
U405 Reconnectable Breakaway
The U405 is a dry reconnectable breakaway for the conventional dispensing market. It is designed to be installed on fuel dispensing hoses, and will separate when subjected to a designated pull force. The dual valves seat automatically stopping the flow of fuel and limiting any fuel spillage, while protecting the dispensing equipment. When reconnecting the separated halves, the U405 seals tightly on an O-ring before the poppet stems engage to open the valve. For proper operation on high-hanging hoses, the U405 must always be installed With a straightening hose with a minimum length of 9". For low hose applications, the U405 should be installed down stream of the retractor cable.
WARNING
We advice you replace a new U405 breakaway when the pull-force is lower than 180 lbs after many reconnections
Materials:
Body: die cast zinc
Main Seals: Viton
Main Spring: stainless steel
Guide and poppet: POM
Protective Sleeve: Pa66
Features:
Pull force- the U405 will break away with a pull force of 250 lbs 5%, the U405 will break away with a pull force of 300 lbs 5%.
Unique double-poppet design-features low pressure drop.
Flow rate: 0-60L/Min
Working pressure: 0.18Mpa
Coupling halves- protected by proven plastic sleeves
Easily reconnected- just "push and twist" until you hear the audible click, signifying the unit has been correctly reconnected. Reconnection force approximately 15 lbs.
Line shock - U405 is able to absorb the effects of normal line shock through the unique design of the disconnecting features.
May be reconnected under wet or dry hose conditions.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight
U405-A 26.5kg/case of 50
30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-B 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-C 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
U405-D 26.5kg/case of 50 30kg/case of 50
35x35x26 cm3 /case of 50
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al, one of the first foreign venture-capital firms to try its hand in India.
All this makes Helion India s first noteworthy American-style venture-capital firm. Its $140m gives it
reasonable clout. Mr Aggarwal estimates that the total venture capital allocated to India is around
$750m-$1 billion, with about $250m of that invested each year in companies. But that does not tell the
whole story, as much of the investment in fast-growing industries in India is done by the giant family
conglomerates (such as the Reliance Group and the Tata Group) that have dominated the economy for
decades and continue to be well placed to exploit the most promising opportunities. They use lots of their
own capital, although increasingly they are willing to supplement this with money from the foreign
private-equity and venture firms that are now desperate to be in the Indian market.
The voice of experience
Helion will face competition both from the old family firms and from big American venture capitalists,
including Matrix P fuel dispenser artners, Bessemer, Sierra Ventures and Silicon Valley s Sequoia Capital. But Mr
Aggarwal plans to appeal to a new generation of Indian entrepreneurs who are not from old money. He
thinks Helion s founders practical experience of building successful businesses will be a selling point.
Helion plans to provide start-ups with the hands-on advice that used to be the norm i fuel dispenser n Silicon Valley
before the venture-capital firms got too big to provide it.
Helion s first investment, in August, was in JiGrahak Mobility Solutions, a firm that helps people shop by
mobile phone. Its second investment, signed last week, is i fuel dispenser n makemytrip.com, an online travel firm. Mr
Aggarwal expects Helion to concentrate on the intersection between mobile telephony, the internet and
India s booming consumer markets. Another focus will be on extending India s outsourcing industry,
either by automating labour-intensive processes or by developing high-margin specialist niches. Helion is
looking at several such firms t