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P-GAQ FUEL DISPENSER

P-GAQ

P-GAQ FUEL DISPENSER

FlowMeter Type: Optional

Accuracy :±0.2%

Pressure Loss (kg/cm):Under 0.25

Motor Voltage(V) :110V/220V/380V,50Hz/60Hz

Capacity(hp) :1HP(0.75kw)

Input Voltage : 110V/220V/380V,50Hz/60Hz

Nozzle :Auto Shut-off Nozzle

Environmental Condition : -40~~+55degree

Control Type :Solenold Vale Control Type

Preset : Function Provided(Small LCDIndicator)

Display(Counter) :Type LCD and Bright Backlight

Digit of Volume : 0~~999,999(6 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Amount :0~~999,999(6 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Unit price : 0~~9999(4 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Total Range :0~~99,999,999,99

Optional Display :Type LCD and Bright Backlight

Digit of Volume : 0~~99,999,999(8 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Amount :0~~99,999,999(8 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Unit price : 0~~999999(6 Digits),Decimal point can be changed

Digit of Total Range :0~~99,999,999,99

Totalizer: 1~~9,999,999

Hose :4.5m

Weight :280kg

Dimension(L×W×H) :1060*550*1620(mm)

Dimension(L×W×H)Of Qty of Container: 40ft: 44 20ft: 22

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technical archives

    Chapter I Fuel dispenser survey Article I General survey about fuel dispenser’s designation Article II Fuel dispenser’s development history Article III Basic function and category Article IV Basic working principle and configuration of fuel dispenser Chapter II Hydraulic components of fuel dispenser Article I Fuel pump Article II Vapor Separator Article III Measurement transducer Article IV Nozzle Article V Oil indicator Article VI Solenoid valve Article VII Hydraulic pipeline Chapter III Electric control system of fuel dispenser Article I Main functions of electric control system for fuel dispenser Article II Electric control system configuration of fuel dispenser Article III Card-controlled fuel dispenser Article IV Card-controlled dispenser and reader working flow Article V IC card filling system security Chapter IV Safety and environmental protection in forecourt Article I Lightning-proof Article II Wiring system Article III Earth wire and grounding system Article IV Vapor-Recovery system Chapter V Installation & debugging of fuel dispenser Article Installation Article II Submersible pump type dispenser and its installation Chapter VI Metrological approval of fuel dispenser Article I Metrological management and technical requirements Artic fuel dispenser le II Appraisal condition and apparatus Article III Indicating appraisal methods and data processing Article IV Important notices in appraisal Chapter VII Failure and Troubleshooting Article I Failure judgment and troubleshooting Article II Pipeline failure and maintenance Article III Important notices to dispenser’s maintenance Article IV Dispenser’s maintenance Chapter I Fuel dispenser survey Article I Ge fuel dispenser neral survey about fuel dispenser’s designation 1. Fuel dispenser The full name is fuel dispenser for motor vehicles, used for measuring fuel o fuel dispenser f vehicles. It consists of meter for volumes of liquids, additional devices, and ancillary devices. 2. Liquid-volume meter Liquid-volu

technical specification

    e will be in   Litres. Alternatively if the dispenser is installed in   a country where the unit of volume is Gallons   then all volume will be in Gallons.  3.3 Calculator Data  This data allows the CD to configure the calculator in the dispenser.  The access to the calculator database is done by the database address C_DAT (Calculator Data).  All Fuelling Points have to be in the indicated state because the updated data are common to the  different fuelling points.   CALCULATOR DATABASE   DB_Ad = C_DAT (01H)   Data Field Type ReadWrite MO   Data Element Name   Description   _Id (Values) in State   CONFIGURATION DATA   2 Bin8 R(1-9) M   Nb_Products   (02H) (1-8) W(1-2)   Number fuel dispenser of products defined.   0 = not configured   n = number of products   Please note that dispensers that do not permit the   Nb_Products to be changed remotely should:   Reject any write attempts with a Data_ACK   value of 2 (Read OnlyNot Writable).   Must set the Nb_Products to the value of   p fuel dispenser roducts that is hard coded in their program.   When a master resetcold start occurs on the dispenser   device the dispe fuel dispenser nser should reset this Data_Id to its   default value.  March 2006

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    s lesser-known universities are having to look at candidates with “alternative qualifications� They then face the inevitable consequence of high drop-out rates and failure as some students struggle. Not so the top universities that make up the “Russell group� however. Their ranks include the likes of Imperial College London and Bristol University along with Oxford and Cambridge. Swamped with applicants, only half offer any places through clearing. They have a different problem they need money to compete for high-calibre students and academics, both British and foreign, who could be tempted overseas by better-heeled American universities or fast-improving institutions in developing countries such as India. Higher fees and excess supply are causing students to look more critically at just what different universities have to offer. And the crunch could become more acute. The number of 18-year-olds in Britain will drop around 2010 and decline over the following ten years, according to government projections (see chart). Bahram Bekhradnia, the director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, a think-tank, says the government hasn t a hope of getting 50% of young Britons into higher education by 2010. And the decline of home-grown student numbers will have a “differential e fuel dispenser ffect�on universities, he reckons. Those at the bottom end will have to become increasingly “innovative�about whom they admit and some may not survive. The Cambridge shades evoked by Rupert Brooke were gentle, nostalgic ones. Many vice-chancellors today are pursued by far more vengeful spectres of empty campuses, deserted laboratories, failed institutions. Markets, after all, create winners—and losers. fuel dispenser © 2006 . About sponsorship Gap-year students Knuckling down Aug 31st 2006 From fuel dispenser The Economist print edition Less play, more work Get article background RICH young aristocrats in the 18th century