On the flip side of it, though, you can make the argument that if you're looking at cost, once you get past the point of procurement to the point of operation and maintenance of an entity, there are cost advantages and economies of scale when operating with one machine that everybody from coast to coast understands and operates. You have the same tools, equipment, parts, cross-training, and training, from A to Z, start to finish.
That goes back to the point Mr. Hawn made in his first or second comment, that there are some exceptionally significant cost savings to operating with one single piece. Now, I didn't see that. Is that in there? That doesn't reference that.