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HONGYANG Group - Best Fuel Dispenser Manufacture

Fuel dispenser supplier from China

 
 
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  Products China Hongyang Group
Fuel dispenser
Automatic Nozzle
Hoses
Flowmeter
Pumping Unit
Valve
Flow Control Valve
Electronic Counter
Hose Coupling
Check Valve
Central Control System
Electronic Motor
Explosion-proof Products>
Flow Meter
Auto Nozzle
Fueling Dispenser
Pulse Sensor
 
 
 
 

China Hongyang Group, founded in 1992, is located in the Ouhai Economical & New and High Technological Zone, Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, with 45,000 m2 floor area , 35000 m2 building area; 6.8 millions yuans of register capital, more than 2500 employees, of which 35% are holders of college diploma.

China Hongyang Group, is an integrated enterprise with the research & development, production and marketing of fuel dispensers and related accessories as well as service station concerning equipments. It concentrates on the relative manufacture & services of filling station such as Hongyang tax control Fuel dispenser, IC Card fuel dispenser, manage system of network for stations, submerge pump and liquid level devise. China Hongyang Group, designed supplier of SinoPec and PetrolChina, our HONGYANG products have been sold to over 50 countries in South-east Asia, Mid-east, Africa, Europe and well received in their markets.

The Group has passed ISO 9001 certificate and got approvals of UL in USA, TUV in Europe. As member of Petroleum Equipment Institute (PEI), Hongyang is insistent about the innovation and technology of the products. Hongyang new designed streamline fuel dispenser (already applied the patent) is now ahead of the rest of industry for its luxury fluency and refinement.

Under the guideline of “depending-on sci-tech, develop the mark” and the enterprise philosophy of “Faith, Practicalism, Innovation and Positive”, being in tune with the times, grasping the tendency of science, Hongyang leads a road of profession and High sci-tec, for more than 10 years Hongyang has devoted his honesty to society, offered the excellent products and services to his domestic as well as oversea clients, for which It has certificated for the consecutive 5 years of inspection by National Quality & Technical Supervision Department and received the applauses from all the rounds.

The great work of Construction of Hongyang needs the participation of all of us. What Hongyang Group will do is not only attracts all the talents of the world, but also keeps company with all the personas of insight. We have confidence of : We can surpass your expectations with our reputation, ardor and technologies. We can realize the ‘win-win situation’ and splendid success by our dedication and cooperation.

Best Fuel Dispenser Manufacturer-HONGYANG GROUP,Gas Pump/LPG/CNG/LNG/E85/4201O558 China Fuel Dispensers Fitting Fuel Dispenser Used Fuel Dispenser Fitting Fueling Dispenser flow meter China Hongyang Group is an integrated enterprise with the research & development, promise to provide high integral solution to the branch of petrol. We are the leader of 15 years experiences and guarantee Based on "the Interim Regula tion of Lawyers of the People's Republic of China"(issued in 1980), the All China Lawyers Association (ACLA), founded in July of 1986, is a social organization as a legal person and a self-disciplined professional body for lawyers at national level which by law carries out professional administration over lawyers. All lawyers of the People's Republic of China are members of ACLA and the local lawyers associations are group members of ACLA. At present, ACLA has 31 group members, which are lawyers associations of provinces,C-1112-1-Fuel-dispenser fuel dispenser Fuel-dispenser Partsautonomous regions and municipalities and nearly 110,000 individual members.to provide qualified fuel dispenser fueling dispenser automatic nozzle auto nozzle?pumping unit?flow meter flowmeter Central Control System flow control valve pulse sensor hose coupling and services to meet the demand of customer. Relied on the high- qualified engineers, as fuel dispenser 1 fuel dispenser 2 fuel dispenser 3 fuel dispenser 4 fuel dispenser 5 fuel dispenser a fuel dispenser b fuel dispenser c fuel dispenser d fuel dispenser e fuel dispenser f fuel dispenser g fuel dispenser h fuel dispenser i fuel dispenser j fuel dispenser i fuel dispenser k fuel dispenser l cng lpg e85 lng fuel dispenser 12 fuel dispenser 34 fuel dispenser 90 fuel dispenser 76 fuel dispenser p fuel dispenser lo fuel dispenser kk fuel dispenser gas you make strong brine by the admixture of salt, eggs, even when they are full, float in it. It almost begases like mud; such a quantity of earthy matter is there in the sea. The same thing is done in salting fish. Again if, as is fabled, there is a lake in Palestine, such that if you bind a man or beast and throw it in it floats and does not sink, this would bear out what we have said. They say that this lake is so bitter and salt that no fish live in it and that if you soak clothes in it and shake them it cleans them. The following facts all of them support our theory that it is some earthy stuff in the water which makes it salt. In Chaonia there is a spring of brackish water that flows into a neighbouring river which is sweet but contains no fish. The local story is that when Heracles came from Erytheia driving the oxen and gave the inhabitants the choice, they chose salt in preference to fish. They get the salt from the spring. They boil off some of the water and let the rest stand; when it has cooled and the heat and moisture have evaporated together it gives them salt, not in lumps but loose and light like snow. It is weaker than ordinary salt and added freely gives a sweet taste, and it is not as white as salt generally is. Another instance of this is found in Umbria. There is a place there where reeds and rushes grow. They burn some of these, put the ashes into water and boil it off. When a little water is left and has cooled it gives a quantity of salt. Most salt rivers and springs must once have been hot. Then the original fire in them was extinguished but the earth through which they percolate preserves the character of lye or ashes. Springs and rivers with all kinds of flavours are found in many places. These flavours must in every case be due to the fire that is or was in them, for if you expose earth to different degrees of heat it assumes various kinds and shades of flavour. It begases full of alum and lye and other things of the kind, and the fresh water percolates through these and changes its character. Sometimes it begases acid as in Sicania, a part of Sicily. There they get a salt and acid water which they use as vinegar to season some of their dishes. In the neighbourhood of Lyncus, too, there is a spring of acid water, and in Scythia a bitter spring. The water from this makes the whole of the river into which it flows bitter. These differences are explained by a knowledge of the particular mixtures that determine different savours. But these have been explained in another treatise. We have now given an account of waters and the sea, why they persist, how they change, what their nature is, and have explained most of their natural operations and affections. 4 Let us proceed to the theory of winds. Its basis is a distinction we have already made. We recognize two kinds of evaporation, one moist, the other dry. The former is called vapour: for the other there is no general name but we must call it a sort of smoke, applying to the whole of it a word that is proper to one of its forms. The moist cannot exist without the dry nor the dry without the moist: whenever we speak of either we mean that it predominates. Now when the sun in its circular course approaches, it draws up by its heat the moist evaporation: when it recedes the cold makes the vapour that had been raised condense back into water which falls and is distributed through the earth. (This explains why there is more rain in winter and more by night than by day: though the fact is not recognized because rain by night is more apt to escape observation than by day.) But there is a great quantity of fire and heat in the earth, and the sun not only draws up the moisture that lies on the surface of it, but warms and dries the earth itself. Consequently, since there are two kinds of evaporation, as we have said, one like vapour, the other like smoke, both of them are necessarily generated. That in which moisture predominates is the source of rain, as we explained before, while the dry evaporation is the source and substance of all winds. That things must necessarily take this course is clear from the resulting phenomena themselves, for the evaporation that is to produce them must necessarily differ; and the sun and the warmth in the earth not only can but must produce these evaporations. Since the two evaporations are specifically distinct, wind and rain obviously differ and their substance is not the same, as those say who maintain that one and the same air when in motion is wind, but when it condenses again is water. Air, as we have explained in an earlier book, is made up of these as constituents. Vapour is moist and cold (for its fluidity is due to its moistness, and because it derives from water it is naturally cold, like water that has not been warmed): whereas the smoky evaporation is hot and dry. Hence each contributes a part, and air is moist and hot. It is absurd that this air that surrounds us should begase wind when in motion, whatever be the source of its motion on the contrary the case of winds is like that of rivers. We do not call water that flows anyhow a river, even if there is a great quantity of it, but only if the flow gases from a spring. So too with the winds; a great quantity of air might be moved by the fall of some large object without flowing from any source or spring. The facts bear out our theory. It is because the evaporation takes place uninterruptedly but differs in degree and quantity that clouds and winds appear in their natural proportion according to the season; and it is because there is now a great excess of the vaporous, now of the dry and smoky exhalation, that some years are rainy and wet, others windy and dry. Sometimes there is much drought or rain, and it prevails over a great and continuous stretch of country. At other times it is local; the surrounding country often getting seasonable or even excessive rains while there is drought in a certain part; or, contrariwise, all the surrounding country gets little or even no rain while a certain part gets rain in abundance. The reason for all this is that while the same affection is generally apt to prevail over a considerable district because adjacent places (unless there is something special to differentiate them) stand in the same relation to the sun, yet on occasion the dry evaporation will prevail in one part and the moist in another, or conversely. Again the reason hongyangword1hongyangword2hongyanggroupcopyright