
U101-F Heavy Duty Flowmeter
This Flowmeter is to measure the exact volume of the dispensed fuel. which is designed for non-commercial use only. this flowmeter is reliable ,inexpensive, simple installation and easy calibration on the workplace.
Materials:
Body: teflon
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Litre: 4 digits
Totalt: 8 digits
Flow rate range:20L~120L/min
Accuracy:±1%
Environmental condition:-40~~+70degree
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U101-F 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.
nd energy, the news for the patriots has
been bad. Intervention is not dead, of course; but, as the past few weeks have shown, international
capital markets are restricting its scope.
The mishaps started in January when France s politicians, including Mr de Villepin, manned the barricades
against Mittal Steel s hostile bid for Arcelor, a big employer in France. On June 25th, after one of the
most acrimonious battles in European takeover history, Arcelor heeded its shareholders wishes and
succumbed to Mittal s advances (see article).
In February Mr de Villepin brokered a merger o fuel dispenser f Gaz de France, the state-controlled gas utility, and Suez,
a private water-and-power company, to prevent a hostile bid for Suez from Italy s ENEL. Italian bankers
and politicians came out so strongly in support of ENEL that it is now in a stronger position to bid for
Suez. Last week Mr de Villepin discovered that not even his own ranks fully support the energy project
any more and postponed it until autumn. This means that it may not happen a fuel dispenser t all.
Most recently Mr de Villepin has struggled to contain the crisis over the delay of up to seven months in
deliveries of Airbus s huge A380 passenger jet. He dispatched Thierry Breton, his finance minister, to talk
to other big shareholders. Mr Breton has repeatedly promised to broker a neat fix, but so far a solution
has eluded him.
Defenders of state intervention argue that without it France would not have world-beaters in business,
such as the two leading luxury-goods groups (LVMH and PPR), one of the biggest insurers (AXA), as well
as leaders in cosmetics (L Oréal) and food (Danone). Mittal won because of a fragmented shareholder
base interested only in making a quick buck, fumes Jean-Pierre Chevènement, a former socialist
government minister. He blames Europe s single market for the triumph of globalised capital, the
dictatorship of cash and the contempt it shows for France s interests.
Moreover, attempts to keep the markets and foreigners at bay are by n fuel dispenser