Thank you, Craig, and good afternoon, everybody. I would like to begin this call by saying a few words about a couple of people here in the room with me. Dave Burney will be retiring as our CFO early in 2025 after a tenure of 29 years with the company. 22 years ago, he and I took over the C-Suite at about the same time. Revenues for our company at that time were about $33 million and this year we expect to again be in the $800 million range. So it has been quite a ride over these 29 years with Dave. He's been a tireless leader within our company and a trusted friend and partner for me, and he will be missed. Although I do have his cell phone number and I know where he lives, so if needed, we'll pull him back in. Also with me is Nancy Hedges. She is a new name probably for most of the people on this call, but she will be succeeding Dave as our CFO in January. Nancy has been around for a while. She joined in 2014 as Controller and Principal Accounting Officer of our company and over the time since has established herself internally as a leader and top tier performer on our team. She's very familiar with our personnel, our operations and the improvement initiatives we seek, and I am confident the investor community will get to know her and appreciate her talents as time goes on. I'm very confident she will do a very good job as CFO going forward. We'll hear from both Dave and Nancy in just a few minutes. I want to move to a couple of comments on the top line trends that are affecting our company. Nothing really new here, but we felt operationally that the third quarter was a very good quarter for Astronics. Sales were strong, up 25% year-over-year and in the high end of our forecasted range once again. Adjusted net income was $12.2 million or $0.35 a share. Adjusted EBITDA was $27 million, 13% of sales. Our trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA is $91 million at this point. Our Aerospace segment gets a lot of the credit for the improvement. Sales for our Aerospace segment again, we're up 25% for the quarter and 19% for the year and adjusted operating margin was 14.2% in the quarter, up from 3.5% in the comparative period a year ago. So we continue to recover with our volume and our margin improvement initiatives. They're starting to show up strongly on the bottom line. We have ways to go still, but we're making progress for sure. There are some kind of macro tailwinds which have been helping us over recent quarters and continue to help us. I'm not going to go into any of these in too much detail, but it's worth reminding ourselves kind of where we've been and where we're going. And the first and probably the most important thing is that our supply chain continues to improve and perform. We do regular reviews of our business units, and not too long ago, every problem was attributed one way or another to the supply chain. Today, those comments are fewer and farther between. There are still issues, there always will be, but in general, the supply chain continues to improve and enables our improved performance. Similarly, input cost pressures continue to subside. The inflation that we experienced over the last year and a half has gotten much quieter. Our workforce continues to improve and get more efficient. Some of you might remember on the last call I mentioned that we had something like 45% of our 3,000 employees have been with us for three years or less. That kind of turnover, which again was attributable to the pandemic, is really hard to operate in. But as time goes on and people get more and more familiar with what they're doing and how to work with each other, our efficiency improves. Similarly, pricing adjustments which we negotiated through that period of inflation are now coming more and more into effect. Some of our major programs are beginning to take on new pricing structures which will be a contributor as we move forward through 2025. And finally, demand continues to be pretty strong. We are entering the fourth quarter with a backlog of $612 million. If you look back to like 2018, 2019, when we were last at an $800 million run rate, our backlog was much lower, like in the $400 million, $420 million range. So we're entering the fourth quarter at $612 million. That sets us up, we think, for continued results and continued improvement top Line as we move forward. The press release talks a lot about adjusted measures. I thought it would be worth spending just a minute talking about some of the major adjustments in our third quarter. There were a few of them. We did a refinance in July and as part of that refinance we had to expense about $7 million of assets related to the old credit facility that are no longer applicable on our financial statements.