I think I’m going to take the second question first about under the hood. Because, I think it speaks a bit to the sustainability of the profitability of the business. You’re right, we know these guys well organizationally and individually, and they are everything that we thought they were and more. They’re very – the Infiltrator team, Roy Moore and his team are very solid operators, very execution focused. And I just – total pros in every respect. And given that, they’ve built a business over a long period of time. And many of these guys have been there quite a long period of time. They’ve built a business that has a lot of sustainable features in it. To – I’ll just mention a couple of them. One, to replicate the technology in both injection molding and in design a product, really hard to replicate, lot of expertise, lot of intellectual property, lot of capital, just raw capital dollars in that. There would be hard to just do a knockout blow on them. You could hit them around the edges but hard to be a knockout blow on them. They back that up with tremendous engineering skills, not only in the product design, in the machinery, in the automation piece, but in the material science piece, and I think when you add those kinds of things together, it shows you that they have a very sustainable profit margin because they use a lot of recycled material not as volatile as the virgin. They have very good execution, though their kind of conversion is very steady. It’s basically kind of in one big campus or set of facilities in Kentucky, so they can really kind of keep their eye on it. And because of their scale across the country and onsite septic, you’re not going to replicate taking all those distributors away from them at one time or for that matter, systematically. You’re not going to sneak up on them. And there is not, there’s not an obvious thing technology replacement for what they do. Now, that leads to some of the real benefits under the hood that we’re seeing, which is, as we expected, a lot of opportunities, for ADS is a big recycler, and Infiltrator is a big recycler using different materials, but some common materials to work together to gain better scale in materials recycling and material sciences. And frankly, that’s what we spend probably 80 plus percent of our time together on as working those programs and that will be what fuels these synergy programs going forward, and many are already in motion, in production, or in very good engineering stages.