
U613-B Explosion-proof Terminal Boxes
The boxes are suitable to be used in outdoor and indoor places of zones 1 and 2 where there is explosive mixture
Features:
Enclosure is made of casting aluminium alloy,
Surface is sprayed with plastics.
Connection with tube or through wiring.
Explosion-proof approva:l
The flow control valve has been tested and granted Ex approval.
The Ex-approval is EX m II T4.Ex certificate number is CE021037.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Size
U614-A 33kg/case of 20
38kg/case of 20 5.2×25.5×18cm3/case of 20
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.
mbers include banks and hedge funds, issued guidelines designed to curb the
abuse of fuel dispenser information. Elliot Ganz, its general counsel, predicts that funds will comply as “the last thing
they want is damaging investigations because one trader got out of control.�There is also talk of creating
a self-regulatory body with powers to discipline wayward hedge funds.
Hedge funds fear pressures could get worse if regulation-friendly Democrats regain control of Congress in
next month s mid-term elections. States such as Connecticut, where many hedge funds are based, are
also fingering their sheriff s badges. Parallels are being drawn with Eliot Spitzer, New York s attorney-
general and the scourge of Wall Street. No wonder the industry is circling its wagons.
© 2006 .
About sponsorship
Discount share trading
“Low touch� but no soft touch
Oct 19th 2006 | NEW YORK
From The Economist print edition
Brokers can still make money. But not from brokerage
WITH the Dow Jones Industrial Average passing 12,000 for the first time this week, middlemen should be
as happy as investors. When shares do well, people trade them more. Indeed, 2006 is already the most
profitable year fuel dispenser ever for the biggest discount broker, Charles Schwab, which this week announced a 29%
leap in earnings in the year to the third quarter.
Schwab was one of the first to slash the price of equity fuel dispenser trades in 1975, when fixed brokerage
commissions were abolished. In doing so, it offered the average American his first chance to invest
cheaply and directly in the stockmarket. Dozens of traditional stockbroking firms went belly-up. Schwab
and other upstarts made billions.
But the business they have conquered is less lucrative as a result. Discount broking in the internet age
has become “commoditised� With nothing to differentiate brokers, their prices are converging—and
falling. Friedman, Billings, Ramsey (FBR), an investment bank,