Sunday, March 8, 2009

This is a kind of small-type garden machinery, it has such characteristic as simple structure, easy operational system and popular outlook..........

This is a kind of small-type garden machinery, it has such characteristic as simple structure, easy operational system and popular outlook and can be used in field, garden, orchard, etc. And can do the work such as cultivation, plough and so on.

Body Size (mm) 1380 *650 *970
N. W( kg ) 55.4
Tilling Scope(mm) 800-1200
Tilling Depth(mm) 150-250
Gear Shifting 0, 1, 2 grade or-1, 0, 1 grade
Transmission Type Belt
Transmission Oil Capacity (L) 0.95
Engine Engine Model WM168FB
Bore*Stroke(mm ) 68 * 54
Displacemen(ml )196
Compression Ratio 8.5: 1
Max. Power output HP/rpm 6.5 (4.8) /3600
Rated power HP(Kw)/rpm 5.5 (4.0 ) /3600
Max. Torque (M. M/rpm) 13/2500
Fuel Oil capacity( L ) 3.6
Engine Oil capacity( L ) 0.6
Min. Fuel consumption g/KW. 395

Friday, February 27, 2009

www.ez2.me


A formal garden in the Western gardening traditionis a neat and ordered garden laid out in carefully planned geometric and symmetric lines. Lawns and hedges in a formal garden must always be kept neatly clipped. Trees, shrubs, subshrubs and other foliage are carefully arranged, shaped and continually trimmed. A French garden is a specific kind of formal garden, laid out in the manner of André Le Nôtre; it is centered on the façade of a building, with radiating avenues and paths of gravel, lawns, parterres and pools (bassins) of reflective water enclosed in geometric shapes by stone coping, with fountains and sculpture.

The simplest formal garden would be a box-trimmed hedge lining or enclosing a carefully laid out flowerbed or garden bed of simple geometric shape, such as a knot garden. The most elaborate formal gardens contain pathways, statuary, fountains and beds on differing levels.

The French formal garden had its origins in sixteenth-century Italian gardens such as Boboli Gardens behind Palazzo Pitti, Florence, laid out by a series of architect-designers for the Grand Duchess Eleanor of Toledo. The formal parterre of clipped evergreens was transferred to France, where some of the earliest formal parterres were those laid out at Anet. Claude Mollet, the founder of a dynasty of nurserymen-designers that lasted deep into the 18th century, introduced the formal parterre.