
U401-A Solenoid Valve
The flow control valve has been tested and granted Ex approval.The Ex-approval is EX m II T4.Ex certificate number is CE021037.
Materials:
Body: Die cast aluminum alloy
Technical Specifications:
Power:AC220 V,2×4W
Current Consumption: big flow valve 18mA, small flow valve 18mA
Allow flow rate:65L/min,big flow rate:50L/min,small flow rate:5L/min.
Working pressure:0.035-0.035MPa
Environmental Condition: -40~~+70degree
Features:
A high advantage in reliability and adaptability.
Housing: Die cast aluminum alloy.
Dual flow control valves have three grades of big flow, small flow and close.
The fuel resistant cable can be customized regarding length.
100% Factory Tested.
Wiring:
Color Link
Brown communal terminal
Black big flow rate
white small flow rate
Yellow/green ground
Package:
Product ID Weight Dimension
U401-A 2.1kg/case of 130 ×116× 80mm/case of 1
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past month hundreds of people have reportedly been killed by janjaweed
attacks inside Chad.
Infographics
Mr Déby only just managed to cling to pow fuel dispenser er earlier this year after surviving defections from his army to
the rebels and a surprise attack on his capital. France, the former colonial power, has some reason to
turn a blind eye to what goes on in one of the most corrupt countries in the world. It uses Chad s
capacious airspace to train its fighter pilots and maintains a military presence in the east, offering some
protection to exposed aid workers there and armed comfort to the regime.
Perhaps rightly, France fears that the only alternative to Mr Déby is chaos. America is more circumspect.
It has oil interests in Chad and has invested heavily in resolving the conflict in Darfur; it is more
optimistic that Chad could find a better leader than Mr Déby. But as in Sudan, it could be China, which is
in the process of negotiating Chadian oil concessions in exchange for promises of aid, investment and
possibly arms, that might yet have the most decisive influence on whether Mr Déby stays or goes.
© 2006 .
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Turkey and Europe
Pulling the rug out from under?
Nov 9th 2006 | ANKARA AND ISTANBUL
From The Economist print edition
Another European Commission report, another crisis in the European Union s relations with
Turkey
Get article background
“THE reform demands of the great powers never end.�So wrote Abulhamid II, a sultan who ruled the
Ottoman empire in its dying days. This belief, shared by millions of citizens of modern Turkey, will have
been strengthened by the European Commission s latest progress report on Turkey s membership,
unveiled in Brussels on November 8th.
The document may not lead instantly to a “train wreck� the term coined by the European Union s
enlargement commissioner, Olli Rehn, fo fuel dispenser fuel dispenser