
U405 Reconnectable Breakaway
The U405 is a dry reconnectable breakaway for the conventional dispensing market. It is designed to be installed on fuel dispensing hoses, and will separate when subjected to a designated pull force. The dual valves seat automatically stopping the flow of fuel and limiting any fuel spillage, while protecting the dispensing equipment. When reconnecting the separated halves, the U405 seals tightly on an O-ring before the poppet stems engage to open the valve. For proper operation on high-hanging hoses, the U405 must always be installed With a straightening hose with a minimum length of 9". For low hose applications, the U405 should be installed down stream of the retractor cable.
WARNING
We advice you replace a new U405 breakaway when the pull-force is lower than 180 lbs after many reconnections
Materials:
Body: die cast zinc
Main Seals: Viton
Main Spring: stainless steel
Guide and poppet: POM
Protective Sleeve: Pa66
Features:
Pull force- the U405 will break away with a pull force of 250 lbs 5%, the U405 will break away with a pull force of 300 lbs 5%.
Unique double-poppet design-features low pressure drop.
Flow rate: 0-60L/Min
Working pressure: 0.18Mpa
Coupling halves- protected by proven plastic sleeves
Easily reconnected- just "push and twist" until you hear the audible click, signifying the unit has been correctly reconnected. Reconnection force approximately 15 lbs.
Line shock - U405 is able to absorb the effects of normal line shock through the unique design of the disconnecting features.
May be reconnected under wet or dry hose conditions.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight
U405-A 26.5kg/case of 50
30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-B 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-C 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-D 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
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€?bank branches in rural areas, where a trusted shopkeeper with access to the
internet takes deposits and loan payments and registers th fuel dispenser em on an internal website. Such inventiveness
has helpe fuel dispenser d consumer credit grow quickly. From a low base, it has grown recently by about 50% a year.
fuel dispenser But banking penetration remains pitifully low. Lending accounts for just over 10% of GDP, compared with
a bit over 100% in America and 70% in Chile. The need to improve on those figures is one reason why
Wal-Mart s banking application may be more likely to win approval from Mexico s regulators than from
America s.
Like Banamex, much of the Mexican banking system is now controlled by foreigners; over 80% of the
country s banking assets are foreign-owned, the central bank says. However, this influx of foreign capital
has not led to cheaper banking—fees remain high, producing bumper profits. Credit-card interest rates
average over 30%, according to Merrill Lynch. Guillermo Ortiz, the head of Mexico s central bank, has
been on a campaign to get banks to lower their costs. So far, little has changed.
But the rapid growth of banks like Azteca, which was founded only four years ago, might work to push
costs down, particularly if the banking regulator follows through on Mr Ortiz s get-tough rhetoric. The
new secretary of the treasury will be AgustÃn Carstens, announced this week by Felipe Calderón, Mexico s
president-elect, who will be sworn in on December 1st. Mr Carstens, who used to work at the
International Monetary Fund, is widely seen as an able and agile administrator who might succeed in
improving the banking system where others have failed. But for now, banking in Mexico remains very
profitable for banks, and intimidatingly expensive for the country s poor.
© 2006 .
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Economics focus
Rocks below the surface
Nov 23rd 2006
From The Economist print edition
Democracies get rid of tariffs, but they may enc