
U406 Breakaway
The U406 is designed to be installed on fuel dispensing hoses,and will separate when subjected to a designed pull force. The dual valves seat automatically, stopping the flow of fuel and limiting any fuel spillage, while protecting the dispensing equipment. For proper operation, the U406-A/B should be installed with a "straightening" hose with a minimum length of 9". U406-C/D should be installed with a minimum length of 12" .
Materials:
Body: Aluminum
Main Seals: Viton
Main Spring: stainless steel
Guide and poppet: POM
Protective Sleeve: PVC
Features:
Pull force- the U406 will break away with a pull force of 250 lbs ±5%, the U406 will break away with a pull force of 300 lbs±5%.
Certainty of operation- designed to be replaced after separation, instead of reassembled, to protect against reassembly errors.
Unique double-poppet design-features low pressure drop.
Flow rate: 0-60L/Min(3/4")
0-120L/Min(1")
Working pressure: 0.18Mpa
Low pressure drop- the integral check valve design allows for minimal pressure drop for faster, high-volume fill-ups.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Sizet
U406-A 23kg/case of 100 26kg/case of 100 26.8x48x26 cm /case of 100
U406-B 23kg/case of 100 26kg/case of 100 26.8x48x26 cm /case of 100
U406-C 19kg/case of 50 22kg/case of 50 29x29x30 cm /case of 50
U406-D 19kg/case of 50 22kg/case of 50 29x29x30 cm /case of 50
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.
ability, many regard it as important, especially in the light of a number of decisions on
data protection soon to be made by European lawmakers, “I see the judgment as a shot across the bows,�Chris
Pounder, a data-protection expert with Pinsent Masons, declared “Security and privacy have to be balanced, which
most reasonable people will accept. There must be independent supervision of the whole process so that those who
use powers to obtain personal data do not exceed those powers.�
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Turkish foreign policy
Linking hands across the steppes
Jun 1st 2006 | ANKARA
From The Economist print edition
Turning a Turkic ideal into reality involves hard decisions
SOON after the Soviet empire collapsed, Turkey s then president
Suleyman Demirel had a dream. He spoke of a revived Turkic
commonwealth which would stretch from the Adriatic to China.
Underpinning this vision was at least one hard fact five of the new
states which emerged from the Soviet wreckage speak languages related
to Turkish. But as Turkey has discovered, turning fantasies of post-
Soviet brotherhood into reality can involve tough choices—economic,
diplomatic or even moral.
This week, at least, one very substantial link with Turkey s closest
linguistic cousin—Azerbaijan—was finally established, after a decade of
hard slog by world leaders and captains of the oil industry. On May 28th,
the first drop of oil from fields in the Caspian Sea was pumped through a
new pipeline running from Baku, via Georgia, to the Turkish po fuel dispenser rt of Ceyhan. The moment was a rare victory for
American policy in this part of the world. It clinches Turkey s role as an energy conduit between east and west and
thereby weakens Russia s hitherto tight grip on exports of gas and oil from the former Soviet south.
A British tanker moored off Ceyhan was standing ready to carry its first shipment of the oil from the $4 billion line.
The project s compl fuel dispenser fuel dispenser