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Download as PDF; Printable version ... move to sidebar hide. Goulds may refer to: Goulds , Florida, United States ... Gould (disambiguation) Goulds Pumps; Goulds Road ...
The Goulds Pumps/ITT Industries 200 was a NASCAR Busch Series race held at Nazareth Speedway in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. Originally a 300 lap race, it was added to the Busch Series schedule in 1988 and last run in 2004 , after the owners, International Speedway Corporation , closed the facility.
The ITT Industries & Goulds Pumps Salute to the Troops 250 was a NASCAR Busch Series stock car race held at Pikes Peak International Raceway, in Fountain, Colorado. It was added to the Busch Series schedule in 1998 and last run in 2005 , after the owners of PPIR, International Speedway Corporation , closed the facility.
Grundfos (Danish pronunciation: [ˈkʁɔnfʌs]) is the largest pump manufacturer in the world, based in Denmark, with more than 19,000 employees globally.. The annual production of more than 16 million pump units, circulator pumps (UP), submersible pumps (SP), and centrifugal pumps (CR).
Warman centrifugal pump in a coal preparation plant application A pair of centrifugal pumps for circulating hot water within a hydronic heating system. Centrifugal pumps are used to transport fluids by the conversion of rotational kinetic energy to the hydrodynamic energy of the fluid flow. The rotational energy typically comes from an engine ...
An early documentation of the design occurred sometime between 1174 and 1206 AD in the Artuqid State (modern Turkey), when inventor Al-Jazari described a machine which incorporated the connecting rod with a crankshaft to pump water as part of a water-raising machine, [8] [9] though the device was more complex than typical crank and connecting ...
Gould in 1940. Gould was born in New York City in 1920. [2] He was the oldest of three sons. His father was the founding editor of Scholastic Magazine Publications in New York City. [3]
The Birds of Australia is a book written by John Gould and published in seven volumes between 1840 and 1848, with a supplement published between 1851 and 1869. [1] It was the first comprehensive survey of the birds of Australia and included descriptions of 681 species, 328 of which were new to Western science and were first described by Gould.