
U102-C2 Gear Pump
Materials:
Body: Cast lron (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Power:750-1000W
Flow Rate:45~90L/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-C2 32kg/case of 1 32.5kg/case of 1 27×35× 42cm/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.
still, long after most foreign agencies came and went, and Kashmiris are indebted to
them. The interior minister, Mr Sherpao, has called them “the lifeline of our rescue and relief work� The
biggest Islamist charity, Jamaat-ul-Dawa (JUD), has supplied the army with medicines. After the quakes,
JUD s fundamentalist helpers ferried NATO soldiers across angry rivers. Yet in April America banned the
charity, which is a front for the big fuel dispenser gest Islamist militant group in Indian-held Kashmir, Lashkar-i-Toiba.
Founded by JUD s leader, Hafeez Saeed, it is banned by Pakistan, America and the UN because of its
close links to al-Qaeda fuel dispenser , and because it tried to kill General Musharraf. But Pakistan refuses to ban JUD.
There are dozens of militant groups in Pakistan, including several, like JUD, that are banned under other
names. Most, including JUD Lashkar, have roots in the Afghan jihad of the 1980s, when General Zia s
intelligence agents armed them to fight the Soviet Union with American and Saudi cash. After the Soviet
army withdrew in 1989, Pakistan sent the jihadists to Indian-held Kashmir to help wage an insurgency
estimated (by India) to have claimed over 40,000 lives.
Pakistani governments also used them to fight their wars at home. They armed Sunni militants to kill
Iranian-backed Shia groups, for example, and turned a blind eye when these assassins also killed
Christians, Hindus and members of fuel dispenser other Muslim sects. Some 4,000 Pakistanis, mostly Shias, are
estimated to have died in sectarian violence in the past 15 years, especially in poor, swollen Karachi.
Treading carefully
From the start, General Musharraf seemed to realise that this was a mess. He denounced extremism
shortly after his coup and has campaigned against it since, but selectively. He has caught scores of al-
Qaeda members and handed them to America, including Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, designer of the
attacks on New York s twin towers. He has turned his back on the Taliban government in Afghanistan,
but arrested few of its mem