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New way to save fuel:

MaxOHMSMaxOHMS Member Posts: 14,715
edited September 2013 in General Discussion
Put some in one of those federally mandated safety spout gas containers.

You will not be able to pour gas out of that worthless thing.

(Edited for bad spelling due to high blood pressure caused by severe frustration.)

Comments

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    shilowarshilowar Member Posts: 38,815 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Yep I can not put gas in my wife's Subaru with one, I have to get one of my old spouts to do it.
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    MercuryMercury Member Posts: 7,809 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    They are like that for ONE simple reason: Blitz (the giant gas can maker) convinced the government to switch to that design! Guess who owns the patent on that design? You get ONE guess! [xx(]


    Merc
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    Don McManusDon McManus Member Posts: 23,497 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Good to know I am not alone.

    I thought I were some kind of ijiot.
    Freedom and a submissive populace cannot co-exist.

    Brad Steele
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    MaxOHMSMaxOHMS Member Posts: 14,715
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by Mercury
    They are like that for ONE simple reason: Blitz (the giant gas can maker) convinced the government to switch to that design! Guess who owns the patent on that design? You get ONE guess! [xx(]


    Merc


    Does the patent belong to a cozy Eastern couple?

    Possibly a corporate entity that is in bed with another much larger and way more powerful corporate entity (the USA)?
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    wpagewpage Member Posts: 10,204 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
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    AlpineAlpine Member Posts: 15,061 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Found that garbage (I don't want to run afoul of the word censor) in the spout of my flat tank for my ATV.

    The milling machine took care of all obstructions in the nozzle.
    ?The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.?
    Margaret Thatcher

    "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
    Mark Twain
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    the middlethe middle Member Posts: 3,089
    edited November -1
    if you remove the spring, they work much better. The best way to remove the spring is simply to twist the spout till the sping breaks.
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    givettegivette Member Posts: 10,886
    edited November -1
    Got two USGI MILSPEC surplus 5gal jerry cans on E-bay. Even went the extra yard, and got an authentic USGI 'donkey dick' lever locking spout.

    Man, was I one happy clown!

    So, I come to realize that I have to knock out that little spring loaded trap-door on my car's tank, and widen the hole, as the spout won't fit in my tank.

    Back to square one. Ugh.


    Joe
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    Sig220_Ruger77Sig220_Ruger77 Member Posts: 12,748 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by Don McManus
    Good to know I am not alone.

    I thought I were some kind of ijiot.


    They are ridiculous aren't they!?!? I have spilled more gas with those pieces of crap then I ever did when I was younger and more careless and mowing lawn for a living.

    Jon
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    beneteaubeneteau Member Posts: 8,553 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
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    bullshotbullshot Member Posts: 14,357 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:Originally posted by beneteau

    Problem solved

    EZ-Pour replacement spout






    The problem with this is that you are putting a $10. spout on a $6. gas can.
    If these were $2. - $5. they would be worth the money and they would probably sell millions more than they do now.
    "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you"
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    JasonVJasonV Member Posts: 2,480 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Auctions and yard sales have the old gas cans and I am buying them up.
    formerly known as warpig883
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    Ditch-RunnerDitch-Runner Member Posts: 24,609 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    +100 same here for 2 to 10 bucks buy them when I find them , wife thinks I am a gas can hoarder [:I] also

    quote:Originally posted by JasonV
    Auctions and yard sales have the old gas cans and I am buying them up.
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    e3mrke3mrk Member Posts: 1,851 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I had one for five minutes before My Kid's modified it to work.
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    WMClarkWMClark Member Posts: 821
    edited November -1
    Funny that this came up. I had been looking around for a couple of replacement Jerry Cans. No one carries them any more. I finally found some labeled "For non potable water use only" & "Federal law prohibits the storage of fuel"

    I got to hunting around the net and found this. If you read the article it seems that this was another of California" great ideas.

    http://lfb.org/today/how-government-wrecked-the-gas-can/

    A small quote from the article.
    The whole trend began in (wait for it) California. Regulations began in 2000, with the idea of preventing spillage. The notion spread and was picked up by the EPA, which is always looking for new and innovative ways to spread as much human misery as possible.

    An ominous regulatory announcement from the EPA came in 2007: ?_oStarting with containers manufactured in 2009?_? it is expected that the new cans will be built with a simple and inexpensive permeation barrier and new spouts that close automatically.?__

    The government never said ?_ono vents.?__ It abolished them de facto with new standards that every state had to adopt by 2009. So for the last three years, you have not been able to buy gas cans that work properly. They are not permitted to have a separate vent. The top has to close automatically. There are other silly things now, too, but the biggest problem is that they do not do well what cans are supposed to do.

    And don?_Tt tell me about spillage. It is far more likely to spill when the gas is gurgling out in various uneven ways, when one spout has to both pour and suck in air. That?_Ts when the lawn mower tank becomes suddenly full without warning, when you are shifting the can this way and that just to get the stuff out.

    There?_Ts also the problem of the exploding can. On hot days, the plastic models to which this regulation applies can blow up like balloons. When you release the top, gas flies everywhere, including possibly on a hot engine. Then the trouble really begins.

    Never heard of this rule? You will know about it if you go to the local store. Most people buy one or two of these items in the course of a lifetime, so you might otherwise have not encountered this outrage.

    Yet let enough time go by. A whole generation will come to expect these things to work badly. Then some wise young entrepreneur will have the bright idea, ?_oHey, let?_Ts put a hole on the other side so this can work properly.?__ But he will never be able to bring it into production. The government won?_Tt allow it because it is protecting us!
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    Ray BRay B Member Posts: 11,822
    edited November -1
    One more reason to vacation in Canada, so that I can grey market some gas cans. Government FOR the people?
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    grdad45grdad45 Member Posts: 5,320 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Quick and easy vent for plastic gas cans:
    Buy a tire valve stem (shortest one you can find)
    Determine where the vent should be located on your can.
    Carefully drill a 1/2" hole in that position. Start with a new can if using a power drill! Sparks and all, you know.
    Remove the valve innards from the valve and discard.
    Run a stiff wire from the new hole out of the spout hole.
    Thread the valve onto the wire, bending the wire to a 90 degree bend.
    Simply pull the valve out and snap it into the hole you drilled.
    Screw the valve cap on to seal, remove to vent!

    I have three of them fixed like that. No problems so far.
    BTW, I cut the hole in two of them with my pocket knife.
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    wpagewpage Member Posts: 10,204 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Originally posted by grdad45
    Quick and easy vent for plastic gas cans:
    Buy a tire valve stem (shortest one you can find)
    Determine where the vent should be located on your can.
    Carefully drill a 1/2" hole in that position. Start with a new can if using a power drill! Sparks and all, you know.
    Remove the valve innards from the valve and discard.
    Run a stiff wire from the new hole out of the spout hole.
    Thread the valve onto the wire, bending the wire to a 90 degree bend.
    Simply pull the valve out and snap it into the hole you drilled.
    Screw the valve cap on to seal, remove to vent!

    I have three of them fixed like that. No problems so far.
    BTW, I cut the hole in two of them with my pocket knife.


    Can I get a visual on that...
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