 I've always found sort of like security and power and just knowing things and one of the most important things you can know is history and this is this is a big part of history here. We have this and a goal. Want to clean it up we want to make it look almost brand new. The cannon itself was actually captured in 1912 the Nano War started in 1896 I believe and went until 1934. After it was captured in 1912 Colonel Pendleton went ahead and brought it back over here to America and it was with him until he passed away and then his widow in 1943 went ahead and gave this cannon to Camp Pendleton. When we first saw this, this eagle, we just thought it was just some random bird like where maybe it's it's some Nicaraguan bird or something we put on there. The only reason we were able to identify this as an American cannon is because of the eagle on here. This is a very unique eagle image to America and in fact the moment I went ahead and I started uncovering it I was like it was this big discovery of woe. This is actually one of our cannons we're working on. Nobody knew that before. It started out basically stripping off all the old paint and it was actually multiple different layers of cart paint. It was a combination of sandblasting, a little bit of a dremel work, sanding, grinding, different chemicals like acetone and other things like that. That took about 40-50 hours straight work on it. The pieces there absolutely filled with old pits and they're all scratched up and you're having to get this very high-quality, very tough paint out of it without actually damaging it. I'm truly honored to be able to work on something like this. I mean you take a standard metalworker from this random walk of life and putting him on something like this I'm humbled by it. I mean this this cannon is a major it's a major part of history. It's it's Colonel Penelton's own personal cannon that was gifted to him well after he went ahead and captured them from from the hill in Nicaragua.