Jerry cans
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: San Antonio, Texas
Jerry cans
Anyone collecting jerry cans, beside just for display on their vehicle? I find they are kind of interesting with all of the different ones available, German WWII cans, British WWII cans and of course the various American cans. I just picked up an American can dated 1941 and it has some interesting variations when compared to the later can we are used to seeing.
52 M38 Willy's
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: San Antonio, Texas
Close examination reveals the early cans were made of galvanized steel, had a two ear screwed lid and the chain is rivited to the handle instead of the cotter pin type attachment for the chain in later cans.
52 M38 Willy's
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
-
- Captain
- Posts: 265
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Northern North East US , Gods Country
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: San Antonio, Texas
Thanks I would appreciate that. I guess I am the only nut on this site that finds collecting jerry cans is interesting. I have a couple of the WWII Marine cans, a couple of German WWII dated cans, British and of course American Army cans. In Europe the Army used every can they could find including the German and British during the Red Ball Express days.
52 M38 Willy's
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
-
- Major
- Posts: 435
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Wales,UK
Hi Jim,
You are not the only jerry can nut on here,I was just a bit slow in owning up !.
They are indeed an interesting subject in their own right. I'm also interested in the various types of oil can used by US forces during WWII.
Matt.
You are not the only jerry can nut on here,I was just a bit slow in owning up !.
They are indeed an interesting subject in their own right. I'm also interested in the various types of oil can used by US forces during WWII.
Matt.
March 1942 Dodge WC-56 Command Car,1229th QM.
Oct.1943 Dodge WC-52 Weapons Carrier,854th BS.
Jan.1943 CCKW LeRoi Compressor.
Oct.1943 Dodge WC-52 Weapons Carrier,854th BS.
Jan.1943 CCKW LeRoi Compressor.
-
- Captain
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: East coast
- Contact:
-
- Lieutenant Colonel
- Posts: 981
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Kennebunkport, Maine
cans
Now look what you started AD
None of US are " nuts" but it takes ALOT of cans to fill the back of a CCKW.
There I've justified it . I'm OK
Now off to the FLEA
See Ya
John
None of US are " nuts" but it takes ALOT of cans to fill the back of a CCKW.
There I've justified it . I'm OK
Now off to the FLEA
See Ya
John
42 Chevy G7117
44 Ford M20 armored car
44 CCKW 353 A1 660 gal Tanker
45 CCKW 353 B2 Air-portable
Ben Hur 1 ton trailer
MVPA#26900
44 Ford M20 armored car
44 CCKW 353 A1 660 gal Tanker
45 CCKW 353 B2 Air-portable
Ben Hur 1 ton trailer
MVPA#26900
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: San Antonio, Texas
Gee guys I feel better now. I thought I was the lone nut in the can but it is refreshing to find other nuts with loose screws out there. As I brought in the can and exclaimed to my wife, Hey look what I got, she looked at me like I was really crazy. Are you going to put it with all the rest of those gas cans, she said? Just no understanding at all.
This one is s0pecial just like all the other special jerrycans in my office.
This one is s0pecial just like all the other special jerrycans in my office.
52 M38 Willy's
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
-
- Captain
- Posts: 183
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: England
- Contact:
We have filled a SWB Jimmy with empty cans, but never counted how many it takes
[/img] http://514th.co.uk/images/w&p2006/1.gif [img]
Mick.
Cant get this photo to work
[/img] http://514th.co.uk/images/w&p2006/1.gif [img]
Mick.
Cant get this photo to work
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: San Antonio, Texas
Great photo. Look at all of the European style cans in the photo. The gasoline had to be delivered, no matter who manufactured the can. British, German or American. After all, "A tank without gasoline is just a 60 ton paperweight." Patton did not say this. It was the commanding general of the quarter master corps while the trucks were rolling in the Red Ball Express.
52 M38 Willy's
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
Former owner and restorer of CCKW353 " Betty Boop"
proud father of a career Army officer/Blackhawk pilot/ War in Iraq veteran
Retired high school history teacher at Lt. Colonel Robert G. Cole CMH High School, Fort Sam Houston Texas
proud great grandson of four Confederate soldiers.
great great grandson of a War of 1812 veteran
great great great grandson of 2 American Revolutionary war veterans
-
- First Lieutenant
- Posts: 93
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: N. Calif
Gas Cans
I too collect gas cans. In Northern California, it seems the 1944"s are hard to find; also, any Navy cans of any year. The 1941's, 42's,43's are very available. For the cans on my MV's, I clean them up and remove the dents, on the others I leave them as is.
Capt Lee, Vietnam Vet, US Army, 1942 GPW, 1944 WC-51, 1943 Batnam T-3, 1943 Ben Hur (wood), 1944 CCKW B2 353
-
- Captain
- Posts: 298
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Extreme Northern AZ
another can man
I check every jerry can I find for date and other marks,the last one I found was a water can,42 date with a vent screw at the top,under the handle,I've never seen one of these yet,it was in the big bone yard with the two halftrack cowls and two CCKW cab,I found one of those early galvanized can one time,but thing got tight so I had to sell it,I'm restoring a halftrack and will eventually do the open cab CCKW,I love that comabt look,with stuff strapped to every available surface,what fun is a factory looking vehicle,thats why I got out of automotive restoration and went into street rodding,I like to have a little choice with my vehicle. And jerry can were alway a great addition,almost every vehicle you see in the combat pictures has a couple of extra cans strapped on some where,on the halftracks they had mine racks down the sides on later models,you alway see these filled with jerry cans,those beast were thirsty. So far I only have 20 or so,alot are post war dated but who's going to check when I'm rolling down the street in a parade. I'm lucky my wife collects her own junk so she can't say much about mine,althought mine is a little bigger.Bobc
Restored M-2-A-1 half-track, 41 CCKW SWB closed cab yard truck, working on open cab G-506 cargo truck
-
- Captain
- Posts: 183
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: England
- Contact:
-
- Major
- Posts: 412
- Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 1:08 pm
- Location: RAMSGATE ENGLAND
-
- First Lieutenant
- Posts: 55
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Newfane,Vermont
Gas can spouts
I've had this brass spout and bag for 30/35 years. Use it on a regular basis. It's the only one I had ever seen until this past fall when I found another at the local flea mkt. http://i232.photobucket.com/albums/ee24 ... 1198932944[/url]
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Pembroke NH
- Contact:
I had thought about making a black painted plywood back for my CCKW and taking a bunch of unuseable jerry cans and slice them in half top to bottom and attach them to the plywood to make it look like the truck was full of jerry cans. With the canvas on, I think it would work.
Dr Deuce Over 50,000 driven miles in a CCKW
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html
-
- Captain
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: East coast
- Contact:
I can see the headlines now ......A false compartment has lead to what we beleave to be a large smuggling operation discovered in NH today. Not sure what thy were hauling but it had to be a lot because of the size of the truck they were using . More on this story and photos at 11:00 !!
GMC CCKW 353, M29 weasel, 1/2 ton dodge, Ben Hur Trailer
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Pembroke NH
- Contact:
You're right!
Especially if I had taco wrappers in there......
Or worse, I was carrying the "gadget"
Especially if I had taco wrappers in there......
Or worse, I was carrying the "gadget"
Dr Deuce Over 50,000 driven miles in a CCKW
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2400
- Joined: Thu Jun 08, 2006 1:10 am
- Location: Pembroke NH
- Contact:
I have often wondered, them going from can to can, not stopping the flow. hot late summer, one spark or GI dying for a butt...
Dr Deuce Over 50,000 driven miles in a CCKW
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html
1942 CCKW closed cab shopvan
1943 CCKW closed cab cargo w/M32 MG mount
1944 CCKW open cab LeRoi Kompressor
1944 CCKW open cab F1 Aircraft fueler tanker
1945 CCKW open cab cargo w/artic cab
1942 Chev cargo
1942 Chev K51 Panel
1944 Chev M6 Bomb Truck
1942 GPW Jeep
http://home.comcast.net/~cckw/wsb/html/ ... 59870.html