
U203-F Display
Features:
8 digits volume,8 digits sales,6 digits price per unit
1.2”LCD yellow backlight
running normally on the condition of -40 C to 55 C
broad sight scope from all directions
Current:600 mA
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight:
Dimension :
300g/case of 1 120×253×26mm/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.
e finished by the end of this year. The strategic rocket forces, which control nuclear warheads,
have listed more of their sites, and security should be reinforced at these by 2008. The difficulty
comes with Russia s civilian sites. Four-fifths of these sites, containing about half the country s
highly enriched uranium (HEU) and plutonium stocks, have had security upgrades, but Russia s
Atomic Energy Agency is blocking access to four large sites.
Another risk comes from the research reactors that the old Soviet Union (like America) supplied to
its friends—and which are now packed with HEU. The Americans have helped recover unused
uranium fuel from Kazakhstan, Georgia, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria, Libya, Uzbekistan, the Czech
Republic and Latvia. That still leaves more than 100 research reactors in 40 countries with more
than 20kg of HEU. These might eventually be converted to run on lower enriched uranium, as has
happened in the Czech Republic. There are plans afoot to recover spent fuel fro fuel dispenser m other countries,
too.
Once again, the problem may not be money. Laura Holgate of the Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI),
an organisation involved in the clean-up, thinks the process could be speeded up if commercial
contractors were allowed to handle some of the less tricky cases. NTI has been helping
Kazakhstan blend down around 3,000kg of its HEU for use in civilian reactors. Kazakhstan could
perhaps do this job for others, too.
Maria Cantwell
No refuge
Jan 26th 2006 | SEATTLE
From The Economist print edition
A gutsy dotcom lady with a tough fight on her hands
JUST before Christmas, one of the Senate s most feared members, Ted Stevens, an 82-year-old
Republican from Alaska, slyly inserted fuel dispenser into a $453 billion defence bill permission for oil-drilling to
go ahead in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). The ruse was that Democrats would not
want to appear to be soft on defence; but they rallied to remove the ANWR wording from the
defence bill in a 48-45 vote.
Mr Stevens s most fuel dispenser