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Dented Tin Cans

Started by , Jun 26 2004 02:16 PM
5 Replies
During shopping today I picked up a dented can of soup, frightened, I quickly put it back and swapped it for an undamaged one.

The fear of ‘dents in cans' harks back to when I was a small boy and used to go shopping with my mother. She warned that damaged cans are bad and can make you ill.

If a can has a dent but is not punctured is there a risk to food safety? Is my mother right or wrong?

Regards,
Simon
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I remember when the dented cans were sold 'cheap' to get rid, due to your comments above.

It was probably right at one time.

If the dent is not defined, ie a crease I do not worry these days, but still ask for a discount!! Rarely get it though. Hence your odd cans in wrong places and other things thread!!
Puzzle is defintiely not puzzled cos he is right....most dented cans are sold off during "promotions" just to get rid of them.

There are two types of cans - Tin and Aluminium. The aluminium ones are okay if slightly dented on the body but will depend on the type of products one is referring to when defects appear on the seaming section of the top end (reason why it is called a two-piece can). This may give rise to pre-mature oxidation effects to canned foods due to micro leaks or a quality issue when carbonation retention is important.....like the good old beer! Do not hesitate to buy CHEAP BEER if the dents appear only on the body section.

As for the tin materials, the entire structure must be sound otherwise don't bother putting them into your shopping basket. A couple ofareas you would need to be observing. The seaming section on both top and bottom must be even and show no seaming deformities or irregularities. The welding section (the reason why it is called a 3-piece can) of the body must be free from leaks, rust or deformities etc. Tin cans also contain a special type of food grade lacquor sprayed on and is used primarily as a barrier between the "product" and the tin surface which rusts when in contact with water surface and oxygen. Therefore, a sharp dent on the can will basically "break" the lacquor and allow contact.....and god knows what will happen from there.

Expiry date in this case has nothing to do with the integrity of the product so unless you are desperately short of a couple of bucks, DO NOT BUY DENTED TIN CANNED FOODS.

Charles Chew
You know these forums are pretty good. Thanks for the excellent advice guys.

I never doubted my Mother for a moment...

Regards,
Simon
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Simon,

All mothers give the same advice. My mum told me the same thing.

But your mother did not tell you about how to look out for BAD UHT packs ie. Exhibit "A" ....right.


Charles Chew

But your mother did not tell you about how to look out for BAD UHT packs ie. Exhibit "A" ....right.

Right!

Whilst we are on the subject I hope to get a response in the next few days, maybe we can put the thing to bed before the end of July.

Regards,
Simon

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