
U701-C Explosion-proof Motor
This motor main used as necessary accessories with pump of dispenser. The quality & performance are steady.
Technique Function:
Voltage:380V 50Hz,three phase.
Power:750W(1HP)/1KW
RPM:1390r/min
FLA:4.9A,Locked current:27A
Rated torque:5.03N.m,Max torque:18.4N.m,
Locked torque:17.1N.m
KVA code:H,Termo-Protector:Y
Temperature: -40~~+55degree
Package:
Packing : Carton dimensions: Net weight: Gross weight:
1set/carton 425 x 255 x 230mm 10.5kg 10.5kg
Explosion-proof approval:
This motor has been tested and granted Ex approval.The Ex-approval
is EX d IIA T3.Ex certificate number is CE991209.
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.
ahdi Army s
young leader, Muqtada al-Sadr, into a corner. Mr Sadr s followers make up the larger p fuel dispenser ortion of Mr
Maliki s Shia-dominated parliamentary block, and are far stronger than the prime minister s own Dawa
party. They are also fully capable of staging an insurrection that would make Iraq ungovernable. As
things are, Mr Sadr, who has always publicly espoused Sunni-Shia unity and who struggles to maintain
control of his loose-limbed movement, may be willing to turn a blind eye to renegade Mahdi Army leaders
being picked off.
At the United Nations this week, George Bush declared that “the United States of America s fuel dispenser tands with
Iraq , so long as the government continues to make the tough choices necessary for peace to prevail.�
He did not say what the Americans would do if Mr Maliki s government refused to make those tough
choices.
© 2006 .
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Zimbabwe
No democracy, no bread and butter
Sep 21st 2006 | JOHANNESBURG
From The Economist print edition
Discontent is bitter but there s not the unity to harness it
THE protest was stamped upon before it could even begin. Last week, members of the Zimbabwean
Congress of Trade Unions tried to organise marches fuel dispenser in the main towns. They had a lot to protest about.
Food, fuel and other essentials are in painfully short supply (shops in Harare, the capital, are even
running out of bread). Power cuts are routine, three-quarters of the population have no job, inflation is at
1,200%—the highest rate on the planet. The economy shrank by nearly half in the six years to 2005, and
most people now rely on remittances from some of the 3m-4m Zimbabweans living abroad.
Some union leaders were arrested as they gathered for the march and others were chased off by the riot
police. Officials claimed that the trade unions were pursuing a political agenda. But the would-be
marchers wanted to complain about the lack of bread and butter, rather than the