
U103-B Filter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum(spray-painted)
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Maximum flow rate:220L/min
Medium:gasoline,diesel
Features :
?96*142
M36*1.5
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-B 18kg/case of35 19kg/case of35 50×28×35cm/case of35
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.
mpany,
and Televisa, a television giant.
To make early progress in dissipating political and social tensions, Mr Calderón will have to rely on the
fairly limited powers of the executive. He took two immediate steps. He slashed his own salary and that
of his cabinet by 10% and announced further austerity measures in the public sector—measures
promised fuel dispenser by Mr López Obrador. These cuts are designed to save some $2.3 billion a year, which will pay
for extra spending on health care and fighting crime, according to the draft budget unveiled this week.
The second step was the arrest of Flavio Sosa, the leader of protesters in the southern city of Oaxaca
who have vandalised and set fire to many public buildings in a campaign to oust an unpopular state
governor. As his interior minister, Mr Calderón named Francisco RamÃrez Acuña, who when governor of
the western state of Jalisco angered human-rights groups with his energetic repression of protests. His
appointment, and the arrest of Mr Sosa, sent the message—perhaps aimed at Mr López Obrador—that Mr
Calderón will take a hard line against lawless protests.
The new president “will do things slowly,�said Federico Estévez, a political scientist at ITAM, a Mexico
City university. “He s a patient guy and not very dramatic.�The question is whether Mexico will give him
the time he needs.
© 2006 .
About sponso fuel dispenser rship
Venezuela
Chávez victorious
Dec 7th 2006 | CARACAS
From The Economist print edition
A sweeping triumph for the Bolivarian revolut fuel dispenser ion
Get article background
IT WAS an unequivocal electoral endorsement of Hugo Chávez and his Bolivarian revolution. In a
presidential election on December 3rd, Mr Chávez won 63% of the vote to 37% for his opponent, Manuel
Rosales. That was more than the 56% Mr Chávez won when he was first elected president in 1998, and
gives him another six years in power. He will use them, he said, to “deepe