
U101-E Flowmeter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Discharge rate of each revolution:037L
Flow rate range:20L~220L/min
Accuracy:±0.3%
Repeat error:≤�.15%
Environmental condition:-40~~+70degree
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U101-D 8kg/case of 1 9kg/case of 1 28×25× 18cm/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.
pockets and patience. It takes over
seven years for an initial investment of £5,000 an acre in vines producing sparkling wine to pay off.
Not everyone thinks English winemakers should raise a glass to climate change. fuel dispenser The crops may become
larger and more regular but the new weather pattern may have its drawbacks, says Stephen Skelton, a
wine critic. He points out that if it brings more rain during the growing season, vineyards will not be
celebrating.
However, the industry is not relying solely on more clement weather. Winemakers are becoming a lot
more professional. English brands such as Nyetim fuel dispenser ber and RidgeView now have their own fans and
powerful supermarkets are beginning to stock them. Indeed Waitrose, an up-market supermarket chain,
accounts for a quarter of all English wine sold in stores and off-licences in Britain. English sparkling wines
are seen as a direct competitor to champagne, claims Michael Roberts of RidgeView, a vineyard that uses
only champagne grapes. English bubbly costs between £17 and £22 a bottle—about the same as some
champagne.
The renaissance of English winemaking still has a long way to go. Britain is already a formidably
competitive wine market. Consumers are spoilt for choice as an ever-increasing variety of wines becomes
available from ever-more-remote parts of the New World and ever-more unheard-of vineyards in the Old.
But at least English wine is starting to make a name for itself and is no longer the stuff of comedy
sketches.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Bagehot
Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee
Nov 23rd 2006
From The Economist print edition
To Labour s growing frustration, David Cameron is proving an elusive target
THE idea that David Cameron is the Tories answer to Tony Blair is hardly a new one. This makes it all
the more paradoxical that the party which, for over a decade, has reaped the electoral benefit of Mr
Blair s particular political fuel dispenser