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Thread: Plastic Drum Identification
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8th November 2013, 08:46 PM #1
Plastic Drum Identification
This is a very long shot but here goes; I found the top half of what I think would have been a 20 litre plastic drum washed up on a beach and was hoping someone here could identify it and hopefully tell me where I could obtain more (whole ones). The catch is that I want the profile/mold to be exactly the same as below:
IMG_0528lores.jpg IMG_0519lores.jpg IMG_0530lores.jpg
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9th November 2013, 12:34 PM #2
Yup.........Thats a plastic drum, no doubt about it.
I would love to grow my own food, but I can not find bacon seeds
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9th November 2013, 05:51 PM #3
I just thought someone may recognise it, no biggy really!
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9th November 2013, 06:23 PM #4
Always like a bit of a puzzle.
Springwater, the numbers are a UN code for packaging. If you google "UN packaging code" or similar, you'll find a number of places that seem to have descriptions.
This might not help either but...
3H1 = A Jerry can , made of plastic, with a closed head (we sort of knew that)
Y1.5 = Packing group II (moderately hazardous) specific gravity of 1.5 (I assume max for the material to be stored)
150 = Vapour pressure of the liquid, in kPa (once again, I assume max)
01 = the year of manufacture
GB/2534 is more interesting. GB is a country code. I assume Great Britain and the 4 numbers are a manufacturer registration number. So potentially you could find out who made the item. But further searching of the internet didn't turn up any more clues.
Regards
SWK
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9th November 2013, 06:42 PM #5
Well, one more step.
This link is the UK packaging approvals database. Manufacturer 2534 (whoever they were) have been cancelled so I would think your chances of getting more of the same are pretty slim.
Regards
SWK
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10th November 2013, 09:59 AM #6
Thank you very much for trying SWK
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10th November 2013, 07:03 PM #7
I often find disgarded plastic bait bags washed up on the beach. The one in the first pic was the first Bonza Bait Squid bag I've found, believe it or not the contents are a product of India...Bonza!
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11th November 2013, 04:40 PM #8
Check with someone who works on a farm or is involved with farm chemicals.
In my past life as a farmer I used dozens of similar drums, they contained Roundup & other chemicals.
Regards Keith.Bekky
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11th November 2013, 06:33 PM #9
Thanks Keith, I've searched a fair while on ebay and such and while there's plenty of used 20 litre drums available for sale, there's none like the one I want. Considering it's production date was 2001 and that it looked like it had spent a long time in the sea going by the number of attached shell fish, I think it's unlikely that I will find another like it. You never know what this Forum can turn up though, that's why I gave it a shot.
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12th November 2013, 10:12 AM #10Hewer of wood
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That's a conundrum SW (boom tish).
Why is it of interest can I ask?
I have a couple that look similar; they're 20 l motor oil drums used by Fuchs.
The zig zag collar around the neck in your pic suggests a locking top was used and that probably means the drum contained toxic or flammable liquid. That fits with the code that SWK found.Cheers, Ern
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12th November 2013, 12:38 PM #11
are you sitting down?
IMG_0516.jpg
I've cut away the top 75mm at what looks to be a join line where it was melted onto the body of the drum.
If I obtained more, I was then going to join them back to back and stack them 4 x 4.
I found if a strong light was held up to it that it's tranlucent enough for some light to pass through so I thought I'd make facilities within the structure for a light in each component.
I may even wire it for sound and play a long looping of Schwarzkopf sounding out Strauss' Four Last Songs but more likely a sound of the sea.
What do you reckon
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12th November 2013, 03:00 PM #12Hewer of wood
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A laudable endeavour. Happy to support it in whatever way I can. Schwarzkopf can bring anything to life.
Pics attached of my two drums. Don't appear to be the same and also still in use. But I'm happy to save them for you.
And they proved a puzzle too but that's another story.Cheers, Ern
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12th November 2013, 06:42 PM #13New Member
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- Sep 2013
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- Newcastle Australia
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That looks exactly the same style of drum that our fire fighting foam comes in. I'm from NSW but MFB probably gets their foam from the same supplier. Worth a shot to try your local fire station. They'll give away as many empty ones as they have lying around, I know we do...
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12th November 2013, 07:28 PM #14
Thanks Ern but I'm so taken by the design of the drum top that no other is going to satisfy...I've gone all finicky about it. I've even given time to thoughts of reproducing it by means of carving or casting them in ceramics and other stuff but I'd need to find someone with greater expertise in such skills than me to do it. I'm thinking I need 16 or 25 produced to achieve the image in my noggin
Fairdinkum! Any chance you could take a shot at your convenience I'd be very appreciative thanks heaps Firebug!
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15th November 2013, 06:05 PM #15
So I try umpteenth firefighting foam web sites of varying descriptions... may have got close witha green looking drum but the pic is front on with a tantalising glipse of the top which looks that it may foot the bill maybe, fracken art!
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