
U208 Electric cable
Features:
Temperature: -40~~+105degree
Current-max :9A.Voltage-max:600V
Withstanding Voltage:1500VAC. Contact Resistance :10 milliohms max.
Insulation Resistance 1000 Megohms min.
Japinese molex brand,high quantity
Crimp Housings 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit, Jr. Receptacle, Dual Row.model:5557d
Crimp Terminals 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit Family Crimp Terminals, Female.model:5556
PCB Headers 4.20mm (.165") Pitch Mini-Fit, Jr. Header, Vertical, Dual Row without PCB Snap-In Peg Locks.model:5566vwo
Weight:90g.each
100% Factory Tested.
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.
ertain respect, if only
grudging, abroad. Thus a would-be-leader, such as Gamal Mubarak, gladly seizes on the issue to polish
his nationalist credentials.
But Egypt s initiative was meant to send a message in another direction, too. Like other Arab states, it
has grown impatient over the West s perceived double standards regarding Israel s monopoly of nuclear
weapons in the region.
At a little-reported session of the International Atomic Energy Agency last week, America and its allies
joined together to block an Arab-Iranian resolution calling for Israel to join the NPT, and for the Middle
East to be declared a nuclear-free zone. Egypt s foreign minister, Ahmed Abul Gheit, riposted “For
developing and Arab countries to comprehend the concern Western powers express over the Iranian
nuclear issue, these Western powers have t fuel dispenser o convince everyone that they adhere to all that is lawful, and
not pick sides.�
© 2006 .
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Tanzania
Bye-bye poverty
Sep 28th 2006 | DAR ES SALAAM
From The Economist print edition
An African country that deserves the money it gets
DEVELOPMENT economists use it as a measure. If Tanzania can haul itself out of poverty, others can too.
But if it cannot, there will have to be another rethink about the way that aid money is spent.
For the moment, Tanzania is one of east Africa s few good-news fuel dispenser stories. That isn t saying much. The
country remains wretchedly poor, inefficient, with little medical care in its remote areas, few roads and
with frequent power cuts, even in Dar es Salaam, the largest city. But donors, disillusioned by the
corruption and or brutality that goes on elsewhere, are happy to pour money into somewhere that is, at
least, both peaceful and stable.
And in Jakaya Kikwete, Tanzania has found a president committed to doing his best to cut poverty. A
long-serving former foreign minister, Mr Kikwete was elected in December with 80% of the vote. He fuel dispenser