New EPA friendly gas cans

spacejamz

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
10,945
1,622
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So I bought some new 2.5 gallas gas cans a few years ago without realizing there was a rule that changed the design of the spout...it is supposed to reduce gas vapors when pouring gas but these new spouts are pretty much worthless and gas goes everywhere when you use them.

makes you wonder if the idiots who designed them actually tried putting gas into a something using it...

Anyone else had fun using the newly designed spouts?

Found some old school spout replacements on Amazon so all is right in the world again...


article on this:

best line from the article:
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lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
59,760
10,254
126
NO-SPILL™ cans are EPA compliant, and a better can has never been made of any material or price. They cost a little more than the average plastic can, but are worth every penny. If the spout breaks, a new one can be bought for ~$14, but the spouts don't fit any other can.

Otherwise, I had one old plastic can with a reasonable old school spout + 4 other newer shitty epa cans. I bought a bag of vents on amazon, installed them on all the cans, and only use the epa spouts to plug the top. When I want to pour from it, I put on the old school spout to pour it into my NO-SPILL™ can. I stock 15G-20G of fuel to power my small equipment, so I need a few cans. My system works well enough, but I'd rather have all NO-SPILL™ cans.
 

Micrornd

Golden Member
Mar 2, 2013
1,351
223
106
The only thing fuel cans I ever authorized for use at work were color-coded Safety cans. Any plastic cans found were immediately emptied, cut up and thrown in the dumpster and the buyer strongly reminded of who he worked for.
What say you Greeman?
 
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Ken g6

Programming Moderator, Elite Member
Moderator
Dec 11, 1999
16,672
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I still have one plastic gas can. I have to unscrew the top entirely when I want to pour it into a mower.

But since I moved and left the old mower behind I got all electric lawn equipment, which is much less messy. :)
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,165
6,394
136
I still have one plastic gas can. I have to unscrew the top entirely when I want to pour it into a mower.

But since I moved and left the old mower behind I got all electric lawn equipment, which is much less messy. :)
I have one of those cans that's a puzzle I have to work out before I can dispense some gas into my mower. While the system is a little arcane, it does work.

I also left my mower behind when I moved, and bought a new gas mower at my new place. For no reason that I can think of I never considered an electric mower, though I did buy an electric string trimmer. I honestly wish I had just bought a 36" stand on mower. A couple thousand bucks more money but would have worked out better for me.
 

spacejamz

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
10,945
1,622
126
I never had an issue with plastic fuel cans as we rarely had them on the job.

I think the main issue with these cans is the venting system...the vent is actually in the spout. When you first pour, the air inside has no way to escape (in a traditional can, you pop the vent cap). So when you start pouring, a burst of air causes a surge of gas to spit out everywhere...assuming you were able to line up the plastic trigger on something that actually opens the spout.
 

lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
59,760
10,254
126
NO-SPILL. You press the button first with the can upright to release pressure, then pour like normal, using the button to control flow. You can fill a chainsaw without spilling a drop cause the flow control's so precise. It also pours fast for bulk filling. Not as fast as a wide open tube, but it's cleaner, especially with 5G cans that can be a little hard to start clean when the can's full.