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Honeycomb Vent

Cleaning Clogged Honeycomb Vents – What Works and What Wrecks Them


Honeycomb vents get dirty. It happens. Dust, grease, paint overspray, soot – everything finds its way into those little cells.

Airflow drops. Equipment heats up. Then someone grabs a pressure washer and blasts the hell out of it. Cells bend. Plating strips off. Shielding goes to hell.

We've seen those vents. Look clean on the outside. Inside, they're destroyed.

There's a right way to clean these things. And a lot of wrong ones. Here's what we've learned.


Check What You're Dealing With First

Don't just start blasting. Look at the honeycomb.

Just dust? Easy. Blow it out.

Greasy and sticky? You need to wash it.

Heavy carbon or hard crust? Might need chemicals.

If the honeycomb is already corroded or crushed – don't clean it. Replace it.


What to Use – And What Never to Touch

The safe stuff: vacuum with a soft brush attachment, compressed air (not too strong), soft nylon brush, warm water, mild detergent.

Pressure washer? No. Too much force. Thin foil bends.

Wire brush? No. Scratches the plating. Shielding goes dead.

Strong acids or caustics? No. They'll eat aluminum.

Random solvents? No. Some dissolve the brazing. The honeycomb falls apart.


Just Dust and Dirt

Vacuum both sides with a soft brush attachment. Then blow compressed air through from the back – opposite to normal airflow. That pushes the crap out the way it came in.

Keep air pressure low enough to move dust but not bend the metal. The foil is thin. Too much pressure warps it.

A soft brush can loosen stuck dust. Never use metal bristles.


Grease and Oil

Dusting doesn't work on sticky stuff.

Take the vent off the cabinet first. Don't wash it in place.

Warm water, mild detergent. Soak it for 10-15 minutes. Scrub gently with a soft brush. Rinse with clean water until all soap is gone.

Then dry it. Really dry it. Blow compressed air through every cell. Water left in the cells corrodes aluminum. White powder forms. Shielding drops.


Heavy Carbon and Hard Crust

Hard carbon buildup needs more work.

For light carbon, you can use a specialized carbon cleaner spray. Spray it on, let it sit 10-15 minutes, then scrub with a soft brush.

There are cleaning agents made for catalytic converters – some work on honeycomb too. But test it on a small corner first. Some chemicals eat the plating.

We've seen guys use carburetor cleaner on honeycomb. It dissolved the brazing. The whole thing fell apart.

So test first. Or ask someone who knows.


Before You Put It Back

After cleaning and drying, check a few things.

Look for bent or crushed cells. If the honeycomb is deformed, shielding is gone.

Check the plating. If it's flaking off, the metal is exposed. It won't conduct.

Check the gasket. Cleaning doesn't fix old gaskets. If it's cracked or hard, replace it.

When you reinstall, don't over‑tighten the screws. Warped frame means leaks.


Clean or Replace?

Honeycomb doesn't last forever. Every cleaning stresses the metal a little.

After 5-6 aggressive cleanings, replace it. Don't wait until it falls apart.

Severe corrosion? Replace. Bent cells? Replace. Gasket shot? Replace that at least.


Bottom Line

Don't wait until fans are screaming and equipment is throttling. Clean vents once or twice a year. It's not hard.

Look at it first. Choose the right method. Blow, scrub, rinse, dry. Inspect before reinstalling.

If you're not sure, ask. Don't guess.

And for the love of God, don't use a pressure washer. We've seen too many good vents killed by one stupid mistake.

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Honeycomb shielding vents

Honeycomb vs. Metal Mesh – Which Shielding Vent Actually Works?


If you've been around shielding vents, you've seen both. Cheap wire mesh. Fancy honeycomb. They look similar from across the room. But the performance gap? Massive.

I've tested both in our shop. Here's what the numbers actually say – and what that means for your equipment.


Shielding – This Is Where Honeycomb Kills Mesh

A metal mesh vent at 1 GHz? Maybe 10‑20 dB. At 5 GHz? Almost nothing. The gaps between the wires act like little antennas. RF walks right through.

Honeycomb works different. Each cell is a waveguide. RF above cutoff bounces off the walls and dies. A good honeycomb vent gives you 60‑90 dB at 1 GHz. Some hit 80‑120 dB.

At 5 GHz, the gap is about 40 dB. That's 10,000 times more signal blocked by honeycomb.

What that means: If you're near a cell tower, a radar, or any serious transmitter, mesh won't cut it. Honeycomb will.


Airflow – The Surprise

People assume mesh flows better because it's thinner. Not really.

A good honeycomb vent has 80‑95% open area. Straight cells, laminar flow, low pressure drop.

Mesh? Woven wires create turbulence. Higher pressure drop. And if you use a fine mesh to get better shielding, you choke airflow even more.

What that means: For the same shielding performance, honeycomb often flows more air. Fans work less. Gear runs cooler.


Durability – Mesh Is Fragile

Honeycomb is a solid block. Aluminum or steel. Resists vibration, shock, dents. You can open and close a cabinet door every day. It won't tear.

Mesh? Snags. Tears. Compresses. A maintenance guy leaning on it bends it out of shape. Once it's bent, shielding is gone.

What that means: For equipment that gets handled or moved, honeycomb lasts. Mesh is a headache.


Corrosion – Mesh Rots Faster

Honeycomb can be plated – nickel, tin, silver. Stainless handles salt spray. Aluminum with chem film survives humidity.

Mesh corrodes at wire intersections. Dissimilar metals create galvanic corrosion. Plating wears off at contact points.

What that means: In coastal or industrial environments, honeycomb lasts years. Mesh needs replacement in months.


Sealing – Hard to Seal Mesh

Honeycomb comes in a rigid frame with a conductive gasket. Bolt it on, it seals.

Mesh is flimsy. Edges don't seat well. Gaskets don't sit right. RF leaks around the frame.

What that means: A poorly installed mesh vent leaks more than the holes themselves. A properly installed honeycomb vent seals.


Cost – Mesh Wins Here

Mesh is cheap. Buy it by the roll.

Honeycomb costs more. Stacking, brazing, plating, framing – it takes work.

What that means: If you're building a cheap consumer product with no serious EMI threat, mesh might be fine. If you're protecting critical gear, honeycomb is worth the extra money.


Bottom Line

Honeycomb beats mesh at high frequencies. Better shielding. Better airflow. Better durability. Better sealing.

Mesh is for cost‑sensitive, low‑frequency stuff. Honeycomb is for when it matters.

If your equipment is near a tower, a radar, or any serious RF source, spend the money on honeycomb. The performance gap isn't small – at 5 GHz, it's about 40 dB. That's the difference between passing EMC and failing. Between reliable operation and random glitches.

We make honeycomb vents. We've tested them against mesh. We know what works.

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EMI Shielding Vent

Deeper Honeycomb = Better Shielding? Not Always.


I hear this all the time. "Give me the deepest honeycomb you got. I want maximum shielding."

Sounds right, doesn't it? Deeper vent = more attenuation.

Not that simple.

Depth helps. Up to a point. Past that, you're choking your fans and throwing money away. Let me explain.


How Depth Actually Works

The honeycomb cells are little waveguides. RF goes in, bounces off the walls, dies. Deeper cell = more bounces. More bounces = more attenuation.

That's true. But only if the cell size matches the frequency.

If the cell is too big for the frequency, even a 2‑inch deep vent won't help. The wave just goes straight through. Cutoff frequency is set by cell size, not depth.

If the cell size is right, then depth adds attenuation. But it's not linear. After about a 4:1 depth‑to‑cell ratio, the improvement flattens out.

We tested a 1/8‑inch cell vent at 5 GHz. At 1/4‑inch depth, about 20 dB. At 1/2 inch, 35 dB. At 1 inch, 50 dB. At 2 inches, 55 dB.

See that? From 1 inch to 2 inches, you double the thickness for only 5 dB. Not worth it.


What's Wrong with Going Too Deep

Every extra millimeter of depth adds pressure drop. Air has to travel through a longer tube. More friction.

At 1/2 inch, pressure drop is small – maybe 0.1 inches of water. At 1 inch, it doubles. At 2 inches, it's four times. Your fans will scream.

Also, deeper vents are heavier. More metal. More cost. More shipping weight.

And they take more space. If your cabinet is tight, a 2‑inch vent might not even fit.

So you're paying more, getting less airflow, and only gaining a few dB you probably don't need.


When You Actually Need Depth

For really high shielding – military TEMPEST, MRI rooms, radar shelters – you might need 1 inch or more. Those call for 80‑100 dB.

But for most commercial and industrial applications, 1/2 inch is plenty. At 1/2 inch, a 1/8‑inch cell vent gives 40‑50 dB at 1 GHz and 35‑40 dB at 5 GHz. That's enough for FCC, CE, and most telecom specs.

Some suppliers push deeper vents because they cost more. More profit. But you don't need it.


Real Example – Cell Tower Cabinet

A customer had a base station cabinet near a tower. They asked for a 1‑inch deep vent for "maximum shielding." We recommended 1/2 inch. They insisted.

We installed the 1‑inch vent. Shielding was 55 dB at 2 GHz. The 1/2‑inch vent would have been 45 dB. They didn't need 55. Their fans were screaming because the pressure drop was too high. They had to upgrade the fans.

They ended up switching back to 1/2 inch. Shielding was still fine. Fans were quiet.


What Actually Matters

Cell size is the primary thing. Match cell size to your frequency. 2.4 GHz problem? 1/8‑inch cells work. 5 GHz problem? 1/8‑inch is marginal – go to 1/16‑inch. 10 GHz problem? You need 1/16‑inch or smaller.

Once cell size is right, adjust depth to get the attenuation you need. But don't overdo it. 1/2 inch is the sweet spot. 1 inch for critical. 2 inches only for extreme.

And don't forget the gasket and frame. A perfect deep honeycomb with a bad gasket leaks. A shallow vent with a good gasket out‑performs a deep one with a poor seal.


Cost vs. Benefit

A 1‑inch vent costs about 30% more than 1/2‑inch. A 2‑inch vent costs double.

You're paying for metal, machining, and weight.

Ask yourself: do I really need that extra 5 dB? Look at your EMC requirement. If it says 40 dB at 1 GHz, a 1/2‑inch vent delivers that. A 1‑inch vent delivers 50 dB. You don't need 50.

Save the money. Save the airflow. Your fans will thank you.


Deeper honeycomb doesn't always mean better shielding. Past a certain point, you're just wasting money and airflow.

Match cell size to frequency. Then pick the depth that meets your requirement – not the deepest you can find.

1/2 inch is enough for most. 1 inch for high shielding. 2 inches only for extreme. And always check the gasket and frame – they matter more than depth alone.

We make vents in all depths. We'll tell you what you actually need – not what costs more. That's what we do.

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Waveguide Honeycomb Vent

Perforated Plate vs. Waveguide Honeycomb Vent – What the Frequency Sweep Actually Shows


You see both on cabinets. Flat sheet with holes punched in it. And that fancy honeycomb thing. They look like they do the same job – let air through, keep RF out.

They don't.

We've tested both on our bench. Same size, same open area, same frequency sweep. The numbers are not even close.

Here's what we measured.


How Each One Works

A perforated plate is just that – a sheet of metal with holes. At low frequencies, the holes are small compared to wavelength, so they block some RF. Crank the frequency up, and the holes become antennas. Signal leaks through. No magic. Just physics.

A honeycomb vent works different. Each cell is a little waveguide. Below cutoff, RF can't propagate through the tube. It bounces off the walls and dies. The attenuation is exponential – not linear. That's the key.



The Frequency Sweep – What We Saw

We tested a standard perforated plate – 40% open area, 3 mm holes. And a 1/8‑inch honeycomb vent, 1/2‑inch deep, 85% open area.

At 100 MHz, they both did something. Perforated plate gave maybe 20 dB. Honeycomb gave 80 dB. Already a gap.

At 500 MHz, perforated plate started falling off. Maybe 15 dB. Honeycomb? 55 dB.

At 2 GHz, the perforated plate was struggling – 10 dB or less. Honeycomb was still at 52 dB.

At 10 GHz, the perforated plate was basically useless. Maybe 5 dB. The honeycomb vent was still holding 61 dB.

That's the difference. At 2 GHz, the honeycomb is blocking about 50,000 times more signal than the perforated plate. At 10 GHz, the gap is even bigger.


Why the Gap Gets Wider at High Frequency

Perforated plate has no depth. The RF sees a hole and goes through. At high frequencies, the hole is bigger than the wavelength, so it's like an open door.

Honeycomb has depth. The cell acts like a tube. If the tube is smaller than the wavelength, the signal can't make it through. The longer the tube, the more attenuation.

That's why honeycomb vents from suppliers like Holland Shielding and Raymond EMC are rated for 80‑100+ dB across wide frequency ranges. Perforated plate can't touch those numbers.


Airflow – The Surprise

People assume perforated plate flows better because it's thinner. Not necessarily.

A good honeycomb vent has 85‑90% open area. The straight cells create laminar flow with low pressure drop.

Perforated plate might have higher open area – but the sharp edges create turbulence. At the same open area, honeycomb often flows better.

So you're not sacrificing airflow for shielding. You're getting both.


What About Low Frequency?

At very low frequencies – below 100 MHz – the gap narrows. A perforated plate with small holes can do okay. And honeycomb's waveguide cutoff doesn't help much below cutoff.

But for most EMI problems – cell towers, Wi‑Fi, 5G, radar – you're dealing with frequencies above 100 MHz. That's where honeycomb dominates.


Cost – The One Place Perforated Plate Wins

Perforated plate is cheap. You can buy it by the sheet. Cut it with shears.

Honeycomb costs more. The manufacturing is more complex – stacking, brazing, plating, framing.

So if your equipment is in a low‑threat environment, with no nearby transmitters and no EMC requirements, perforated plate might be fine.

But if you're near a cell tower, a radar, or any serious RF source, perforated plate is a gamble. The cheap vent will cost you in interference and failed compliance tests.


Installation – Both Need Care

Perforated plate is hard to seal. The edges are sharp. Gaskets don't sit well. RF leaks around the frame.

Honeycomb comes in a rigid frame with a conductive gasket. You bolt it on, it seals. Less room for error.

A poorly installed perforated plate leaks more than the holes themselves. A properly installed honeycomb vent seals.


Real Example – Cell Tower Interference

A customer had a base station cabinet with a perforated plate vent. At 2 GHz, they were getting interference from a nearby tower. We measured the vent – 8 dB shielding at 2 GHz.

Swapped to a 1/8‑inch honeycomb vent, same size. Shielding jumped to 52 dB. Interference gone.

The perforated plate saved them $50. It cost them weeks of troubleshooting.



Perforated plate and honeycomb vent both let air through. That's where the similarity ends.

At 1 GHz, the difference is about 40 dB. At 10 GHz, it's even bigger.

Perforated plate is cheap. It works at low frequencies. It's fine for low‑threat environments.

Honeycomb vent is engineered. It works across a wide frequency range. It handles RF and airflow at the same time.

If your equipment matters, spend the money on honeycomb. The perforated plate isn't a deal. It's a compromise. And at high frequencies, it's not even that.

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honeycomb waveguide vent

Custom Anti‑Interference Shield Vent for Power Inverter Cabinets – Keeping the Noise In and the Heat Out


Inverter cabinets are always fighting two battles. You open a vent for cooling, and the RF gets out. You seal it tight, and the modules cook themselves.

We've built plenty of shielding vent solutions for inverter cabinets. Here's a practical approach – from selection to installation.


Where the Interference Comes From

Inverters have rectifiers and IGBTs switching at high speed. That generates a lot of high‑frequency harmonics. These harmonics go two ways.

One path – conducted emissions. They travel back through the power lines and mess with the grid or other equipment.

The other path – radiated emissions. They leak out through cabinet gaps, door seals, and ventilation openings.

Vents are the biggest radiated leakage point. Cut a row of cooling slots in the door, and you've basically opened a window for EMI.


Why Cooling and Shielding Hate Each Other

Cooling needs openings. Shielding needs a continuous metal surface. They're natural enemies.

A common hack is to put a metal mesh over the vent. Fine mesh blocks more RF, but also blocks airflow. Fans work harder. Coarse mesh flows air, but RF walks right through.

So you can't just use mesh. You need a structure that lets air pass but stops RF.


How a Honeycomb Waveguide Vent Solves Both

The principle isn't complicated. A honeycomb vent is a bunch of little tubes. Each tube is a waveguide. The tube size determines what frequency it stops. The opening needs to be smaller than about one‑twentieth of the wavelength you're trying to block.

Smaller holes = better shielding, but more airflow restriction. Bigger holes = less restriction, but weaker shielding. So selection is about finding the balance.

A good honeycomb waveguide vent gives you 60‑100 dB of shielding. And the honeycomb structure has high open area – it flows more air than typical mesh.


How We Customize for Inverter Cabinets

Every inverter cabinet is different – power rating, size, mounting arrangement. You can't just grab a standard panel and bolt it on. Here's what we do.

Step 1 – Figure out the frequency.

Inverter noise usually lives in the tens of kHz to tens of MHz, but harmonics can reach hundreds of MHz or even GHz. You need to know your worst frequency. Higher frequency means smaller cell size.

Step 2 – Figure out the airflow.

Calculate how much cooling air you need based on the inverter's power dissipation. More power means more vent area. We aim for 85% open area or higher, otherwise the fans waste power.

Step 3 – Figure out the size and mounting.

Where's the vent opening? What shape? We custom‑make the outer frame, mounting holes, and thickness to match your cabinet drawing.

Material and finish depend on the environment. For indoor, standard aluminum works – light and corrosion‑resistant. For high vibration or strength, we use steel. For coastal or chemical plants, we add plating (nickel, tin) or use stainless.


Installation – Where Most People Screw Up

You can pick the perfect vent and still ruin it with bad installation.

Clean the surface. The mounting area must be bare metal. No paint, no coating, no rust, no oil. Any insulating layer kills the electrical contact. Scrape it down to shiny metal.

Conductive gasket. You need a conductive gasket between the vent frame and the cabinet – beryllium copper fingers, conductive rubber, or metal mesh. No gasket means metal‑to‑metal contact that won't seal properly. The gasket must sit on a clean, continuous metal surface and get compressed evenly.

Torque. Don't use an impact driver. Too loose, the gasket doesn't compress – gap. Too tight, the frame warps – the gasket lifts. Follow the spec.

Screw spacing. Spacing too far apart lets the gasket bulge in the middle. We recommend screws every 50 mm or less.

Treat the mounting holes. Every screw hole must have bare metal. Paint under the screw head is a leak.


When to Use Double Waveguide

If a single layer isn't enough, you can stack two layers or use cross‑cell honeycomb. That gives higher shielding. But it also kills airflow. Use it only for extreme requirements – military, EMC test rooms.


What This Solution Achieves

It turns the vent opening from a weak point into an extension of the shield. Cooling does its job with fans. EMI stays inside where it belongs. No more compromise.

After installation, test it – scan the vent with a spectrum analyzer. Compare before and after. The difference tells the story.


Need a Custom Solution?

Got a cabinet drawing and a frequency spec? Send them over. We'll design a vent that fits, seals, and works.

That's what we do.

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shielding ventilation board

Low Wind Resistance Honeycomb Channel – How We Keep Air Moving Without Killing Shielding


We sell a lot of honeycomb ventilation panels. And we get the same question over and over. "How do I get more airflow without losing shielding?"

Tricky question. Because the two fight each other. Smaller cells shield better but restrict air. Larger cells flow better but leak more RF.

The trick is designing a low wind resistance honeycomb channel that gives you enough of both. Here's what we've learned about getting that balance right.


The Trade‑Off You Can't Escape

The honeycomb works like a bunch of little tubes. Air goes through. RF bounces off the walls and dies.

Two things control how well it works.

Cell size. Smaller cells block higher frequencies. But smaller cells mean less open area – less space for air to flow.

Cell depth. Deeper cells shield better. But deeper cells create more friction – more pressure drop. Fans work harder.

You can't have it both ways. You pick a spot on the curve.

We ask customers two questions: what frequency do you need to block? How much airflow do you need? Then we pick the cell size and depth that hit both.


Cell Size – The Biggest Knob

Bigger cells flow more air. Smaller cells shield higher frequencies.

Here's the rough guide we use:

1/4‑inch cells – cutoff around 600 MHz. Open area about 90%. Best airflow. Only for low‑frequency EMI.

3/16‑inch cells – cutoff around 800 MHz. Open area about 88%. Better airflow than 1/8‑inch, lower frequency shielding.

1/8‑inch cells – cutoff around 1.5 GHz. Open area about 85%. The workhorse. Good for most telecom, data centers, medical gear.

1/16‑inch cells – cutoff around 3 GHz. Open area about 75‑80%. For 5G, radar, high‑frequency stuff. Airflow takes a hit.

The rule: use the biggest cell that still covers your frequency. Don't overspec. A 1/16‑inch vent at 2.4 GHz shields great, but it chokes airflow for no reason.

For low wind resistance, you want 1/8‑inch or larger whenever possible.


Cell Depth – The Second Knob

Depth is how thick the honeycomb is. Standard is 1/2 inch. You can go 1 inch or 1.5 inch.

Deeper cells shield better. But pressure drop roughly doubles when you double the depth.

We tested 1/8‑inch cells at different depths. At 1/2 inch, about 50 dB at 2 GHz. At 1 inch, about 60 dB. But the fans work a lot harder.

For low wind resistance, stick with 1/2 inch unless you really need the extra shielding.

One customer insisted on 1‑inch depth for a military application. Shielding was excellent. But their fans couldn't handle the pressure drop. They had to upgrade the fans. That's the trade‑off.


Open Area – The Airflow Number

Open area is how much empty space the vent has. A good honeycomb vent has 80‑90% open area.

At 85% open area, a 12x12 vent at 200 CFM has pressure drop of about 0.1 to 0.2 inches of water. Fans don't even notice. At 500 CFM, it's around 0.4 to 0.6 inches. Still fine. At 1,000 CFM, it might hit 1.5 inches – that's where you hear the fans working.

The open hole of the same size has about half the pressure drop. So you're not losing much by adding a well‑designed honeycomb vent.


Wall Thickness – Thin vs. Thick

Thinner walls mean more open area, lower pressure drop. But thin walls are fragile.

Thicker walls are tougher, but they take up space. Same cell size, thicker walls = less open area = higher pressure drop.

For most applications, standard foil thickness is fine. For low wind resistance, you want the thinnest walls that still survive handling.


Cross‑Cell Honeycomb – High Shielding, Higher Pressure Drop

If you need very high shielding, you can use cross‑cell honeycomb – multiple layers of honeycomb offset from each other.

It shields better – up to 90‑105 dB at certain frequencies. But airflow decreases.

For low wind resistance, single‑layer honeycomb is usually the better choice. Cross‑cell is for when you absolutely need the shielding and can sacrifice some airflow.


Surface Finish – Smooth Is Better

Rough cell walls create more friction. More friction means higher pressure drop.

We keep our forming tools sharp. Smooth walls = smoother airflow.

Some suppliers don't care. They run tools until they're worn. Cells come out rough. Airflow suffers.

We replace tools on a schedule. Not when they break.


Slant Honeycomb – For Rain, Not for Low Wind Resistance

Slant honeycomb – 30°, 45°, 60° – is for outdoor rainproof applications. The angled cells shed water.

But slant cells have higher pressure drop than straight cells. The air has to turn.

If you need low wind resistance, stick with straight cells. Only use slant if you absolutely need rain protection.


Real Example – Data Center Upgrade

A customer had a server rack with high heat load. They were using perforated sheet vents – 40% open area. Fans maxed out, still hot.

We swapped to 1/8‑inch honeycomb, 1/2‑inch depth, 85% open area. Pressure drop dropped by more than half. Fans slowed down. Temperature dropped 12°C.

The shielding? They didn't even know they had an RF problem until the old vents leaked. New vents fixed that too.


Real Example – Telecom Cabinet

A telecom cabinet near a cell tower had a cheap 1/4‑inch vent. Great airflow, but at 2 GHz it leaked.

We swapped to 1/8‑inch cells, same depth. Open area dropped from 90% to 85% – fans didn't care. Shielding at 2 GHz went from 20 dB to 55 dB.

They got low wind resistance and good shielding. Balance.


How to Spec for Low Wind Resistance

Here's what we tell customers.

Step 1. Know your frequency. What's the highest frequency you need to block?

Step 2. Pick the largest cell size that covers that frequency. 1/8‑inch for most. 1/4‑inch for low frequencies. 1/16‑inch only if you absolutely need it.

Step 3. Start with 1/2‑inch depth. Only go deeper if you need the extra shielding.

Step 4. Look at open area. 85% or more is good.

Step 5. Check pressure drop. Get a curve from the supplier.

Step 6. If pressure drop is too high, go up a cell size or add more vent area.



Low wind resistance honeycomb channel design is about balance. Cell size for frequency. Depth for attenuation. Open area for airflow.

The sweet spot for most applications is 1/8‑inch cells, 1/2‑inch depth, 85% open area. Good shielding to a few GHz. Low pressure drop. Fans happy.

Don't overspec on cell size. Don't overspec on depth. Bigger isn't always better.

We test every design on a flow bench. Same rig, same pressure. We know the numbers before we ship.

If you need a vent that breathes and blocks, tell us your frequency and your airflow. We'll build the right honeycomb channel. That's what we do.

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ventilation board

Shielding Effectiveness Numbers – What They Actually Mean and How to Tell If They're Real


You look at a datasheet for a shielding vent board. Big number. 60 dB. 80 dB. Looks impressive.

But what does that actually mean? And more important – how did they test it?

We test these things in our shop. Here's what shielding effectiveness really is – and how to tell if the number is real or just marketing.


What Is Shielding Effectiveness? In Plain English

It's simple. It tells you how much RF signal the vent stops. Measured in dB.

20 dB? The signal is 100 times smaller. 40 dB? 10,000 times smaller. 60 dB? A million times smaller.

So a vent that says 60 dB at 1 GHz means the signal coming through is one millionth of what it would be with no vent.

That's the idea. Simple.

But here's the catch – the number depends on how you test it.


What Affects the Number

Three things.

Cell size. Smaller cells block higher frequencies. 1/8‑inch cells cutoff around 1.5 GHz. 1/16‑inch cells cutoff around 3 GHz.

Depth. Deeper cells block more. A 1/2‑inch deep vent at 5 GHz might give 35 dB. Same vent at 1‑inch depth? Maybe 55 dB.

The edge seal. You can have perfect honeycomb, but a bad gasket ruins everything. The frame and gasket matter as much as the core.

So when you see a number, ask: what cell size? what depth? was the gasket included in the test?


How They Test It – The Real Way vs. The Cheap Way

There are standards. A real test uses a far‑field setup. Transmitting antenna on one side of the vent, receiving on the other. The vent is mounted in a wall between two shielded chambers. They sweep frequencies, measure the signal with and without the vent. That's the shielding effectiveness.

Some suppliers use a near‑field probe. Hold it an inch away from the vent. That's faster and cheaper. But it doesn't tell you how the vent performs against a real plane wave from a tower a mile away.

Near‑field numbers are almost always higher than far‑field. Sometimes by 10‑20 dB.

So always ask: far‑field or near‑field?


The Main Standards

If someone says they tested to a standard, here are the ones you'll see.

IEEE 299. Commercial standard. Used for enclosures and ventilation panels.

MIL‑STD‑285. Military standard. Common in defense and aerospace.

GB/T 34938‑2017. China's national standard specifically for waveguide cutoff ventilation panels.

GB/T 12190 and GB/T 30142‑2013. Chinese standards for shielding rooms and materials.

ASTM D4935. For planar materials like mesh and honeycomb.

MIL‑G‑83528. For gaskets.

If they can't name a standard, they probably didn't test properly.


What the Numbers Mean in the Real World

Here's a rough idea.

20‑30 dB. Basic. Good for some commercial stuff. Not for sensitive gear.

40‑50 dB. Solid. Most good honeycomb vents sit here.

60‑80 dB. High. Military, medical, critical.

100+ dB. Very high. Shielded rooms. Special construction.

Don't chase the biggest number. If you only need 40 dB, a 60 dB vent might choke your airflow for no reason.


What to Ask Your Supplier

When you see a shielding number, ask:

How did you test it? IEEE 299? MIL‑STD‑285? Or a probe in a garage?

At what frequency? 60 dB at 1 GHz might be 30 dB at 6 GHz. Get data at your frequency.

With or without the gasket? If they tested the honeycomb alone, the real number is lower.

Far‑field or near‑field? Far‑field is real. Near‑field is optimistic.

Can I see the report? A real supplier has batch‑specific test data.


Real Example – The 70 dB Lie

A customer bought a vent with "70 dB" on the datasheet. We tested it in our far‑field setup. At 2 GHz, it was 35 dB.

The supplier had tested near‑field. And they rounded up.

The customer didn't know until they installed it and got interference. They replaced it with our vent – same advertised 70 dB, but tested properly. Real 65 dB at 2 GHz. No more interference.


Why the Standard Matters

A vent that passes MIL‑STD‑285 is held to a different level than one tested with a probe in a garage.

The standard tells you how it was set up, what frequencies, what the margin of error is.

No standard? You're trusting a number with no context.



Shielding effectiveness is measured in dB. Tells you how much RF the vent blocks.

The test standard tells you how it was measured – IEEE 299, MIL‑STD‑285, GB/T 34938, or something else.

A 60 dB number from a real far‑field test is worth more than an 80 dB number from a near‑field probe.

Don't buy on numbers alone. Ask how they tested. Ask for the report. Test it yourself if you can.

We test to IEEE 299 and MIL‑STD‑285. We keep batch records. We know what we're shipping.

If you're not sure, send us your frequency and your requirement. We'll tell you what vent fits. That's what we do.

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ventilation board

Common Mistakes in Shield Vent Selection – And How to Not Make Them


We get calls from people who already bought a shield vent somewhere. And it doesn't work. Leaks RF. Chokes the fans. Dies in six months.

Sometimes it's junk. But a lot of times, the buyer just picked wrong. Or installed it like a caveman.

Here are the screw‑ups we see most often. And how to not make them.


Mistake #1 – Picking the Wrong Cell Size for Your Frequency

This is the big one. Someone buys a vent with 1/8‑inch cells because that's what their buddy used. But their problem is at 800 MHz. 1/8‑inch cells cutoff around 1.5 GHz. At 800 MHz, that vent does almost nothing.

Or the opposite. They buy 1/4‑inch cells for a 5 GHz problem. 1/4‑inch cutoff is about 600 MHz, so it works, but the attenuation is weak. You need smaller cells for higher frequencies.

How to avoid: Know your frequency. Look at the vent's cutoff spec. Pick cells where your frequency is well above cutoff. For 2.4 GHz, 1/8‑inch is fine. For 5 GHz, 1/8‑inch still works, but 1/16‑inch is better. For 10 GHz, you need 1/16‑inch or smaller. Don't guess.


Mistake #2 – Ignoring Airflow and Pressure Drop

We see this all the time. Someone specs a vent with 1/16‑inch cells and 1‑inch depth because they want "maximum shielding." Then they bolt it on and the fans scream. Equipment runs hot. They blame the vent.

Well, yeah. Small cells and deep depth kill airflow. You can't have both.

How to avoid: Figure out your CFM. Ask the supplier for a pressure drop curve. Make sure your fans can handle it. If not, go up a cell size or add more vent area. Don't just chase the highest dB number.


Mistake #3 – No Gasket (Or the Wrong One)

A shield vent without a conductive gasket is just a hole with a screen. RF leaks around the edges.

We've seen vents bolted straight to painted metal. No gasket. Paint is an insulator. The vent does nothing. Or they use foam weatherstrip – not conductive. Same problem.

How to avoid: Use a conductive gasket – silver‑filled silicone or beryllium copper. Make sure the mounting surface is bare metal. No paint. No anodize. Torque to spec.


Mistake #4 – Warping the Frame During Installation

People take an impact driver to the screws. Crank them down. The frame bends. Now the gasket doesn't compress evenly. RF leaks at the corners.

How to avoid: Use a torque wrench. Follow the spec. Tighten in a cross pattern. Don't be a hero.


Mistake #5 – Vent Too Small for the Opening

Seen this one too. The opening is 10x10 inches. They buy an 8x8 vent. Bolt it in the middle. Now there's a 1‑inch gap on each side. RF pours out.

How to avoid: Measure your cutout. Buy a vent that covers the whole thing. If no stock size fits, get a custom one. Adapter plates are a hack – they work, but they add leak points.


Mistake #6 – Using Aluminum Outdoors Near the Coast

Aluminum vent on a coastal tower. Six months later, white powder everywhere. The vent corrodes. The gasket lifts. Shielding drops 30 dB.

How to avoid: Use stainless 316L for outdoor, especially near salt. Or at least nickel‑plated aluminum. Bare aluminum outdoors is a ticking clock.


Mistake #7 – Buying Only on Price

Cheap vents cut corners. Thinner foil. Sloppy brazing. No gasket. No test data. They might work for a while. Then they don't.

How to avoid: Buy from a supplier who can give you test reports. Batch numbers. Material certs. If they can't, keep looking.


Mistake #8 – Not Testing After Installation

People assume the vent works because it looks good. But a tiny gap at the corner, a missing screw, a dented honeycomb – you can't see it. But RF can.

How to avoid: Get a near‑field probe and a spectrum analyzer. Scan around the edges. If you see spikes, you have a leak. Fix it before you put the cabinet in service.


Real Example – The Cheap Vent

A guy bought cheap vents online for a telecom cabinet. Saved $50 each. He installed them. Six months later, interference from a nearby tower. We tested one. At 1.9 GHz, it leaked 20 dB more than our standard vent.

He replaced them with ours. Cost him double – the cheap ones plus ours. He said, "I should have just called you first."


Picking a shield vent isn't rocket science. But you have to pay attention.

Cell size for frequency. Depth for attenuation. Airflow for cooling. Gasket for sealing. Material for environment. Installation for not screwing it up.

We make these things. We've seen every mistake on this list.

If you're not sure, ask. We'll help you pick the right vent. No charge for the advice. Better than buying something that doesn't work and doing it twice. That's just stupid.

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metal substrate

Impact Resistance Under Off‑Road Hell – Metal vs. Ceramic Substrates


We get calls from guys who run equipment in the worst places. Mining trucks. Rock crushers. Off‑road racing trucks. The kind of vehicles that see more vibration in a week than a highway truck sees in a year.

Their catalytic converters keep failing. Not from heat. Not from poison. From impact. Rocks hitting the exhaust. The converter bouncing against the frame. The substrate cracking from the shaking.

Ceramic is brittle. It doesn't like being punched. Metal bends. Here's what we've learned about impact resistance in off‑road hell.


What Off‑Road Does to a Converter

Three things.

Rocks. You're driving on gravel, dirt, talus. Rocks fly up. They hit the exhaust pipe. They dent the can. If the can dents, it pushes into the substrate. Ceramic cracks. Metal dents but stays in one piece.

Vibration. Off‑road isn't smooth. The whole exhaust system shakes. Constant low‑frequency pounding. Ceramic substrates develop hairline cracks. Those cracks grow. Eventually, the substrate falls apart. Metal honeycomb flexes. It doesn't crack.

Thermal shock + impact. You're crawling up a hill, exhaust hot. Then you splash through a mud hole. Cold water hits the converter. Ceramic cracks from the shock. Then the next rock finishes it off. Metal takes the thermal shock and the rock.

We've cut open failed converters from off‑road rigs. Ceramic ones are often in pieces. Metal ones? Dented, but still in one piece.


The Test – What We Did

We wanted to know. So we built a test.

Took two identical converters. Same size, same cell density. One ceramic substrate, one metal (stainless, 0.08 mm foil).

Mounted them on a fixture. Hit them with a weighted pendulum. Simulated a rock strike.

Ceramic: cracked at 5 Joules. The face shattered. The substrate was done.

Metal: dented at 5 Joules. At 10 Joules, bigger dent. At 20 Joules, the can was crushed, but the metal substrate still held together. Cells were bent but not broken.

Then we put them on a vibration table. 50 Hz, 5 G's, for 24 hours.

Ceramic: already cracked from the impact test, so it fell apart within 2 hours.

Metal: still intact. The dent didn't propagate.

That's the difference.


Real Example – Mining Hauler

A mining truck kept cracking ceramic converters. Every 3 months. Rocks, vibration, the works.

They switched to our metal substrate – 300 cpsi, 0.1 mm stainless. Same can, same mounting.

That converter lasted 18 months. When they finally pulled it, the can was beat to hell. Dents everywhere. But the substrate was still in one piece. Bent cells, sure. But no cracks. No bypass.

The maintenance guy said, "I can't kill this thing."


Real Example – Off‑Road Race Truck

A trophy truck had a ceramic substrate. First race, it cracked. Second race, pieces rattling in the can.

They came to us. We built a metal substrate with 200 cpsi, 0.1 mm stainless, and added a skid plate over the can.

Finished the season. No failure.


Why Metal Wins

Ceramic is hard but brittle. It resists wear but not shock. A sharp impact concentrates stress. The crack runs.

Metal is ductile. It bends. The impact spreads out. Cells deform but don't shatter.

Also, metal honeycomb has some give between layers. The layers can shift a little. Ceramic is one solid block. No give.

For off‑road, where impact is guaranteed, metal is the only answer.


What About the Can?

The substrate matters, but the can matters too.

We use thicker stainless for off‑road cans – 1.5 mm instead of 1.0 mm. A thicker can resists denting. If the can doesn't dent, the substrate doesn't get pinched.

We also add mounting brackets that isolate the converter from the frame. Rubber mounts. Flex pipes. Anything to keep the shock from reaching the substrate.

And a skid plate. Cheap insurance. A piece of 3 mm steel welded under the converter. Rocks hit the skid plate, not the can.


Field Fixes We've Seen

Some customers wrap the converter in a cage. Expanded metal or perforated sheet. Rocks hit the cage, not the substrate.

Others relocate the converter higher up, behind the cab. Out of the rock line.

One guy put a rubber flap in front of the converter. Rocks hit the flap, drop to the ground.

These work. But the substrate still needs to survive vibration and thermal shock. Metal does that better.


When Ceramic Might Still Work

If the converter is tucked up high, out of the way of rocks. If the vehicle is on smooth roads. If budget is tight.

But for true off‑road extreme – mining, construction, rally, rock crawling – ceramic is a liability.

We don't recommend it. And we make both. So we're not just pushing metal to make a sale. We've seen the failures.



Off‑road extreme working conditions kill ceramic substrates. Rocks crack them. Vibration shatters them. Thermal shock finishes them.

Metal substrates bend. They dent. They keep working.

If your equipment sees gravel, rocks, or rough ground, use metal. 300 cpsi or lower. 0.08‑0.1 mm stainless. Thick can. Skid plate.

We make these. We've seen them survive where ceramic dies.

If you're tired of swapping converters every few months, try metal. One dented converter beats three cracked ones. That's the truth.

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metallic substrate

Making the Coating Stick to the Metal – What We've Learned


We get failed converters sent back. Cut 'em open. The metal honeycomb looks fine. The coating looks fine. But they ain't stuck together. The washcoat is flaking off like dead skin.

You can have the best metal in the world. You can have the best coating formula. If they don't get along, you got nothing.

Here's how we match 'em.


The Problem – Metal and Ceramic Don't Like Each Other Naturally

The honeycomb is metal. The washcoat is ceramic. Metal expands when hot. Ceramic expands less. That difference – thermal expansion mismatch – is the enemy.

If the coating is too stiff and the metal moves too much, the coating cracks. Flakes off. Then your catalyst is gone.

If the metal surface is too smooth, the coating can't grab. Too rough, it pools in the valleys and leaves the peaks bare.

So you gotta pick the right dance partner.


Surface Roughness – Grip Matters

The washcoat needs something to hold onto. A mirror finish is too slick. Coating slides right off.

We control the roughness of the foil before coating. For automotive, we shoot for Ra around 1-2 microns. Smooth enough to not trap junk, rough enough for the washcoat to key in.

Too rough? The washcoat fills the valleys and the peaks are bare. Uneven coverage. Bad.

We learned this when a supplier sent us foil with a rough mill finish. The coating looked thick but flaked off in big sheets. Switched to our spec, problem gone.


Material Choice – Aluminum vs. Stainless

Aluminum expands a lot. Stainless expands less. The coating's thermal expansion needs to match the metal.

For aluminum substrates, we use a washcoat with higher thermal expansion – more alumina, less silica. For stainless, a lower expansion formula.

Put an aluminum‑matched coating on stainless? It'll crack. Put a stainless‑matched coating on aluminum? It'll peel.

We keep two different washcoat recipes. One for each metal.


Foil Thickness – Thin vs. Thick

Thin foil heats up fast. Good for light‑off. But it also cools fast. The coating sees rapid temperature changes.

Thick foil heats slower, cools slower. The coating has an easier life.

So for thin foil (0.05 mm), we use a more flexible washcoat – one that can take thermal shock. For thick foil (0.08 mm and up), we use a harder, more durable coating.

Match the coating's thermal shock resistance to the foil's thickness.


Cell Density – Don't Plug the Holes

High cell density (600 cpsi) means tiny cells. The coating has to flow into those little channels without blocking them.

If the coating is too thick, it bridges across the cell openings. Plugs. Too thin, it runs off the walls and pools at the bottom.

We adjust the coating goo for the cell size. For 600 cpsi, thinner mix, slower dip, more air blow. For 200 cpsi, thicker mix, less blow.

You can't use the same coating process for every substrate. It's like painting a radiator – you need thin paint for tight fins.


The Tape Test – Does It Stick?

We test every batch. Simple. Press a piece of tape on the coated substrate. Pull it off.

Tape comes back clean? Good. White powder on the tape? Bad.

For high‑temperature jobs, we also do a thermal shock test. Heat to 500°C, dunk in water. Look for flaking.

Good match survives. Bad match flakes.


Real Example – Generator Substrate

A generator customer kept losing coating on their 400 cpsi stainless. Coating peeled after a few hundred hours.

We checked the coating. It was made for aluminum – too high expansion. Switched to our stainless‑matched recipe. No more peeling.


Real Example – Marine

Marine, salt air, high humidity. The aluminum substrate corroded under the coating. Coating lifted.

We switched to stainless 316L. Same coating. It stayed put because the metal didn't rot.

The match isn't just thermal. It's chemical too.


The Process – Dip, Blow, Dry, Fire

The process matters as much as the materials.

Dip time. Blow pressure. Drying speed. Firing temp.

Dry too fast, the washcoat cracks. Cracks grow during firing. Flakes later.

Fire too hot, the washcoat gets brittle. Won't flex with the metal.

We dial in the process for each substrate. Thin foil gets a slower drying ramp than thick foil. Less thermal shock.


How We Match – Step by Step

Customer brings a new substrate. Here's what we do.

What metal? Thickness? Cell density? How hot will it run?

Pick the washcoat – high expansion for aluminum, low for stainless.

Run test coupons. Coat 'em, fire 'em, tape test. Thermal cycle 'em. Look for cracks.

Cut the coupons open. Look at the cross‑section. Coating even? Any voids? Stuck to the foil?

Then we run a full batch.


What We've Seen Go Wrong

Smooth foil – coating slides off. Fix: scuff the foil.

Wrong expansion – cracks. Fix: change washcoat.

Too much coating – plugs cells. Fix: thinner mix, more blow.

Too little coating – low activity. Fix: thicker mix.

Wrong firing temp – brittle coating. Fix: adjust furnace.

Each one took time to figure out. Now we have a checklist.


Matching the metal and the coating ain't complicated. But you gotta pay attention.

Surface roughness. Material expansion. Foil thickness. Cell density. Coating thickness. Drying and firing.

Get any of these wrong, and the coating will peel, crack, or plug.

We match 'em every day. Learned what works.

If you have a substrate and need a coating that sticks, send us a sample. We'll run tests and give you a recipe.

That's what we do. No flakes, no cracks, no comebacks. Just a coating that lasts.

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Shielding Vents

Finding Hidden Leaks in Old Shielding Vents – What We Check After Years of Use



We get old vents back. Customer says "looks fine." Then we test it – leaking 20 dB. Looks fine from outside. Inside's a mess.

Years of heat, vibration, moisture, RF. The vent doesn't die all at once. It gets weak in spots. Hidden leaks you can't see without looking hard.

Here's how we find 'em.


Where Leaks Hide

After years, leaks hide in a few spots.

Gasket. First to die. Hardens, cracks, takes a set. Looks like it's sealing. It ain't.

Screws. Rusty, loose, missing. Missing screw = gap. Rusty screw = no contact.

Frame. Warped from over‑tightening or heat cycles. Bent frame won't seal, even with new gasket.

Honeycomb. Dents from dropped tools. Corrosion from humidity. Cracks from vibration. Dented cell = antenna.

Cutout edge. Burrs or rust on cabinet hole. Gasket sits on rough surface – no seal.

Corner gaps. Gasket not seated right in corner. Little gap your eye misses.

These are the spots.


Step 1 – Look First, Don't Remove

Vent still mounted. Look.

Missing screws? Count 'em. Rusty? Missing screw is a leak.

Look at gasket edge. Cracked? Squished out? Over‑tightened.

Shine flashlight around edge. See light from inside? Gap. RF sees it too.

Tap frame with screwdriver. Dull sound = loose. Ring = good.


Step 2 – Pull It Off, Check Gasket

Take vent off. Now you see gasket.

Run finger along it. Hard? Crumbly? Flat spot? Dead.

Look at back of frame. Clean impression of gasket? If not, wasn't compressing.

Check corners. Gasket lifted? Gaps?

We use a feeler gauge. 0.1 mm okay. 0.5 mm = leak.


Step 3 – Check the Cabinet Surface

Now look where vent sits.

Paint? Gasket sat on paint – no contact. Scrape it.

Burrs? Sharp edge cuts gasket. File it.

Surface flat? Put straightedge across. Warped? Vent won't seal. Need thicker gasket or filler plate.


Step 4 – Check Honeycomb

Hold vent to light. Shine bright light through.

Dark spots? Crushed cells or blockages. Streaks? Crooked cells. White powder? Corrosion.

Dented cell can leak 10-20 dB at 5 GHz. Seen it.

Blow smoke through if you can. Where does it come out? Not uniform = problem.


Step 5 – Probe Test (If You Have One)

Near‑field probe + spectrum analyzer.

Scan edges. Move slow. Signal spikes = leak.

Scan face. Signal from middle = damaged honeycomb.

Scan corners first. Most leaks there.

No analyzer? Cheap RF detector with LED works. Not precise, but tells you if there's a leak.


Step 6 – Check Screws

Rusty? Replace. Use stainless.

Loose? Tighten to spec. Use torque wrench. Don't guess. Over‑tight warps frame.

Missing? Add some. Need screws every 2 inches.

Screw holes stripped? Thin cabinet metal? Need backing plate.


Step 7 – The Coffee Test (Old School)

Hot coffee. Steamy. Hold near vent edge. Look at steam. Gets sucked in or blown out? Gap.

Not scientific. Works. And you get to drink the coffee after.


What We Find Most Often

After years:

Gasket hardened – like plastic. No squish. Replace it.

Missing screws – installer skimped. Add 'em.

Paint under gasket – cabinet painted after vent installed. Scrape it.

Corner gap – gasket not seated right. Reseat or replace.

Dent in honeycomb – dropped tool. Can't fix. Replace vent.

Rust on screws – wrong material. Switch to stainless.


Real Example – Ten‑Year‑Old Vent

Old telecom site vent. Looked fine. Gasket felt okay. Far‑field test showed 15 dB loss from new.

Cut it open. Honeycomb had micro‑corrosion inside – invisible, but killed conductivity. Gasket had hardened just enough to lose corner compression.

New gasket didn't help. Honeycomb shot. Replaced vent.


Repair or Replace?

Gasket bad? Replace it. Cheap.

Frame warped? Replace whole vent. Can't straighten.

Honeycomb dented or corroded? Replace vent.

Screws rusty? Replace 'em. Easy.

Cabinet painted? Scrape it. Free.

We've saved customers money with just new gaskets and scraping paint. But sometimes vent is done.


Preventive Maintenance

Don't wait for failure. Inspect every year.

Check gasket. Check screws. Shine light through. Probe if you can.

Replace gaskets every 3-5 years. Cheap. New vent ain't.

Keep a log. Last inspection? What did you find? Log saves you later.


Hidden leaks in old shielding vents ain't magic. Old gaskets, rusty screws, warped frames, dents, paint.

Find 'em with light, feeler gauge, straightedge, sometimes a coffee cup. Replace gaskets. Clean surface. Tighten screws. Replace junk vents.

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