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| Senior Member | |
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member | Hammer and screwdriver! ![]() Thats how most do it and unless you have the canopener tool thingy you will too.
__________________ If total goverment control will make us all safer, then why are prisons so dangerous? |
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| | #5 |
| Senior Bear Fluffer ![]() | Yep, I used a pair of slip joint pliers and a screwdriver. Got it halfway open then bent the top back to get at the ammo. Transfered all to an ammo box. It was an interesting aroma that came from that box. Not unpleasant in the least. I was thinking as I opened it that the ammo inside had not seen the light of day since 1954! Now, if I can just get a Sunday with out it snowing or below zero I will be able to go out and shoot some of it! I have 4 Mosins that need to be fed!
__________________ "Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati" (If all else fails play dead) |
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| | #7 |
| Senior Bear Fluffer ![]() | Hitting live ammo with a hammer is way too dangerous for me. Next time I am going to use a blow torch! Or tin snips. Depends.
__________________ "Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati" (If all else fails play dead) |
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Indianapolis, IN. "The city where nothing happens."
Posts: 1,028
Trader Rating: (1) | Why not just go for broke and use a thermal lance. anyways, if it's those galvanized cans there should be a tab you can pull with a pair of pliers.
__________________ "All rifles need a sharp pointy object on the end!" http://s96.photobucket.com/albums/l195/zephri/ |
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| | #12 |
| Senior Member | stupid of me but i was desperate to get it open. actually took a drill press with the biggest bit i could find and drilled just till i got to the inside of the can. then using a combination of metal sheers and pliars i got it open in oh id say 15 or 20 minutes haha |
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| | #13 |
| Senior Member ![]() | If you look the can over very carfully you will find a pull tag .. It may have some solder on it but if you get a hold of it with a pair of needle nose pliers and roll it back like the old spam cans( that had spam in it) it will roll right up then lift the top lid off it and walla AMMO! ![]() |
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| | #15 |
| Senior Member | You guys that say to use the pull tab are hilarious... Check out my thread from a while back on my Czech Silvertip: http://www.gunandgame.com/forums/mos...mmunition.html (Military Surplus Ammunition)
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| | #17 |
| Senior Member | Well, another "1st" is mastered, I opened my first can of spam. And the prize (besides the satisfaction): 300 rounds of Bulgarian 182gr FMJ. Wow, if life was just always that good! Thank you all for the good and the humorous advice. I did in fact find a pull tab but despite careful handling it ripped off in 5 seconds flat. In the end the hammer and screwdriver method was the way to go. I carefully punctured the tin seal and once I had an opening big enough to insert some needle nose pliers I started to roll back the tin. Voila! It still feels like its wrong to work a container with live ammo in it with a hammer and screwdriver but hey, who can argue with the results? Thanks again to all of you! |
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| | #18 |
| Senior Member | You know, the question does have to be asked: How did the grunts in the line get these things open? Given that the reason the M-N bayonet has a screwdriver tip is so it could be used as a tool to take the rifle down for cleaning, could it possibly be the bayonet was to be used like the key of a sardine can or something to get the ammo tins open? |
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| | #19 |
| Grumpy Old Fart ![]() | I doubt the cans were as hard to open back then as they are now. I doubt many grunts received cans of ammo anyway! They probably received a "handful" when it was available.
__________________ Thank God we don't get as much Government as we pay for! -Will Rogers |
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| | #20 |
| Senior Member | You're probably right, but even if it was the company armorer sergeant opening the cans and passing out the ammo to the guys in the line, somebody had to open the silly things! The question stands: how did the guys at the front get these cans open during the war? |
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