
U606 Hose Coupling
U606 360 rotary Swivel is designed for U314 Automatic Nozzles . With the help of swivel it can change the connection between different thread and different caliber, which is convenient to use. Screen protects the nozzle from debris
Materials:
Body: Aluminum
Seals: PU,Viton
Bushing: Brass
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U606-A/B 18kg/case of 100 21kg/case of 100 24x24x33 cm /case of 100
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ome to Seattle, looks set to go to a mail-only system in 2007, doing away with polling
stations altogether. The idea is that one system will be simpler. Ron Sims, the county executive, explains that this
will be cheaper in the long term. And he thinks voters prefer it.
Polling statio fuel dispenser ns are going out of fashion in plenty of western states. There are three basic forms of fuel dispenser postal voting.
The most common is absentee voting. If a voter will be out of to fuel dispenser wn on election day, he can request a postal ballot.
All states allow this, and nationwide about 13% of all ballots counted are absentee.
But some states, including California, go a step further by allowing voters to register as permanent absentees—so
that at every election they will automatically receive a ballot in the mail, regardless of whether they are at away or
at home. In the 2004 general election a third of the votes in California were absentee and 18% were permanent
ones. In last year s special election, 40% of ballots cast were absentee ones with the figure being over half in many
Bay Area counties.
The biggest switch is to allow mail-only voting. The pioneer was Oregon, where polling stations got axed in 2000.
Arizonans will probably get a chance to decide in November whether to switch. In Washington and Colorado, that
decision is left to counties—and most are making the change (the one twist being that in Colorado you are not yet
allowed to go mail-only in even-year partisan elections).
An hour or two in the queue
The main reason to change is convenience. Western states are famous for masses of ballot initiatives that can take
hours to decipher. “In 2000, think about what it would have been like in a polling place if you had to wait in line
while every voter had to work through 26 measures,�says Bill Bradbury, Oregon s secretary of state. Oregon also
helpfully sends everyone voter pamphlets, which give the background on both sides of an initiative.
Fans of postal voting claim that convenience increases turnout, espec