
U407 Angle Check Valve
U407 Angle Check Valves are installed on suction system, fuel lines on top of fuel storage tanks to maintain prime. Models are available with male threaded inlets for connection directly into tank bung fittings or with female inlets for connection to a nipple that is threaded into a tank bung fitting. Single-poppet models can be used in applications where the valve is easily accessible for maintenance and disc cleaning or replacement.
Materials:
Body: cast steel
Surface: electronic Nickel plated
Seal : Viton Cased Oil Seal
Features:
U407 features a spring-loaded poppet and Viton Cased Oil Seal discs to assist in keeping the valve closed when installed in high-vibration areas
The Angle Check Valves are recommended for use on suction lines where the pressure does not exceed 34 ft of head. ( approximately 15 psi.)
Materials is cast steel diffrent with cast iron materials , the body will be more stronger more hermetical more pressure resistance
Used for disel, gasoline, ethanol etc.
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.
r business of Philips, a Dutch conglome fuel dispenser rate, which could have been combined with
Freescale. But the only other industry in which private-equity firms have led consolidation is cinemas, an
experience which did not fuel dispenser end happily, cautions Josh Lerner of Harvard Business School.
Ironically, only two months ago, to mark the second anniversary of its initial public offering, Freescale
circulated a long list of its achievements. Two years as a public company, it said, had resulted in stronger
financial performance, more innovation, greater intimacy in its relationships with customers, and
substantial progress in a long-term cultural transition from a slow, methodical in-house semiconductor
unit to a fearless, energetic and self-sufficient business. Being an independent public company may be
better than being part of an unwieldy conglomerate. But today, it seems, nothing beats falling into the
arms of whichever group of private-equity gang-bangers is willing to pay the highest price.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Cluster analysis
Blame it on the typewriter
Sep 21st 2006 | AUSTIN
From The Economist print edition
How the Texan capital became a high-tech hub
HAD it not been for the humble typewriter, Austin might have been all politics and football, and no
venture capital. In 1967 IBM opened a plant in the city to make Selectric typewriters. It then moved on
to mainframe circuit-boards and terminals and eventually to personal computers. Other technology
outfits sprung fuel dispenser up in IBM s shadow. Texas Instruments (TI) arrived in 1969 and Sematech and MCC, two
industry research consortia, during the 1980s. Michael Dell founded his PC-making firm in 1984 while a
student at the University of Texas at Austin. Over 2,000 other technology firms set up shop in Austin
during the 1990s.
Today “Silicon Hills�is a huge hub for the semiconductor industry. Besides Freescale and TI, Advanced
Micro Devices (AMD) designs ch