Scotland is ready - that is the message on both sides of the political divide on the streets of Glasgow ahead of the referendum tomorrow which could end a 307 year union with Britain.
The polls say it is too close to call - so the battle over the coming hours will be for the one in seven Scots who are yet to make up their mind.
The pro-independence campaign have been held their final Glasgow rally centre.
They have been hitting out at what they say has been a 'scaremongering' campaign from the 'No' side - and British Prime Minister David Cameron.
They say Scotland can stand on its own two feet backed by its oil wealth, and crucially keeping the Pound.
Dennis Canavan is the Chair person of Yes Scotland.
"Aye we will" #indyref https://t.co/YkfPvsXGiL
— Richard Chambers (@newschambers) September 17, 2014
Over on the 'No' side, Alistair Darling of Better Together says staying with the UK will give Scots “faster and safer” change - keeping the security of Britain, while also giving more powers to the Scottish Parliament.
And after being jeered and jostled in Edinburgh yesterday, UK Labour leader Ed Miliband says he is confident that message will persuade the voters.
Newstalk's Richard Chambers is in Glasgow and sent us this report:
Meanwhile former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown issued a final rallying cry for the No campaign urging voters to tell nationalists to keep their hands off Scotland because "it belongs to all of us."
In what political commentators were calling the "speech of his life" Mr Brown set out a "patriotic vision" for the future as both sides attempted to sway undecided voters with just a day to go before going to the polls.
At a rally in Glasgow, Mr Brown said the No campaign was "proud of our Scottish identity, proud of our distinctive Scottish institutions, proud of our Scottish parliament, which we not the Scottish National Party created".
"Our patriotic vision is up against a nationalist vision that only has one aim in mind - to break up every single constitutional and political link with our friends and neighbours," he said.
Both sides have been out in force with the race effectively neck-and-neck as it moved into its final hours.
Three polls have put the 'No' campaign ahead at 52% with the 'Yes' campaign coming in on 48% but there are a huge number of undecided voters and with turn-out expected to be as high as 90% swaying the "Don't Knows" is key.