watch Mash videos. The other is for the student hipster on a budget and isn't going to spend £100 on a bottom bracket but thinks fixies are cool. A year later his spokes will have rusted and his bearings crumbled and the bike will probably be abandoned in city centre after uni finishes.

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wtjs | 3 years ago
7 likes

I don't think we care about what a haggard hard drinking opinionated fashion deadbeat thinks or does, except that it would clearly be a good outcome for society if she is kept off the road for as long as possible.

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Gkam84 | 3 years ago
0 likes

The one question they didn't ask. Did he vote for Brexit? He speaks about "it wasn't what we were promised"...So it's just coming home to roost if he did. I have no sympathy if that is the case. 

Also, I suspect they are getting anti-dumping because of the price point of their bikes, it's cheap "fashion" bike, as he said himself. He could easily have that frame built and welded, to scale in the UK and wouldn't cost the £500 a frame he quotes, but I bet it costs him less than £50 a frame in Asia...

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Legin replied to Gkam84 | 3 years ago
4 likes

I don't know if you noticed Thatcher killed off most of our industry 40 years ago. We are a nation of middle-men, buy cheap, sell high. Somehow the twats who lead us haven't quite understood that.

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Gkam84 replied to Legin | 3 years ago
0 likes

Legin wrote:

I don't know if you noticed Thatcher killed off most of our industry 40 years ago. We are a nation of middle-men, buy cheap, sell high. Somehow the twats who lead us haven't quite understood that.

I know many frame builders in the UK and even more who would be capable of putting a frame together. If he wanted, he could shop around a lot of places in the UK to get components made in the UK and have a full UK frame aswell, but he's after the budget end of the market, so must buy cheap instead of quality.

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Secret_squirrel replied to Gkam84 | 3 years ago
3 likes

I must say I'm finding it hard to feel any sympathy. Looks one step removed from a gas tubing BSO. Maybe he should try adding some value?

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Dingaling replied to Legin | 3 years ago
3 likes

Unions and management did far more damage to manufacturing long before Thatcher. Dock workers and car workers fucked their businesses years before Thatcher came to power.

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eburtthebike replied to Dingaling | 3 years ago
0 likes

Dingaling wrote:

Unions and management did far more damage to manufacturing long before Thatcher. Dock workers and car workers fucked their businesses years before Thatcher came to power.

Yeah, they all ruined their own industries because they knew they could just walk away and get a job in the city the next day.  As we're seeing very clearly now, the key workers aren't the share sellers or finance wizards, it's doctors, nurses, delivery staff and dock workers.

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Legin replied to Dingaling | 3 years ago
3 likes

Was that before or after the owners and shareholders had failled to invest in modernising their businesses? Was that before or after the owners and shareholders had nicked all the cash? Was that before or after our basket case economy joined the EU. Unions only abused their power where there was poor management, poor management only got appointed where it suited the owners of the business to appoint them. 

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Legin | 3 years ago
1 like

Re Export Tariffs tbf to Brexiteers they never once said Project Fear would fail, and so far it is looking a resounding success!

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adamrice | 3 years ago
4 likes

"negotiating the catwalk in cleats is probably too much to ask."

Have you seen the shoes women wear on the catwalk?

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Titanus | 3 years ago
0 likes

I don't condone dangerous driving but speed limits are the bane of my existence. To some this may sound contradictory, but that's only because many drivers are very crap, and speed does indeed exacerbate crapness. The key to safety is appropriate use of excess speed. 

2 speeding offenses in one journey? This suggests too many speed limits, or at least too many limits that are overly slow. Unfortunately the law doesn't make allowances for higher speeds on empty motorways which makes it an ass in my view. Why can't Britain, like Germany have a road or two without these frustrating limits? Any why is it 70 miles per hour tops? The one and only true speed limit is more like 186,000 miles, not per hour or even per minute, but per second! Even at that speed it takes a while to get anywhere beyond our own bunch of planets. But even for moving around on our own little world, an entire hour to do just 70 miles is pathetic.

Many will argue against my view on speed. But many of these arguments will come either from people on Strava, or those who don't have a problem with Strava which is all about how fast one can go, albeit on a push bike but the principle is the same. Speed limits are one of many reasons I no longer ride a motorcycle anymore. Whats the point in paying through the roof to maintain and operate a vehicle on public roads only to be patronised and frustrated by pedantic beurocracy.

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brooksby replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
1 like

If you can hit lightspeed on your bike (or your car, for that matter) then fair play to you; but I think you'll find manoeuvering around the urban environment quite difficult...

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andystow replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

At even 90% of lightspeed the car, driver, air, and everything within a few kilometers would turn into exotic new forms of very hot matter and radiation within the first centimeter of travel. Much more expensive and inconvenient than a speeding ticket!

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hawkinspeter replied to andystow | 3 years ago
1 like

andystow wrote:

At even 90% of lightspeed the car, driver, air, and everything within a few kilometers would turn into exotic new forms of very hot matter and radiation within the first centimeter of travel. Much more expensive and inconvenient than a speeding ticket!

Relevant XKCD: https://what-if.xkcd.com/1/

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hawkinspeter replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
0 likes

At least if you do manage to get up to 186,000 miles per second, it won't feel like you're spending any time travelling at all due to the time dilation.

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OnYerBike replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

Time will pass for you still, it will just pass slower for everyone else. So if you take a 10-minute journey, your wrist watch will show 10 minutes has passed. But when you get to your destination, the receptionist's clock will show the same time that you left, because no time has passed for everyone else.

Admittedly you'd be travelling a few thousand times around the world in that time so it might be a moot point...

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hawkinspeter replied to OnYerBike | 3 years ago
0 likes

OnYerBike wrote:

Time will pass for you still, it will just pass slower for everyone else. So if you take a 10-minute journey, your wrist watch will show 10 minutes has passed. But when you get to your destination, the receptionist's clock will show the same time that you left, because no time has passed for everyone else.

Admittedly you'd be travelling a few thousand times around the world in that time so it might be a moot point...

I would have thought the opposite - time would pass quicker for everyone else and be effectively stopped for yourself. It's a moot point though as if you have any mass at all (being a weight weenie won't save you) then you'd have infinite energy - you'd collapse into a black hole before you'd get to the speed of light.

(I recall reading somewhere that we know that neutrinos have some mass as they can change flavour, and if they were massless, they wouldn't be able to change as they wouldn't 'experience' any movement in time)

Edit: Found a suitable link: https://phys.org/news/2014-05-does-light-experience-time.html

Also saw a paradox about neutrinos - if you can move faster than a neutrino (which theoretically can move at any speed slower than light), you would change it into an antineutrino (which would make it a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorana_fermion)

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Captain Badger replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
6 likes

Titanus wrote:

I don't condone dangerous driving but speed limits are the bane of my existence. To some this may sound contradictory, but that's only because many drivers are very crap, and speed does indeed exacerbate crapness. The key to safety is appropriate use of excess speed. 

Please tell me when excess speed is appropriate....

Titanus wrote:

2 speeding offenses in one journey? This suggests too many speed limits, or at least too many limits that are overly slow.

No this suggests that she broke the law at least twice in one journey.....

Titanus wrote:

Unfortunately the law doesn't make allowances for higher speeds on empty motorways which makes it an ass in my view. Why can't Britain, like Germany have a road or two without these frustrating limits? Any why is it 70 miles per hour tops? The one and only true speed limit is more like 186,000 miles, not per hour or even per minute, but per second! Even at that speed it takes a while to get anywhere beyond our own bunch of planets. But even for moving around on our own little world, an entire hour to do just 70 miles is pathetic.

Aaaah now I  see! You're trolling us - you are Socrapicyclist AICM £5. Nice one dude, you had me going then, Chapeau!

Titanus wrote:

Many will argue against my view on speed. But many of these arguments will come either from people on Strava, or those who don't have a problem with Strava which is all about how fast one can go, albeit on a push bike but the principle is the same. Speed limits are one of many reasons I no longer ride a motorcycle anymore. Whats the point in paying through the roof to maintain and operate a vehicle on public roads only to be patronised and frustrated by pedantic beurocracy.

Ditto my previous..... nice one

 

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Hirsute replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
0 likes

I took them to mean excess speed compared with the speed limit rather than excess speed for the situation.

If every drove at the speed for the situation, we wouldn't need speed limits and I think some of the 'why isn't it 30' is down to different limits in different counties.

Where I live, there are not many 40s and I am surprised that in other places the limit can be 40 where I am used to an equivalent being a 30, hence there is a bit of arbitrariness that people use for leverage.

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Simon E replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
6 likes

Titanus wrote:

I don't condone dangerous driving but speed limits are the bane of my existence.

...

The key to safety is appropriate use of excess speed.

Excess speed is, by definition, dangerous. It cannot be a key to safety.

If speed limits are the bane of your existence then perhaps ask why you're going everywhere in such a hurry that you feel you need to repeatedly break the law.

Perhaps a stint with the police or fire service might change your perspective. 70 mph is enough to do all kinds of damage - to your car, yourself, roadside buildings and so on. Just check the regularly updated Car crashes into Building thread to see how many dickheads can't even keep their cars on the road in town and city centres. Those incidents wouldn't happen if drivers respect the speed limit and drive to the conditions. Like you, each one of them thinks they are a "better than average" driver.

Meanwhile I'll happily vote for more pedantic beaurocracy if it means selfish fuckers in cars and vans have to slow down and show a little consideration for other road users (and buildings).

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Titanus replied to Simon E | 3 years ago
0 likes

Simon E wrote:

Titanus wrote:

I don't condone dangerous driving but speed limits are the bane of my existence.

...

The key to safety is appropriate use of excess speed.

Excess speed is, by definition, dangerous. It cannot be a key to safety.

If speed limits are the bane of your existence then perhaps ask why you're going everywhere in such a hurry that you feel you need to repeatedly break the law.

Perhaps a stint with the police or fire service might change your perspective. 70 mph is enough to do all kinds of damage - to your car, yourself, roadside buildings and so on. Just check the regularly updated Car crashes into Building thread to see how many dickheads can't even keep their cars on the road in town and city centres. Those incidents wouldn't happen if drivers respect the speed limit and drive to the conditions. Like you, each one of them thinks they are a "better than average" driver.

Meanwhile I'll happily vote for more pedantic beaurocracy if it means selfish fuckers in cars and vans have to slow down and show a little consideration for other road users (and buildings).

I know it sounds contradictory, but what I mean is that sometimes drivin fast isn't necessarily dangerous. A bit of a blast on an empty road isn't much to be worried about. I always used to ride about 90 or so on motorways unless foul weather or too much traffic. I never died even once. Treavelling at higher speeds and whether it's appropriate comes down to common sense and good judgement.

For me, tailgating is a substaintial issue. On a motorcycle if  need to brake hard and the car behind can't stop in time, he gets a dent in his bonnet, I get a wheel chair. So it is something that gets me particularly irate. This issue isn't enforced nearly to the extent of speeding. Surely those yellow speed cams on motorways can be set up to measure distances and speeds between cars and issue fines based on the results.

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Rendel Harris replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
6 likes

Titanus wrote:

2 speeding offenses in one journey? This suggests too many speed limits

No, it suggests an irresponsible tonker incapable of controlling themselves or their vehicle within the parameters decreed by law.

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mdavidford | 3 years ago
3 likes

Quote:

If Gilbert can add the illusive San Remo win to his palmarès...

Does that mean he's planning to deepfake his face onto footage of the actual winner?

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Riverbib | 3 years ago
2 likes

She was banging on her alcoholism on Woman's Hour this morning. Bloody well hope she doesn't drink and drive.

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Captain Badger replied to Riverbib | 3 years ago
3 likes

Riverbib wrote:

 Bloody well hope she doesn't drink and drive.

Two hopes there. And Bob's dead...

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muhasib | 3 years ago
5 likes

No mention of when Susannah Constantine committed the offences? I wouldn't have thought driving to Cornwall was anything to draw attention to with the lockdown going on.

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Secret_squirrel replied to muhasib | 3 years ago
0 likes

Given that as of this time last year she had a 127 acre pad in West Sussex thats a very good question.

Though tbf (if I must) the offenses may not have occurred during lockdown.

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