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Can opener

A can opener (North American and Australian English) or tin opener (British English) is a mechanical device used to open metal tin cans. Although preservation of food using tin cans had been practiced since at least 1772 in the Netherlands, the first can openers were not patented until 1855 in England and 1858 in the United States. These early openers were basically variations of a knife, though the 1855 design continues to be produced.

A late-20th-century can opener with a rotating cutting wheel and a counter-rotating serrated wheel, for left-handed use

The can opener consisting of the now familiar sharp rotating cutting wheel that runs round the can's rim to cut open the lid was invented in 1870, but was considered very difficult to operate for the ordinary consumer. A more successful design came out in 1925 when a second, serrated wheel was added to hold the cutting wheel on the rim of the can. This easy-to-use design has become one of the most popular can opener models.

Around the time of World War II, several can openers were developed for military use, such as the American P-38 and P-51. These featured a robust and compact design with a pull cutting blade hinged to a corrugated handle with a pivot. Electric can openers were introduced in the late 1950s and met with success. The development of new can opener types continues with a recent redesign of a side-cutting model.

Invention of cans edit

 
Peach can, September 5, 1856

Food preserved in tin cans was in use by the Dutch Navy from at least 1772.[1] Before 1800, there was already a small industry of canned salmon in the Netherlands. Freshly caught salmon were cleaned, boiled in brine, smoked and placed in tin-plated iron boxes. This canned salmon was known outside the Netherlands, and in 1797 a British company supplied one of their clients with 13 cans. Preservation of food in tin cans was patented by Peter Durand in 1810. The patent was acquired in 1812 by Bryan Donkin, who soon set up the world's first canning factory in London in 1813.

 
"Simplex" can sealing machine

By 1820, canned food was a recognised article in Britain and France and by 1822 in the United States.[1] The first cans were robust containers, which weighed more than the food they contained and required ingenuity to open, using whatever tools available. The instruction on those cans read "Cut round the top near the outer edge with a chisel and hammer."[2][3] The gap of decades between the invention of the can and can opener may be attributed to the functionality of existing tools versus the cost and effort of a new tool.[4]

Twist-key can-opener edit

 
A can opener's twist key
 
Twist key can opener
in use

Also called tin can key can-opener.[5] During the 1800s,[6] the canning process was mechanised and refined, with can walls becoming thinner. The twist-key can-opener was patented by J. Osterhoudt in 1866.[7] There still was no general-purpose can-opener, thus each can came with a spot-welded or soldered-on twist-key can-opener which snapped off after fatiguing the metal by bending at a thin region. Each food-type had its own can-type, and came with its own can-opener-type. Tinned fish and meat were sold in rectangular cans. These cans were fitted with a twist-key that would roll around the top of the can, peeling back a pre-scored strip.[8] Coffee,[9] beans, and other types of meat were packaged in cylinders with metal strips that could be peeled back with their own kinds of built-in keys that would roll around the top of the can.[10] Cans of milk used puncture devices.[6]

Lever-type can openers edit

 
Lever-type can opener design of 1855 by Robert Yeates
 
Bull-head push-lever-type can opener of 1865
 
Lever-type can opener design of 1858 by Ezra Warner

General-purpose can openers first appeared in the 1850s and had a primitive claw-shaped or "lever-type" design. In 1855, Robert Yeates, a cutlery and surgical instrument maker of Trafalgar Place West, Hackney Road, Middlesex, UK, devised the first claw-ended can opener with a hand-operated tool that haggled its way around the top of metal cans.[11]

In 1858, another lever-type opener of a more complex shape was patented in the United States by Ezra Warner of Waterbury, Connecticut, US. It consisted of a sharp sickle, which was pushed into the can and sawed around its edge. A guard kept the sickle from penetrating too far into the can. The opener consisted of several parts which could be replaced if worn out, especially the sickle.[12] This opener was adopted by the United States Army during the American Civil War (1861–1865); however, its unprotected knife-like sickle was too dangerous for domestic use. A home-use opener named the "Bull's head opener" was designed in 1865 and was supplied with cans of pickled beef named "Bully beef". The opener was made of cast iron and had a very similar construction to the Yeates opener, but featured a more artistic shape and was the first move towards improving the look of the can opener. The bull-headed design was produced until the 1930s and was also offered with a fish-head shape.[2]

Rotating wheel can openers edit

The first rotating wheel can opener was patented in July 1870 by William Lyman of Meriden, Connecticut, US and produced by the firm Baumgarten in the 1890s.[13] The can was to be pierced in its centre with the sharp metal rod of the opener. Then, the length of the lever had to be adjusted to fit the can size, and the lever fixed with the wingnut. The top of the can was cut by pressing the cutting wheel into the can near the edge and rotating it along the can's rim.[14]

The necessity to pierce the can first was a nuisance, and this can opener design did not survive. In 1920, Edwin Anderson[15][16][17] patented a can opener with pivoted handles with which to hold the can in one hand while a key-type handle geared to a cutting wheel is turned with the other cutting the outside of the lip,[18][19][20] a side can opener, unlike the gramophone-like orientation of most contemporary can openers, in effect a hand-held pliers version of the Swanson Can-Opener.[21] In 1925,[22] the Star Can Opener Company[23] of San Francisco, California, US had improved Lyman's design by adding a second, serrated wheel, called a "feed wheel", which allowed a firm grip of the can edge.[24] This addition was so efficient that the design is still in use today.[25][26][27][28][29]

Whereas all previous openers required using one hand or other means to hold the can, can-holding openers simultaneously grip the can and open it. The first such opener was patented in 1931 by the Bunker Clancey Company of Kansas City, Missouri and was, therefore, called the "Bunker". It featured the now standard pliers-type handles, when squeezed would tightly grip the can rim, while turning the key would rotate the cutting wheel, progressively cutting the lid along the rim. The cutting wheel is coupled to a serrated feed wheel as in the Star design[30][16] and rotated in the opposite direction by interlocking cogwheels reducing friction. The Bunker company was absorbed by the Rival Manufacturing Company, also of Kansas City, in 1938.[2]

A new style of the can opener emerged in the 1980s. Whereas most other openers remove the lid by cutting down through the lid from the top just inside the rim, removing the top and leaving the rim attached to the can, these use a roller and cutting wheel to cut through the outside seam of the can. The can is left with a relatively safe, non-jagged edge, and the top can be set back on top as a cover, although it does not provide a seal. The feed wheel teeth have a somewhat finer pitch than those of earlier designs and reside at the bottom of a V-shaped groove, which surrounds the rim on three sides at the point of action.[31][32]

Church key edit

 
A "butterfly" serrated-wheel and raking blade can opener with a can piercer, on left and "church key" bottle cap lifter, on right.
 
Contemporary church key, three views. The left end is a can piercer and the right end is a bottle cap lifter.

Church key initially referred to a simple hand-operated device for prying the cap (called a "crown cork" or "bottle cap") off a glass bottle; this kind of closure was invented in 1892.[33][34] The first of these church key style openers was patented in Canada in 1900.[35]

The shape and design of some of these early "church key" opener's fulcrum hole resembled a large old key's dual-node keyring hole.[36] In 1935, steel beer cans with flat tops appeared, and a device to pierce the lids was needed. The same opener was used for piercing those cans. Made from a single piece of pressed metal, with a sharp point at one end, it was devised by D. F. Sampson,[37][38] for the American Can Company, who depicted operating instructions on the cans.[39] The church key opener is still being produced, sometimes as part of another opener.[40][41][42][43] For example, a "butterfly" opener is often a combination of the church key and a serrated-wheel opener. Beer and soda cans began in the mid-1960s to feature pop-tabs, which were rings attached to cans. These tabs eliminated the need for church keys to open the cans.[44]

Military use can openers edit

 
P-51 and P-38 openers

Several can openers with a simple and robust design have been specifically developed for military use. The P-38 and P-51 are small can openers with a cutter hinged to the main body. They were also known as a "John Wayne" because the actor was shown in a training film opening a can of K-rations. The P-38 can opener is keychain-sized, about 1.5 inches (38 mm) long, and consists of a short metal blade that serves as a handle (and can also be used as a screwdriver), with a small, hinged metal tooth that folds out to pierce the can lid. A notch just under the hinge point keeps the opener hooked around the rim of the can as the device is "walked" around the rim to cut the lid out. A larger version, called P-51, is somewhat easier to operate. P-38 was developed in 1942 and was issued in the canned field rations of the United States Armed Forces from World War II to the 1980s. The P-38 and P-51 are cheaper to manufacture and are smaller and lighter to carry than most other can openers. The device can be easily attached to a keyring or dog tag chain using the small punched hole.[45]

Official military designations for the P-38 include "US Army pocket can opener" and "Opener, can, hand, folding, type I". As with some other military terms (e.g., jeep), the origin of the term is not known with certainty. The P-38 and P-51 openers share a designation with the Lockheed P-38 Lightning and North American P-51 Mustang fighters, however this is coincidental. The most likely origin of the name is much more pedestrian; the P-38 and P-51 measure 38 mm (1.5 in) and 51 mm (2.0 in) in length respectively.[46]

P-38s are no longer used for individual rations by the United States Armed Forces, as canned C-rations were replaced by soft-pack MREs in the 1980s. They are, however, included with United States military "Tray Rations" (canned bulk meals). They are also still seen in disaster recovery efforts and have been handed out alongside canned food by rescue organizations, both in America and abroad in Afghanistan. The original US-contract P-38 can openers were manufactured by J. W. Speaker Corp. (stamped "US Speaker") and by Washburn Corp. (marked "US Androck"), they were later made by Mallin Hardware (now defunct) of Shelby, Ohio and were variously stamped "US Mallin Shelby O." or "U.S. Shelby Co."[47]

 
Standard issue "FRED" can opener of the Australian Defence Force

A similar device that incorporates a small spoon at one end and a bottle opener at the other is currently employed by the Australian Defence Force and New Zealand Army in its ration kits. The Field Ration Eating Device is known by the acronym "FRED". It is also known as the "Fucking Ridiculous Eating Device".[48][49]

Another similar device was included with British Army "Operational Ration Pack, General Purpose" 24-hour ration pack and "Composite Ration Pack" rations. At one time they were manufactured by W. P. Warren Engineering Co., Ltd. The instructions printed on the miniature, greaseproof paper bag in which they were packed read: "Their design is similar, but not identical, to the P-38 and P-51 can openers."[47]

Most military ration can openers have a very simple design and have also been produced for civilian use in many countries. For example, small folding openers similar to the P-38 and P-51 were designed in 1924 and were widely distributed in the Eastern European countries.[50]

In Slovenia a somewhat rounded version of a P-38 is known as "sardine can opener", because in the 1990s such openers were usually packed with cans that did not feature the pull-top pre-scored lid. A non-folding version of the P-38 used to be very common in Israeli kitchens, and can still be found in stores, often sold in packs of five.

Electric openers edit

 
A fully automatic can opener by Mark Sanders

The first electric can opener was patented in 1931 and modeled after the rotating wheel can opener design.[51] Those openers were produced in the 1930s and advertised as capable of removing lids from more than 20 cans per minute without risk of injury.[52] Nevertheless, they found little success. Electric openers were re-introduced in 1956 by two American companies. Klassen Enterprises of Centreville brought out a wall-mounted electric model,[53] but this complex design was unpopular too.[2] The same year, Walter Hess Bodle invented a freestanding device, combining an electric can opener and knife sharpener.[54] He and his family members built their prototype in his garage, with daughter Elizabeth sculpting the body design. It was manufactured under the "Udico" brand of the Union Die Casting Co. in Los Angeles, California, US and was offered in Flamingo Pink, Avocado Green, and Aqua Blue, popular colors of the era. These openers were introduced to the market for Christmas sales and found immediate success.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Gordon L. Robertson (2006). Food packaging. CRC Press. pp. 122–123. ISBN 0-8493-3775-5.
  2. ^ a b c d e (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 January 2010. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  4. ^ Ridely, Matt (14 September 2012). "Don't Look for Inventions Before Their Time". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  5. ^ "9 Types of Can Openers for Safer, Faster, & Easier Cooking". worstroom.com. WorstRoom Home Design. 18 November 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  6. ^ a b Esther Inglis-Arkell - Nov 27, 2017 1:58 pm UTC (27 November 2017). "Don't lose a finger: The 200-year evolution of the can opener". Ars Technica. Retrieved 1 March 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ J. Osterhoudt "Improved Method of Opening Tin Cans" U.S. Patent 58,554 2 October 1866
  8. ^ "History of the Can: Can Opener". Retrieved 8 August 2009.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ File:1965 - Trexler Park Coffee Can - Allentown PA.jpg
  10. ^ Mjtrinihobby in HomeLife-hacks. . Archived from the original on 8 January 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  11. ^ Encyclopedia of Kitchen History. Taylor & Francis Group. 27 September 2004. ISBN 978-1-57958-380-4.
  12. ^ Ezra J. Warner (5 January 1858) "Can opener" U.S. Patent 19,063
  13. ^ William W. Lyman "Improvement in can openers" U.S. Patent 105,346 12 July 1870.
  14. ^ Bryan H. Bunch, Alexander Hellemans (2004). The history of science and technology. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 398. ISBN 0-618-22123-9.
  15. ^ Stern, Daniel (27 January 1921). "American Artisan". Keeney Publishing Company – via Google Books.
  16. ^ a b . casetext.com. Archived from the original on 27 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Star Can Opener Company Of San Francisco California 1920". eBay.
  18. ^ U.S. Patent 1,360,256
  19. ^ Side can opener
  20. ^ File:Can Opener, Pictorial Equipment Article, Kellogg. (3855920935).jpg
  21. ^ File:FMIB 45262 Swanson Can-Opener - a new and practical device invented by a practical canneryman Will open any size, any diameter, any style.jpeg
  22. ^ "Western Canner and Packer". Miller Freeman Publications of California. 27 January 1924 – via Google Books.
  23. ^ 1927 City Directory, San Francisco CA - Page 2029
  24. ^ . 26 January 2020. Archived from the original on 26 January 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  25. ^ U.S. Patent 1,598,841
  26. ^ U.S. Patent 1,528,178
  27. ^ "Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office". The United States Patent Office. 27 January 1943 – via Google Books.
  28. ^ U.S. Patent 180,307
  29. ^ U.S. Patent 174,161
  30. ^ Charles Arthur Bunker, "Can opener", U.S. Patent 1,838,525, 29 December 1931.
  31. ^ Paul Porucznik, Keith Longstaff, "Can Openers" U.S. Patent 4,782,594 5 April 1984
  32. ^ Kun-Jen Chang, "Side cutting can opener with a double grip" U.S. Patent 5,946,811 4 November 1997
  33. ^ William Painter (2 February 1892) "Bottle sealing device" U.S. Patent 468,258
  34. ^ Churchkey. Worldwidewords.org (2 November 2002). Retrieved on 2013-03-20.
  35. ^ Mario Theriault (2001) Great Maritime Inventions 1833–1950, Goose Lane, p. 21 ISBN 0-86492-324-4
  36. ^ January 1980 JFO Newsletter. Just-for-openers.org. Retrieved on 20 March 2013.
  37. ^ . bartenderschoolofsantarosa.com
  38. ^ Short History of the Beer Can (part 2) 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Streeter.org. Retrieved on 20 March 2013.
  39. ^ . ebeercans.com
  40. ^ Jonathan Lighter, ed. (1994). . Vol. 1, A–G. New York: Random House. p. 422. Archived from the original on 4 December 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2010.
  41. ^ Timeline: History of Beer Cans. Rustycans.com. Retrieved on 20 March 2013.
  42. ^ . Brewery Collectibles Club of America
  43. ^ church key. plateaupress.com.au
  44. ^ Burrington, JD (1976). "Aluminum "pop tops". A hazard to child health". JAMA. 235 (24): 2614–7. doi:10.1001/jama.1976.03260500030022. PMID 946866.
  45. ^ R. Foster (18 August 1995). . Pentagram (Army Public Affairs) (image of article at www.dogtagsrus.com). Archived from the original on 23 October 2009. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  46. ^ P-38 Engineering Drawing 17 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine. Georgia-outfitters.com. Retrieved on 20 March 2013.
  47. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  48. ^ Greame Hardiman. "The Malayan Emergency. 2RAR 1956/57". 2RAR. Digger History: an unofficial history of the Australian & New Zealand Armed Forces. Retrieved 5 November 2007. I remember the spoon come tin opener that was in later years nicknamed "Fred" (Fucking ridiculous eating device)
  49. ^ . Ration Pack. Australian Defence News & Opinion – MilitaryPeople.com.au. 2007. Archived from the original on 11 May 2010. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  50. ^ K. F. Schioniger "Folding can opener" U.S. Patent 1,507,093 2 September 1924
  51. ^ Preston C. West "Can opener" U.S. Patent 1,834,563 1 December 1931
  52. ^ "Popular Science". The Popular Science Monthly. Bonnier Corporation. 123 (5): 18. 1933. ISSN 0161-7370.
  53. ^ Bernard Klassen "Electrically operated can opener" U.S. Patent 2,789,345 26 March 1956.
  54. ^ Walter H. Bodle "Can opening and knife sharpening device" U.S. Patent 2,897,589 4 December 1956.

External links edit

  Media related to Can openers at Wikimedia Commons

opener, other, uses, disambiguation, opener, north, american, australian, english, opener, british, english, mechanical, device, used, open, metal, cans, although, preservation, food, using, cans, been, practiced, since, least, 1772, netherlands, first, opener. For other uses see Can opener disambiguation A can opener North American and Australian English or tin opener British English is a mechanical device used to open metal tin cans Although preservation of food using tin cans had been practiced since at least 1772 in the Netherlands the first can openers were not patented until 1855 in England and 1858 in the United States These early openers were basically variations of a knife though the 1855 design continues to be produced A late 20th century can opener with a rotating cutting wheel and a counter rotating serrated wheel for left handed useThe can opener consisting of the now familiar sharp rotating cutting wheel that runs round the can s rim to cut open the lid was invented in 1870 but was considered very difficult to operate for the ordinary consumer A more successful design came out in 1925 when a second serrated wheel was added to hold the cutting wheel on the rim of the can This easy to use design has become one of the most popular can opener models Around the time of World War II several can openers were developed for military use such as the American P 38 and P 51 These featured a robust and compact design with a pull cutting blade hinged to a corrugated handle with a pivot Electric can openers were introduced in the late 1950s and met with success The development of new can opener types continues with a recent redesign of a side cutting model Contents 1 Invention of cans 2 Twist key can opener 3 Lever type can openers 4 Rotating wheel can openers 5 Church key 6 Military use can openers 7 Electric openers 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksInvention of cans edit nbsp Peach can September 5 1856Food preserved in tin cans was in use by the Dutch Navy from at least 1772 1 Before 1800 there was already a small industry of canned salmon in the Netherlands Freshly caught salmon were cleaned boiled in brine smoked and placed in tin plated iron boxes This canned salmon was known outside the Netherlands and in 1797 a British company supplied one of their clients with 13 cans Preservation of food in tin cans was patented by Peter Durand in 1810 The patent was acquired in 1812 by Bryan Donkin who soon set up the world s first canning factory in London in 1813 nbsp Simplex can sealing machineBy 1820 canned food was a recognised article in Britain and France and by 1822 in the United States 1 The first cans were robust containers which weighed more than the food they contained and required ingenuity to open using whatever tools available The instruction on those cans read Cut round the top near the outer edge with a chisel and hammer 2 3 The gap of decades between the invention of the can and can opener may be attributed to the functionality of existing tools versus the cost and effort of a new tool 4 Twist key can opener edit nbsp A can opener s twist key nbsp Twist key can opener in useAlso called tin can key can opener 5 During the 1800s 6 the canning process was mechanised and refined with can walls becoming thinner The twist key can opener was patented by J Osterhoudt in 1866 7 There still was no general purpose can opener thus each can came with a spot welded or soldered on twist key can opener which snapped off after fatiguing the metal by bending at a thin region Each food type had its own can type and came with its own can opener type Tinned fish and meat were sold in rectangular cans These cans were fitted with a twist key that would roll around the top of the can peeling back a pre scored strip 8 Coffee 9 beans and other types of meat were packaged in cylinders with metal strips that could be peeled back with their own kinds of built in keys that would roll around the top of the can 10 Cans of milk used puncture devices 6 Lever type can openers edit nbsp Lever type can opener design of 1855 by Robert Yeates nbsp Bull head push lever type can opener of 1865 nbsp Lever type can opener design of 1858 by Ezra WarnerGeneral purpose can openers first appeared in the 1850s and had a primitive claw shaped or lever type design In 1855 Robert Yeates a cutlery and surgical instrument maker of Trafalgar Place West Hackney Road Middlesex UK devised the first claw ended can opener with a hand operated tool that haggled its way around the top of metal cans 11 In 1858 another lever type opener of a more complex shape was patented in the United States by Ezra Warner of Waterbury Connecticut US It consisted of a sharp sickle which was pushed into the can and sawed around its edge A guard kept the sickle from penetrating too far into the can The opener consisted of several parts which could be replaced if worn out especially the sickle 12 This opener was adopted by the United States Army during the American Civil War 1861 1865 however its unprotected knife like sickle was too dangerous for domestic use A home use opener named the Bull s head opener was designed in 1865 and was supplied with cans of pickled beef named Bully beef The opener was made of cast iron and had a very similar construction to the Yeates opener but featured a more artistic shape and was the first move towards improving the look of the can opener The bull headed design was produced until the 1930s and was also offered with a fish head shape 2 Rotating wheel can openers editThe first rotating wheel can opener was patented in July 1870 by William Lyman of Meriden Connecticut US and produced by the firm Baumgarten in the 1890s 13 The can was to be pierced in its centre with the sharp metal rod of the opener Then the length of the lever had to be adjusted to fit the can size and the lever fixed with the wingnut The top of the can was cut by pressing the cutting wheel into the can near the edge and rotating it along the can s rim 14 The necessity to pierce the can first was a nuisance and this can opener design did not survive In 1920 Edwin Anderson 15 16 17 patented a can opener with pivoted handles with which to hold the can in one hand while a key type handle geared to a cutting wheel is turned with the other cutting the outside of the lip 18 19 20 a side can opener unlike the gramophone like orientation of most contemporary can openers in effect a hand held pliers version of the Swanson Can Opener 21 In 1925 22 the Star Can Opener Company 23 of San Francisco California US had improved Lyman s design by adding a second serrated wheel called a feed wheel which allowed a firm grip of the can edge 24 This addition was so efficient that the design is still in use today 25 26 27 28 29 Whereas all previous openers required using one hand or other means to hold the can can holding openers simultaneously grip the can and open it The first such opener was patented in 1931 by the Bunker Clancey Company of Kansas City Missouri and was therefore called the Bunker It featured the now standard pliers type handles when squeezed would tightly grip the can rim while turning the key would rotate the cutting wheel progressively cutting the lid along the rim The cutting wheel is coupled to a serrated feed wheel as in the Star design 30 16 and rotated in the opposite direction by interlocking cogwheels reducing friction The Bunker company was absorbed by the Rival Manufacturing Company also of Kansas City in 1938 2 A new style of the can opener emerged in the 1980s Whereas most other openers remove the lid by cutting down through the lid from the top just inside the rim removing the top and leaving the rim attached to the can these use a roller and cutting wheel to cut through the outside seam of the can The can is left with a relatively safe non jagged edge and the top can be set back on top as a cover although it does not provide a seal The feed wheel teeth have a somewhat finer pitch than those of earlier designs and reside at the bottom of a V shaped groove which surrounds the rim on three sides at the point of action 31 32 nbsp 1870 William Lyman can opener nbsp 1920 Star Can Opener nbsp 1925 Double wheel design nbsp 1931 Bunker openerChurch key editMain article Church key nbsp A butterfly serrated wheel and raking blade can opener with a can piercer on left and church key bottle cap lifter on right nbsp Contemporary church key three views The left end is a can piercer and the right end is a bottle cap lifter Church key initially referred to a simple hand operated device for prying the cap called a crown cork or bottle cap off a glass bottle this kind of closure was invented in 1892 33 34 The first of these church key style openers was patented in Canada in 1900 35 The shape and design of some of these early church key opener s fulcrum hole resembled a large old key s dual node keyring hole 36 In 1935 steel beer cans with flat tops appeared and a device to pierce the lids was needed The same opener was used for piercing those cans Made from a single piece of pressed metal with a sharp point at one end it was devised by D F Sampson 37 38 for the American Can Company who depicted operating instructions on the cans 39 The church key opener is still being produced sometimes as part of another opener 40 41 42 43 For example a butterfly opener is often a combination of the church key and a serrated wheel opener Beer and soda cans began in the mid 1960s to feature pop tabs which were rings attached to cans These tabs eliminated the need for church keys to open the cans 44 Military use can openers editMain article P 38 can opener nbsp P 51 and P 38 openersSeveral can openers with a simple and robust design have been specifically developed for military use The P 38 and P 51 are small can openers with a cutter hinged to the main body They were also known as a John Wayne because the actor was shown in a training film opening a can of K rations The P 38 can opener is keychain sized about 1 5 inches 38 mm long and consists of a short metal blade that serves as a handle and can also be used as a screwdriver with a small hinged metal tooth that folds out to pierce the can lid A notch just under the hinge point keeps the opener hooked around the rim of the can as the device is walked around the rim to cut the lid out A larger version called P 51 is somewhat easier to operate P 38 was developed in 1942 and was issued in the canned field rations of the United States Armed Forces from World War II to the 1980s The P 38 and P 51 are cheaper to manufacture and are smaller and lighter to carry than most other can openers The device can be easily attached to a keyring or dog tag chain using the small punched hole 45 Official military designations for the P 38 include US Army pocket can opener and Opener can hand folding type I As with some other military terms e g jeep the origin of the term is not known with certainty The P 38 and P 51 openers share a designation with the Lockheed P 38 Lightning and North American P 51 Mustang fighters however this is coincidental The most likely origin of the name is much more pedestrian the P 38 and P 51 measure 38 mm 1 5 in and 51 mm 2 0 in in length respectively 46 P 38s are no longer used for individual rations by the United States Armed Forces as canned C rations were replaced by soft pack MREs in the 1980s They are however included with United States military Tray Rations canned bulk meals They are also still seen in disaster recovery efforts and have been handed out alongside canned food by rescue organizations both in America and abroad in Afghanistan The original US contract P 38 can openers were manufactured by J W Speaker Corp stamped US Speaker and by Washburn Corp marked US Androck they were later made by Mallin Hardware now defunct of Shelby Ohio and were variously stamped US Mallin Shelby O or U S Shelby Co 47 nbsp Standard issue FRED can opener of the Australian Defence ForceA similar device that incorporates a small spoon at one end and a bottle opener at the other is currently employed by the Australian Defence Force and New Zealand Army in its ration kits The Field Ration Eating Device is known by the acronym FRED It is also known as the Fucking Ridiculous Eating Device 48 49 Another similar device was included with British Army Operational Ration Pack General Purpose 24 hour ration pack and Composite Ration Pack rations At one time they were manufactured by W P Warren Engineering Co Ltd The instructions printed on the miniature greaseproof paper bag in which they were packed read Their design is similar but not identical to the P 38 and P 51 can openers 47 Most military ration can openers have a very simple design and have also been produced for civilian use in many countries For example small folding openers similar to the P 38 and P 51 were designed in 1924 and were widely distributed in the Eastern European countries 50 In Slovenia a somewhat rounded version of a P 38 is known as sardine can opener because in the 1990s such openers were usually packed with cans that did not feature the pull top pre scored lid A non folding version of the P 38 used to be very common in Israeli kitchens and can still be found in stores often sold in packs of five Electric openers edit nbsp A fully automatic can opener by Mark SandersThe first electric can opener was patented in 1931 and modeled after the rotating wheel can opener design 51 Those openers were produced in the 1930s and advertised as capable of removing lids from more than 20 cans per minute without risk of injury 52 Nevertheless they found little success Electric openers were re introduced in 1956 by two American companies Klassen Enterprises of Centreville brought out a wall mounted electric model 53 but this complex design was unpopular too 2 The same year Walter Hess Bodle invented a freestanding device combining an electric can opener and knife sharpener 54 He and his family members built their prototype in his garage with daughter Elizabeth sculpting the body design It was manufactured under the Udico brand of the Union Die Casting Co in Los Angeles California US and was offered in Flamingo Pink Avocado Green and Aqua Blue popular colors of the era These openers were introduced to the market for Christmas sales and found immediate success 2 See also editAssume a can openerReferences edit a b Gordon L Robertson 2006 Food packaging CRC Press pp 122 123 ISBN 0 8493 3775 5 a b c d e Lifting the lid on the tin can opener PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 8 August 2009 Can opener Archived from the original on 2 January 2010 Retrieved 8 August 2009 Ridely Matt 14 September 2012 Don t Look for Inventions Before Their Time The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 8 April 2015 9 Types of Can Openers for Safer Faster amp Easier Cooking worstroom com WorstRoom Home Design 18 November 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2023 a b Esther Inglis Arkell Nov 27 2017 1 58 pm UTC 27 November 2017 Don t lose a finger The 200 year evolution of the can opener Ars Technica Retrieved 1 March 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link J Osterhoudt Improved Method of Opening Tin Cans U S Patent 58 554 2 October 1866 History of the Can Can Opener Retrieved 8 August 2009 permanent dead link File 1965 Trexler Park Coffee Can Allentown PA jpg Mjtrinihobby in HomeLife hacks How to Open a Can of Corned Beef 4 Steps with Pictures Archived from the original on 8 January 2019 Retrieved 1 March 2020 Encyclopedia of Kitchen History Taylor amp Francis Group 27 September 2004 ISBN 978 1 57958 380 4 Ezra J Warner 5 January 1858 Can opener U S Patent 19 063 William W Lyman Improvement in can openers U S Patent 105 346 12 July 1870 Bryan H Bunch Alexander Hellemans 2004 The history of science and technology Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 398 ISBN 0 618 22123 9 Stern Daniel 27 January 1921 American Artisan Keeney Publishing Company via Google Books a b Star Can Opener Co v Bunker Clancey Mfg Co 41 F 2d 142 Casetext casetext com Archived from the original on 27 January 2020 Star Can Opener Company Of San Francisco California 1920 eBay U S Patent 1 360 256 Side can opener File Can Opener Pictorial Equipment Article Kellogg 3855920935 jpg File FMIB 45262 Swanson Can Opener a new and practical device invented by a practical canneryman Will open any size any diameter any style jpeg Western Canner and Packer Miller Freeman Publications of California 27 January 1924 via Google Books 1927 City Directory San Francisco CA Page 2029 Star Can Opener Advertising San Francisco Vintage Kitchen Etsy 26 January 2020 Archived from the original on 26 January 2020 Retrieved 27 January 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link U S Patent 1 598 841 U S Patent 1 528 178 Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office The United States Patent Office 27 January 1943 via Google Books U S Patent 180 307 U S Patent 174 161 Charles Arthur Bunker Can opener U S Patent 1 838 525 29 December 1931 Paul Porucznik Keith Longstaff Can Openers U S Patent 4 782 594 5 April 1984 Kun Jen Chang Side cutting can opener with a double grip U S Patent 5 946 811 4 November 1997 William Painter 2 February 1892 Bottle sealing device U S Patent 468 258 Churchkey Worldwidewords org 2 November 2002 Retrieved on 2013 03 20 Mario Theriault 2001 Great Maritime Inventions 1833 1950 Goose Lane p 21 ISBN 0 86492 324 4 January 1980 JFO Newsletter Just for openers org Retrieved on 20 March 2013 United States Bartenders Guild Newsletter bartenderschoolofsantarosa com Short History of the Beer Can part 2 Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Streeter org Retrieved on 20 March 2013 Flat Top Beer Cans ebeercans com Jonathan Lighter ed 1994 Historical Dictionary of American Slang Vol 1 A G New York Random House p 422 Archived from the original on 4 December 2018 Retrieved 31 January 2010 Timeline History of Beer Cans Rustycans com Retrieved on 20 March 2013 Beer can history Brewery Collectibles Club of America church key plateaupress com au Burrington JD 1976 Aluminum pop tops A hazard to child health JAMA 235 24 2614 7 doi 10 1001 jama 1976 03260500030022 PMID 946866 R Foster 18 August 1995 The greatest Army invention ever Pentagram Army Public Affairs image of article at www dogtagsrus com Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 8 August 2009 P 38 Engineering Drawing Archived 17 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Georgia outfitters com Retrieved on 20 March 2013 a b The P 38 can opener Archived from the original on 26 August 2009 Retrieved 8 August 2009 Greame Hardiman The Malayan Emergency 2RAR 1956 57 2RAR Digger History an unofficial history of the Australian amp New Zealand Armed Forces Retrieved 5 November 2007 I remember the spoon come tin opener that was in later years nicknamed Fred Fucking ridiculous eating device Black Berets Ration Pack Australian Defence News amp Opinion MilitaryPeople com au 2007 Archived from the original on 11 May 2010 Retrieved 8 August 2009 K F Schioniger Folding can opener U S Patent 1 507 093 2 September 1924 Preston C West Can opener U S Patent 1 834 563 1 December 1931 Popular Science The Popular Science Monthly Bonnier Corporation 123 5 18 1933 ISSN 0161 7370 Bernard Klassen Electrically operated can opener U S Patent 2 789 345 26 March 1956 Walter H Bodle Can opening and knife sharpening device U S Patent 2 897 589 4 December 1956 External links edit nbsp Media related to Can openers at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Can opener amp oldid 1181191891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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