View Full Version : Old Beer Can? Identify This...
StaticCling
03-13-2015, 6:17pm
I found two of these a few weeks ago when raking pine needles and pine cones up on the mountain. I also found a rusty old pop top can. I tossed them. I have a contractor building a dog run for me up here, and it looks like he unearthed another one.
http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d186/Air1070/Mobile%20Uploads/image_zpsh3rqfb8b.jpg
http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d186/Air1070/Mobile%20Uploads/image_zpsouyv1l9b.jpg
http://i35.photobucket.com/albums/d186/Air1070/Mobile%20Uploads/image_zpsrbs1wbbe.jpg
I included the modern 12oz can for comparison. Too small for oil can.
:waiting:
island14
03-13-2015, 6:21pm
Hard to tell now, but I remember them..
Dad always had a "Church Key" he called it on is key chain. :D
My Uncle Jiggs could belch .."Stroh's Beer"
We were so very proud of him. :datawiz:
CertInsaneC5
03-13-2015, 6:32pm
I used to collect old ones like that as a kid. But that one is way far gone unless you can expose "something" on it I have no idea.
StaticCling
03-13-2015, 6:42pm
I used to collect old ones like that as a kid. But that one is way far gone unless you can expose "something" on it I have no idea.
Yeah, the ones that are here are sort of buried. And with all the snow and rain up here, they are toast. I have found old bottles and cans down the hill that are in good shape, but I have never seen ones that require a 'church key' to open.
I remember pop tops as a kid, and big cans of juice that would require the little tool to open, but never individual cans...
mrvette
03-13-2015, 6:44pm
Still have a few 'church keys'.....used to call them that also....
I went to remodel my hall bath some years ago, found a beer can in the wall, drank one myself, and added to the lore......
in a few decades the next fellow gets his turn.....
:seasix::D
MrPeabody
03-13-2015, 7:06pm
My recollection is that the last beer and soda cans that needed a tool to open went away in the early to mid 60s.
Grey Ghost
03-13-2015, 7:13pm
I still remember opening some cans in the '70s like that. I have gone to old home sites and raked through the trash pile for old bottles.
Burro (He/Haw)
03-13-2015, 7:15pm
The church key opening. Reminds me of my dad and his cronies. :cert:
island14
03-13-2015, 7:32pm
I remember pop tops as a kid, and big cans of juice that would require the little tool to open, but never individual cans...
Kinda of a side note on improvements over the years, but we still do not have twist off caps on the beer bottles here. :yesnod:
The last time I was in the states I opened up the beers using another beer bottle as an opener using my hand grip for the wedge Filipino style.
After watching me open a few... my buddy looked at me with a grin and said..
"You do know that those twist off now don'tcha" :Jeff '79:
Actually I did know that at one time.. but had forgot as I have been away too long.. :lol:
island14
03-13-2015, 7:36pm
My recollection is that the last beer and soda cans that needed a tool to open went away in the early to mid 60s.
Later 60's maybe early 70's I think. :island14:
Back before zip lock baggies.. when Mom still wrapped our PJ & Jelly sandwiches for school lunches in foil or saran wrap. :lol:
JRD77VET
03-13-2015, 7:45pm
definitely old beverage can :yesnod: Large opening for liquid and the small one for air :datawiz:
MrPeabody
03-13-2015, 7:47pm
Later 60's maybe early 70's I think. :island14:
Back before zip lock baggies.. when Mom still wrapped our PJ & Jelly sandwiches for school lunches in foil or saran wrap. :lol:
Don't forget waxed paper.:yesnod:
Don't forget waxed paper.:yesnod:
Yep.
Waxed paper. Brown bag.
JRD77VET
03-13-2015, 7:58pm
Don't forget waxed paper.:yesnod:
Then taking the wax paper out to recess to make the sliding board faster. ( and hoped you didn't get busted my the old bittie Miss Heckler and get marched right up to the principal's office :lol: )
63C2splitter
03-13-2015, 9:55pm
In 71, flip top cans were available, but in Vietnam, the beer we got required a church key to open (Budweiser). I think they packaged it that way to minimize damage in transit.
Milton Fox
03-13-2015, 10:07pm
Paint shade looks similiar, but this maybe an earler version.
http://www.worldofbeerbottles.com/beer/image/coors%20can.jpg
My recollection is that the last beer and soda cans that needed a tool to open went away in the early to mid 60s.
1967 for sure need an opener. We had at least one opener in every room of the house and they were very well used.
Steve Austin
03-13-2015, 10:49pm
I was popping tops in 71 I think. I do remember my parents opening steel cans the old fashioned way as a kid. They always drank it from a glass though.
MrPeabody
03-13-2015, 11:07pm
Beverage can - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beverage_can#Opening_mechanisms)
CertInsaneC5
03-13-2015, 11:32pm
Paint shade looks similiar, but this maybe an earler version.
http://www.worldofbeerbottles.com/beer/image/coors%20can.jpg
The local sure would be right. But the only thing that can is good for now is trash. :cert:
04 commemorative
03-14-2015, 10:36am
Dad,Grandpa and Uncle used to drink this,many church keys around lol.
We ( I was 6) built cement stairs in back of house and in the cinder blocks are many of these cans !
https://search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?p=horlacher+beer+can&ei=UTF-8&hspart=mozilla&hsimp=yhs-003
NCC-1701
03-14-2015, 12:07pm
Looks like someone was using it for crack...:lol:
GS Ragtop
03-14-2015, 1:16pm
My great-grandad called those 'fertilizer'. He must have thrown a few thousand empty PBR cans in the vegetable garden behind his garage.
PBR= Pabst Blue Ribbon. "A real beer for real men" he always said just before he'd belch. Made us kids laugh every time. :rofl:
mrvette
03-14-2015, 8:41pm
Went for a short hike through some trails in the Grass Valley mountains today, and so passed an acre of burnt out forest, trees laid flat and others all burnt bark and so I did not notice the metal cans until the return trip....one looked like a gallon of gasoline, and some other church key type beer cans and a soup looking can....labels all rusted away....some drunks on camping accident??
anyway it was funny, my son commented they went ape shit knocking down fires near any houses....and the leaves/pine needles and fallen/rotting wood sure as hell makes a good fuel source.....
:issues:
Bucwheat
03-15-2015, 3:05pm
Boy,we are a bunch of old fuggers here ,aren't we? I remember my dad opening those cans with a church key, we used to open them with a hunting knife in a pinch.
StaticCling
03-15-2015, 3:08pm
anyway it was funny, my son commented they went ape shit knocking down fires near any houses....and the leaves/pine needles and fallen/rotting wood sure as hell makes a good fuel source.....
:issues:
:yesnod:
San Bernardino County (where my cabin is) requires property owners to remove Pine Needles/Cones annually. They fine you if it isn't done by the end of June.
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