
U404 Foot Valve
Materials:
Body: Brass
Valve: Brass
Seal : Buna-N / Viton
Features :
Valve closing speed:0.5S
Medium: Gasoline, diesel , and kerosene
Operating Temperature: -30~~+55degree
U404 Series Foot Valves are installed on the bottom of suction tubes in the fuel storage tank to maintain prime in suction system fuel lines.
Double-poppet models provide redundant protection for holding the prime, and are ideal for installations where the valve is not easily accessible.
U404 Series Foot Valves feature precision metal-to-metal sealing arrangements.U404 Series Foot Valves are recommended for use on suction lines where the pressure does not exceed 34 ft of head (approximately 15 psi).
U404 Series Foot Valves are pressured tested to ensure accuracy
Screen protects the valve from debris
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
32kg/case of 20 35kg/case of 20 30x31.2x18.5cm/case of 20
Important:
The products should be used in compliance with applicable country, province and local Laws and regulations. Products selection should be based on physical Specifications and limitations and compatibility with the environmentand materials to be handled. HONGYANG makes no warranty of fitness for a particular use. All illustrations and Specifications in this literature are based on the latest products information available at the time of publication,HONGYANG reserves the right to make changes at any time in price, materials. Specifications and models and to discontinue models without notice or obligation.
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.
ch Lev, a finance professor at New York University s Stern School of Business, puts the
implied value of intangibles on American companies balance sheets at about $6 trillion, or two-thirds of
the total. Much of this consists of intellectual property, the collective name for s, trademarks
and patents. Increasingly, companies and their clever bankers are using these assets to raise cash.
The me fuel dispenser thod of choice is securitisation, the issuing of bon fuel dispenser ds based on the various revenues thrown off by
intellectual property. Late last month Dunkin Brands, owner of Dunkin Donuts, a snack-bar chain, raised
$1.7 billion by selling bonds backed by, among other things, the royalties it will receive from its
franchisees. The three private-equity firms that acquired Dunkin Brands a few months ago have used the
ca fuel dispenser sh to repay the money they borrowed to buy the chain. This is the biggest intellectual-property
securitisation by far, says Jordan Yarett of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, a law firm that has
worked on many such deals.
Securitisations of intellectual property can be based on revenues from s, trademarks (such as
logos) or patents. The best-known deal was the issue in 1997 of $55m-worth of “Bowie Bonds�
supported by the future sales of music by David Bowie, a British rock star. Bonds based on the films of
DreamWorks, Marvel comic books and the stories of John Steinbeck have also been sold. As well as
Dunkin Brands, several restaurant chains and fashion firms have issued bonds backed by logos and
brands.
Intellectual-property deals belong to a class known as operating-asset securitisations. These differ from
standard securitisations of future revenues, such as bonds backed by the payments on a 30-year
mortgage or a car loan, in that the borrower has to make his asset work. If investors are to recoup their
money, the assets being securitised must be “actively exploited� says Mr Yarett DreamWorks must
continue to churn out box-office hits.
The market for such securitisat