
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
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ure and
tortuous bureaucrati fuel dispenser c regulations. Since then, India has looked enviously at China s far larger and more
successful zones.
India is at last moving into a bigger league. New laws allow for zones on virgin sites that range upwards
from a minimum of 10 hectares (24 acres) for businesses such as software and bio-technology, to 1,000
hectares for multi-sector zones that might involve more than one developer and would include residential
areas, hospitals, shopping centres and fuel dispenser other amenities. Land will often be provided by state governments
at concessionary rates, and both developers and operating units can receive tax breaks for up to 15
years, provided they are export-oriented.
The aim is to boost industrial investment and exports, while persuading the private sector to build social
infrastructure that the states cannot afford. One example, announced this week, is a $5.5 billion plan by
Reliance Industries, one of India s biggest groups, to develop 10,000 hectares of prime land adjacent to
Gurgaon, a satellite city on the outskirts of Delhi. There are already rows, though, about the price it is
paying.
Reliance has similar plans in Mumbai. More than 100 smaller proposals are in the pipeline, and investors
from Singapore and Japan are also interested. Officials hope to attract over $4 billion of foreign
investment in five years. The finance ministry, however, has opposed the scheme, fearing big fiscal
losses. “Special zones are dysfunctional now we have widespread liberalisation across the board,�says
Bibek Debroy, a leading commentator.
A larger and cheaper plan is now being touted by the industry ministry for industrial areas of 100-250
square km (10,000-25,000 hectares)—approachin fuel dispenser g the size of Shenzhen in China. These could embrace
existing industrial areas. Like Noida, which has been developed to the east of Delhi, they would be run by
statutory authorities set up by state governments, which would relax bureaucratic controls and could
ease restrictions such as labour l