How vacuum cleaners work (2024)

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You are here:Home page >Home life >Vacuum cleaners

How vacuum cleaners work (2)

by Chris Woodford. Last updated: August 05, 2023.

Even when your house is clean, it'sabsolutely filthy! That's because most of the dust and dirt in your house is way too small tosee. Fortunately, most of us can live without knowing this kind of truth about our homes;a quick run around with the vacuum cleaner is enough to keep us happy.Twenty-first century homes are packed with dozens of appliances andgadgets, but vacuums are one of the few most of us simply couldn't livewithout. We all know vacuums suck up dirt—but how exactly do they work?And what makes a modern-style cyclonic cleaner different from an old-style bag cleaner?Let's take a closer look!

Photo: A Dyson cleaner, like this one, shows you just how much dirt it's picking up in its transparent bin. The dust and hair tends to swirl around thanks to the machine's "cyclonic" action. Other popular makes of vacuum cleaner (including Hoover, Miele, and Electrolux) also now make bagless cleaners, though they tend to work in a different way: they generally use internal filters to separate out dust and dirt, which is deposited in a plastic bin, while the air returns to the room through a grille in the back of the machine.

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Contents

  1. Why are they called "vacuum" cleaners?
  2. Vacuum cleaners with bags
  3. Cyclonic vacuum cleaners
  4. How does a cyclonic vacuum cleaner work?
  5. Water vacuums
  6. Who invented the first carpet cleaning machine?
  7. Find out more

Why are they called "vacuum" cleaners?

The name "vacuum cleaner" is a bit of a giveaway when it comes tounderstanding how your machine works: vacuum cleaners work by suction.("Suction cleaner" would be a better name than vacuum cleaner, in fact, because there's no actualvacuum involved. There is a difference in air pressure, but nowhere is there is an absolute vacuum.)If you've ever tried that cleaning trick with a tissue paper and a comb,you'll know how effective suction can be for removing dirt. If not, try it now! Wrap a piece of tissuepaper around a comb. Breath out as far as you can and hold your breath.Place the comb and paper against your mouth. Now lean against a dustyarmchair and press your mouth and the comb against it. Breath insharply so, effectively, you are breathing straight through the comb.Take the comb away from your mouth and inspect the tissue paper. See howdirty it is!

Now imagine what would happen if you could keep this trick up for hour upon hour, justlike a vacuum cleaner. Eventually, the dirt would build up on the tissue paper to such anextent that air would no longer flow through it properly. Your ability to clean—as ahuman vacuum cleaner—would be greatly impaired. This is a very important point: fora vacuum cleaner to work effectively, it has to maintain powerful airflow the whole time.If its bag is full or its filters are clogged up, its airflow will be dramatically reducedand it won't pick up dust. This is a problem that plagues almost every type of vacuumcleaner—even the bagless, cyclonic ones that are now so popular.

How vacuum cleaners work (3)

Photo: Not all floor sweepers use vacuums. This cordless Gtech SW01 sweeper has two rotating nylon brushes at the front that flip dust and hair into a slide-out plastic dirt bin (which I've opened up slightly, first picture, top right). Turn it over and you can see the main brush bar (with its purple bristles) and a smaller rotating brush (with black bristles) for cleaning edges (second photo, middle right). It weighs just 1.6kg and runs for 30–60 minutes on a full, 16-hour charge. All this machine has to do is spin the brushes, so it can get by with a tiny 7.2-volt electric motor (much smaller and less power-hungry than the motors in large vacuum cleaners, which, as we'll see below, also act as suction fans).

Vacuum cleaners with bags

Invented in 1901 by a British engineer, the first electricvacuums were simple sucking machines with a brush and suction head atthe front, a motor in the middle, and a bag at the back. When youswitched them on, the motor whirred into action, sucking in air anddirt and blowing them into the bag.

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Photo: Vacuum cleaners looked and worked much the same way for most of the 20th century:they had a suction head at the front and a giant inflated bag at the back.This is a Vintage Singer photographed in 1942. I can remember seeing machines similar to thisstill in use in the late 1980s. Photo by Arthur Rothstein, Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information,courtesy of US Library of Congress.

Think back to the "suck and filter" comb trick and you'll understand straight away how these old-style, bag vacuum cleaners work. In place of yourmouth, there's a powerful electric motorattached to a fan that sucks in air. Instead ofa tissue paper and comb, there's a dirt bag (sometimes a disposable paper bag insidea fabric bag), which catches the dust sucked in so youcan use the cleaner for some time without worrying about where all thedirt is going. The bag isn't completely airtight, as you might think.Air can pass out of it, though not dirt, so it effectively acts as a filter; the air is suckedinto the bag and then escapes through it, leaving the dirt behind inside it.

This diagram summarizes what's happening inside a conventional vacuum:

How vacuum cleaners work (5)

  1. Electricity outlet supplies energy to the cleaner's electric motor.
  2. In a typical cleaner, the electric motor is rated at about 500–1000 watts, so ituses five to ten times as much energy as an old-style (incandescent) lamp.
  3. Rubber belt (blue) powered by electric motor turns brushes and beaters on the roller at the front of the machine.
  4. Vigorous beating and brushing loosens dirt from the carpet or rug.
  5. Fan attached to the electric motor sucks air and loosened dirt in through the front of the machine.
  6. Dirty air travels through to the back of the machine, cooling the electric motor as it passes by.
  7. Dirt is trapped in the bottom of the dirt bag (which may be a single fabric bag or a disposable paper bag fixedinside a fabric bag).
  8. Relatively clean air emerges out of the back. Note that the outgoing air is much warmer than the incoming airbecause it's picked up waste heat from the electric motor.

How does a bagless vacuum cleaner work?

Most modern vacuums have done away with bags and use easy-to-empty plastic bins instead. That means they need to use filters to separate the dust from the air (which is the job the bag used to do). Here's the setup in a typical modern, bagless Electroluxcleaner. You'll notice that the airstream, which I've indicated with a large yellow arrow, is linear (a straight line) fromthe hose at the front through to the grille at the back, just as it is in an old-style bag cleaner.

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  1. Inlet: This attaches to the usual cleaning head and interchangeable tools (not shown).
  2. Dirt collecting bin: Normally this sits inside the cleaner at the front, but I've removed it and placed it on its side soyou can see things more clearly.
  3. HEPA filter: The filter is a cylinder of folded paper attached to the orange bit you can see at the base of the dirt bin. The air is sucked through the filter, leaving the dirt behind in the bin. You can see some photos of the actual filters from this machine in our article on HEPA filters.
  4. Motor unit: This cleaner has a very powerful 2000-watt motor, although it does need it to pull air through the HEPA filter. Motor ratings for cleaners with HEPA filters can be quite misleading: they don't necessarily give you more suction at the cleaning end, becausemore of their power is used pulling air through the filter, which may clog frequently.
  5. Filter and outlet grille: This is a simple bit of sponge that you can remove and wash.

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Cyclonic vacuum cleaners

Most vacuums used this "suck and bag the dirt" process until the late 1980s, when another British engineer named James Dyson felt it was time to go one better.

The trouble with old-style vacuum cleaners is that they suck indirty air and blow it directly into the bag. The bag catches the dirtand the relatively clean (but often still quite dusty) air drifts back into the room. The longer youuse a vacuum, the more the bag fills up. As the bag fills up, theamount of empty air it can hold decreases, so its ability to suck inmore dirt is gradually diminished. The longer you go without emptyingyour vacuum, the worse the problem becomes. But emptying the bag isa real nuisance—and the dust can go everywhere!

How vacuum cleaners work (7)

Photo: Vacuum cleaners work just like the comb and paper trick usingtwo, sophisticated HEPA filters. Top: Lower filter: Take thedust-collecting bin off a Dyson and you can see one of the two HEPA filters (beneath the circular grating). This is actually the air outlet: clean air that has passed right through the machine passes throughthis filter and returns to the room. Bottom: Upper filter: There's another, much more important filter at the top of the dust bin. This one cleans the air immediately after it has passed through the cyclone (after the bulk of the dust and dirt has already been removed).

Goodbye to the bag

I saw the problem, and I saw a possible solution, which was the huge cyclones outside cement plants and timber yards that collect dust all day long. So I started building various versions of that technology.

James Dyson, The New York Times, 2018.

Dyson decided to tackle this difficulty by doing away with the bagaltogether. By this time, he was already a successful inventormanufacturing his own plastic garden equipment. His factory inEngland's West Country was plagued with dust, so he designed a"cyclonic" air filtering device to keep it clean. Using a powerful fan,it sucked in dusty air and spun it around at high speed like acentrifuge. Spinning thedusty air was an effective way to separate the dust out of the air. Ina washing machine, the sameprinciple is used tospin water from clothes at the end of the wash cycle. As the drum spinsat high speed, the clothes fling against the edge of the drum and thewater they contain is forced out through the drum's tiny holes. Thesame idea proved just as effective in Dyson's air filter. Spinning thedirty air separated out the heavy dust particles, which could be trapped and collected; the cleaned air could then be pipedback into the room. Dyson's machine was so efficient and successful that hewondered why vacuum cleaners didn't use the same idea. He resolvedto invent a cyclonic vacuum cleaner there and then.

Now it's very important to point out that Dyson did not invent the idea ofusing a cyclone to remove dust from air. In fact, if you look at his original patent(Vacuum cleaner appliances,dated 1983), you'll find he references quite a number of earlier inventions ("prior art"),the first of which is Bert M. Kent'sVacuum Creating and dust-separating machinedeveloped 70 years before, in 1913, and patented in 1917. Kent clearly states that one of his objects "is toprovide a machine... in which the 'cyclone' principle of dust separation is employed and the use of screensavoided."

Nor did Dyson invent the bagless vacuum cleaner.Back in the 1930s, Edward H. Yonkers, Jr. of Evanston, Illinois had notedhow "the resistance to the passage of air through thebag is progressively increased during the normalaccumulation of dust." To solve this, Yonkers proposeda suction cleaner with a sophisticated paper filter, in which "the whirling motion of the air around the conical filter serves to centrifugallyseparate the heavy particles of dust," which are then caught in a simple, bagless container.His invention became the very successful FilterQueen®, roughly four decades before Dyson!

So what did Dyson actually invent? His contribution was to apply these two principles to a relatively compact, household vacuum cleaner and persuade people that it was more effective than the vacuum cleaners they'd become used to; it was as much about marketing as anything else—which is true of all great inventions.

Perfecting the invention

Between the late 1970s and the mid 1980s, Dyson built no fewer than5,127 prototypes of his cyclonic cleaner. By the late 1980s, he wasselling a bright pink cyclonic cleaner called theG-Forcein Japan. It was large, clumsy, and expensive, but it earned him enough money todevelop a more compact, affordable cyclonic vacuum called the DC01.During the mid-1990s, this new machine won countless design awards andsoon became Britain's biggest selling vacuum cleaner—and machines based on this design arenow sold worldwide.

Its secret is simple: because there is no bag to clog up with dust anddirt, the machine maintains a fairly constant airflow (informally, we say it sucks with exactly the same power).You still have to empty the dirt bin every so often, but the cyclonicaction means a Dyson with a full dirt bin works equally as well as one that'sjust been emptied.

All this goes to show that, no matter how good an invention appearsto be, someone can always make it better!(Talking of improvements, have you seen robotic vacuum cleanersthat clean your home automatically?)

Key parts of a Dyson vacuum

How vacuum cleaners work (8)

So how does a Dyson actually work. First, let's quickly run through the key parts you'll find on one of the classic early models: the Dyson DC04 upright:

  1. Brush bar and air intake: The rotating brush under this bar loosens dirt in the rug so the vacuum's suction can pull it in. This is much the same as in a conventional vacuum.
  2. Height adjustment: Allows you to use the cleaner on hard floors, rugs, and other surfaces. When the vacuum is upright, the rotatingbrush is switched off. Air sucks in through an extension hose at the top of the machine instead.
  3. Powerful electric motor: This is effectively a giant fan that sucks in air and pulls it through the machine's cyclone and filters. As you've probably noticed, the motor in a vacuum cleaner gets quite hot after a few minutes; that's why the cool air it sucks in emerges from the machine somewhat hotter. On this Dyson, the air outlet is at the bottom, just underneath the dirt bin. Put your hand there and you'll feel warm air blowing out.
  4. Transparent plastic dust collection bin. The bin on this cleaner is absolutely full. One interesting thing worth noting on Dysons is the way their centrifugal, spinning action sorts dust particles into bands of different sizes, much like a centrifuge. You can just about see in this photo that there's a band of grit at the bottom of the bin, followed by a darker band of bigger dirt particles, with lighter fluff sitting on top.
  5. Cyclone: The cyclone is a large yellow plastic cone that points down into the dust bin:

    How vacuum cleaners work (9)

    The cyclone is the most important part of a Dyson. You can see from this photo that it's a tapering,cone-shaped piece of plastic with small holes in the top. The electric motor sucks dirty air into the top of the cyclone, where it whirls around at high speed. While the air is drawn through the cone, the dust spins around, drops down, and collects in the clear plastic bin beneath ready for disposal.

    Just above the cyclone is the upper dust filter (it's inside the gray cylinder, above the yellow cyclone, in the photo of the HEPA filters up above). There's one filter immediately above the dust collection bin and a second one at the bottom of the machine. The air passes through this second filter, for an extra clean, just before it returns to the room.

  6. Air hose: The electric motor sucks air through the Dyson along a network of tubes. The air is piped to the top of the machine, pulled and whirled through the cyclone, before returning through this pipe to the bottom of the machine. You can see the actual airflow through the machine in the photo down below.

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How does a cyclonic vacuum cleaner work?

How vacuum cleaners work (10)

Now we've seen the parts, how do they all work? Here's a rough guide to what everything does as the air flows through a typical multiple-cyclone vacuum cleaner. In this model:

  1. Air enters through the brush bar at the bottom.
  2. The air enters the first stage tangentially (perpendicular to the cylindrical dirt bin) and spins around the cyclone in the middle. The dirt particles swirl to the edge, fall downward, and collect at the bottom while the air is drawn up through holes in the cyclone itself.
  3. The somewhat cleaner air passes into the second, upper stage.
  4. Here, a similar process happens only with a number of smaller cyclones that remove much finer dirt particles.
  5. The relatively clean air passes through a HEPA filter. Since most of the dirt has already been removed,this filter doesn't really impede the flow of air through the machine.
  6. The air blows back into the room after passing through a second HEPA filter.

The motor unit (not shown on this drawing) and fan is located at the base of the machine in between the two back wheels.

Please note that this drawing is not an exact representation of what happens in a Dyson (or any other, similar machine): it's just designed to give you a very general idea of what's happening in a cyclonic cleaner. In a Dyson DC04, like the one photographed up above, the airflow is actually like this:

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I've removed the cyclone and dustbin, moved it to the side, and turned it backwards so you can see clearly what's happening. The red line shows the airflow up to the point at which it enters the cyclone. The orange line shows the airflow after the air exits the cyclone. The air enters through the brush bar, passes up a pipe at the side of the machine to the top, where it enters the cyclone, spins around, passes through the upper HEPA filter, then leaves through a second pipe also near the top of the machine, before traveling back down another pipe to the fan and the lower HEPA filter and finally exiting just underneath the dirt bin.

If you'd like to know more, please refer to one of the patents in the reading list down below, where you'll find complete technical drawings and a detailed explanation of how everything works in an actual machine.

Water vacuums

When it comes to suction, conventional vacuum cleaners tend to... suck, for want of a better word. Bulging bags and clogged filters progressively reduce the airflow, making it impossible for them to pick up more dirt effectively. Without filters, however, they blow quite a lot of the finer dust (the harmful particles known as PM10s, smaller than 10 microns) back into your room; so, instead of "vacuum cleaning", they are simply "dust rearranging": sucking in dirt and blowing it back out so it settles somewhere else. That's a particular problem for people with asthma or dust allergies.Even the best cyclonic vacuums aren't perfect:cyclones don't remove all the dirt, hence the need for those extra HEPA filters, which are typically either so fine that they clog up repeatedly (reducing airflow and cleaning power) or so coarse that they allowdirt back into the room.

How vacuum cleaners work (12)

Artwork: A simplified water vacuum cleaner.

What's the solution? One option is to use a water vacuum, which uses a tank of water to trap the dirt instead of a bag or conventional dirt bin. The dusty incoming air fires into the water tank, where the dirt is held in solution. The moist air that leaves the tank is then spun around to remove the water (a bit like in a Dyson), producing clean air that flows back into the room.

Here's how a typical water vacuum works:

  1. Air is sucked in through the brush bar in the usual way.
  2. A powerful motor (not shown) pulls the air through a water tank, where most of the dirt is trapped.
  3. The moist air continues through the tank, spiraling past plastic plates, which help to separate out the water droplets from the air that carries them. The water drips back down into the tank.
  4. Clean, dry air exits through an outlet on top of the machine.

Who invented the first carpet cleaning machine?

Interestingly, the first "vacuum" cleaners worked in the opposite way to almostall the machines described here: they blew compressed airdown into a carpet to knock the dust out, which they then attempted to collect. One early example, John Thurman's pneumatic carpet renovator, patented in 1899, described itself like this:

"The invention may be said to consist, briefly, in a pneumatic dust-extractor designed to be placed over or in close proximity to the carpet whereby an air-blast is projected into and through the carpet, forcing the dust out into the collector, where it accumulates and is subsequently removed."

Here's another of Thurman's cleaners, which worked in a similar way:

How vacuum cleaners work (13)

Artwork: John Thurman's pneumatic cleaner took air from a compressor hose (green) and blew it down into the carpet through a cleaning head (red), so forcing dust up into the collection bag (blue) along the red-dotted path. As with later cleaners, the air was filtered and passed back intothe room through the bag. For more details, see US Patent: 744437: Carpet-renovator by John S. Thurman.

You can see a picture of a later Thurman carpet cleaner here.Although labeled "vacuum cleaner," it's unclear whether this one pushed air down or sucked it up.

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On this website

  • Clothes washing machines
  • Clothes drying machines (tumble dryers)
  • Dishwashers
  • Roomba® robot vacuum cleaners

On other sites

Books

  • The Vacuum Cleaner: A Historyby Carroll Gantz. McFarland & Company, 2012. The fascinating chronological story of the vacuum, traced from the besom (twig broom) to the modern Dyson.
  • Electrical Appliance Manual by Graham Dixon. Haynes, 2000. Basic maintenance and repair guidance for common vacuums and other domestic appliances.

Articles

Patents

How vacuum cleaners work (14)

Artwork: One of Hoover's original vacuum cleaner patents. This one dates from around World War II and was filed by William D. Sellers and Alfred G. Gross in 1939. All the basic features are in place—the rotating brush bar at the front (red), the fan (center), the belt drive (green), and the bag outlet at the back (yellow)—in a design that would remain largely unchanged until Dyson's innovations appeared in the 1980s. For more details, see US Patent: 2343227: Suction Cleaner. Artwork courtesy of US Patent and Trademark Office.

There are dozens of patents covering cyclonic and other types of vacuum cleaners, including many filed byJames Dyson and his associates. Here are a few worth looking at if you want to study cyclonic vacuum cleaner design in more detail, ordered from oldest to newest:

For a detailed look at a typical water vacuum, try:

Patents for earlier cleaning devices are filed under slightly different names, such as "pneumatic carpet renovators." Here are a couple of examples, but you'll find many more...

Please do NOT copy our articles onto blogs and other websites

Articles from this website are registered at the US Copyright Office. Copying or otherwise using registered works without permission, removing this or other copyright notices, and/or infringing related rights could make you liable to severe civil or criminal penalties.

Text copyright © Chris Woodford 2007, 2023. All rights reserved. Full copyright notice and terms of use.

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How vacuum cleaners work (2024)

FAQs

How vacuum cleaners work? ›

When you turn on the vacuum cleaner, the electric motor starts to spin. This in turn spins the fan, which creates a powerful suction force. The dirt and dust is drawn into the vacuum cleaner through the intake port, and it is held there by the porous bag. Once the bag is full, you simply remove it and replace it.

How does a vacuum cleaner really work? ›

Vacuum cleaners pull air in and the air sucks up dirt and dust. Inside vacuum cleaners a fan blows air (you can often feel it). In order for a fan to blow air, it needs to draw air in. This is the air that sucks up, or vacuums, the dirt and dust.

How does a vacuum system work? ›

When using the central vacuum system, you simply plug a hose into one of the inlet valves. The hose connects to the power unit, creating a powerful suction that pulls dirt, dust and debris through the tubing system and into a collection canister.

What is the working principle of a vacuum cleaner? ›

At its core, the vacuum cleaner works on the principle of creating a partial vacuum, which generates suction to draw in dust, dirt, and debris. This suction is created by a motor that powers the cleaner, and the air movement inside the machine is vital to its functioning.

How does a vacuum create suction? ›

Vacuum cleaners use an electric motor that spins a fan, sucking in air – and any small particles caught up in it – and pushing it out the other side, into a bag or a canister, to create the negative pressure.

What is the science behind vacuum cleaners? ›

Technology. A vacuum's suction is caused by a difference in air pressure. A fan driven by an electric motor (often a universal motor) reduces the pressure inside the machine. Atmospheric pressure then pushes the air through the carpet and into the nozzle, and so the dust is literally pushed into the bag.

Do vacuums actually create a vacuum? ›

A household vacuum cleaner should be able to produce a partial vacuum. Of course none of these 'vacuums' are close to being completely empty of molecules, but they can have pressures much less than the atmosphere.

How do vacuums pull air in? ›

The ambient air pushes itself into the vacuum cleaner through the intake port because the air pressure inside the vacuum cleaner is lower than the pressure outside.

How does the vacuum method work? ›

The vacuum exercise is an exercise which involves contracting some internal abdominal muscles, primarily the transverse abdominal muscle, and not as much the diaphragm. Repetitions of the exercise may be used as a form of endurance training, and light strength training.

How does a vacuum remove air? ›

A vacuum pump's main function is to change the pressure in a contained space to create a full or partial vacuum either mechanically or chemically. Pressure will always try to equalize across connected regions as gas molecules flow from high to low to fill the entire area of that volume.

What are the basics of a vacuum? ›

Vacuum is defined as a space that is entirely devoid of matter; i. e., an enclosed volume that is not filled with air or any other gasses. Ideal vacuum conditions can be found in interstellar space, where there is a particle density of one atom per cubic centimeter.

What makes a vacuum powerful? ›

If you're looking for a vacuum cleaner with powerful suction, you may want to consider one with higher wattage. A higher wattage often indicates a more powerful motor and potentially better suction.

How do bagless vacuums work? ›

Bagless vacuum cleaners don't rely on a bag to store debris. They usually use a built-in bin to store the dust and dirt that is collected throughout your home. Because they don't contain bags, they can be emptied on the go - usually at the touch of a button, or with very simple disassembly of the bin compartment.

What causes suction in a vacuum cleaner? ›

Most vacuums use a motor to create suction. The motor sits behind a canister or bag with a filter positioned between them to protect it from debris. The suction pulls debris through a series of rollers, tubes, and hoses, trapping it in the canister or bag in the process.

Is it OK to vacuum everyday? ›

Improved Indoor Air Quality: Vacuuming everyday can help to remove dirt, dust, and other particles from your floors and furniture, which can improve indoor air quality.

How do vacuums measure suction? ›

The sealed suction of a vacuum cleaner is measured in inches of water lift. This rating is taken when the motor is totally sealed, and the term refers to how many inches the motor will vertically lift a 1" column of water.

How does the vacuum cleaner separate the dust from the air? ›

Dust and dirt are drawn up via either a brush or another appropriate nozzle through the pipe/hose and into the dust collector. This process is powered by the suction motor and all air is filtered through the exhaust filter to keep debris in the vacuum, while expelling only clean air.

What happens to bugs in a vacuum cleaner? ›

When it comes to spiders and bugs that have a more fragile body without an exoskeleton, they most likely will be killed by the suction. If they make it into the vacuum bag, they will suffocate from the dirt inside. Bugs that do survive the suction and stay alive in the vacuum bag can crawl out.

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