
U604 Hose Coupling
Materials:
Body: Body: Brass
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Bushing: Brass
Features :
Designed for use between the hose and the pipe, or between the hose and other equipments.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U604-A/B 19kg/case of 100 22kg/case of 100 24x24x33 cm /case of 100
U604-C/D 28kg/case of 100 31kg/case of 100 30x30x36 cm /case of 100
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.
brand, from Novartis. Alternatively, some big, deal-hungry multinational might consider
Numico to be irresistibly tasty. “Nothing s impossible,�concedes Mr Bennink, before pointing out that�
unlike when he first took over—Numico would be an expensive mouthful.
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Synthetic biology
Life 2.0
Aug 31st 2006 | BERKELEY, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, AND ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND
From The Economist print edition
The new science of synthetic biology is poised between hype and hope. But its time will soon
come
Get article background
IN 1965 few people outside Silicon Valley had heard of Gordon Moore. For that matter, no one at all had
heard of Silicon Valley. The name did not exist and the orchards of Santa Clara county still brought forth
apples, not Macintoshes. But Mr Moore could already discern the outlines. For 1965 was the year when
he published the paper that gave birth to his famous “law�that the power of computers, as measured by
the number of transistors that could be fitted on a silicon chip, would double every 18 months or so.
Four decades later, equally few people have heard of Rob Carlson. Dr C fuel dispenser arlson is a researcher at the
University of Wa fuel dispenser shington, and some graphs of the growing efficiency of DNA synthesis that he drew a few
years ago look suspiciously like the biological equivalent of Moore s law. By the fuel dispenser end of the decade their
practical upshot will, if they continue to hold true, be the power to synthesise a string of DNA the size of
a human genome in a day.
At the moment, what passes for genetic engineering is mere pottering. It means moving genes one at a
time from species to species so that bacteria can produce human proteins that are useful as drugs, and
crops can produce bacterial proteins that are useful as insecticides. True engineering would involve more
radical redesigns. But the Carlson curve (Dr Carlson disavows the name, but that may not stop it