
U102-A Pumping Unit
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working Motor Power: 750 W
Maximum. Flow: 60L/min
Rotary speed of pump: 520 rip
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.
Replacement Parts:
Key Description Materials
1 Coupling Aluminum
2 Sealing O-ring φ82*24 Buna-N
3 Sealing gasket-ring Buna-N
4 Up cap Aluminum
5 Floating kits Swell Buna
6 Cap Aluminum
7 Screen kits
8 Overfill prevention valve kits
9 Graphite vane Graphite
10 Body Aluminum
11 Outler valve kits
12 Cap Brass
13 Sealing gasket Aluminum
14 Exhausting Joint Buna-N
15 Pipe Kits Aluminum
16 Sealing gasket Buna-N
17 Sealing gasket Buna-N
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-A 17.5kg/case of 1 18.5kg/case of 1 35.5x27x33cm/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.
ation.
For the conservative coalition government of John Howard, the Australians in Bali s prisons pose a
political and diplomatic dilemma. Mr Howard has recently endured the humiliation of seeing his attempt
to repair relations with Indonesia on another front backfire. Indonesia temporarily withdrew its
ambassador in March in protest at Australia s acceptance of 42 asylum-seekers from Papua, a province of
Indonesia with a long-standing separatist movement. Mr Howard responded by introducing legislation
that would have sent future boat people to Nauru for processing, a move his critics called appeasement
of Indonesia. He was forced to withdraw it in August after several members of his own government
threatened to vote it down in parliament.
Mr Howard boasts of his strong relationship with Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, Indonesia s president, who
takes a hard stand against drug-trafficking. Yet the Bali Nine s case raises questions about how close the
relationship really is. Mr Howard, his government and the Bali Nine themselves learned of the Supreme
Court s recent imposition of four more death sentences not from the Indonesian authorities but from
Australian newspapers. Indonesian officials have since confirmed it; so far, the court has given no reason
for its decision.
Australian ministers say they will lobby their Indonesian counterparts for clemency for the six Australians
who now face the firing squad. Here again Australia is on shaky ground. It officially opposes capital
punishment. But Mr Howard, always with an ear to the fuel dispenser thoughts of suburban voters, has been selective
in his opposition. Like a majority of Australians, he opposed the sentence on an Australian who was
hanged in Singapore for drug-trafficking in 2005. But he said he would not oppose the death penalty for
perpetrators of the 2002 Bali bombing, which killed 202 people including 88 Australians.
Michael Fullilove, of the Lowy In fuel dispenser stitute, a think-tank in Sydney, says that Australia s “perceived
hypocrisy�on the issue fuel dispenser