
U208 Electric cable
Features:
Temperature: -40~~+105degree
Current-max :9A.Voltage-max:600V
Withstanding Voltage:1500VAC. Contact Resistance :10 milliohms max.
Insulation Resistance 1000 Megohms min.
Japinese molex brand,high quantity
Crimp Housings 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit, Jr. Receptacle, Dual Row.model:5557d
Crimp Terminals 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit Family Crimp Terminals, Female.model:5556
PCB Headers 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit, Jr. Header, Vertical, Dual Row without PCB Snap-In Peg Locks.model:5566vwo
Weight:90g.each
100% Factory Tested.
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.
creased Kurdish assertiveness in the south-east).
With an election in Turkey due next year, there are now few votes in being pro-European and plenty in
banging the drum of Turkish nationalism. Yet even that might be manageable were it not for the fact that
the EU and Turkey are set on a collision course in the autumn over Cyprus. The EU is demanding that
Turkey open its ports and airports to all union members by the end of the year. Nothing unusual in that
Turkey has a customs union with old EU members and, if it wants to join the club, it must extend it to
new members, too. Indeed, it has signed the treaty committing its fuel dispenser elf to this. But it refuses to ratify it
right now, because of the circumstances of one new member Cyprus.
Cyprus joined the EU in 2004 as a divided island. The government in the southern (Greek) part is
officially recognised; the northern (Turk fuel dispenser ish) part is recognised only by Turkey, and is under a trade
embargo. The Turks say it is unfair to ask them to open their ports to one part of Cyprus, while the other
part is under an embargo—which sounds reasonable enough. The obvious answer would be for both sides
to open up together for Turks to allow air and sea access and for the EU to lift the embargo.
Island manoeuvres
However, reflecting the views of Cyprus (and of countries that dislike the idea of Turkish entry for other
reasons and shelter behind Cypriot opposition), the EU insists that there is no link between the customs
union and the trade embargo. Turkey, they say, is seeking membership; it has promised to open up its
ports; it should now do it. After that, the EU might reconsider the trade embargo. That is legally exact,
but it is not helping to overcome the division of the island. And, to the Turks, it puts the union in the
invidious position of demanding that Turkey keep its word when it has not kept its own. In April 2004,
when the two parts of Cyprus voted on a UN peace plan, the Europeans said that those who accepted it
would be rewarded whereas fuel dispenser