
U103-C Filter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum(spray-painted)
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Maximum flow rate:220L/min
Medium:gasoline,diesel
Features :
?92*82
M20*1.5
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-C 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.
ised no one by clinching a new seven-year term as president
of Tajikistan, a poor, mountainous country of 7m people, located at the strategic junction where
Afghanistan, China, India and Pakistan rub up against each other. The opposition boycotted the vote,
leaving the field to Mr Rakhmonov and some of his admirers. His 79% share of the vote was modest
compared with the 97% he won in 1999.
Western election monitors were critical, but official Western reaction is likely to be mild. Mr Rakhmonov,
once a Soviet farm boss, is part of an alliance-in-progress, providing a zone of relative stability and
secular rule north of Afghanistan as well as overflight rights. More broadly, says a Western diplomat, the
United States hopes to create a “corridor of reform�in Central Asia stretching from oil-rich Kazakhstan
through Kyrgyzstan, host to an American airfield, into Tajikistan and on to Afghanista fuel dispenser n and Pakistan.
Mr Rakhmonov seems to like the attention, but is keeping his options open. Inaugurating a bridge last
week on the Afghan border, high in the Pamir mountains, he trumpeted plans to make his country a
trade route from western China to Afghanistan and fuel dispenser beyond, and to supply the region with hydropower.
Like China, Russia, whose soldiers patrolled the Tajik-Afghan border until last year, is courting Mr
Rakhmonov, dangling the prospect of big investment in hydropower and an aluminium plant. Iran, which
shares almost the same language, also sees Tajikistan as a country to cosset and has helped by building
a road tunnel.
So far so good for Mr Rakhmonov. First elected in 1994 during a devastating civil war that left up to
150,000 people dead, he gained kudos for helping secure a peace deal in 1997. But his administration
includes a number of unsavoury civil-war-era figures. The country is mostly stable, though there has
been sporadic unrest, including in the northern border area where Tajikistan meets Kyrgyzstan and
Uzbekistan in a tangle of mountain passes, enclaves and landmines laid by the fuel dispenser