Last updated: July 6, 2026
Getting Startedintermediate

Commercial Sim Gear: GOLFZON vs TrackMan

GOLFZON vs TrackMan vs Foresight vs Full Swing for Facilities

GOLFZON TwoVision ($20-30K/bay), TrackMan 4 ($18-20K), iO ($12-14K), Full Swing ($12-16K), GCQuad ($8-11K). Compared by TCO, software, maintenance.

The Short Answer

GOLFZON TwoVision ($20-30K/bay), TrackMan 4 ($18-20K), iO ($12-14K), Full Swing ($12-16K), GCQuad ($8-11K). Compared by TCO, software, maintenance.

By AceJuly 6, 202618 min read

The Six Commercial Systems You Need to Know

The commercial sim equipment market for 2026 has six serious contenders. Not all of them belong in every facility. Here’s the landscape:

System Price Per Bay Business Model Fit Total Install Base (Est.)
GOLFZON TwoVision $20,000-$30,000 Premium lounges, entertainment venues 500+ venues (mostly Asia), expanding US
TrackMan 4 $18,000-$20,000 Premium lounges, coaching, fittings 15,000+ units (all markets)
TrackMan iO $12,000-$14,000 Sim bars, mid-market facilities New (2025 launch)
Full Swing Pro/Series $12,000-$16,000 Franchises, sim bars (Back Nine) 2,000+ commercial units
Foresight GCQuad $8,000-$11,000 Fitting studios, coaching centers 10,000+ units
Golf VX Quantum $15,000-$25,000 Premium lounges, unusual spaces 500+ commercial units

Each of these systems has strengths, weaknesses, and a specific business model they serve best. The next six sections explain what you actually get for your money.


1. GOLFZON TwoVision: The Full Immersion Experience

Price per bay: $20,000-$30,000 Best for: Premium lounges, entertainment-first venues, high-traffic locations Used by: GOLFZON’s own franchise network, partnerships with USGA, Troon, NGCOA, Pebble Beach Ecosystem: Fully integrated (hardware + software + content all from GOLFZON)

GOLFZON TwoVision is not a launch monitor with a screen. It’s a fully integrated simulator system — three screens for wraparound immersion, a custom-built enclosure, their proprietary launch monitor technology, and a software ecosystem that includes officially licensed courses (Pebble Beach, St. Andrews, and 190+ others).

The TwoVision is the closest thing to hitting real fairways that currently exists in the simulator market. The wraparound display creates spatial awareness that flat-screen systems can’t match. When you hit a slice, you see the ball curve to the right on the side screens. That matters for the customer experience.

What you actually pay:

Component Cost
GOLFZON TwoVision system (full sim + enclosure + screen + software) $20,000-$30,000
Installation (factory-trained, includes calibration) $2,000-$4,000
Annual software license (includes course updates) $1,500-$2,500/year
Maintenance contract (optional, recommended) $1,000-$2,000/year

The GOLFZON advantage nobody talks about: They own the entire ecosystem. When something breaks, you call one number. GOLFZON sends a technician. They don’t tell you it’s the projector manufacturer’s problem or the software developer’s problem. This matters more than you think in a commercial environment where downtime is lost revenue at $40-80/hour per bay.

The GOLFZON disadvantage nobody talks about: You’re locked in. The TwoVision runs GOLFZON’s software exclusively. You cannot load GSPro. You cannot switch to E6 Connect. You cannot add a TrackMan later without ripping out the entire system. GOLFZON’s course library is good (190+ courses, including exclusive Pebble Beach content through their partnership), but it’s not GSPro’s 450+ course library. If your customers want niche courses or user-created content, TwoVision won’t deliver.

Maintenance realities: GOLFZON’s Asian install base (500+ venues) means they’ve been maintaining these systems at scale for 20 years. Their service infrastructure in the US is still growing — parts availability and technician response times outside major metro areas are unproven. If you open in Omaha and your projector fails, expect a longer downtime than if you open in Manhattan.

Who should buy GOLFZON: Premium lounges where the sim experience is the primary draw. Entertainment venues that compete with Topgolf, bowling alleys, and movie theaters — not with golf ranges. Operators who want a turnkey system with single-vendor support. Facilities in metro areas where GOLFZON’s US service network is established.

Who should not buy GOLFZON: Budget-conscious operators. Anyone who wants GSPro or third-party software. 24/7 unstaffed models (you’re paying for immersion features nobody sees at 2 AM). Multi-concept facilities that already have TrackMan or Full Swing and want consistency across all bays.


2. TrackMan 4: The Gold Standard, Priced Like One

Price per bay: $18,000-$20,000 Best for: Premium lounges (Five Iron Golf model), high-end coaching studios, club fitting Used by: Five Iron Golf (all locations), PGA Tour facilities, elite teaching academies Ecosystem: Open (hardware + TrackMan Performance Studio software + GSPro + E6 + TGC 2019)

TrackMan 4 is the launch monitor that needs no introduction. It’s the gold standard for radar-based ball flight tracking, the system used by Tour players and the PGA Tour itself. In a commercial facility, the TrackMan name alone carries marketing value — customers recognize it, trust it, and are willing to pay a premium for it.

What you actually pay:

Component Cost
TrackMan 4 launch monitor $18,000-$20,000
Impact screen + enclosure $1,500-$4,000 (depends on quality tier)
Projector (BenQ 4K short-throw recommended) $2,500-$3,500
Hitting mat (commercial grade) $1,500-$2,500
Bay computer (required for TrackMan software) $1,500-$2,500
Side netting + turf + flooring $2,000-$4,000
Sound system $1,000-$2,000
Total per bay (fully built out) $28,000-$38,500
TrackMan Performance Studio software (annual) $1,500/year
Optional: GSPro license $250/year
Optional: E6 Connect commercial $1,000-$2,000/year

The TrackMan advantage: Accuracy. There is no debate — TrackMan 4 is the most accurate launch monitor available for commercial use. If your business depends on customers trusting the numbers (fitting, coaching, competitive play), TrackMan is the answer. The software ecosystem is also genuinely open — you can run TrackMan’s own Performance Studio (which includes their course library), GSPro, E6 Connect, or TGC 2019. You are not locked in.

The TrackMan disadvantage: Price and complexity. TrackMan 4 at $18-20K plus another $10-18K in per-bay buildout means a 6-bay facility spends $168K-$230K on equipment alone before hitting the software license. The radar-based system also has physical requirements — it needs 6-8 feet behind the hitting area and the sensor must be aligned precisely. You cannot stuff a TrackMan 4 into a narrow bay the way you can with a camera-based system.

The iO alternative: TrackMan’s iO ($12,000-$14,000) is a lower-cost commercial option that launched in 2025. It uses the same radar technology in a smaller form factor with a slightly reduced feature set (no club face impact location, simplified data package). For a sim bar where most customers just want to hit a ball and see where it goes, the iO is probably the smarter buy than the full 4. But it’s still $12-14K per bay, and it doesn’t carry the “pro-level” marketing cachet of the TrackMan 4.

Maintenance realities: TrackMan has the most established service network of any sim company. They’ve been selling commercial units for 15+ years. Parts are available. Technicians exist in every major metro. The downside is that TrackMan is a launch monitor, not a full sim system — if your projector fails, you call BenQ. If your screen tears, you call Carl’s Place. If your software crashes, you call GSPro support. There are three-to-four vendors involved in every bay, and when something breaks, you become the integration coordinator.

Who should buy TrackMan: Facilities where accuracy and brand recognition drive premium pricing. Coaching studios and fitting centers (the standard for both). Five Iron Golf-style premium lounges where the marketing value of “we have TrackMan” justifies the cost. Operators who want software flexibility (open ecosystem).

Who should not buy TrackMan: 24/7 unstaffed models (you’re paying for features nobody on site will appreciate). Budget-constrained operators. Facilities with tight bay dimensions (need 6-8 feet behind hitter). Anyone who wants a single-vendor turnkey solution.


3. Full Swing Pro/Series: The Franchise Standard

Price per bay: $12,000-$16,000 Best for: Franchise locations (Back Nine), sim bars, mid-market facilities Used by: Back Nine Golf (all locations), Topgolf sim lounges Ecosystem: Semi-open (Full Swing software + GSPro + E6 + TGC)

Full Swing Golf has been in the commercial sim business since the 1990s. Their Pro and Series systems are the most widely deployed commercial launch monitors in the franchise space — Back Nine uses Full Swing as their exclusive equipment provider.

What you actually pay:

Component Cost
Full Swing Pro launch monitor $12,000-$16,000
Impact screen + enclosure $1,500-$3,000
Projector $1,500-$3,000
Hitting mat (commercial grade) $1,200-$2,000
Bay computer $1,200-$2,000
Side netting + flooring $1,500-$3,000
Sound system $600-$1,500
Total per bay (fully built out) $19,500-$30,500
Full Swing software (annual, includes course library) $800-$1,500/year
GSPro support $250/year

The Full Swing advantage: Value and support. At $12-16K per bay, Full Swing Pro undercuts TrackMan iO by a small margin and TrackMan 4 by a significant one. The company’s 25+ years in commercial sims means they understand facility operators’ needs — multi-bay management, centralized administration, remote diagnostics. The software ecosystem supports GSPro, which gives you access to the best course library in sim golf.

The Full Swing disadvantage: The data package is less comprehensive than TrackMan or GCQuad. For a sim bar where customers just want to swing and have fun, this doesn’t matter. For a coaching or fitting facility where customers need club path, face angle, and impact location data, it does. The brand doesn’t carry the same marketing cachet as TrackMan for the premium customer who knows equipment.

Maintenance realities: Full Swing’s commercial support is solid but concentrated — they have fewer technicians than TrackMan. The upside is that as Back Nine’s exclusive equipment provider, there’s consistent demand keeping parts and service available. The downside is that if you’re an independent operator not affiliated with Back Nine, you’re lower priority during peak season.

Who should buy Full Swing: Back Nine franchisees (not optional). Mid-market sim bars that need reliable commercial equipment at a reasonable price. Independent operators who want GSPro compatibility with commercially-rated hardware. Facilities that need multi-bay management without the premium price of TrackMan or GOLFZON.

Who should not buy Full Swing: Premium lounges trying to compete with Five Iron Golf on brand cachet. Fitting centers that need TrackMan or GCQuad-level data. Facilities in areas without Full Swing service coverage (check availability before buying).


4. Foresight GCQuad: The Fitting Studio’s Weapon

Price per bay: $8,000-$11,000 Best for: Club fitting studios, coaching centers, mobile fitting operations Used by: PGA Tour Superstore fitting bays, club fitters worldwide Ecosystem: Open (FSX Play software + GSPro + E6 + TGC)

The GCQuad is the portable launch monitor that became the standard for club fitting. Its quad-camera system captures more data points than radar-based systems — including head data (lie angle, face angle, strike location) that fitters rely on. At $8-11K, it’s the cheapest of the true commercial systems.

What you actually pay:

Component Cost
Foresight GCQuad $8,000-$11,000
Impact screen + enclosure $1,500-$3,000
Projector $1,500-$3,000
Hitting mat $800-$1,500
Bay computer $1,200-$2,000
Netting + flooring $1,500-$3,000
Lighting (cameras need consistent light) $500-$1,500
Total per bay (fully built out) $15,000-$25,000
FSX Play software (annual) $500-$1,000/year
GSPro optional $250/year

The GCQuad advantage: Price and portability. At $8-11K per unit with a fully built bay at $15-25K, GCQuad is the cheapest path to a commercial-grade facility. The quad-camera capture is superior for club fitting — it measures things radar systems can’t (strike location, lie angle at impact). And because it’s portable, you can use one unit across multiple bays, or run a mobile fitting operation that travels to courses and events.

The GCQuad disadvantage: Camera-based systems have tighter physical constraints than radar-based ones. Lighting must be consistent — fluorescent flicker or direct sunlight through windows can throw off readings. The GCQuad needs to sit on the ground in front of the hitting area, which means it’s a trip hazard and a theft risk in unstaffed environments. The unit is also less durable than a permanently installed radar system — in a high-volume commercial setting with 50+ users per day, you’ll need to replace or recalibrate GCQuads more frequently than a TrackMan.

The BLP/GC3 confusion: Many operators mistakenly think the Bushnell Launch Pro ($3,000) or Foresight GC3 ($4,500) are commercial-viable because they share technology with the GCQuad. They are not. The BLP and GC3 are consumer devices with consumer-grade durability. In a commercial setting doing 30+ sessions per day, expect 12-18 months before issues appear. The GCQuad is the commercial device.

Maintenance realities: Foresight’s commercial support is better than their consumer support, but that’s a low bar. GCQuad calibration drifts over time — commercial users report needing recalibration every 3-6 months in high-volume settings. Parts availability is generally good for the GCQuad, but Foresight’s US service network is smaller than TrackMan’s.

Who should buy GCQuad: Club fitting studios where data accuracy for head parameters is critical. Coaching centers that prioritize ball flight data over immersive simulation. Mobile operators who need a single unit to serve multiple locations. Budget-conscious operators who want commercial-grade accuracy at a consumer-adjacent price.

Who should not buy GCQuad: Entertainment-first venues where immersion and customer experience matter more than data. 24/7 unstaffed facilities (theft risk, lighting requirements). High-volume sim bars doing 60+ sessions per day per bay (durability concerns). Anyone who doesn’t need club fitting-level data and would be better served by a simpler, more durable system.


5. Golf VX Quantum: The Premium Alternative

Price per bay: $15,000-$25,000 Best for: Premium lounges, unusual spaces (low ceilings, tight quarters) Used by: Select premium facilities, golf entertainment venues Ecosystem: Semi-open (Golf VX software + GSPro + E6 + TGC)

Golf VX Quantum uses high-speed camera technology mounted in the ceiling — there’s no floor unit, no equipment on the ground, and no physical footprint in the hitting area. This makes it unique among commercial systems. The cameras track club and ball data from above, which means no shadows, no trip hazards, and no alignment issues.

What you actually pay:

Component Cost
Golf VX Quantum (ceiling-mounted camera system) $15,000-$25,000
Impact screen + enclosure $1,500-$3,500
Projector $2,000-$3,500
Hitting mat (commercial grade) $1,200-$2,000
Bay computer $1,200-$2,000
Netting + flooring $2,000-$4,000
Total per bay (fully built out) $23,000-$40,000
Golf VX software (annual) $800-$1,500/year
GSPro optional $250/year

The Golf VX advantage: Space flexibility. The ceiling-mount design means no floor footprint, no alignment requirements, and no restrictions on where the player stands. This makes Quantum the best option for tight spaces, irregular room shapes, or facilities that want to use the same space for non-golf events. The camera system also captures an enormous data set — including club path, face angle, dynamic loft, attack angle, and club delivery data that competes with GCQuad for fitting applications.

The Golf VX disadvantage: Price and maturity. At $15-25K per bay plus buildout, Quantum competes directly with TrackMan iO and Full Swing Pro on price — but it doesn’t compete on brand recognition. Most golfers have never heard of Golf VX. The ceiling-mounted installation is also non-trivial — you need a structural engineer to verify the ceiling can support the weight, and installation requires a certified technician. The company is newer than TrackMan, Foresight, and GOLFZON, which means the service network is less established.

Maintenance realities: Ceiling-mounted systems have lower physical wear (nobody is kicking them, spilling beer on them, or tripping over them), which is ideal for commercial environments. But when something does break, it’s more complex to repair — you need a technician who can work at height, and the camera alignment process is delicate.

Who should buy Golf VX: Premium lounges with unusual space constraints (low ceilings, narrow rooms, irregular shapes). Facilities that want the cleanest possible hitting area (no floor units). Operators who value fitting-grade data alongside entertainment capability. Early adopters who are comfortable with a less established service network.

Who should not buy Golf VX: 24/7 unstaffed models (you don’t need the premium features). Operators in areas without Golf VX service coverage. Facilities that rely on brand recognition to attract customers. Anyone who wants a turnkey solution with the largest possible support network.


6. The Dark Horse: What Actually Runs at Scale

If you’re building 8+ bays and need a consistent experience across every one, you need to know what the biggest operations actually use.

Five Iron Golf runs TrackMan 4 across all locations. Premium pricing, premium brand, premium experience. Their customers come for TrackMan.

Back Nine Golf runs Full Swing Pro and Series across all franchise locations. It’s reliable, cost-effective, and the franchise model standardizes installation and service.

Another Nine runs a mix — many of their 24/7 locations use mid-tier equipment (SkyTrak+, BLP) because nobody is on site to appreciate TrackMan. Some of their higher-end lounges use commercial gear. This is the smartest approach: match equipment to business model, not brand.

GOLFZON runs their own TwoVision and OneVision systems in their franchise and partner locations. If you buy a GOLFZON franchise, you get GOLFZON hardware. Non-negotiable.

What this tells you: even the chains don’t agree on equipment. They agree on business model first, then equipment.


Total Cost of Ownership: What the Brochure Doesn’t Tell You

The purchase price is not the cost. The cost is the purchase price plus installation plus annual software licenses plus maintenance plus replacement cycles plus lost revenue from downtime.

System 5-Year Hardware Cost 5-Year Software Cost 5-Year Maintenance Total 5-Year TCO per Bay
GOLFZON TwoVision $20,000-$30,000 $7,500-$12,500 $5,000-$10,000 $32,500-$52,500
TrackMan 4 $18,000-$20,000 $7,500-$10,000 $2,500-$5,000 $28,000-$35,000
TrackMan iO $12,000-$14,000 $7,500-$10,000 $2,500-$5,000 $22,000-$29,000
Full Swing Pro $12,000-$16,000 $4,000-$7,500 $2,500-$5,000 $18,500-$28,500
GCQuad $8,000-$11,000 $2,500-$5,000 $3,000-$6,000 $13,500-$22,000
Golf VX Quantum $15,000-$25,000 $4,000-$7,500 $5,000-$8,000 $24,000-$40,500

The hidden cost nobody calculates: downtime during replacement. A GCQuad that needs replacement every 18 months at $8-11K costs $2,000-$5,500/year in amortized replacement cost alone. While the unit is out for service (2-4 weeks), that bay generates zero revenue. At $40/hour with 35% utilization, that’s $1,344-$2,688 in lost revenue per replacement event. The “cheap” system has costs that don’t appear on any invoice.

Software licensing is another trap. TrackMan Performance Studio at $1,500/year is fine for the first year. But multiply by 6 bays at year 5, and you’re paying $9,000/year just to keep the software running. That’s not an expense you can cut when revenue dips.


Which Equipment for Which Business Model

Now the practical framework. Here’s what to buy based on what you’re building.

24/7 Unstaffed Facility (Another Nine model)

Recommended equipment: Mid-tier (SkyTrak+, BLP, Mevo+) or TrackMan iO Not recommended: GOLFZON TwoVision, TrackMan 4, Golf VX Quantum Why: Nobody is on site to appreciate premium features. You need equipment that’s durable enough to survive unsupervised use and simple enough that a remote operator can diagnose issues. The premium systems are wasted spend. The mid-tier has a short lifespan but at $3,000/bay, you can replace it twice before you match TrackMan iO’s price. Key consideration: Remote management capability. If your system goes down at 11 PM on a Saturday, can you diagnose and fix it without driving to the facility? Most mid-tier systems have app-based diagnostics. Premium systems need on-site technicians.

Sim Bar (4-8 bays, food and beverage)

Recommended equipment: TrackMan iO, Full Swing Pro, or mix Not recommended: GCQuad (unless fitting is a revenue stream), GOLFZON TwoVision (overkill for bar setting) Why: Sim bar customers care about two things: does it work, and does it look cool. TrackMan iO gives you the brand recognition at a reasonable price. Full Swing Pro gives you reliability and GSPro access. The GCQuad is wasted on customers who don’t care about strike location data. Key consideration: Mixing equipment across bays is fine for sim bars. Put TrackMan in 2 premium bays and Full Swing in the rest. Your regular customers will learn which bay they prefer.

Premium Lounge (Five Iron model)

Recommended equipment: TrackMan 4 or GOLFZON TwoVision Not recommended: GCQuad, mid-tier consumer gear Why: Premium lounges sell an experience, not just bay time. Customers pay $50-80/hour because they want the best. TrackMan 4 gives you the gold standard name. GOLFZON TwoVision gives you the most immersive experience. Both justify premium pricing. Neither works on a budget. Key consideration: Brand alignment matters. If you’re positioning as a “serious golf” venue, TrackMan is the answer. If you’re positioning as an “entertainment destination” (competing with Topgolf, axe throwing, escape rooms), GOLFZON’s immersion is the stronger play.

Fitting Studio / Coaching Center

Recommended equipment: GCQuad or TrackMan 4 Not recommended: Full Swing Pro (limited data), GOLFZON (locked ecosystem) Why: Fitting customers need accurate data that they trust. GCQuad is the fitting standard. TrackMan 4 is the coaching standard. Both give you defensible numbers that justify upselling a $500 driver. Key consideration: GCQuads are portable. If you do on-course fittings, mobile demo days, or work with college programs, the GCQuad moves with you. TrackMan 4 is a semi-permanent installation.

Multi-Concept Entertainment Venue (12+ bays)

Recommended equipment: Consistent across all bays — choose one vendor Not recommended: Mixing 3+ systems across 12+ bays (logistics nightmare) Why: At 12+ bays, the complexity of managing multiple equipment types becomes an operational tax you don’t need. Pick one vendor, standardize, and build a relationship with their service team. If you have enough capital for 12 bays, you have enough for TrackMan 4 or GOLFZON TwoVision across all of them.


The Reality: Most Facilities Buy the Wrong Equipment

Here’s what I’ve seen in 70+ tracked facilities:

The #1 equipment mistake is buying consumer gear for commercial use. A Garmin R10 running in a facility doing 40 sessions per day. A SkyTrak+ in a sim bar where 50 people per day walk past the hitting mat. These are devices designed for a 2-person household doing 10 sessions per month. In a commercial setting, they fail in 6-12 months. And when they fail during peak hours on a Saturday, you don’t just lose that session — you lose the customer forever.

The #2 mistake is buying premium equipment for a business model that doesn’t need it. A 24/7 unstaffed facility with GOLFZON TwoVision at $30K per bay is burning capital that could be working capital, marketing budget, or the difference between survival and failure in year one.

The #3 mistake is mixing incompatible systems without planning for it. Running TrackMan in 2 bays and GCQuad in 2 bays and GOLFZON in 2 bays. Each needs different software, different maintenance, different spare parts. You create three times the operational complexity for zero customer benefit.

The #4 mistake is software lock-in by accident. Buying a system that doesn’t support GSPro because you didn’t ask. GSPro is the de facto standard for sim software — 450+ courses, active development, the largest user community. If your equipment can’t run GSPro, you’re limited to whatever course library the manufacturer provides. GOLFZON’s is good (190+ courses). TrackMan’s is adequate. Full Swing’s is acceptable. None matches GSPro.


Decision Framework: Your Equipment Scorecard

Here’s how to decide. Score each system on what matters for your business:

  1. Total cost of ownership over 5 years: What does each system actually cost when you include software, maintenance, and replacement cycles?
  2. Customer experience match: Does this system deliver the experience your target customer wants? (People care about immersion, brand recognition, data accuracy, and reliability in that order for most facilities.)
  3. Service network: Can you get a technician within 48 hours if the system goes down on a Thursday before your busiest weekend of the month?
  4. Software flexibility: Does it run GSPro? Does it run other software? Can you switch software platforms without replacing hardware?
  5. Physical requirements: Does your space have the ceiling height, depth behind the hitter, and lighting conditions this system needs?
  6. Scalability: If you add more bays in year two, can you buy the same equipment? Is the pricing consistent? Is the vendor responsive?

Rate each system from 1-10 on these six factors. Add the scores. The highest total is your answer — not the one with the lowest purchase price.


The Bottom Line

The commercial equipment market is more competitive in 2026 than it has ever been. TrackMan is fighting to defend its premium position against GOLFZON’s encroachment. GOLFZON is investing heavily in US infrastructure. Full Swing is holding the franchise space. GCQuad is retreating to its fitting studio niche. Golf VX is trying to carve a new category.

None of these companies care about your specific business. They care about selling units.

Your job is to figure out which unit serves your customers and survives your volume. That is not a decision a salesperson can make for you. The equipment brochure says what the equipment costs. The total cost of ownership — including downtime, software, maintenance, and replacement cycles — is what you’ll actually pay.

Cross-reference: See our Startup Costs by Bay Count guide for complete facility buildout numbers. Read the GOLFZON commercial dominance analysis for the ecosystem strategy behind their US push. Check the Franchise Comparison for equipment decisions driven by franchise model requirements. Facility owners should also track how much facilities actually make to understand whether your equipment decision is proportional to your revenue potential.

#commercial-golf-simulator#golf-simulator-business#indoor-golf-facility#golfzon#trackman#foresight#full-swing#simulator-equipment#golf-business#simulator-guide#2026

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