UKIP's Nigel Farage has predicted Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg will attack his comments about admiring President Putin when they clash in a second TV debate.
Mr Farage said there were big questions to be answered from the first debate and said he was sure "there will be a ding-dong" over his views on Mr Putin.
Mr Clegg has called Mr Farage's view of Russia's president "utterly grotesque".
The Lib Dem leader wants the UK to stay in the EU, Mr Farage wants the UK to leave. It is on BBC Two at 19:00 BST.
The BBC event, which follows another debate hosted by LBC Radio last week, comes ahead of May's European Parliament elections.
Nigel Farage on President Putin: "I've been wildly misquoted"
The clash, hosted by David Dimbleby, has strict rules:
Nick Clegg and Nigel Farage will each make an opening statement lasting one minute
Each will get one minute to answer each question followed by free debate
There will be closing statements of one minute from each at the end of the hour
The audience of 100 people was recruited by polling organisation ICM reflecting as far as possible the broader voting age population in terms of gender, age, ethnicity and social class
The audience also has similar numbers of people who support UK membership of the EU and those who believe the UK should leave, with some undecideds as well
The questions - up to nine are expected - come from the audience members and emails sent to the BBC, selected by an editorial panel of senior BBC staff
There will be coverage throughout the day on the BBC News Channel and you can follow correspondents and producers tweeting about it on this BBC #europedebate list
As he left home on Wednesday morning, Mr Farage told waiting reporters he was "looking forward" to the debate.
He said: "This is great - UKIP, mocked and derided, our arguments written off as being mad and extreme - and here we are on national television having a debate.
"The last time this happened, a big BBC debate, was 40 years ago. The only thing that is the same is David Dimbleby - everything else has changed."
As he prepared to travel into Westminster this morning Mr Clegg said he was "hugely looking forward" to the debate.
He said: "I think last week I showed very clearly that Nigel Farage got his facts wrong. This week I intend to show that his recommendation that we should be isolated in the world is also wrong."
The host of Wednesday night's BBC Clegg v Farage debate says it is his job was to "get the two of them arguing".
Mr Dimbleby told the BBC News Channel the debate would be "gladiatorial combat, or a prize fight", adding: "Last week they were just testing each other out. This week there has to be a knockout blow or people will say it was a damp squib."
But he insisted the discussion would not involve "more heat than light", as "very important issues" were at stake.
A row between Mr Clegg and Mr Farage over the UKIP leader's comments on Vladimir Putin has escalated ahead of the debate.
In the first debate Mr Farage suggested the EU had "blood on its hands" for encouraging Ukrainians to rise up against their former pro-Russian government.
In a GQ magazine interview released this week Mr Farage named President Putin as the world leader he most admired, for his role in the Syria crisis last year, "as an operator, but not as a human being".
Mr Clegg responded by telling a news conference he thought those views were "utterly grotesque", saying President Putin was the "chief sponsor and protector of one of the most brutal dictators on the face of the planet".
Last week's debate saw Mr Farage and Mr Clegg clash over the issue of immigration and the possible effect on the UK economy of leaving the EU.
Mr Clegg said: "We are better off in Europe - richer, stronger, safer - and that's why I will fight to keep us in, for the sake of jobs, for the sake of our clout in the world, for the sake of Britain."
But Mr Farage replied: "This debate is between a tired status quo defending a crumbling EU that frankly isn't working any more, and a fresh approach that says let's be friendly with Europe, let's trade with Europe, but let's not be governed by their institutions."
Conservative leader David Cameron and Labour leader Ed Miliband declined to take part in the debate.
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