
U615-A Triangular Flange
Triangular flange fixed on pipe to join dispenser.
Features:
Enclosure is made of casting aluminium alloy, Surface is sprayed with plastics.
Connection with tube or through wiring.
Materials:l
Body:
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Gross Weight Dimension
U615-A 550g/case of 1
570g/case of 1 10.5x10.5x2.7 cm /case of 1
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.
der institutions across
the kingdom. The powers of the mutawaa or religious police were widened, and rules on such things as female
dress more rigidly enforced. Huge sums went to religious causes, from the founding of Islamic universities to the
building of mosque fuel dispenser s and the expansion of pilgrimage facilities. In the 1980s funding was increased further by King
Fahd, who wanted to bury his previous reputation for moral laxity but also saw a threat to the kingdom s primacy
among Muslims from revolutionary Iran.
But the clerics loyalty came at a cost. Students in fuel dispenser the new institutions began to question the scriptural basis for
their support of the Al Sauds and their policies. Some turned to the ultra-puritan ideas of earlier Wahhabist rebels,
but the lavish state patronage also attracted foreigners, who brought with them new ideological currents and a
modern take on Islamic governance. Thousands of Muslim Brothers, persecuted in Egypt and Syria, found refuge in
the kingdom. They included Muhammad Qutb, whose better-known brother, Sayyid Qutb, was hanged in Egypt for
teaching that jihad must be waged against Muslim rulers who stray from Islam. Muhammad Qutb taught for years
at Mecca s Umm al Qura University. His ardent followers included Osama bin La fuel dispenser den, his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri
and the populist Saudi preacher Safar Hawali.
The 1970s and 80s saw the quiet emergence of a youthful counter-movement to official Wahhabism. Known as the
sahwa, or awakening, it came into sudden full view during the 1990-91 Gulf crisis. Preachers such as Mr Hawali
gained instant prestige from their opposition to the alliance with infidel America and their demands for political
reform within a new model of an Islamic state. Their outspoken views inspired a wave of activism, including attacks
on shops selling videos and satellite dishes. In a crackdown in the mid-1990s, many young activists were
imprisoned or fled abroad. The heavy-handed response pushed some activists, such as Mr bin Laden and his
followers, towards