Where to start? The real problem is that the government has introduced some new gas cylinder safety measures that make all gas cylinders suck. Don't throw away your old canister. A neighbor gave me an old version of this can, but I needed two, one for gas/oil for a snow blower, the other for clean gas for a home generator. The old one is still in good condition except for some rust on the underside. The glass came without dents but with small chips on the bottom. There was some corrosion on the nozzle. As others have said, this is a bit difficult to understand, but I assume this is done by government regulations. Don't throw away your old bottle. The long nozzle is good for forcing gas into things, unlike the pesky nozzles on a cheap plastic gas bottle, but then again the nozzle touches the ground so I'm keeping the plastic bag it came in. to protect him. The nozzle arrived in the box but was not attached. The lid is spring-loaded at the back, so it must be held open when filling. By the way, your car can get static electricity, so you should take the canister out of the car and put it on the ground before touching it with the filler neck. I have a Subaru so this might only apply to a Subaru but I wanted to get rid of the gas in the tank so I could buy fresh gas so I put it in the car and put the edge of the brass tip on the injector in the flap door got stuck in the car. base pain. This has also happened to me with cheap plastic gas cylinders. Solution: Take a thin strip of metal, bend it so that it does not fall into the tank, and then fill it up with gasoline. It wouldn't be funny if it was midnight on a desert road at -10F. Again, I attribute this in part to state law. Do not throw away the old gas cartridge.
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