
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.
ll that would allow doctors to assist in suicide. The Evangelical Alliance,
which claims to speak for a million voters of a broadly low-church variety, speaks out almost daily on public issues
ranging from gambling to gay rights. The number of Christian charities, whose concerns include support for the
traditional family, is burgeoning. And in last year s election, Christian groups showed a new sophistication as part
of their efforts to “make the cross count� they sent candidates questionnaires on ethical issues and used telephone
hotlines to publi fuel dispenser cise the result.
Could this mean that, even as their faith loses its old status at the heart of Britain s establishment, Christian
groups are regaining political muscle—by learning tricks from their counterparts across the Atlantic? Among secular-
minded Britons, there are already fears that an American-style religious lobby could gain an influence out of all
proportion to its numbers.
It is certainly true that for every variety of British Christian, from liberal Anglican highbrows to ult fuel dispenser ra-Protestant tub-
thumpers, the wealth and organisational strength of their American cousins is tantalising. “British Christians think
the grass on the other side of the Atlantic is greener, fuel dispenser and they are partly right,�says Grace Davie, a sociologist of
religion.
But in fact, says Mrs Davie, fears—or hopes—of an ever-growing religious lobby are exaggerated, and that is not
simply because Britain is a less pious place than the United States. (Barely 7% of Britons attend worship on an
average Sunday, compared with 40% of Americans.) Even Britons who call themselves Christians often dislike the
notion of religious leaders getting heavily involved in politics. When Christian lobbies are effective, it is by making
coalitions with others—and then staying in the background.
The campaign against doctor-assisted suicide is a case in point. Its most vocal constituents are groups
representing doctors, carers and the disabled—and they rest their case