Carryover product losses cut. (Plant & Equipment).American American, river, 30 mi (48 km) long, rising in N central Calif. in the Sierra Nevada and flowing SW into the Sacramento River at Sacramento. The discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill (see Sutter, John Augustus) along the river in 1848 led to the California gold rush of organisation The Witte Company have developed a fluid bed drying system which features an integral bag collector unit that captures 100% of entrained product and returns the fine material into the fluid bed for processing. Key features of the system include vertical airflow engineering, and an integral bag collector unit situated on top of the fluid bed. The placement of the unit above the vertical airstream allows the high airflow which increases drying capacity and reduces required dryer size, whilst simultaneously saving the 10% of product loss commonly accepted as carryover carryover n. in taxation accounting, using a tax year's deductions, business losses or credits to apply to the following year's tax return to reduce the tax liability. (See: carryback) in remote dust collection systems. In addition, the compact Witte system eliminates the need for the complex ductwork duct·work n. A group or system of ducts: installed new ductwork in the building. , conveyors, drums, handling equipment, maintenance crews and downtime The time during which a computer is not functioning due to hardware, operating system or application program failure. associated with remote dust collection systems. |
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