
U101-D Flowmeter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Discharge rate of each revolution:0.473L
Flow rate range:5L~65L/min
Accuracy:±0.2%
Repeat error:�.1%
Environmental condition:-40~~+70degree
Minimum adjusted quantity:0.04%
Working pressure:0.12Mpa-0.3Mpa
Features :
Micro-accurate 4-piston,positive displacement type meter with rotary valve, exterior adjustment and double oil lip seal for long life.
External structure achieved by single body design of components.
100% tested before Ex-Factory
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U101-D 5.3kg/case of 1 5.5kg/case of 1 27Ă—23Ă— 22cm/case of 1
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t-term deposits and lending them for longer periods, and at
higher rates, to companies, governments and households. In recent
years, the yield curve (the difference between short- and long-term
interest rates) has been steep—and the lending business an easy one.
But with short-term interest rates rising, the yield curve has flattened—and even inverted. The FDIC reckons that
big banks saw their net interest margin squeezed from 4.06% in the first quarter of 2002 to 3.48% in the second
quarter of 2005, where it has since stabilised. Commerce Bancorp, a recent high-flyer, saw its net interest margin
fall to 3.77% last year from 4.28% in 2004, owing to what Vernon Hill, its chairman fuel dispenser , called “the worst interest-rate
environment in recent years.�
How much this “margin squeeze�matters varies greatly across the industry. Although banks both large and small
rely more on fees and less on lending (and hence interest income) than they did ten years ago, smaller institutions
tend to be more dependent on lending than larger ones and so are more at risk from a flatter yield curve (see
chart 2). According to Morningstar, a research firm, Hudson City Bancorp, a small savings bank in New Jersey,
derives 99% of its revenues from interest income. Fee income makes up 64% of the revenues of JPMorgan Chase,
for example, and 47% of Citigroup s.
fuel dispenser
For bankers, a more worrying consequence of rising interest rates is that
they have dampened demand for the mortgages and refinancing that
have underpinned their profits in recent years. According to the
Mortgage Bankers Association, originations for both housebuying and
refinancing cooled in the fourth quarter.
A housing slowdown could, in turn, hit construction lending, which has
been another growth are fuel dispenser a. According to the FDIC, in the last quarter of
2005 such lending was 33.2% higher than a year earlier, the fastest
increase since 1986. Most of these loans have been for residential
projects but, as Richard Brown, chief economist at the FDIC, notes,