Featured Not Your Grandmother's Can-Opener

Discussion in 'Tools' started by wlwhittier, Nov 7, 2025.

  1. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Well-Known Member

    ~613 grams of wood an' steel; the shaft is a ~5/8" chamfered octagonal; the blade is ~1/4" thick, an' is not welded to the shaft, but tenoned into a rectangular mortise. then peened over to secure it. That joint is slightly loose, resulting in slop that amounts to ~1/8" at the tip of the blade. The lack of a welded joint there suggests a reasoned choice favoring the mortise & tenon...a more time-costly method...but that's conjecture; I don't know why. The wooden grip is oval, ~1 1/4" by ~1 3/8", 6" long, with a heavy iron ferrule 1 3/4" long.

    I believe this tool was made to remove the inner portion of the top of a ~55 gallon oil drum...or probably lots of them; there were literally millions of those as surplus, post-WWII.

    It could have been started with a ~1/4 hole drilled or punched just inside the lip. The blade is sharpened both sides; that, an' the notch at the shaft tip, would have allowed right or left hand operation. I'll guess those tops were ~12 gauge steel (~0.105"); to use this thing all day would have been a real job of work. There is quite a bit of wear at the corner where the blade edge meets the tenon, suggesting considerable usage of this tool.
    I'll be glad to hear your thoughts, comments an' suggestions. Thanks for lookin'!
    EDIT: Google says most of those drum tops were 18 gauge, ~1.2mm thick.

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    Last edited: Nov 7, 2025
    Any Jewelry, Boland, cfh and 7 others like this.
  2. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Whit,my man I officially dub you- The Tool Man.
     
  3. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Well-Known Member

    Generous of you, old boy...Thanks!
     
    Marote and charlie cheswick like this.
  4. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Nice piece of homebrew!
     
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  5. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    i'd rather use one of them then the turn handle ones ( what and effing nightmare they were..............auf wiedersehen....goodbye)

    turn turn turn bobble.. :oops:......turn turn bobble :mad:

    aw well its tomato soup it'll just pour out through the gaps.............................taken its time though :mad:

    ........for f:muted::muted:k sake :inpain::(:nurse:

    now i wonder how many times that happened.......even in a day :)
     
  6. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I still use a hand-cranked can opener. Works like a charm. it's a clamp and crank though, not a stabby-stabby up-down up-down.
     
    wlwhittier likes this.
  7. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Well-Known Member

    I've got a modern cranker, the horizontal-cut kind...I like it, an' the clean results.
    I also have the battery-powered teardrop, which cuts horizontally...it wiggles like a dog passin' a peach-pit, an always seems about to quit before it's finished, but doesn't.
     
  8. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    No batteries here. We had an electric one when I was a kid, but it died and was never replaced. The electric one was the cat-caller; catfood cans had no pull tabs and the sound meant "breakfast" in Cat.
     
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  9. moreotherstuff

    moreotherstuff Izorizent

    Dick Powell using a similar can opener in the "Pettin' in the Park number from Gold Diggers of 1933.

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  10. Bev aka thelmasstuff

    Bev aka thelmasstuff Colored pencil artist extraordinaire ;)

    I still have a bunch of kitchen implements with the green wooden handle (can opener, jar opener, egg beater, etc) that were my grandmother's and I'm 76. They still work like a charm. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. No worries if the power goes out.
     
    komokwa likes this.
  11. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Green handles with pale yellow trim = 1930s. Gotta love Grandma!
     
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