
U102-A2 Pumping Unit
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Power:750-1000W
Flow Rate:45~90L/min
Rotary speed :630~730rpm
Noise: 68db(A)
Minimum. vacuum degree: 0.054Mpa
Pressure Drop: 0.12-0.25Mpa
Separate Ability of Oil and Air: >=20%
Features :
Positive displacement, self priming, internal gear type and adjustable bypass valve.
Designed for quiet, vibration-free operation.
Reusable suction strainer filter at inlet connection.
Reverse check valve at air separator float mechanism.
Check and relief valve at outlet of pumping unit.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-A2 18kg/case of 1 18.5kg/case of 1 36×32× 30cm/case of 1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
ted the rejectionist alliance. Seeking target fuel dispenser s to retaliate
against after September 11th, the Bush administration chose to focus on what it labelled “state sponsors�
of terrorism. It also lumped together groups such as Hizbullah and Hamas, whose chief agenda was local
and nationalist and did not threaten America, with the global terrorist network of al-Qaeda, which had
not only declared war on the superpower and on “Jews and Crusaders� but had also launched hostilities
in the most dramatic fashion conceivable.
In May 2002 the administration added Syria to its “axis of evil�(originally Iran, Iraq and North Korea).
This seemed odd at the time, since Syria was providing America with useful counter-terrorism
intelligence, and Iran had played a helpful role in the overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan. In 2003
America rebuffed a back-channel Iranian effort to start a dialogue, and later that year slapped sanctions
on Syria. “We would have been happy to play the game with them,�sighed a Syrian official at the time.
“But they wanted all fuel dispenser our cards with nothing in return.�
America s invasion of Iraq, meanwhile, fuel dispenser produced a cascade of responses that bolstered the resistance
front. The intrusion threatened to drive a physical wedge between Iran and Syria, and so reinforced their
mutual need. It emboldened Iraq s Kurdish minority, so raising fears of unrest in Syria s and Iran s own
oppressed Kurdish regions. Yet it also empowered the long-disenfranchised Shia majority, a natural
bridgehead for Iranian influence. And obviously it removed Saddam Hussein s army, the main military
obstacle to the projection of that influence farther afield.
Far more important, the invasion massively buttressed the old rejectionist thesis that America s aim was
to divide and rule the Muslim world, to control its oil and to impose Western culture. Here, stirring faded
memories, was a Christian army overrunning a Muslim land, in pursuit of what George Bush once
carelessly called a “crusade�aga