The history of the beverage can and pull tabs.

coinman123

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Feb 21, 2013
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New England, Somewhere Metal Detecting in the Wood
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One of the most hated metal detecting finds there is can still help you find out the age of your site anyways, heres a list of cans and pull tabs and the years they were made.

Flat top cans: These and cone top cans were the first. These were made from 1935-1961 (replaced by pull tab) these cans were opened with a special can opener called a churchkey that leaves two cut triangles on the front.
Flat-Top-Opened-Can.jpg1863_1.jpg

Steel cans: Usually rust easy, are found in horrible shape most of the time, perfect cylinder with aluminum top, 1935-1980. These cans stick to magnets.
20150726_215728.jpg

Aluminum cans: Replaced the steel cans that tended to rust and were more expensive to make. Side usually tapers off towards the top unlike steel cans which are perfect cylinders. 1980's to present.
ucb_aluminum-p.png

Cone top cans: 1935-1960, used in smaller beverage companies. The shorter the top the older the can is. These cans have a large pointed top which is opened by a bottle cap.
20150726_214615.jpg

Pull tab cans: 1962-1980 (ish)
20150726_215734.jpg

Zip top pull tabs: 1962-1964, the first type of pull tab used, if you find these you may find some silver.
20150703_145350.jpg

Ring pull tabs: 1965-1980ish, replaced zip tops which were likely to cut people, discontinued to fight litter, plus, people would step on them and get cut.
Beverage_pull_tab.jpg

Push button: Mid 70's, two little buttons on top of can, mean't to replace the pull tabs and fight litter
push-button.gif

Stay-tabs (current style that stays on can), 1980-now. The current round design of stay tab dates from the '90s, most were square shaped in the 1980s.
20150726_222132.jpg20150726_222132.jpg

Sorry for any typos, sent from my phone
 

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great info...thanks !!
 

Wow, I can't believe anyone could hate anything as iconic as the pull tab.

My collection is missing a few of the finer examples and I'm more excited over a late '63 than I am over another gold and diamond ring. (anybody can find one of them)

Here's a quick little identification site.

Pull Tabs, our friends!

Please, support you local FOPT chapter. (Friends Of Pull Tabs)
 

Wow, I can't believe anyone could hate anything as iconic as the pull tab.

My collection is missing a few of the finer examples and I'm more excited over a late '63 than I am over another gold and diamond ring. (anybody can find one of them)

Here's a quick little identification site.

Pull Tabs, our friends!

Please, support you local FOPT chapter. (Friends Of Pull Tabs)

I don't hate them,like some people..I just don't LIKE them.
 

I'd be happy to find an ancient pull tab instead of another horseshoe on this road. I'd probably take close up's of it and post here on T-net!
 

thanx for the post coinman 123. And good link G.I.B. !
 

I have been finding a lot of Civil War era pull-tabs. Like from the can in this image.

4e5b8e1f2a7b2.image.jpg
 

Thanks for the info. Good luck in the field!
 

Wow, I can't believe anyone could hate anything as iconic as the pull tab.

My collection is missing a few of the finer examples and I'm more excited over a late '63 than I am over another gold and diamond ring. (anybody can find one of them)

Here's a quick little identification site.

Pull Tabs, our friends!

Please, support you local FOPT chapter. (Friends Of Pull Tabs)

Good link, I was metal detecting and found an area with lots of 1970's coke and pepsi cans. Most were all bent and had lots of rust. I ended up with two perfect pepsi cans and one ok Coke can.

I have a display with some old 1960's and 1970's soda cans, sad that most have rusted away so I only have a few. There is a 1940's and 50's trash pile in one of my favorite colonial sites, the surface of the trash pile is littered with rusty cone top cans, most have holes and none have any trace of paint from sitting in the sun, rain and snow for 70 years . I decided to take one nicer ones with no holes. Not sure they are collectible in this condition though. Still, a cool piece of can history ;)
 

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Great thread n info. Thanks
On a side note, I've dug quite a few can openers too.
Peace ✌
 

Somehow, this image makes pulltabs seem slightly less undesirable.

pulltabart.jpg
 

One positive aspect to the ubiquitous pull tab is that enough of these in a heavily populated park will tend to discourage all
but the most patient detectorist in the pursuit of gold rings . I get happy if I'm finding a lot of nickels and pull tabs in parks
because it tells me that anybody metal detecting there is cranking their discrimination too high to get the gold rings .
 

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