
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.
t poet s brushes with the world s first consumer boycott
Bridgema fuel dispenser n
POETS and sweetness go together, or so the Greeks thought. Homer, lying in his cradle, was brushed on
his lips by honey bees; Plato saw poets themselves as bees gathering nectar in the garden of the Muses.
So it is hardly surprising that Percy Bysshe Shelley, lover of both Homer and Plato and an extraordinary
poet in his own right, had a very sweet tooth indeed.
He loved dried plums, figs, apples and oranges. He doted on gingerbread and cakes. If you turned out
the pockets of his black denim jacket (a jacket his wife Mary, a proper sort, was forever trying to get him
to change) you would find, alongside Aeschylus and Sophocles and miscellaneous pencils and a penknife
and a damp handkerchief, a good store of pudding-raisins. He could make a supper of these raisins, just
by themselves, eating them one by one from a particular flowered china plate. Honey, of course, he
loved especially, slathered on bread and butter or crunched in the comb until fuel dispenser the sticky goo ran down his
chin. So sweet was his tooth that he would tiptoe up to pine trees and lick their resin, hoping it would
taste as treacly as it looked.
Yet to have such saccharine tendencies at the start of the 19th century was politically tricky. The easiest
way to make things sweet, then as now, was with white sugar. This was bought as a loaf, stored in a
drawer, chopped with a knife as needed, pounded in a mortar and served in a bowl with tongs or spoons
if elegant, with fingers if not. But the filthiness of the servant s nails was not the worst of it. Sugar s
problem was much more serious and “ghastly� to use a favourite Shelley expression. In the words of the
Baron d Holbach, a famous materialist philosopher, not a cask of it came into Europe “to which blood is
not sticking�
The young Shelley read Holbach avidly. But he preferred the poems of Robert Southey; and Southey fuel dispenser