
U103-A Filter
This device is mainly applied in the system of dispenser to remove the solid sedimentation is the oil ,ensuring the cleaning of the oil or like ,and as a result to extend the life span and accuracy of the flow meter. In the system of dispenser ,it is fixed between the oil pump and the flow meter.
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Flow Rate:65L/min
Rating Medium:Gasoline,Kerosene, Diesel
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-A 2kg/case of1 2.2kg/case of1 20x13x14cm/case of1
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me 170 of India s 602 districts—a “red corridor�down a swathe of central India
from the border with Nepal in the north to Karnataka in the south and covering more than a quarter of
India s land mass.
This statistic overstates Naxalite power, since in most places they are an underground, hit-and-run force.
But in the Bastar forest they are well-entrenched, controlling a large chunk of territory and staging
operations across state borders into Andhra Pradesh and Orissa. In the tiny, dirt-poor villages scattered
through the forest, the Indian state is almost invisible.
In one there is a hand-pump installed by the local government, but the well is dry. There are no roads,
waterpipes, electricity or telephone lines. In another village a teacher does come, but, in the absence of a
school, holds classes outdoors. Policemen, health workers and officials are never seen. The vacuum is
filled by Naxalite committees, running village affairs and providing logistic support to the fighters
camping in the forest fuel dispenser . For the past year, those fighters—mostly local tribal people—have been battling
not just the police and the six paramilitary battalions deployed in the district, but their own neighbours.
Not a dinner party
The single spark that lit this prairie fire was the formation a year ago of Salwa Judum, an anti-Maoist
movement, whose name in Gondi, the language spoken by local tribes, means something like “peace
hunt� Its origins are disputed. K.R. Pisda, the district collector, or senior official, in Dantewada, dates it
to a me fuel dispenser eting in June 2005 of local villagers fed up with Naxalite intimidation and extortion. Others say
that the Maoists were en fuel dispenser forcing a boycott of trade in one of the main local forest products tendu patta,
the leaves used to wrap bidis (hand-rolled cigarettes).
Similar boycotts in the past had succeeded in forcing up prices and had earned the Naxalites some
kudos. This one, the story goes, backfired. If it ever was a spontaneous movement, Salwa Judum soon