I love my 1990's vintage gas cans:
![[Hearth.com] For the love of simple gas cans... [Hearth.com] For the love of simple gas cans...](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72703-51718749e193c055e4da59242e4b700d.jpg?hash=7mCObYfBP3)
Dirt simple, fixed spout, vent cap, heavy and durable (at least by today's standards). Seems this is all one could buy ca.1995, and I had no problem with that.
I've bought and tossed a half dozen gas cans since, and haven't found anything acceptable. For a while, all the cans had stupid retractable nozzels, which you had to push down into the fuel to put the cap on, meaning you got your hands wet with gasoline every time you removed the cap and withdrew the spout. Now, seems they all have these stupid "spill proof" designs, which cause me to spill more gas all overmyself than I ever did with the old technology.
Where can one still buy the gas can shown in the photo above? Why did they have to mess with a good design?
![[Hearth.com] For the love of simple gas cans... [Hearth.com] For the love of simple gas cans...](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72703-51718749e193c055e4da59242e4b700d.jpg?hash=7mCObYfBP3)
Dirt simple, fixed spout, vent cap, heavy and durable (at least by today's standards). Seems this is all one could buy ca.1995, and I had no problem with that.
I've bought and tossed a half dozen gas cans since, and haven't found anything acceptable. For a while, all the cans had stupid retractable nozzels, which you had to push down into the fuel to put the cap on, meaning you got your hands wet with gasoline every time you removed the cap and withdrew the spout. Now, seems they all have these stupid "spill proof" designs, which cause me to spill more gas all overmyself than I ever did with the old technology.
Where can one still buy the gas can shown in the photo above? Why did they have to mess with a good design?