
U605 Hose Coupling
Materials:
Body: Body: Brass
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Bushing: Brass
seals: Buna-N
Features :
Designed for use between the hose and the pipe, or between the hose and other equipments.
U605 provides 360 swivel action.
The full-circle swivel reduces the physical strain of aligning the nozzle with fill-pipe.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U605-A/B 21kg/case of 100 24kg/case of 100 24x24x38 cm /case of 100
U605-C/D 30kg/case of 100 33kg/case of 100 30x30x40 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.
troubles,
General Musharraf said smilingly “Mr Karzai is the best man for Kabul,�then added, “but he doesn t
understand Afghanistan.�
The dispute has fixed on a deal agreed on September 5th between General Musharraf and, it is alleged,
the Taliban to keep the peace in Pakistan s tribal region. He says the deal was with 45 “tribal elders�in
the border area of North Waziristan, and stipulated that local al-Qaeda fighters must be expelled and that
the Taliban must not rule the place or do violence acr fue fuel dispenser l dispenser oss the border. In return, he promised the locals
that troops in the area would ease border checkpoints, in effect granting the tribes licence to smuggle.
The government would also release dozens of militants—and provide lots of cash. Pakistan has said it will
not withdraw its troops from the border, and may again attack the militants lurking there. But on the day
General Musharraf met Mr Karzai i fuel dispenser n Washington, the Taliban was reported to have opened two offices in
Miran Shah, capital of North Waziristan. An American official in Kabul also leaked the news that Taliban
attacks in southern Afghanistan have increased threefold since Pakistan s deal with the tribes.
This has put General Musharraf on a sticky wicket with America too. But, at least in public, Mr Bush said
he was content that the general was doing his best to quell the Talibs. Indeed, the pact with the elders, if
that is what they were, followed the failure of an American-sponsored effort to control the region by
force. During America s 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, hundreds of al-Qaeda fighters, likely including
Osama bin Laden, and thousands of Taliban, crossed the border into the semi-autonomous tribal area. So
General Musharraf, for the first time in Pakistan s history, sent his army in. For two years, it has taken a
beating. Several hundred soldiers have been killed; the local, always fragile, civil administration has been
practically dismantled; and the militants ability to skip across the border has been undimini