Anyone else recall pre-pull-tab pop machines having a slot in them a bit bigger than the can, with a triangular punch on a hinge that was pushed down to open the can?
Sometimes the punch was beyond filthy. Probably held back the eradication of smallpox.
A lot of stuff like that is buried in landfills, or floating in those enormous “garbage islands” in the middle of the ocean.
I’m not sure what is really worse though. Stuff that doesn’t decay very fast may be unsightly, but that also means it isn’t interacting with the biosphere too much. Stuff that decays fast like sewage may not hang around for decades, but it affects the stuff that’s eating it more than something that just sits there.
I don’t see how. Smallpox is spread by airborne breath particles or direct saliva contact from an infected person. For these can openers to have been a vector for smallpox, an infected person would have to have sucked on his unopened can, then opened it with the opener on the machine, and then another person would have had to soon afterwards opened his can on that same opener.
Besides, smallpox had eradicated from the USA a decade before soda pop was sold in cans in vending machines.
Some cans of Chinese beer (notably the 330ml cans of Tsingtao) still come with the old-style pull tab. A very nostalgic brew but I no longer drop the thing into the can like I (and everyone I knew) used to.
Are you sure it’s a freshness issue? I figured it was due to the higher pressure of a carbonated drink needed a sturdier cap. Non-carbonated drinks can use a weaker (and cheaper) tape cap.
I remember when I was a Boy Scout that we used to make chains out of the pull tabs at summer camp. There was a long chain attached near the vending machine and we were encouraged to add our tabs to the chain instead of throwing individual ones in the trash or on the ground.
If I remember correctly it took a bit of strength to pull the tab off correctly. You had to pull it off smooth and straight or the ring had a tendency to snap off, then what. Well you could use a pair of pliers to puff the tab off or pour the contents through a very small hole, decisions, decisions.
In import stores here you occasionally see non-European soft drinks with the ring pull yokeys. They went out here around about 1988/89. What I miss is Supercans though, 500ml of fizzy pop goodness.
No, no, no. I remember kids (Chinatown, NYC, in the late 70s) pulling the pop top HALFWAY open, so it was still connected. Then the really cool kids (yes, like me, how’d you guess?) would insert a straw through the “finger pull” circle and into the can. If you were the coolest, you’d somehow shove your finger through the loop as well (painful, but hipness often is) and nonchalantly stroll around, sipping your Coke. Which was often almost empty, because you couldn’t throw it in a bin when you’d spent all that time making sure you you were looking cool.
I tried to find a church key at the store the other day and couldn’t find one. There was a time when the little church key/bottle opener combos were ubiquitously attached magnetically to every refrigerator in the world. Damn, now I can’t find my buggy whip either.
I ask because I have never seen a soda can, ever in my life, that didn’t have one of these on it. And these things are what I have always called “pull tabs.” And googling “soda pop pull tab” yields images of these things. Yet the thread seems to be saying there have not been pull tabs on sodas in years.
No, we’re talking about the old-style pull tabs that looked like this. You pulled the ring part up and stuck your finger through the ring. Then you pulled the triangular part off the can. The entire tab separated from the can, which is why they were a littering problem.