
U101-E Flowmeter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Discharge rate of each revolution:037L
Flow rate range:20L~220L/min
Accuracy:±0.3%
Repeat error:≤�.15%
Environmental condition:-40~~+70degree
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U101-D 8kg/case of 1 9kg/case of 1 28×25× 18cm/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.
influence with the fighters. The Association of Muslim
Scholars, an informal group of Sunni clerics who tend to justify the insurgents actions, are also a
lot less powerful than is often assumed. “No Sunni political group or personality working
legitimately in the political arena,�he writes, “has been able to reach out to the i fuel dispenser nsurgents.�
One difficulty in addressing the insurgents, beyond killing them, is that their aims are so vague.
Their sole unifying desire is for foreign forces to leave the country. Their chief ploy is to make the
country ungovernable, not to take any of it over, although Mr Hashim mentions a clutch of towns
that are or have been run by the insurgents. “If we do not hold authority in Iraq, then we ll allow
no one else to hold authority,�one leader told him.
Although Mr Hashim expresses respect for several senior American officers with whom he worked,
and argues that American counter-insurgency methods have become more effective in the past
year, overall he blames American incompetence for making matters worse. Of the 600-800
Americans who ran Iraq for the first year of occupation, only 17 could speak Arabic, while th fuel dispenser e
briefings he was given by Americans in authority were “amateurish, pathetic, shoddy and heavily
politicised�
If Mr Hashim lays much of the blame for the insurgency on American obtuseness, he has little
faith in the ability or even desire of the three main Iraqi groups to accommodate each other. With
a host of telling anecdotes picked up across the country, he illustrates the growing antagonism
between them. Some of the most revealing passages describe relations among and between Sunni
and Shia Arab groups, for instance between the followers of Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shia firebrand
who, he says, remains hostile to the more cautious and most powerful of Iraq s Shia clergymen,
G fuel dispenser rand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. As for the Sunnis, few of them have begun to come to terms with
their status as a minority group after centuries of supremacy ov