Definitive Buying
Guide to Commercial
A buying guide for Canadian foodservice operators, chefs, consultants,
dealers and decision-makers.
FOOD PREP &
HOLDING
EQUIPMENT
PUBLISHED BY R.E.D CANADA
|
2026 EDITION
|
redcanada.com
Behind Every Great Restaurateur
is a Trusted Food Equipment Supplier
Paragon Food Equipment Vancouver is a proud member of the Restaurant Equipment
Distributors of Canada (R.E.D.), Canada’s premier network of independent food service
equipment dealers. By working together from coast‑to‑coast, R.E.D. dealers can ensure
the best prices and service, no matter the business. From hotel chains to small family‑run
restaurants, a R.E.D. dealer is here to help.
www.paragondirect.ca
(604) 255-9991 • 1 800 565-5088
760 East Hastings Street,
Vancouver, BC V6A 1R5
The restaurant equipment & supplies experts!
Paragon has been the trusted source for restaurant equipment and supplies in Vancouver and across Canada for nearly
40 years. Locally owned and operated, we understand what is most important to our customers: fast access to a wide
selection of equipment and smallwares at unbeatable prices, backed by professional sales advice and service.
With the largest inventory of top‑brand restaurant equipment and commercial kitchen supplies in our region, Paragon
provides its customers with a wide selection of cooking and food prep equipment, refrigeration, furniture, cookware,
tableware, stainless equipment, storage and transport solutions, janitorial supplies and a huge selection of smallwares.
Visit us online or at our 18,000 square foot warehouse showroom and see for yourself!
Need more reasons to shop Paragon?
• With more than 25,000 sq. ft. of capacity in our two local warehouses and showroom, our large inventory of core items
means that you get what you need without delay.
• We purchase by the container‑load, giving us significant savings that we pass on to our customers.
• Our Price Match Guarantee ensures that you’ll never pay too much when you shop at Paragon.
• Our friendly and knowledgeable staff have decades of experience and can serve you in 10 languages!
• Exclusive mail list subscriber deals that offer discounts below sale prices.
See us first for quality Atosa equipment!
With nearly a decade’s experience selling Atosa foodservice equipment, our sales team has unmatched knowledge of this
fast‑growing brand. Visit us online to see the full range of Atosa’s products and contact us for expert advice and service.
Table Of Contents
A LETTER FROM OUR CEO
FROM PREP TO PASS — AN OVERVIEW OF FOOD PREP & HOLDING
TYPICAL EQUIPMENT CHOICES BY TYPE OF ESTABLISHMENT
QUESTIONS TO ASK BEFORE BUYING
10
FOUNDATIONAL BUYER EDUCATION
13
Food Safety and Canadian Standards
13
What is HACCP?
14
Workflow Design, Throughput and Labour Efficiency
14
Power, Motors, RPM, Torque and Variable Speed
15
Ergonomics, Cleanability and Serviceability
17
Glossary — A Shared Vocabulary for Prep and Holding
17
SECTION ONE - FOOD PREP EQUIPMENT
19
Food Processors — Batch, Continuous-Feed, and Combination
20
Bowl Choppers, VCMs, Blixers, and Thermal Mixers
25
Mixers — Planetary and Spiral
29
Immersion Blenders
31
Slicing & Portioning
33
Meats & Protein
38
Dough Equipment - Sheeters, Rollers, Pasta & Fermentation
41
Vacuum Sealers and Sous-Vide Circulators
42
Manual Prep Equipment
45
Specialty Prep
49
Scales and Weighing
52
PREP EQUIPMENT — MASTER COMPARISON
57
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BUILDING THE PREP BATTERY
59
Best Prep Investments by Operation Type
60
SECTION TWO - HEATED HOLDING EQUIPMENT
61
Holding The Line — Why Heated Holding Matters
62
Heated Holding Cabinets and Proofers
63
Cook-and-Hold and Low-Temperature Holding Ovens
66
Retherm and Thermalizer Ovens
67
Heat Lamps, Strip Heaters, and Heated Shelves
69
Induction Warmers and Induction Chafers
72
Steam Tables, Hot Food Wells, and Drop-Ins
73
Hot Display Merchandisers and Carving Stations
77
Line Support and Mobile Holding
80
SECTION THREE - THE ESSENTIALS BEHIND THE EQUIPMENT
85
Compatibility
86
Power and Utilities
87
Cleanability
88
Operator Safety
89
Preventive Maintenance
90
Parts and Service
90
Warranty
91
Ownership
92
Workflow and Ergonomics
93
Food Safety Zoning
94
Noise and Vibration
95
RED CANADA MEMBERS ACROSS CANADA
96
MASTER LIST — R.E.D APPROVED SUPPLIERS
98
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FROM PREP TO PASS — AN
OVERVIEW OF FOOD PREP & HOLDING
Why prep and holding matter: a whole-systems view.
A successful kitchen does not run on cooking equipment alone. Before the line can fire consistently, ingredients
must be mixed, cut, weighed, portioned, processed, and staged properly. Many chefs treat mise en place as a craft
in its own right. Traditionally done by hand with a knife, that craft has been redefined over decades by dedicated
prep equipment that delivers quality control, efficient time management, and repeatable results day after day.
Prep is not only a pre-service activity. Once food is cooked and ready, it must often be held, transported,
displayed, rethermed, or merchandised without losing quality. When product needs to bridge one service into the
next — or move from a commissary to a satellite location — holding becomes the equipment that protects safety,
yield, and presentation. Food prep and holding equipment sit on both sides of the cooking process, and together
they shape labour efficiency, food safety, consistency, and guest satisfaction.
That is why this guide treats prep and holding as one connected category, not two unrelated equipment lists. The
best equipment decision is the one that fits the operator’s menu, pace of production, staff skill level, available
utilities, and service model — from kitchen to customer.
What this guide is built to help you do
Understand the full prep-to-pass workflow, not just isolated machines.
Ask better questions before spending capital or operating dollars.
Compare categories on throughput, labour, quality, cleanability, and total cost of ownership.
Plan prep zones and holding lines that support labour, food safety, and service speed.
Work more effectively with your R.E.D Dealer and service partners.
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Labour efficiency
moving repetitive tasks off the knife and onto the machine.
Consistency
same cut, same portion, same result, shift after shift.
Food safety
cleaner surfaces, controlled time and temperature, safer workflow.
Speed of service
batch cooking, holding ahead, and fewer à-la-minute bottlenecks.
Food quality
better moisture retention, better texture, better presentation.
Waste reduction
less shrinkage, fewer remakes, tighter yields.
Menu flexibility
more capacity to expand offerings without adding headcount.
How this guide is organized
The guide is built in two connected sections. Section One covers the food prep equipment that turns
raw product into ready-to-cook or ready-to-plate ingredients. Section Two covers the heated and
active holding equipment that protects food between production and service. A third, shorter block
covers the support material — prep zone design, lifecycle ownership, and the R.E.D Approved supplier
tables — that helps you buy and operate well over time.
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TYPICAL EQUIPMENT CHOICES BY
TYPE OF ESTABLISHMENT
No two operations prep the same way. The table below is a starting reference for how needs typically differ
across Canadian foodservice settings. It is a planning aid, not a prescription — every kitchen’s final kit depends on
menu, volume, staffing, space, and utilities.
core / typically present
often present / situational
rarely present/not applicable
QSR
Casual
Fine Dining
Food processors (batch / continuous)
Bowl choppers / VCMs
Blixers / thermal mixers
Planetary mixers
Spiral mixers
Immersion blenders
Commercial blenders
Slicers (gravity / automatic)
Vegetable prep machines / dicers
Meat saws / grinders / tenderizers
Dough sheeters and rollers
Vacuum sealers
Sous-vide circulators
Scales — portion / bench
Scales — legal-for-trade retail
Scales — receiving / platform
Heated holding cabinets
Proofers
Cook & hold ovens
Retherm / regeneration equipment
Steam tables / hot food wells / drop-ins
Heat lamps / strip heaters
Heated shelves / plate warmers
Induction warmers / chafers
Drawer warmers / bun warmers
Banquet carts / heated transport
Pickup / to-go lockers
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Inst.
Healthcare / Retirement
Commissary
Catering / Banquet
Bakery / Retail
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QUESTIONS TO ASK BEFORE BUYING
Asking the right questions is the fastest way to narrow the field. Prep and holding equipment ranges from a
countertop immersion blender to a floor-standing spiral mixer to a full banquet cart fleet — and while the price
range is enormous, the framework for buying well is the same. Work through the eight categories below with your
R.E.D Dealer before you commit.
•
What products are you prepping or holding most often — proteins, produce, dough, baked goods, plated meals,
buffet items, or a mix?
•
Is the menu stable or is it likely to change within the equipment’s expected life?
•
Are there specialty items (allergens, retherm, sous-vide, legal-for-trade retail) that require dedicated equipment?
•
Does the equipment need to bridge to another station (e.g., attachment-compatible with your mixer, pan-
compatible with your holding cabinet)?
•
What is the busiest peak output (per hour, per shift, per service period) the equipment must support?
•
How often is the equipment running — occasional, daily, continuous?
•
Is the constraint batch size, batch frequency, or both?
•
Are there growth plans (expanded menu, off-site catering, additional covers) that should size the decision upward?
MENU AND APPLICATION
THROUGHPUT AND PRODUCTION VOLUME
Sorrentino’s, by HESCO Foodservice Ltd.
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•
Will the unit live in a dedicated prep area or share space with other stations?
•
What is the footprint, door-swing, loading, and staging area required on all sides?
•
Does it need mobility — casters, compact profile, pass-through capability?
•
Where will attachments, blades, discs, bowls, and carriers be stored at point of use?
•
What voltage, phase, and amperage does the unit require, and does the building support it?
•
Is single-phase 120V, 208V, or 240V available, and are 208–240V three-phase circuits available where needed?
•
Does the unit need a dedicated circuit, a specific plug configuration, or a direct connection?
•
Are drains, water feeds, or ventilation required (for steam wells, thermal mixers, proofers, or retherm equipment)?
•
Is the unit NSF-certified for commercial use in Canada, and does it support your local Public Health HACCP plan?
•
Are food-contact surfaces smooth, sealed, and easy to clean?
•
Are probes, controls, and calibration points accessible for verification?
•
Can blades, discs, bowls, carriers, and other parts be removed for wash-down in a sink or warewasher?
•
Does the unit support allergen segregation (colour coding, dedicated attachments, separate prep zones)?
•
What is the loading height, and will staff lift or pivot to operate the unit?
•
Are controls readable, intuitive, and appropriate for the skill level of the team using them?
•
Does the machine reduce manual touches or shorten training time?
•
Is the noise level manageable for the space, especially if prep is happening during service?
SPACE AND LAYOUT
UTILITIES AND VENTILATION
FOOD SAFETY AND SANITATION
ERGONOMICS AND LABOUR
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•
How quickly can the unit be broken down, cleaned, and reassembled between products or at the end of the shift?
•
Which components are dishwasher-safe and which require hand washing?
•
What preventive maintenance tasks are owned by staff, and which need a service technician?
•
Where will replacement blades, gaskets, probes, and consumables be sourced?
•
What does the warranty actually cover — parts only, parts and labour, freight, travel, on-site service?
•
Is this a bench warranty (carry-in) or on-site?
•
What is the expected uptime, and what does downtime cost you?
•
Is the service network strong in your region, or will you be waiting on parts?
•
Beyond purchase price, what does the equipment cost to run, clean, and maintain over five to ten years?
•
Are financing or leasing options (e.g., through Econolease) a better fit for cash flow than outright purchase?
CLEANING AND MAINTENANCE
SERVICE, PARTS & TOTAL COST OF OWNERSHIP
Penticton Lakeside Resor, Canadian Restaurant Supply
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FOUNDATIONAL BUYER EDUCATION
Before we open the two main sections, this chapter covers the foundational concepts that return again and again across
prep and holding equipment: food safety, workflow and throughput, power and controls, ergonomics and cleanability,
serviceability, and the language of ownership cost. Operators who understand these concepts are far better positioned to
evaluate individual categories with confidence.
Food Safety and Canadian Standards
Food safety is not a buzzword. It is the foundation of every operation where the public consumes food. In Canada, local
Public Health authorities set the parameters a foodservice operation must meet to open and operate. When a kitchen is
newly built, renovated, or materially changed, Public Health is involved in confirming that the space meets safety, sanitation,
plumbing, ventilation, and equipment standards.
On the equipment side, food safety shows up in small but meaningful details: smooth food-contact surfaces, sealed controls,
removable components, accessible cleaning points, and certifications that confirm the unit is built for commercial use. Look
for NSF certification on food-contact equipment (and CSA / cULus for electrical safety) as a baseline. Your R.E.D Dealer can
confirm what certifications are relevant to the category and your local Public Health authority.
Beyond opening day, equipment shapes food safety every shift through cross-contamination control, temperature control,
and the practicality of daily cleaning. If a unit is hard to clean, it will not be cleaned as often as it should be. If a holding unit
cannot hold product at or above 60°C (140°F), it is not holding safely. Equipment that is designed with sanitation in mind
pays back every service.
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What is HACCP?
Workflow Design, Throughput
and Labour Efficiency
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) is an internationally recognized system for identifying, controlling, and
preventing food safety hazards through production, preparation, cooking, and service. In Canada, HACCP-based approaches are
used across foodservice and are referenced by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and provincial Public Health authorities.
HACCP is built on seven principles:
1.
Analyze biological, chemical, or physical food hazards.
2. Determine critical control points (CCPs).
3. Establish critical limits at each CCP.
4. Establish CCP monitoring procedures.
5. Establish corrective actions when limits are breached.
6. Establish verification procedures to confirm system effectiveness.
7.
Establish documentation and record-keeping routines.
Well-designed prep and holding equipment supports a HACCP plan by making sanitation easier, making temperature control
observable, and making documentation (probe readings, calibration logs, clean-down checks) part of the daily rhythm of the
kitchen.
The single most common equipment mistake is buying for
capacity without thinking about workflow. A processor
that can produce 45 kg of diced vegetable per hour is only
valuable if your prep zone can actually feed, receive, and
stage that volume. Equipment is a multiplier on workflow,
not a substitute for it.
Three things are usually happening at once. First, batch size:
how much product does a single run produce? Second,
batch frequency: how often is the machine running through
a shift? Third, handoff: where does the finished product go,
who cleans the tool between batches, and how is product
staged for the next step? A well-sized unit balances all three.
Labour is the clearest return. Dedicated prep equipment is
almost always faster than hand work once volume is there,
and the equipment can be run by a less experienced team
member when controls, interlocks, and guards are well
designed. The operator benefit is not just hours saved: it
is also fewer errors, less fatigue late in a shift, and more
predictable yields.
PRO TIP
“Skate to where the puck is going to be.” - Wayne Gretzky
When sizing equipment, plan for the kitchen you expect to run in
three to five years, not the one you run today. A mixer that is one size
too large will cost a little more on day one; one that is one size too
small will create bottlenecks every service and be replaced early.
Hobart - HL1400
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Power, Motors, RPM,
Torque and Variable Speed
PRO TIP
When comparing two machines with similar horsepower,
look for the duty-cycle rating, the presence of thermal
overload protection, and whether the motor is gear-driven
(typically more robust on heavy loads) or belt-driven
(quieter, often gentler at start-up). These details separate
heavy-duty commercial units from light-duty units that
happen to share a headline spec.
Specifications are often discussed in the language of motors
— horsepower, amps, RPM — but those numbers only matter
when you read them together. The question is not “how fast
does it spin” but “how well does it process what I run through
it.”
RPM alone can be misleading. Higher RPM may improve
cutting speed on softer product, but dense product — cheese,
root vegetables, thick dough, frozen protein — needs torque
to move through the blade or auger without bogging down or
burning out a motor. A lower-RPM, higher-torque motor often
outperforms a faster, weaker one on the same load.
Variable speed, where it is offered, turns one machine into
several. It matters when a kitchen needs delicate texture
control on one product and brute force on another. Duty
cycle — how long a machine can run continuously before it
needs to cool — is another under-discussed spec. A heavy-
duty machine is designed for longer, more demanding cycles
than a light-duty model at a similar headline rating.
Robot Coupe - R2N
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Ergonomics, Cleanability and Serviceability
Glossary — A Shared Vocabulary for Prep and Holding
Three buying criteria are routinely under-weighted in spec sheets and over-weighted only after the sale. Ergonomics,
cleanability, and serviceability each protect the day-to-day return on the purchase.
Ergonomics. Loading heights, control placement, door swing, reach to interior surfaces, and weight of removable parts
all shape how hard a machine is to use during a busy shift. Good ergonomics reduce fatigue and injury risk, which in turn
reduces turnover and sick days.
Cleanability. If a unit is hard to dismantle, hard to reach into, or awkward to sanitize, it will be cleaned less often and less
thoroughly. Smooth food-contact surfaces, removable cutting heads and blades, sealed electronics, and dishwasher-safe
components are not cosmetic features — they are the difference between a clean kitchen and a HACCP problem waiting to
happen.
Serviceability. Can the unit be repaired in the market you operate in? Are parts held in Canada, or imported on demand? Is
the service network familiar with this brand? A powerful machine with weak parts support becomes a problem fast. A good
R.E.D Dealer can advise on which brands are supportable in your region.
Operators, chefs, consultants, and dealers all use the same category but not always the same words. The glossary below is a
shared reference for the terms used throughout this guide.
Term
Plain-language definition
Torque
Rotational force produced by a motor. Torque is what allows a machine to power through dense or
heavy products — cheese, dough, root vegetables — without bogging down. Usually more important
than raw RPM.
RPM
Revolutions per minute. How many times a blade, disc, or shaft rotates in one minute. Affects cutting
speed and texture, but higher RPM does not automatically mean better performance.
Variable Speed
A control feature that lets the operator adjust motor or blade speed. Increases versatility across
different products and desired textures.
Duty Cycle
How long a machine can run continuously before it needs to rest or cool. Heavy-duty units are rated
for longer, more demanding operation.
Throughput
The amount of product a machine can process in a given period — per batch, per hour, per shift,
or per day. The right throughput question is not “how fast” but “how fast, consistently, cleanly, and
safely.”
Pulse
Short bursts of motor power used for better control over texture and cut consistency.
Duty Level
Marketing language for expected daily use. Light / medium / heavy duty ratings are only a guide —
read the duty-cycle spec for a real answer.
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Term
Plain-language definition
Proofing
Controlled environment (temperature and humidity) used to let dough ferment and rise before
baking. Proofing cabinets and combination proofer-holding cabinets are the most common
equipment forms.
Retherm
Short for rethermalization: bringing precooked and chilled or frozen food back to safe service
temperature, typically through hot water, combi, or specialized retherm equipment. Not the same as
holding.
Cook & Hold
A low-temperature oven cycle where product is cooked slowly and then held at a safe service
temperature for an extended period, often overnight. Delivers yield and tenderness gains on proteins.
Wet Well / Dry Well
Two architectures of hot food wells. Wet wells generate steam from heated water; dry wells heat the
pan directly with radiant, conductive, convection, or induction heat.
Drop-In
A hot or cold well designed to drop into a counter or service line, rather than sit on top of one.
Pass-Through
A cabinet or unit with doors on both sides so it can be loaded from one zone and served from
another — a common holding-line configuration.
Pan Capacity
The number and size of pans a cabinet or well will accept. Usually expressed in full-size (GN 1/1) or
fractional (GN 1/2, 1/3, 1/6, 1/9) pan counts.
Halo / Radiant Holding
Gentle radiant heat surrounding or below product to maintain temperature without further cooking.
Legal-for-Trade
A scale certified for use where the weight shown determines what a customer pays. In Canada, retail
scales must be approved and inspected under Measurement Canada requirements.
Measurement Canada
The federal agency that regulates legal-for-trade measuring devices, including retail scales. Initial
inspection and periodic re-inspection are performed by authorized service providers.
NSF Certification
Independent third-party certification confirming that food-contact equipment meets sanitation and
hygienic design standards.
Standard Warranty
The primary warranty policy covering parts, labour, and exclusions. The fine print (travel, freight,
wear items) matters.
Bench Warranty
A warranty structure where the unit must be brought to an authorized repair location rather than
serviced on-site. Common on smaller equipment.
Replacement Warranty
A warranty structure where the unit or part is replaced rather than repaired. Common on some
countertop equipment and select wear items.
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SECTION ONE
FOOD PREP EQUIPMENT
Twelve categories, one job: get food ready to cook, plate, or package —
faster, safer, and more consistently than by hand.
Prep equipment is where most kitchens find their first real labour savings. A knife is slow. A stockpot full
of diced onion is a cook’s entire morning. The right machine turns that morning into twenty minutes. But
every category here trades one thing for another — footprint for speed, flexibility for volume, simplicity
for control. This section walks through each category in the order most operators think about them,
explains where each one earns its keep, and ends with a single comparison matrix you can take back to
your RED Dealer.
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CORE PREP
Food Processors — Batch,
Continuous-Feed, and Combination
Food processors are one of the most useful pieces in a commercial kitchen. They cut knife work, improve consistency, and
move staff faster through busy prep periods. But the category is not one machine. It is three.
Batch units work inside a closed bowl. Continuous-feed units push product through a feed tube and out the side.
Combination units try to do both. Each solves a different problem, and none of them do every job well.
Batch / bowl units
Continuous-feed units
Product goes into a closed bowl, gets processed inside the
chamber, and comes out when you open the lid. That gives you
control over texture, consistency, and yield. Batch units are the
right call for sauces, marinades, dressings, purees, chopped
herbs, breadcrumbs, and most smaller-batch work where you
want to watch what is happening.
Bowl material matters. Stainless steel is tougher and better
for heavy use. Clear polycarbonate lets staff see the product
during processing, which helps when texture has to be exact.
Bowl capacity matters too — a bigger bowl only pays back if
you are actually filling it often enough.
These are built for volume. Product goes in a hopper, passes a
cutting disc or blade, and drops out into a pan. Slicing, shredding,
grating, julienne cuts — that is where continuous-feed earns its
money. If your kitchen is moving through lettuce, onions, carrots,
cabbage, or cheese every day, this is the machine that saves staff
hours.
Watch the hopper style. Large hoppers handle bulky product.
Tube-style hoppers are better for long items like cucumbers
or whole carrots. A continuous-feed unit that slices and grates
may not dice — check before you buy. Match the machine to
the prep you actually do, not to the list of attachments on the
spec sheet.
Robot Coupe - CL40
Waring - WFP11SW
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Combination units
One machine, both jobs. Combination units
give you a batch bowl and a continuous-
feed head in a single footprint. That can be
a real win for kitchens short on space. It can
also be a compromise. If you need top-end
performance in either mode, a dedicated
batch or continuous unit will usually beat a
combo.
PRO TIP
Size up if you are growing. A 20-qt planetary mixer that takes two batches today will take four next year. The wrong
answer to that problem is a second mixer. The right answer was a 40-qt the first time.
•
How much product do you process in a single prep shift?
•
Do you need control over texture, or speed through volume, or both?
•
What electrical is available at the station — 120V, 208V, 240V?
•
Which disc and blade attachments will you actually use every week?
•
Is the feed tube large enough for the product you load most often?
•
Can the bowl, lid, and blade pack go through the dishwasher?
QUESTIONS TO ASK BEFORE BUYING A FOOD PROCESSOR
Sammic - CK-35V
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