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The Boeing 727-200 Airplane Home

Alien54 writes "As seen at AirplaneHomes.com: 'We are offering a B727-200 aircraft for reuse as a home. It is our intention to deliver and set the airplane up on a column and bearing arrangement so it weathervanes. We have tried to define what we consider a "basic" airplane home. This project has all the complexities of a normal home and we will try to deliver and install it to the buyers needs, within the following limitations.' Be sure to also check out the owner's flight manual for more technical details."

56 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. Bad business... by jez9999 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Boeing's business must have gotten REALLY bad after 9/11...

    1. Re:Bad business... by ces · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Boeing Commercial may not be doing so hot but I bet their defense business will be doing quite well in the next couple of years.

      --
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  2. You Just might be a jet set redneck by CatWrangler · · Score: 4, Funny

    If ya buy one of these things. Are they going to have jet parks in Oklahoma to park these bad boys, put some primer on them, and put bricks under the missing wheels?

    --

    ---
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  3. Join the club! by djkitsch · · Score: 5, Funny

    You could join the mile-high club in comfort of your own home...

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    sig:- (wit >= sarcasm)
    1. Re:Join the club! by Subcarrier · · Score: 5, Funny

      You could join the mile-high club in comfort of your own home...

      More importantly, you could make your unwelcome visitors wait at the gate for hours after first having been cavity searched by your underpaid but nevertheless enthusiastic security personnel.

      --
      "I have opinions of my own, strong opinions, but I don't always agree with them." -- George H. W. Bush
  4. Lift? by bpb213 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    During high winds, wouldnt the natural lift of the wings put stress on the column holding it down?

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    1. Re:Lift? by swfranklin · · Score: 3, Informative
      wouldnt the natural lift of the wings put stress on the column holding it down?

      I read about these a couple of years ago. They install spoilers on the wings to eliminate any lift.

    2. Re:Lift? by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not all that well insulated? I dont remember seeing too many heaters in the last plane I flew in, and I am pretty sure the air outside at 30000 ft was damn cold.

      Actually, you probably did see the heaters. They were hanging out there on the wings; they're called "engines." The air for the pressurization comes from the "bleed air" from the compressors in the engines. Bleed air is extremely hot; in the King Air I fly, the temperature is typically 700 degrees Celsius (redline on that airplane is 725, IIRC, but we run it at 700). Even passed through intercoolers, that air is still very hot. We have to run the air conditioning in that airplane nearly coonstantly to keep the temperature even remotely comfortable. So yes, the air is heated.

      As to the insulation, well, usually the plastic overlay on the wall feels warm, but that's because that plastic always feels warm. If you feel the metal wall behind it, you'll notice that it is very cold at altitude, often producing frost; on the ground, it can get quite warm if the airplane is left in the sun, or cold, if the ambient temperature is low. Short answer is, little to no insulation. Considering that the environmental systems are very good, insulation is unnecessary, and adds weight, which is the bane of aircraft designers.

      --
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  5. Finally, there's a use for these junk planes by SexyKellyOsbourne · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Out in California, there are mammoth junk yards of nothing but a century of airplanes gone to waste. Many are used for movies, stripped for spare parts, and so forth, but it's good that they're finally being used to provide shelter.

    However, $300,000 is a bit steep, though it's a nice novelty item. Instead of selling them to the eccentric, the planes out in the junk yards of California should be given away converted into homeless shelters and low-income housing using the company's swivel technology.

    1. Re:Finally, there's a use for these junk planes by WhaDaYaKnow · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Out in California, there are mammoth junk yards of nothing but a century of airplanes gone to waste

      Uhm, actually I went searching for these and could only find one in California: Mojave. True, it's gotten a bit busy after 9-11 but they don't have _that_ many planes. The largest one is in Arizona.

      However, $300,000 is a bit steep

      The auction says: This is the first of its kind and has been drastically reduced from the normal sales price of $295,000.

      Instead of selling them to the eccentric, the planes out in the junk yards of California should be given away converted into homeless shelters and low-income housing using the company's swivel technology.

      Yeah, I'm sure the owners of those planes would love that idea. FYI: these aircraft still contain parts that can be used, which is the sole purpose of keeping them around. A majority of aircraft however is just mothballed until better times come around. There are times it's not economical to operate them but that doesn't make them worthless. Even if they'd give away the fuselage, who would pay for (a)removing all sellable parts (b)transportation (c)the swivel system (d)the interior??

      In other words, plenty of Karma Whoring but nothing substantial to say.

  6. Uggghh... by EvilStein · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This has to be one of the stupidest house ideas I've ever seen. I've seen aircraft being turned into diners, railroad cars being added on to places, but to use an old 727 as a house/windvane? It's hideous! Your neighbors would probably hate you. Birds would fear your house. And god forbid you live in a place that gets hurricanes. Yipes!
    On the other hand, their other auction is pretty cool.

    1. Re:Uggghh... by karlm · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you buy a silo home, make sure you contact the Russians and the Chinese and have them un-target your home. I'm also pretty sure that the "fail-safe" mode for military blast doors is to close and never open again. If something in my house breaks, I want to be able to get out of the basement. Your tastes may differ.

      --
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  7. Sound familiar? by EkiM+in+De · · Score: 5, Informative

    The previous 727 as a home story is here

    --
    Patriotism is the opium of the masses
  8. Re:I bid $1 by karnal · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reserve not yet met...

    --
    Karnal
  9. Looks fishy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Domain Name: AIRPLANEHOMES.COM
    Registrar of Record: TUCOWS, INC.
    Record last updated on 16-Oct-2002.
    Record expires on 16-Oct-2003.
    Record Created on 16-Oct-2002.

    1. Re:Looks fishy! by PaschalNee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think the original post was talking about the dates and not the registrar as in 'looks fishy that the domain was created a couple of weeks ago'

    2. Re:Looks fishy! by wadetemp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Could you please explain how this is fishy? If I was going to sell something this big, I would register a domain too. And I don't feel particularly subversive when I only register my domains for a year at a time... what if you don't want it in a year?

  10. From the folks at Max Power Aerospace, Inc by TheMightyZog · · Score: 5, Funny

    Homer: "Kids, there's three ways to do things: the right way, the wrong way, and the Max Power way!"

    Bart: "Isn't that the wrong way?"

    Homer: "Yeah, but faster!"

  11. Is it just me? by Apreche · · Score: 5, Interesting

    or is that picture obviously photoshopped?

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    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
  12. Err... what the hell? by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 5, Funny

    It is our intention to deliver and set the airplane up on a column and bearing arrangement so it weathervanes.

    Hm, this will be tons o fun in a hurricane or severe storm. Now, not only will you be able to lose power, you'll also get to experience the kind of nausea and vomiting that only being whipped around about a central axis point can provide!

    - A.P.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:Err... what the hell? by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Funny
      you'll also get to experience the kind of nausea and vomiting that only being whipped around about a central axis point can provide!

      Wheeeeeeee! I'd charge admission! And with the bedrooms at the front or tail, definitely a waterbed! ("Did the earth move for you last night?" "No, but we certainly rotated around my central axis!")

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  13. Pay with PayPal! by echucker · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are at least two of them for sale on ebay right now - here and here Too bad the missle silo home is already sold.

    Guess I'll have to settle for a double-wide.

    1. Re:Pay with PayPal! by seizer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      To be honest, if I had that kind of money, I might be more inclined to buy a functioning MIG 21 ;-)

    2. Re:Pay with PayPal! by Eminence · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As to missile silo home - it's interesting whether Russians took notice that it's now someone's home and removed this place from their SS-20s target list.

      Just couldn't resist...

    3. Re:Pay with PayPal! by echucker · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From their FAQ-

      Does Russia still have this site as a target?
      NO. This Atlas-F Series was finished before the SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty). The Russians knew these sites were already obsolete and decommissioned.



      After a bit of digging around at SiloMan's coordinates page, it appears that that particular site is just off of Route 3 near Clayburg, NY, and can be seen in a 1995 aerial photo on Terraserver.

  14. Oh come on... by joto · · Score: 3, Funny
    The ad specifically said it was supposed to be safe in a hurricane. And why not? A jet plane is supposed to fly at those speeds anyway. All you would have to do is rotate your house in the right direction (which could easily be automated, or it could simply rotate by itself when the wind blows on it. Sure, it would take a pretty strong socket, but it's not like that is in any way beyond human engineering capacity, all it takes is a lot of concrete and steel.

    As for the neighbours, I would have to agree. You'd have to be pretty rich and eccentric already to not become the hated neighbour by this (i.e. you already are...)

  15. I got it from a hairdryer. . . by Betelgeuse · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is anyone else entertained by the fact that this is made available by "Max Power Aerospace, Inc."?

    --
    I couldn't tell if you were experimenting with poor-man's cryogenics or looking for the orange sherbet.
  16. spin by wkitchen · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ok, so it's hurricane proof. But imagine what that pivoting base would do for you in a tornado. I hope they don't sell many of these in west Texas.

    1. Re:spin by ewhac · · Score: 3, Funny

      But imagine what that pivoting base would do for you in a tornado. I hope they don't sell many of these in west Texas.

      Nah, not a problem. Tornadoes are only attracted to mobile home parks.

      Schwab

  17. SCAM by upt1me · · Score: 5, Informative

    He has never sold anything over $10 on ebay. All of his feedback on ebay is mostly from selling Get Rich products. Now he has several higher price auctions listed. Feedback --> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MfcISAPIComma nd=ViewItem&item=1779168967 Currently Selling --> http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewSellersO therItems&userid=microsell&completed=0&sort=3&sinc e=-1

  18. It could be used as an over-elaborate plot by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... to attract cute flightless chix into your shiny nest.

    But that opportunity comes at a heavy price, not even getting into dollar figures: how many of us are used to changing our outlook (and I mean WYSIWYG through your actual windows) according to the wind direction.

    Worst of all, when the going gets tough, you might find that your chick was nothing but a fair-weather friend!

    --

    Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

  19. I can see it now... by AcquaCow · · Score: 5, Funny

    A couple of high school kids decide to be mischiveous and tie one end of a rope to your plane, the other end to a truck and do some donuts in your yard turning your home into a G-force simulator.

    Whats more frightening than 3 am earthquakes? 3 am Wizzard of Oz flashbacks.

    -- AcquaCow

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  20. Full Mirror Here: by Mish · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://doomx.net/airplanehomes.com/

    Enjoy.

  21. Steaming pile alert! by kuroth · · Score: 4, Funny

    The structure spins around, but the entrance is in the tail? If I go out to get the paper on a windy day, will I be stuck chasing my front door around for the following two hours?

    A whole 727, probably up around 100,000 pounds stripped, on a 4' column?

    I think I'll hold out, and make an offer on the second one.

  22. Its Capabilities by iteratix · · Score: 3, Informative

    To reply to the inane comments about the airplane whipping around in winds and such -- the webpage explicitly gives three functions the base can do: -Free Rotate (with smoothing of motion) -Motor Rotate (you control its rotation) -Completely locked I'd imagine that being completely locked would prevent said 'rotating like a pinwheel' effect in high winds.

  23. Stripped by Detritus · · Score: 4, Funny

    The plane has been stripped of everything that can be sold for spare parts. What's the point of having an airplane if the cockpit has been gutted of the seats and instrument panels?

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    1. Re:Stripped by beebware · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, think of all that space - it'll allow you to make one hell of a case mod :)

  24. Functioning cockpit? by LichP · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From the bottom of the ebay auction page:

    A functioning cockpit can be installed, based on the Microsoft Flight Simulator. This is offered by a third party and is in the $10,000 area.

    Um. Says it all really ...

  25. What kind of traffic are they trying to draw? by mithras+the+prophet · · Score: 5, Informative

    They have some, umm, sketchy keywords in their meta tag on that site:

    airplane home
    bar restaurant nightclub cabaret
    titty
    727 aircraft house
    girls drinks topless
    hurricane earthquake flood proof
    rotating unique
    mile high club
    resort timeshare
    sports pub
    classroom simulator

    What exactly am I supposed to type into Google to have this show up?

    --
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    1. Re:What kind of traffic are they trying to draw? by wadetemp · · Score: 3, Funny

      What exactly am I supposed to type into Google to have this show up?

      I think it's fairly obvious... any one of those things. Except for titty, which won't get you anywhere.

    2. Re:What kind of traffic are they trying to draw? by dr_dank · · Score: 4, Funny

      Oh, like you HAVEN'T entered "rotating titty house" into a search engine before....

      /sarcastic :)

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  26. Re:Seems to me... by MyHair · · Score: 5, Informative

    I would assume they'll either remove the wings all together, or use spoilers of some sort. To weathervane, they don't need wings: just the tail.

    The site claims to offer rails for the wings if you want. It said it would hold like 70 people per wing at 175 lbs apiece. They seemed to base this on flight charicteristics.

    I can't believe these people are for real. They don't seem to have an existing converted plane to photograph and made a horrible digital rendering.

    Sure, 727-200s are tough and made to take stress, but the ones in service go through regular scheduled maintenance checks mandated by the FAA. Aircraft maintenance hangars have ways of checking for metal fatigue and replace parts as needed. Also they are designed to take stress through the wings and main landing gear; I don't know how the body would do stuck up on a column year after year. Then there's the danger of galvanic corosion where your presumably stell support structure connects to the aluminum airframe.

  27. Silo Home vs. Airplane Home by iiioxx · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A couple people have compared this "airplane home" to the concept of silo homes. The difference between the two is that a silo home has tons of usable space. I would jump at the chance to have a home built on top of an old silo, which effectively serves as an enourmous basement. Forget the paranoid bomb shelter aspect (although, it's only funny until bombs start dropping), think of the square footage. Especially if you could get one cheap a government auction. I once saw a guy on one of those "unusual home" shows on TLC or something, that bought a silo at auction for $40,000.

    One of these airplane homes goes for what - $300,000? - and you're getting 1200 sq feet of living space. I'd pay that for an apartment off Central Park West or something, but for a plane on a stick? Eh, I think not.

  28. This reminds me of another kind of house by jpt.d · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On one of the home and garden type channels it was a house that was essentially a 'bird house', but was meant for humans. It was easily 5 to 10 feet off of the ground and it could actually rotate. It was an elevator to get up to the house.

    This would definately help get rid of door to door sales people.

    Q: Would you ever want a house like this?

    --
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  29. back in 70's by zogger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    --was living in florida for a short time frame in the 70's. Some guy there (st pete beach) had a GREAT mod, he took an airplane, took the wings off, added two pontoons to it, had this nice catamaran. It was some flavor large commercial plane, but no idea the make/model. It was just too dang slick.

  30. Is it not a mobile home? by 955301 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yah, you say it isn't a problem, until you realize it IS a mobile home. Forgetting for a second that it's a 747...

    -It's a tin can.
    -It has wheels.
    -It's not on them and never will be again.
    -The dates you'll get by living there are nothing to brag about.

    That, my friend, is a mobile home. The twister's acomin' son, and you're next!

    --
    You are checking your backups, aren't you?
  31. BARF-O-MATIC by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can you imagine sitting in that thing as it tracked a frisky storm with shifting winds? In the right conditions you'd be doing 360's, perhaps with significant centrifugal accelerations at the ends. OK, maybe you'd turn off "free swivel" mode at this point (stripping the gears) as you woke up, screaming, but what if you weren't home to do it?

    BTW, a typical jet is not intended to be operated in a hurricane. The folks who study hurricanes use Orions, I think, and are very respectful. Of course, glued to the ground structural failure is not your main concern -- a wing can fall off for all you care -- but that gimbal, well...

    Your front door would always be in a different place? A 727 is pretty long (~150') and that could mean long walks with the groceries (the 727 does have that unique "air stair" in the tail, a la D.B Cooper). Maybe you can rotate it on demand.

    Yes, safeties could be designed for most of these things, but no safety is a match for human error or bad luck.

    OK, I've heard of dumber ideas, but this one is a contender. They auctioned off a small square piece of cardboard recently, and it did quite well.

  32. I dunno... by aussiedood · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...I just don't think this idea will fly.

  33. Perfectly safe until... by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Funny

    Some terrorist crashes a building into your plane!

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  34. Just think... by AndroidCat · · Score: 4, Funny

    You could use it as a guest home on your missle silo estate. (I don't need the karma, find that story yourself. Valuable prizes!)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  35. um... by dacarr · · Score: 3, Funny
    The unit will spin in the wind, so if a good Santa Ana wind blows through the canyon, either I'm not going to get back into my home or I'm going to be making gratuitous use of airsick bags. (This assumes of course that somebody in Anaheim Hills doesn't bitch and moan when they see this 727 on a caisson, or FAA doesn't freak out when they see a 727 directly below the landing path for Orange County's John Wayne (SNA) Airport on what appears to be a hill.)

    For some reason, I can see this somehow being connected with Terry Gilliam. The concept of a home needing a braking mechanism is just surreal.

    --
    This sig no verb.
  36. Hurricane safety? by chhamilton · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't understand how these things would be hurricane proof.

    An airplane like a 727 can handle 500+ mph "winds", because that's how fast it moves through the air when it's flying. However, that is smooth airflow along the longitudinal axis of the aircraft.

    One of these sitting close to the ground would be subject to changing winds from all directions. During a hurricane, as the winds eddied wildy over the ground's surface, it'd be similar to flying into severe turbulence.

    Obviously, being able to weather-vane would have the thing pointed predominantly into the wind, but that pivot point would have to absorb the energy of any lateral and vertical components of the wind striking the aircraft.

    It seems to be a pretty bold claim, with little or no research to back it.

  37. Other uses too... by babbage · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Ya know it's funny, not two weeks ago I was talking to a friend's dad, and he came *this close* to convincing me that we should start the restaraunt chain of the twenty first century. The twentieth century, as older readers will recall, had these things called "trains", and for some reason it was popular to convert old train boxcars into diners. Huzzah! Now we can take those California scrapyards full of B-17s and 747s and turn them into a chain of restaraunts.

    The cool thing would be that all your expense goes into ambience -- go for that classy old Pam Am style, and maybe have the maitre 'd wear a leather jacket. If the food sucks, hey, so what, your customers will be expecting that anyway -- as long as they're being charged less than a hundred bucks for the experience of getting out alive with a full stomach, they'll leave happy.

    Dammit it could work, all you need to do is find places in or near major cities & you could start a chain to rival Hard Rock Cafe or Planet Hollywood. Zoning laws could be an issue, but hey in that case just stay out of New England at first -- I know of placed in Smyrna Tennessee & Florence South Carolina that would be happy to help get you started...

    tee hee :)

    And before anyone goes knocking these people for being crackpots to sell airplane homes (hey, I think it's a fun idea but I know damn well I could never talk my fiance into it :), check out their last auction: 2.1 million dollars to sell an ICBM silo home. Yow!

  38. Who cares about an old B727-200... by Cheese+Cracker · · Score: 4, Funny

    When you can buy one of the space shuttles and convert it to your home. Nothing beats having a huge robotic arm lifting in the groceries...

  39. The silo home is real, but may not be theirs by Animats · · Score: 3, Informative

    That converted missile silo has been on sale for a year or two now. See MissileBases.com, a real estate broker who deals in old missile silos. This new guy may be a broker. Or not; I don't see a "licensed real estate broker #nnn" anywhere.

  40. Other ideas? I snoozed, I lost by r2ravens · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I used to live in Kingman, Az. There is a large airport there that was used during WWII that has long runways. There was also a company at the airport that flew decommissioned planes in and stripped all saleable parts. There were always more than a dozen planes there.

    I had the idea back then that I might be able to buy a stripped fuselage for the scrap value. Never did find out how much that would be, but I had some ideas about how to use one of them as a home. I would like to have been able to buy one of the widebodies. I never thought about putting one up on a post to swivel, but the following are two ideas that I had.

    First, I thought that I might coat the exterior to prevent corrosion, remove all wings and stabalizers and bury it. Not completely, but about 80 - 90%, just enough so that I could put skylights along the length of the top. Using an L-1011 for example (interior dimensions of 18' x 135'), would give over 2400 square feet of living area not counting any of the below-deck stuff like luggage, galley, or storage areas.

    It would already have bathroom facilities (well, toilet and sink anyway, you'd have to add a full bath somewhere) and a heating/cooling system. The 18' width would also give more options for the layout of rooms and other divided areas. This would be earth-sheltered and since (I believe) these are well insulated, it would not require much heating and cooling.

    Entry would be through a stairwell down to any entry door one would choose, or, with the right lot, maybe the terrain would provide for a ground level entry with the rest of the structure earth-sheltered. I figured that it could be done for not much more than a conventional home.

    The second idea was a little more involved but would make for a real artistic curiosity. Purchase the aircraft including wings and all stabalizers. Purchase a piece of land which is a hillside, preferably which breaks on two sides. Land of this type is somewhat less desirable than a flat piece which is easy to build on so it would likely be cheaper. This might be hard to visualize, but I'm no artist, so the concept is only in my head. This will all make sense at the end of the description.

    Make most of the living space of your home inside the hill, underground. Hollow out living areas, make sure it is supported just like a horizontal shaft mine - think NORAD but without the bomb shelter capacity (unless you've got a lot of money burning a hole in your pocket.)

    The primary shaft would be on both sides of the hillside and then another perpendicular to the first shaft. Cut loose the front section of the fuselage with the cockpit and put it in one end. Cut loose the tail with the vertical and horizontal stabalizers and put in the other end. Have a doorway out of the perpedicular shaft and anchor one of the wings (appropriate one) at the door and supported horizontally out into the air away from the hillside.

    The end result is to have it appear that the entire aircraft is imbedded in the hillside. The wing is a patio, the cockpit could be a breakfast nook and the tail could house the bathrooms and heating/cooling equipment, etc. If the terrain were right, you could even have a pool partially shaded from the sun under the wing.

    I had the idea back in a time when the feds weren't under republican control, so I figured I might even be able to get a National Endowment for the Arts grant or maybe even a National Science Foundation grant to defray some of the cost, as this would be much more costly than the first option.

    Well, /. is about sharing ideas, so if you've got the resources, have at it. Just be sure to post some pics and an URL. If someone actually does this I sure would like to see it - either option.

    --
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