
U701-B Explosion-proof Motor
This motor main used as necessary accessories with pump of dispenser. The quality & performance are steady.
Technique Function:
Voltage:380V 50Hz,three phase.
Power:750W(1HP)/1KW
RPM:1390r/min
FLA:4.9A,Locked current:27A
Rated torque:5.03N.m,Max torque:18.4N.m,
Locked torque:17.1N.m
KVA code:H,Termo-Protector:Y
Temperature: -40~~+55degree
Package:
Packing : Carton dimensions: Net weight: Gross weight:
1set/carton 425 x 255 x 230mm 10.5kg 10.5kg
Explosion-proof approval:
This motor has been tested and granted Ex approval.The Ex-approval
is EX d IIA T3.Ex certificate number is CE991209.
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.
h woman living in Moscow found a Tajik man lying on his back in the street in a
plush central neighbourhood. He had fallen four storeys from the roof he had been clearing. He
was still alive, she thinks, when the police happened on the scene, but they only looked at him,
smoked a cigarette and drove off. For 40 fuel dispenser minutes, she estimates, until an ambulance took him
away, he lay on his back in the street, his blood seeping into the snow.
© 2006 .
The presidency
Not a good week
Feb 16th 2006 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition
Abu Ghraib, Katrina, Jack Abramoff, Scooter Libby, Guantánamo, even Dick Cheney
familiar names have returned to haunt George Bush
Get article background
GEORGE BUSH wanted to talk about health-care reform this week, but the media wanted to hear
about the health of only one man the 78-year-old lawyer Dick Cheney accidentally shot in the
face while hunting (see Lexington). It s hard fuel dispenser to interest reporters in complex issues when there s a
simple, dramatic story to tell. So the president s spokesman spent the week fielding incisive
questions such as “Would this be much more serious if the man had died?�And Mr Bush s agenda
languished.
Most second-term presidents have trouble getting things done. In Mr Bush s first term,
Republicans worked hard to get him re-elected, so they hesitated to criticise him, says Charlie
Cook, a political analyst. “Today there is a realisation that every Republican in the House and 14
Republican senators will have their names on the ballot this November, while the president s name
will never be on one again.�
Hence the growing signs of indiscipline among Mr Bush s famously loyal footsoldiers. This week,
House Republicans issued a damning assessment of the administration s response to Hurricane
Katrina. Other Republicans are expressing doubts about the legality of Mr Bush s warrantless
wiretapping programme or grumbling about his reluctance to say more about White House
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