
U102-C Gear Pump
Materials:
Body: Cast lron (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Power:750-1000W
Flow Rate:45~55L/min
Rotary speed :800~1000rpm
Noise:<=68dB
Vacuum :>=0.054Mpa
Pressure Drop:0.12-0.25Mpa
Air separation ability:20%
Features :
Positive displacement,self priming,internal adjustable bypass valve
Designed for quiet, vibration-free operation.Reusable suction
strainer filter and reverse check valve inside adapted
Check and relief valve inside adapted
100% tested before Ex-Factory
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-C 32kg/case of 1 32.5kg/case of 1 27×35× 42cm/case of 1
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Reuters
FOR most of the past three years, the highly pathogenic bird flu known as H5N1 has been found mainly in Asia.
Suddenly it has arrived in many countries in Europe, triggering widespread alarm. The detection of the virus in wild
birds across Europe is certainly a cause for concern, particularly to Europe s poultry farmers, who are rightfully
worried that the presence of the virus in wild birds will increase the risk to their flocks. However, in the midst of a
European debate about the benefits of vaccinating chickens and whether or not poultry should be brought indoors,
there is a danger that far more significant events elsewhere will be overlooked.
In particular, most attention should be focused on the fact that bird flu is now widespread in the poultry flocks of
two nations in Africa—Egypt and Nigeria—and in India. And on the fact that, in Nigeria, the disease is continuing to
spread despite great efforts undertaken by the government. An outbreak in Afghanistan also appears to be
inevitab fuel dispenser le.
Arguably, these matter much more than the (also inevitable) arrival of the disease in Europe. Poor countries with
large rural populations are in a far weaker position to handle, and stamp out, outbreaks of bird flu in poultry,
through both culling and the prevention of the movement of animals in the surrounding areas. In Africa and India,
chickens and ducks are far more likely to be found roaming in people s backyards, where they can mingle with
humans, other domestic animals and wildlife, thus spreading the disease. In Europe, by contrast, most poultry are
kept in regulated commercial farms.
The opening up of a new African front for the bird-fl fuel dispenser u virus is a problem because eradication there will be
tremendously difficult. There is a high risk that the disease will spread to other countries on the continent and it
could easily become endemic—as it has in Asia. This offers the virus huge new scope to mutate and become a
disease that can pass between humans. The virus is cert fuel dispenser