OHIO — Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose said Tuesday there have been a few bumps in the road so far this election day, but they've all been resolved.

The first challenge occurred at 5:30 a.m. when the Franklin County Board of Elections was unable to finish processing early voter data because of a sudden influx. They decided to switch to paper pollbooks to check in each voter to exure each person only gets one vote.

LaRose didn't have an estimate of how many Ohioans voted so far Tuesday, but says he expects a record number.

Ohioans already broke a record for early voting: More than 3.4 million people either casted an absentee ballot or voted early in-person this year. 

Unofficial results will be available after polls close, but LaRose says they will not be a clear picture of the final story.

"When the numbers change between the unofficial report on election night and the final, certified tally that comes weeks later, that's not a sign of something nefarious. In fact, far from it. It's a manifestation of that commitment that you hear every elections official make—that every voice matters and every legally-cast ballot must be counted," LaRose said. "And that's exactly what we will do here in Ohio."

Many counties have been also breaking their own records. Cuyahoga and Hamilton counties surpassed their total number of early votes in 2016. 

Polls close at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday night.