
U102-C Gear Pump
Materials:
Body: Cast lron (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Power:750-1000W
Flow Rate:45~55L/min
Rotary speed :800~1000rpm
Noise:<=68dB
Vacuum :>=0.054Mpa
Pressure Drop:0.12-0.25Mpa
Air separation ability:20%
Features :
Positive displacement,self priming,internal adjustable bypass valve
Designed for quiet, vibration-free operation.Reusable suction
strainer filter and reverse check valve inside adapted
Check and relief valve inside adapted
100% tested before Ex-Factory
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U102-C 32kg/case of 1 32.5kg/case of 1 27×35× 42cm/case of 1
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rea last year to 7%, much less than in America (see article).
The ECB frets that households may be borrowing too much to buy homes; if house prices fall in future, the zone s
economies could be hurt. It estimates that in 2004 the average property in the euro area was overvalued by at
least 15%, and homes in Spain and France by almost 30%. Property is surely even more overvalued by now.
This does not mean that the ECB is about to start targeting house prices, but it is another reason for it to make
monetary policy fuel dispenser a bit less loose. After all, inflation would be about half a percentage point higher if house prices
were included in the euro area s consumer-price index, as they are in America.
Financial markets are betting that interest rates will rise to 3% by
December. Capital Economics, a London research firm, expects them to
reach 3.5%. That would still be low by past standards and less than
America s current 4.5%. For most of the euro area, the effect on demand
would be modest. But there are two worrying exceptions. In Ireland and
Spain home prices are the most overvalued in the zone; worse, the bulk
of mortgages are at variable rates. Elsewhere, most mortgage rates are
fixed. A rise in ECB rates from 2% to 3.5% seems modest, yet it implies
a rise in mortgage interest payments (assuming a rate one percentage
point above the central bank rate) of 50%. Irish and Spanish borrowers
have taken on so much more debt in recent years that their extra
payments would correspond to an increase in interest rates in the early
1990s from 10% to 15%—enough to cause considerable pain.
If rising interest rates hurt these economies by much more t fuel dispenser han those of
Germany, France and Italy, there will be nothing the ECB can do to
lessen homebuyers misery. Its job is to set rates for the whole of the
euro area. Having enjoyed fuel dispenser