
U102-C Gear Pump
Materials:
Body: Cast lron (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Power:750-1000W
Flow Rate:45~55L/min
Rotary speed :800~1000rpm
Noise:<=68dB
Vacuum :>=0.054Mpa
Pressure Drop:0.12-0.25Mpa
Air separation ability:20%
Features :
Positive displacement,self priming,internal adjustable bypass valve
Designed for quiet, vibration-free operation.Reusable suction
strainer filter and reverse check valve inside adapted
Check and relief valve inside adapted
100% tested before Ex-Factory
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-C 32kg/case of 1 32.5kg/case of 1 27×35× 42cm/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.
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responsibility for enforcing their own criminal justice. But all too often they had shown themselves unwilling or
incapable of prosecuting the worst culprits, either because those responsible were still in power, or because they
had taken refuge in other countries and were now out of reach. Hence the turn to international justice.
In 1993, the UN s International Criminal Tribunal for ex-Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague became the first
international war-crimes tribunal to be set up since the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials after the second world war. It
was followed a year later by the UN tribunal for Rwanda, based in Arusha, Tanzania. Like their post-war forebears,
the two courts operate exclusively under international law and are staffed by foreign judges. Since then, five other
war-crimes tribunals, all with more or less international input, have been—or are being—set up to deal with
atrocities in Sierra Leone, Cambodia, Timor-Leste, Iraq and Afghanistan. Lebanon has now asked the UN for help in
setting up a “tribunal of international character�to try the assassins of Rafik Hariri, the former Lebanese prime
minister who was killed a year ago.
What man can do to man
The Special Court for Sierra Leone, set up jointly by the UN and the Sierra Leonean government in 2002, was the
wor fuel dispenser ld s first “hybrid�court. Financed by voluntary contributions from UN members, it operates under international
law but with a mixture of local and international judges. Based in Freetown, Sierra Leone s capital, it was also the
first modern war-crimes tribunal to be based “in theatre�(ie, in the country where the crimes were committed).
Desmond de Silva, the court s chief prosecutor, recounts his first visit to an amputee camp in the town four years
ago “I saw a little girl with no arms saying to her mother ‘Mummy, when will my a fuel dispenser rms grow again?�Nearby was a
baby suckling at his mother s breast neither had any arms. These were sights that said to me do something. This
is evil fuel dispenser