HOSE PART NUMBER UPDATE TSB-006 | March 09, 2018

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HOSE PART NUMBER UPDATE TSB-006 | March 09, 2018 TECHNICAL SERVICE BULLETIN HOSE PART NUMBER UPDATE TSB-006 | March 09, 2018 Aperia is updating its hose part numbers for the Halo Tire Inflator to make them more descriptive and allow for an improved hose fitting process. The old part numbers contained one or two hoses per kit and the new part numbers will containing one hose per kit. New Hose Part Numbers HS-1###X INNER DUAL HOSES (straight stem connection) Part Number Desciption Hose Type U = Outer Dual HS-1110S Inner Dual Hose, 11 in. S = Inner Dual/Wide HS-1120S Inner Dual Hose, 12 in. Hose Length ##.# Inches HS-1130S Inner Dual Hose, 13 in. Part Type HS-1140S Inner Dual Hose, 14 in. HS = Hose HS-1150S Inner Dual Hose, 15 in. OUTER DUAL HOSES (180 degree connection) HS-1160S Inner Dual Hose, 16 in. Part Number Desciption HS-1090U Outer Dual Hose, 9 in. WIDE-BASE HOSES* (straight stem connection) HS-1100U Outer Dual Hose, 10 in. Part Number Description HS-1110U Outer Dual Hose, 11 in. HS-1080S Wide-base Hose, 8 in. HS-1120U Outer Dual Hose, 12 in. HS-1100S Wide-base Hose, 10 in. HS-1130U Outer Dual Hose, 13 in. *Wide-base hose kits include dual to wide conversion cap. part no. CROSS REFERENCE HOW TO MEASURe HOSES OLD PART NUMBERS NEW PART NUMBERS Hose lengths are measured from crimp to crimp. Part Number Hose 1 Hose 2 INNER DUAL/WIDE-BASE HOSES HS-2001D HS-1100U HS-1130S HS-2002D HS-1100U HS-1140S HS-2003D HS-1100U HS-1155S LENGTH OUTER DUAL HOSES HS-2002W HS-1080S n/a HS-2003W HS-1100S n/a LENGTH HS-2011R HS-1130S n/a HS-2012R HS-1140S n/a Contact Us HS-2013R HS-1155S n/a We’d be happy to answer your questions about HS-2014R HS-1165S n/a ordering the Halo or replacement parts. Call the 55-00002107 HS-1090U n/a number below and select (1) for sales or email HS-2022R HS-1100U n/a us. We look forward to hearing from you. HS-2023R HS-1110U n/a Phone +1 (650) 741-3231 HS-2031R HS-1080S n/a Website www.aperiatech.com HS-2032R HS-1100S n/a Sales [email protected] Doc No: 91-00006044 Rev: R01 .
Recommended publications
  • STEMCO Replacement Hoses - Update To: All Distributors of STEMCO Products
    BULLETIN NO. 575-0175 OCTOBER 7, 2020 STEMCO Replacement Hoses - Update To: All Distributors of STEMCO Products STEMCO is pleased to announce an update to our inflation system replacement hoses. The part numbers listed below are direct replacements for the Meritor - PSI MTIS hoses, Hendrickson and TireMaax CP & PRO hoses, and the Halo Tire Inflator System. This update includes an updated packaging quantity along with a new box design. The new quantity will be 8 hoses per box (previously 12 per box). This update will be effective October 15, 2020. Key benefits for this product include: ¡ Convenient fill/pressure check port for easy pressure checks without disconnecting a hose fitting ¡ Rugged, DOT approved hose material ¡ Performs well in high temperature environments Part Min/ Part Min/ Number Description Mult Number Description Mult 810-0057 Replaces Meritor PSI 31363-00 (19.5+, 180°) 8 19.5", 22.5" Wheels, Straight Fitting (Inner Wheel & WB Singles); 831-0520 8 Replaces Halo, HS-1120S, Inner Dual Hose, 12” 810-0058 Replaces Meritor PSI 31373-00 (19.5+, Straight) 8 831-0521 Replaces Halo, HS-1160S, Inner Dual Hose, 16" 8 810-0059 Replaces Meritor PSI 31364-00 (17.5-, 180°) 8 24.5" Wheels, Straight Fitting (Inner Wheel); 831-0522 8 810-0060 Replaces Meritor PSI 31374-00 (17.5-, Straight) 8 Replaces Halo, HS1130S, Inner Dual Hose, 13" Replaces Hendrickson VS-31503-1 (SS) and 810-0061 8 831-0526 Replaces Halo, HS-1080S, Wide-base Hose, 8" 8 VS-33767-1 (TP) (22.5” / 24.5”, Straight) 831-0518 Replaces Halo, HS-1110S, Inner Dual Hose, 11"
    [Show full text]
  • Charters: What Survives?
    Banner 4-final.qxp_Layout 1 01/11/2016 09:29 Page 1 Charters: what survives? Charters are our main source for twelh- and thirteenth-century Scotland. Most surviving charters were written for monasteries, which had many properties and privileges and gained considerable expertise in preserving their charters. However, many collections were lost when monasteries declined aer the Reformation (1560) and their lands passed to lay lords. Only 27% of Scottish charters from 1100–1250 survive as original single sheets of parchment; even fewer still have their seal attached. e remaining 73% exist only as later copies. Survival of charter collectionS (relating to 1100–1250) GEOGRAPHICAL SPREAD from inStitutionS founded by 1250 Our picture of documents in this period is geographically distorted. Some regions have no institutions with surviving charter collections, even as copies (like Galloway). Others had few if any monasteries, and so lacked large charter collections in the first place (like Caithness). Others are relatively well represented (like Fife). Survives Lost or unknown number of Surviving charterS CHRONOLOGICAL SPREAD (by earliest possible decade of creation) 400 Despite losses, the surviving documents point to a gradual increase Copies Originals in their use in the twelh century. 300 200 100 0 109 0s 110 0s 111 0s 112 0s 113 0s 114 0s 115 0s 116 0s 1170s 118 0s 119 0s 120 0s 121 0s 122 0s 123 0s 124 0s TYPES OF DONOR typeS of donor – Example of Melrose Abbey’s Charters It was common for monasteries to seek charters from those in Lay Lords Kings positions of authority in the kingdom: lay lords, kings and bishops.
    [Show full text]
  • Joint Special School Building Committee Nashua High School North, Lecture Hall Thursday, July 22, 2021 7:00 Pm Amended Meeting Agenda
    JOINT SPECIAL SCHOOL BUILDING COMMITTEE NASHUA HIGH SCHOOL NORTH, LECTURE HALL THURSDAY, JULY 22, 2021 7:00 PM AMENDED MEETING AGENDA COMMITTEE MEMBERS: Ald. Dowd, Ald. Harriott-Gathright, Ald. Klee, Ald. Lu, Ald. Wilshire, Ms. Bishop, Ms. Brown, Ms. Giglio, Ms. Johnson, Ms. Raymond. CALL TO ORDER ROLL CALL PREVIOUS MEETING MINUTES APPROVAL – June 24, 2021 REMARKS BY CHAIRMAN REMARKS BY SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION (if requested) ITEMS FOR DISCUSSION AND APPROVAL OF INVOICES Link to Agenda Items and Attachments 1. Architect’s Report - Harriman 2. Construction Manager’s Report – Harvey a. Change Order #003 – PMS b. Change Order #016 – FMS 3. IT Proposal for FMS and PMS 4. Invoice Approval – View Invoices Harriman Invoices, Total $99,947.15 i. #2106038, $69,414.11 - NMS ii. #2106039, $13,969.46 - FMS iii. #2106040, $16,563.58 - PMS b. Harvey Invoices, Total $2,096,638.20 i. 2020-003 #12, $750,502.31 – FMS ii. 2021-001 #4, $1,346,135.89 – PMS c. Hayner/Swanson, Inc Invoice i. #18117, $394.80 – NMS d. John Turner Consulting Invoice i. #2105010-01, $910.00 – PMS e. Page St Storage Invoice i. #237199. $95.00 – FMS f. Vanasse & Associates Invoices, Total $24,771.57 i. #39625, $6,446.80 – NMS ii. #39575, $15,024.04 – PMS iii. #39431, $3,300.73 – NMS g. Williams Scotsman Invoices, Total $79,700.30 i. #9010888722, $43,766.44 - FMS ii. #9010888725, $35,933.86 – FMS COMMENTS BY COMMITTEE MEMBERS NON-PUBLIC SESSION, IF NEEDED ADJOURNMENT Upcoming meetings: Thursday, August 26, 2021 JOINT SPECIAL SCHOOL BUILDING COMMITTEE THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 2021 NHS NORTH BOARD ROOM A meeting of the JSSBC was held at NHS North on Thursday, June 24, 2021.
    [Show full text]
  • The Diocese of Sodor Between N I Ð Aróss and Avignon – Rome, 1266
    Theð diocese of Sodor between Ni aróss and Avignon – Rome, 1266-1472 Sarah E. Thomas THE organisation and administration of the diocese of Sodor has been discussed by a number of scholars, either jointly with Argyll or in relation to 1 ð Norway. In 1266 the diocese of Sodor or Su reyjar encompassed the Hebrides and the Isle of Man, but by the end of the fourteenth century, it was divided between the Scottish Hebrides and English Man. The diocese’s origins lay in the Norseð kingdom of the Isles and Man and its inclusion in the province of Ni aróss can be traced back to the actions of Olaf 2 Godredsson in the 1150s.ð After the Treaty of Perth of 2 July 1266, Sodor remained within the Ni aróss church province whilst secular sovereignty 3 and patronage of the see had been transferred to the King of Scots. However, wider developments in the Christian world and the transfer of allegiance of Hebridean secular ðrulers from Norway to Scotland after 1266 would loosen Sodor’s ties to Ni aróss. This article examines the diocese of Sodor’s relationship with its metropolitan and the rather neglected area of its developing links with the papacy. It argues that the growing 1 A.I. Dunlop, ‘Notes on the Church in the Dioceses of Sodor and Argyll’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society 16 (1968) [henceforth RSCHS]; I.B. Cowan, ‘The Medieval Church in Argyll and the Isles’, RSCHS 20 (1978-80); A.D.M. Barrell, ‘The church in the West Highlands in the late middle ages’, Innes Review 54 (2003); A.
    [Show full text]
  • Urban Society and Communal Independence in Twelfth-Century Southern Italy
    Urban society and communal independence in Twelfth-Century Southern Italy Paul Oldfield Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of PhD. The University of Leeds The School of History September 2006 The candidate confirms that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. Acknowledgements I would like to express my thanks for the help of so many different people, without which there would simply have been no thesis. The funding of the AHRC (formerly AHRB) and the support of the School of History at the University of Leeds made this research possible in the first place. I am grateful too for the general support, and advice on reading and sources, provided by Dr. A. J. Metcalfe, Dr. P. Skinner, Professor E. Van Houts, and Donald Matthew. Thanks also to Professor J-M. Martin, of the Ecole Francoise de Rome, for his continual eagerness to offer guidance and to discuss the subject. A particularly large thanks to Mr. I. S. Moxon, of the School of History at the University of Leeds, for innumerable afternoons spent pouring over troublesome Latin, for reading drafts, and for just chatting! Last but not least, I am hugely indebted to the support, understanding and endless efforts of my supervisor Professor G. A. Loud. His knowledge and energy for the subject has been infectious, and his generosity in offering me numerous personal translations of key narrative and documentary sources (many of which are used within) allowed this research to take shape and will never be forgotten.
    [Show full text]
  • Board of County Commissioners Agenda Thursday, December 14,2017,9:00 Am Commission Chambers, Room B-11 I
    BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AGENDA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14,2017,9:00 AM COMMISSION CHAMBERS, ROOM B-11 I. PROCLAMATIONS/PRESENTATIONS 1. Presentation of FY 2017 annual report-Susan Duffy, Topeka Transit. 2. Presentation regarding the Equifest event to be held on February 23, 24, and 25, 2018-Justine Staten, Kansas Horse Council. 3. GraceMed Third Quarter Report-Alice Weingartner. 4. Overview of the Court's proposed evidence presentation system-Chuck Hydovitz, Court Administration. II. UNFINISHED BUSINESS III. CONSENT AGENDA 1. Acknowledge receipt of the December 13th Expocentre Advisory Board Meeting agenda and minutes of the November 8th meeting-Kansas Expocentre. 2. Acknowledge receipt of notice of Ambulance Advisory Board meetings in 2018 (January 24; April 25; July 25; and October 24, all at 4:00p.m. in the Topeka/Shawnee County Public Library }-Emergency Management. 3. Consider authorization and execution of Contract C448-2017 with Imaging Office Systems, Inc. (sole source) for annual maintenance of the PSIGEN optical scanning and indexing software in an amount of$4,725.00 with funding from the 2017 budget-Appraiser. 4. Acknowledge receipt of correspondence from Cox Communications regarding removal ofFM on Channel237 beginning January 1, 2018. IV. NEW BUSINESS A. COUNTY CLERK- Cynthia Beck 1. Consider all voucher payments. 2. Consider correction orders. B. COURT ADMINISTRATION- Chuck Hydovitz 1. Consider authorization and execution of Contract C449-2017 with Stenograph (sole source) for the purchase of four Court Reporter machines at a total cost of $21,180.00 with a trade-in discount of$5,600.00 for a final cost of$15,580.00 with funding from the 2017 budget.
    [Show full text]
  • Regnal Lists in East Slavic Chronicles 04 with Proof Corrections Inserted
    1 Sergei Bogatyrev (University College London) Memory and Politics in the Chronicle Lists of Princes, 12th-15th Centuries Abstract: This paper examines the lists of princes that can be found in the East Slavic chronicles compiled from the twelfth to the fifteenth century, including the Primary Chronicle and the Novgorodian chronicles. For the first time in the historiography, this work studies the corpus of princely lists as distinctive texts with specific cultural functions. The lists of princes were not reference tools but rather charters that validated political arrangements and shaped collective identities. On the basis of textual and formal analysis, the article demonstrates that the chronicle lists of princes legitimised kingship and served as a form of recorded collective memory for members of princely families and their Novgorodian allies. In a group of princely lists from the first half of the fifteenth century, the genealogical concepts of the Riurikid and Danilovichi dynasties appeared for the first time in East Slavic literature. These concepts reflected intensified contacts among literati in the East Slavic republic of letters and political changes caused by the expansionism of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the growth of the principalities of Moscow and Tver’. Key words: Genealogy, memory, dynasty, chronicle writing, lists of princes, Primary Chronicle, Novgorodian chronicles Lists of princes are one of the oldest genres of historical narrative. In East Slavic literature, princely lists appeared in the earliest existing chronicle, the Primary Chronicle, which was compiled in Kyiv under Prince Vladimir Vsevolodovich Monomakh in the 1110s. Later chronicles also feature numerous lists of princes.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Legitimate Rebellion and Condemn Usurpation of the Crown: Discourses of Fidelity and Treason in the Gesta Danorum of Saxo Grammaticus
    HOW TO LEGITIMATE REBELLION AND CONDEMN USURPATION OF THE CROWN: DISCOURSES OF FIDELITY AND TREASON IN THE GESTA DANORUM OF SAXO GRAMMATICUS Lars Hermanson The Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus’s voluminous work Gesta Dano- rum, composed c. 1190–1210, tells the story of the Danish people from pre- historic times until Knud VI’s conquest of Pomerania in 1185. Here I will deal with the period c. 1146–1178, in which Saxo tells how Duke Valdemar gained the throne and how he later had to defend his position against his kinsmen who tried to usurp the crown. Saxo Grammaticus and the Historical Background Ever since the assassination of Valdemar’s father Knud Lavard in 1131, Denmark had been a country torn by civil wars, as different branches of the royal family vied for the kingship. The Scandinavian bilateral system of kinship implied that the combatants’ hereditary claims were more or less equal. They were all descendants of King Svend Estridsen, who dur- ing the later part of the eleventh century had restored and enlarged the royal patrimony (see Figure 1: Descendants of Svend Estridsen). In order to gain the upper hand over their opponents, the contenders each cre- ated action groups composed of hand-picked kinsmen and allies from among the leading magnates of the realm.1 During the 1140s and 1150s the most powerful aristocratic network was the Trund clan, first and foremost represented by the renowned Archbishop Eskil. The “Trunds” possessed large estates and occupied high offices within the church and the royal administration. Between 1146 and 1157 a fierce war was fought between kings Svend Grathe (Erik Svendsen’s lineage) and Knud Magnussen (Niels Svendsen’s lineage).
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded from Brill.Com09/24/2021 05:15:28PM Via Free Access 318 Faletra Empire
    Chapter 11 Colonial Preoccupations in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s De gestis Britonum Michael Faletra Nearly three quarters of the way through the sweep of legendary history that constitutes Geoffrey of Monmouth’s De gestis Britonum, the narrative grinds almost to a halt. Whereas parts of the history had glossed over dozens of kings and hundreds of years, sometimes in a page or two, the pace of events lead- ing up to the reign of King Arthur had steadily slowed, only to arrive at a near standstill in Geoffrey’s description of Arthur’s Plenary Court. It is a moment of great political importance, the celebration of the king’s victory both over the Saxons who had plagued the realm for a generation and over much of what is now France: like several of his more successful predecessors on the British throne, Arthur returns to Britain a conqueror. The Plenary Court held to stage Arthur’s coronation and to celebrate his glorious new order takes place on Pentecost in the Welsh city of Caerleon: “Located in Glamorgan on the River Usk at a lovely site not far from where the Severn empties into the sea, it had an abundance of riches greater than that of any other city and was thus an excellent place to hold a high feast.”1 No expense is spared, Geoffrey reminds his Anglo-Norman readers, and he treats them to lavish descriptions of the coronation processions, the splendid regalia, the celebratory games, and the feasting for many hundreds of guests – all of which seem calculated to drive home the fact that ancient Britain had attained a cultural pinnacle:
    [Show full text]
  • The Eucharist in Twelfth-Century Literature
    University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK Theses and Dissertations 5-2016 Hoc Est Corpus Meum: The uchE arist in Twelfth- Century Literature Lindsey Zachary Panxhi University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd Part of the History of Religion Commons, Medieval History Commons, and the Medieval Studies Commons Recommended Citation Panxhi, Lindsey Zachary, "Hoc Est Corpus Meum: The uchE arist in Twelfth-Century Literature" (2016). Theses and Dissertations. 1499. http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/1499 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Hoc Est Corpus Meum: The Eucharist in Twelfth-Century Literature A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English by Lindsey Zachary Panxhi John Brown University Bachelor of Arts in English, 2009 University of Arkansas Master of Arts in English, 2011 May 2016 University of Arkansas This dissertation is approved for recommendation to the Graduate Council. _______________________________ Dr. William Quinn Dissertation Director _______________________________ ___________________________________ Dr. Joshua Byron Smith Dr. Mary Beth Long Committee Member Committee Member Abstract In “Hoc Est Corpus Meum: The Eucharist in Twelfth-Century Literature,” I analyze the appearance of the Eucharist as a sacred motif in secular lais, romances, and chronicles. The Eucharist became one of the most controversial intellectual topics of the High Middle Ages. While medieval historians and religious scholars have long recognized that the twelfth century was a critical period in which many eucharistic doctrines were debated and affirmed, literary scholars have given very little attention to the concurrent emergence of eucharistic themes in twelfth-century literature.
    [Show full text]
  • (2019-2020) Advisor Program Building Room Number
    Atlanta Technical College Arts and Sciences STUDENT ADVISEMENT (2019-2020) ADVISOR PROGRAM BUILDING ROOM TELEPHONE STUDENT NUMBER NUMBER E-MAIL ADDRESS LAST NAME Sonya McCoy-Wilson, Ed.D. Dean Academic Complex C2107 404-225-4672 smccoy- [email protected] Beverly Jackson Program Assistant Academic Complex C2107 404-225-4594 [email protected] Cassandra Parker, Lead Instructor Mathematics Academic Complex C1210 404-225-4119 [email protected] Kathy Griffin, Lead Instructor Academic Complex C1210 404-225-4526 [email protected] Math Academic Complex Physics Academic Complex Kimberly Crews, Chairperson English and Humanities Academic Complex C2107C 404-225-5055 [email protected] Art Appreciation Academic Complex English Academic Complex German Academic Complex History Academic Complex Humanities Academic Complex Interpersonal Relations Academic Complex Reading Academic Complex Speech Academic Complex Theater Academic Complex Interdisciplinary Studies, Academic Complex AAS Degree 1 Atlanta Technical College Arts and Sciences STUDENT ADVISEMENT (2019-2020) ADVISOR PROGRAM BUILDING ROOM TELEPHONE STUDENT NUMBER NUMBER E-MAIL ADDRESS LAST NAME Ronald Laws, Chairperson First Year Experience and Academic Complex C2118 404-225-4628 [email protected] Social Sciences Economics Academic Complex Psychology Academic Complex Sociology Academic Complex Academic Success Center Academic Complex C2118 404-225-4628 Early College Essentials, Academic Complex TCC 2 Atlanta Technical College Business and Public Service Technologies
    [Show full text]
  • Provider Reimbursement Manual Medicaid Services (CMS) Part 2, Provider Cost Reporting Forms and Instructions, Chapter 35, Form CMS-2540-96
    Department of Health and Medicare Human Services (DHHS) Centers for Medicare and Provider Reimbursement Manual Medicaid Services (CMS) Part 2, Provider Cost Reporting Forms and Instructions, Chapter 35, Form CMS-2540-96 Transmittal 16 Date: OCTOBER 2008 HEADER SECTION NUMBERS PAGES TO INSERT PAGES TO DELETE 3508 (Cont.) – 3509.1 (Cont.) 35-15– 35-18.1(5pp.) 35-15– 35-18.1 (5pp.) 3511.3 – 3511.3 (Cont.) 35-22.1– 35-22.2 (2pp.) 35-22.1– 35-22.2 (2pp.) 3534.3 (Cont.) – 3534.4 35-73 – 35-76 (4pp.) 35-73 – 35-76 (4pp.) 3565 (Cont.) – 3566 (Cont.) 35-121 – 35-124 (4pp.) 35-121 – 35-124 (4pp.) 3590 (Cont.) – 3590 (Cont.) 35-303 – 35-308 (6pp.) 35-303 – 35-308 (6pp.) 35-355 – 35-356 (2pp.) 35-355 – 35-356 (2pp.) 35-389 – 35-402(14pp.) 35-389 – 35-402 (14pp.) 3595 (Cont.) – 3595 (Cont.) 35-503 – 35-505.1 (4pp.) 35-503 – 35-505.1 (4pp.) 35-511.2 – 35.514 (4pp.) 35-511.2 – 35.514 (4pp.) 35-516.1 – 35-518 (3pp.) 35-516.1 – 35-518 (3pp.) 35-519 – 35-520 (2pp.) 35-519 – 35-520 (2pp.) 35-533 – 35-534 (2pp.) 35-533 – 35-534 (2pp.) 35-539 – 35-540 (2pp.) 35-539 – 35-540 (2pp.) 35-545 – 35-546 (2pp.) 35-545 – 35-546 (2pp.) 35-563 – 35-569 (7pp.) 35-563 – 35-569 (7pp.) NEW/REVISED MATERIAL--EFFECTIVE DATE: This transmittal updates Chapter 35, Skilled Nursing Facility Complex Cost Report, Form CMS 2540-96, to reflect further clarification to existing instructions.
    [Show full text]