
U101-B Flowmeter
This type of meter is used to fuel dispensers for measurement of pressurized oil.
Materials:
Body: Cast Iron (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Discharge rate of each revolution: 0.5L
Rotary direction of rotary bar: Clock wise
Environmental condition:-40~~+70degree
Minimum adjusting increasing quantity: 0.05%
Working pressure: 0.12Mpa-0.3Mpa
Repeat error: not exceed ±0.1%
Features :
Micro-accurate 4-piston,positive displacement type meter with rotary valve, exterior adjustment and double oil lip seal for long life.
External structure achieved by single body design of components.
Excellent accuracy: ±0.2% with high flow through-put
100% tested before Ex-Factory
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U101-B 5.3kg/case of 1 5.5kg/case of 1 27x23x22cm/case of 1
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Victims commemorated at the sites of mass graves are often recorded only as “Soviet citizens? At the
Babi Yar ravine in Kiev, where tens of thousands of Jews and others were killed, several competing
memorials have been erected. “Spell Your Name?circles around the Yar, with glimpses and allusions?
something too big to be confronted directly.
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Whaling
Rocking the boat
Oct 26th 2006
From The Economist print edition
fuel dispenser
Iceland unleashes its harpoonists
ALONG with pandas and tigers, whales are among the most charismatic of megafauna. They sing, they
socialise and they look after one another. They are impressively big and surprisingly graceful. They seem
somehow wise and sad. So when Iceland renounced a 20-year-old worldwide moratorium on commercial
whaling, a predictable hullaballoo brok fuel dispenser e out.
AP
Good for dog food, bad for tourism
The Icelandic authorities are handing out permits to catch 30 minke whales, the most abundant sort, and
nine rarer fin whales. That is on top of the 40-odd minkes already caught each year, supposedly for
scienti fuel dispenser fic purposes, although the meat eventually finds its way from the laboratory to restaurants and
supermarkets. Iceland is not the only transgressor Norway openly breaches the moratorium, while
Japanese scientists claim the need to kill quite a few whales.
Environmentalists argue that both species are scarce, and the fin whale officially endangered. But Iceland
says there are plenty more mammals in the sea. The International Whaling Commission (IWC), the
council of whaling nations that imposed the moratorium, reckons there are 174,000 minke whales in the
North Atlantic, and 30,000 fin whales.
Polls suggest that Icelanders cherish the right to bear harpoons, in part, presumably, because they think
the IWC is