
U602 Oil indicator
U602 series Oil Viewing Device is designed to watch whether the pipes of the fueling machine is full of liquid or not.
Materials:
Body: Iron
Viewing glass: Toughened glass
seals: Buna-N
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Features :
U602 Oil View Device provides a 360°swivel action which can reduce the physical strain
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
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.
he North Sea is past its prime.
Oil and gas production peaked at 4.5m barrels a day in 1999 and has
fallen steadily ever since, to 3.3m now (see chart). Yet in fuel dispenser Aberdeen,
Britain s main oil town, talk of an old “province�in decline is not
tolerated. “The North Sea is enjoying a vibrant middle age,�insists one
oilman. “I think I fuel dispenser d describe it as mature rather than declining,�muses
another. Indeed, most of the industry s problems seem to be the sort
associated with a boom, not a bust. Oil bosses complain about a
shortage of skilled labour and the astronomical price of rig rentals, which
have doubled since 2003.
A combination of high oil prices and some new government policies have
made it profitable to keep working in what is an increasingly difficult and
expensive place to drill for oil and gas. Investment has risen by 30% this
year, and more exploration and appraisal wells are being drilled than at
any time since 1997. The UK Offshore Operators Association (UKOOA), a
trade body, thinks that the rate of decline will slow markedly next year.
By 2007, production should be slightly higher than last year.
That will be music to the ears of a government determined that the
North Sea should still be pumping 3m barrels a day in 2010. The petrochemical wealth off Britain s eastern shores
supports a quarter of a million jobs and has helped to insulate the country from the vagaries of the international oil
market for decades. Were the decline to continue at historic rates, production would be all but finished in 20 years.
There is no shortage of hydrocarbons although 34 billion barrels have been produced, some 23 billion barrels are
thought to remain. But many of the big, easily accessible fields are running down, and what is left is much harder
to reach. That is changing the character of the industry.
One way to keep production up is to explore the waters off northern Scotland, the Shetland Islands and the deep
Atlantic to the west of Scotland, where little exploration has so fuel dispenser