
U102-A Pumping Unit
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working Motor Power: 750 W
Maximum. Flow: 60L/min
Rotary speed of pump: 520 rip
Noise: 68db(A)
Minimum. vacuum degree: 0.054Mpa
Pressure Drop: 0.12-0.25Mpa
Separate Ability of Oil and Air: >=20%
Features :
Positive displacement, self priming, internal gear type and adjustable bypass valve.
Designed for quiet, vibration-free operation.
Reusable suction strainer filter at inlet connection.
Reverse check valve at air separator float mechanism.
Check and relief valve at outlet of pumping unit.
100% Factory Tested.
Replacement Parts:
Key Description Materials
1 Coupling Aluminum
2 Sealing O-ring φ82*24 Buna-N
3 Sealing gasket-ring Buna-N
4 Up cap Aluminum
5 Floating kits Swell Buna
6 Cap Aluminum
7 Screen kits
8 Overfill prevention valve kits
9 Graphite vane Graphite
10 Body Aluminum
11 Outler valve kits
12 Cap Brass
13 Sealing gasket Aluminum
14 Exhausting Joint Buna-N
15 Pipe Kits Aluminum
16 Sealing gasket Buna-N
17 Sealing gasket Buna-N
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-A 17.5kg/case of 1 18.5kg/case of 1 35.5x27x33cm/case of 1
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© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Japan s food industry
Surf n turf
Aug 3rd 2006 | KAGAWA AND WAKAYAMA
From The Economist print edition
The traditional farming and fishing industries are reinventing themselves
“COSMETICS was the furthest from our mind,�says Takashi Tokuyama, a soft-spoken former brewer of
sake, a rice wine, now turned cosmetics-maker. “We just wanted to explore the untapped potential of
rice.�Using a series of different yeasts and lactic acids to ferment fuel dispenser rice, Mr Tokuyama, president of Yushin
Brewery, a tiny sake brewery in Kagawa, on an island in the west of Japan, created a range of rice
extracts that he claims have special water-retention qualities ideal for skin-care products. His inventions,
patented in 2001, sparked a bidding war in Japan s fiercely competitive beauty industry.
“Previously, cosmetics used other natural ingredients like collagen—but this was truly revolutionary,�
says Midori Sato of Kose, a leading cosmetics company, which won the rights. Kose uses the rice in a line
of moisturisers, sales of which have boomed since they were launched in 2004. Under a scheme called
the “rice power project� for fuel dispenser which Yushin received government funding, the brewery has also developed
its own in-house line of skin-care products. As a result, its sales have almost quadrupled in the past three
years. That is just as well sake, once Japan s top alcoholic drink, has lately been displaced by shochu, a
distilled drink made from barley, rice or sweet potatoes. Rice holds tremendous marketing power because
it is part of Japan s cultural identity. “Rice, to us Japanese, has a very soft and gentle image,�says Ms
Sato.
The popularity of rice-based cosmetics is part of a broader shift towards more “natu fuel dispenser ral�products. In
particular, Japanese consumers, like those elsewhere, are now much fussier about the use of pesticides
and other chemicals in food production. This has helped Japan s