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Old 28-02-11, 03:14
rob love rob love is online now
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I would think that 99% of the ferret can brackets would have been the rounded style. Mind you, many of the Canadian ferrets also had locally made bracket/baskets which held both cans.

As to the water cans, the black plastic came in during the 70s I believe. Prior to that, the large mouth water can similar to the jerry can was in service. They are still to be found in excellent shape in the local military scrapyard.

The plastic jerry cans were a product of the mid 80s. There was also a more commercial design out there for a couple years in the early 80s, but it did not accept the horsecock, nor the fuel adapters for generators or yukon stoves. Seems to me Ed had photos of the various jerry cans in an article in Army Motors years back.
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Old 28-02-11, 03:54
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Scott Bentley Scott Bentley is offline
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Although they are as rare as hens teeth, a 20 litre Plastic Can also existed for Naptha, having a blue tab instead.

I'm not sure what the nexus was for changing to the plastic cans, but if it was for environmental reasons I'd laugh, as Jon pointed out, the adaptors (horse cocks) both old and new leak like crazy. Also, nothing like trying to get the cap off of a can that was filled in previously cold weather. They could have at least put bigger nubs on the cap for the hammer beatings to remove the cap. I've also seen more than one split open when dropped off of the top on an APC.
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Old 28-02-11, 04:25
rob love rob love is online now
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The plastic jerry can was the greatest advance made in decades for the maintainer, especially when combined with the refuelling pods. The old steel cans would flake their lining, after being mushroomed off the back of the 5 tons. These pieces would either clog the screen on the horsecock (at which time the frustrated driver would either punch a hole in the screen or remove it altogether) or the pieces would go directly into the fuel system of the vehicles. The M113s were especially susceptible to them. They would get caught up in the quick disconnects at the powerpack, and starve the engines for fuel.

We still had problems with the plastic cans. The cans would be left with their tops off, or else get contaminated thru misuse like filling them with hull sludge. Guys would also use them for other liquids like antifreeze and not mark the can. It would end up being poured into a vehicle, and we (the mechanics) would then have to drain and purge the entire fuel system. Any small amounts of water in them would collect in the bottom of fuel tanks, and then freeze up the lines of the LSVWs at their low spots. But these are more the acts of carelessness of the operators than problems with the cans.

I have also seen where the plastic cans would catch fire when being filled on very cold, dry days. They did not ground like the old metal cans.

There were 4 or 5 different straps you could order for the cans to denote what liquid is in them. Besides the gas and diesel, and the naptha that Scotty mentioned, there was also one for decontamination fluid.
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