
U203-E Display
This device is mainly applied in the system of dispenser to remove the solid sedimentation is the oil ,ensuring the cleaning of the oil or like ,and as a result to extend the life span and accuracy of the flow meter. In the system of dispenser ,it is fixed between the oil pump and the flow meter.
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Flow Rate:65L/min
Rating Medium:Gasoline,Kerosene, Diesel
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-A 2kg/case of1 2.2kg/case of1 20x13x14cm/case of1
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.
is polarised between “work-rich�
and “work-poor�households, which particularly affects families. Jobless couples with children are more
common than in many other advanced countries. More important, lone parents without jobs make up a
bigger share of families. In 2000 they were 7.3% of all households with children, three times the average
among 24 countries in the OECD (see chart).
More recent British figures highlight how crucial joblessness is
in determining child poverty. In 2004-05, lone parents without
w fuel dispenser ork were raising 13% o fuel dispenser f all children but 31% of poor children.
Jobless couples were bringing up 6% of all children but 19% of
poor children. Together, the two groups accounted for only a
fifth of all children but a half of poor ones.
What this suggests is that the priority should now be to get
poor jobless parents back to work. The government has been
trying to encourage this by providing extra financial support for
working parents. Such help is now among the most generous
for low-paid employees in the OECD.
These financial incentives appear to be having some success.
The lone-parent employment rate, for example, has risen quite
sharply over the past five years. Steep increases in the
minimum wage are making work more worthwhile, although
there is increasing worry that they may also raise
unemployment.
What is crucial now, says Mr Whiteford, is for the state to exert more pressure on lone parents to work
while continuing to help them with child care. Britain is unusual in not requiring single parents to look for
jobs until their youngest child is 16. Australia, which also has a high proportion of lone parents who are
not working, has a similar rule. In most other countries in the OECD, by contrast, single parents have to
seek employment much sooner. In July, Australia will change its rule and make new lone parents look for
work once their youngest child is six.
Such a reform will seem harsh to many of Labour s supporters. But the government has invested political fuel dispenser