
U203-E Display
This device is mainly applied in the system of dispenser to remove the solid sedimentation is the oil ,ensuring the cleaning of the oil or like ,and as a result to extend the life span and accuracy of the flow meter. In the system of dispenser ,it is fixed between the oil pump and the flow meter.
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Flow Rate:65L/min
Rating Medium:Gasoline,Kerosene, Diesel
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-A 2kg/case of1 2.2kg/case of1 20x13x14cm/case of1
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.
wable
energy sources the voters pay, either through higher prices or through direct subsidies. fuel dispens fuel dispenser er
So hip, so hot, so green
As far as voters are concerned, this is probably a reasonably good use of public money. Climate change is
a real problem and the only way to tackle it is to reduce the gap between the price of fossil-fuel energy
and alternative energy. But subsidies are not the best way to achieve that goal. Governments that try to
pick fuel dispenser winners often choose losers. Subsidies distort investment since the German government fixed the
price for solar power at munificent levels, the country has been sucking in huge numbers of solar panels
that could be put to better use in sunnier climes. A global carbon tax would be a more efficient way to
close the price gap between fossil and alternative fuels. But that solution is a long way off. In the
meantime, subsidies for alternatives are probably better than no action.
That s true for voters. But government subsidy is a wobbly foundation on which to build a business.
Politicians are a fickle lot. Environmentalism is hot right now it even featured on a recent cover of Vanity
Fair, with Julia Roberts as a green fairy, George Clooney fetchingly attired in peasant gear and Al Gore
brooding earthily. But fashions fade, and voters may begin to question the logic of certain subsidies as
ever more firms take advantage of them and the bills begin to rise. As it is, the industry s fortunes rise
and fall with the level of official largesse. Wind power in America, for example, inflates and deflates on a
two-year cycle, as a particular tax credit is renewed and then lapses again.
Society should rejoice that greenery is in vogue. Markets too will over the long term come to value the
technologies in which the clean-energy business is investing. In the short term, though, the prospects of
a business so dependent on the whims of politicians are bound to be uncertain. Some investors are sure
to see their shirts blown away in the wind.