Friendly Plastic Pop Can Nearly Ready for Market 114
drfishy writes "BevNET has the story of Toledo, OH based Owens-Illinois and their new pop can. The can is made of a "fancy" new clear plastic with a traditional aluminum top and should be in stores sometime this year. Consumers are supposed to like it because of the "cool" factor, manufacturers will like it because they can use the same equipment to fill and package them, beverage companies like it because consumers and manufacturers will, and advertising agencies love it because they can get rich making all new commercials to convince people it really is cool. Seriously though, I like the idea, enough to submit a story about it anyway..."
Pop can? (Score:4, Funny)
Obligatory link: http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~almccon/pop_soda/ [caltech.edu]
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:2)
Never heard of "pop" until I met some people from Chicago. They thought "soda" was weird.
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Soda?
My word, do some people actually drink sodium oxide?!
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:3, Informative)
I've lived in enough areas in the US that I've been around most variations. It seems to break down like this:
West: soda or pop
Midwest: pop
East: soda or soda-pop
NorEast: soda-pop
South: Coke or "fountain drink"
Deep South: Coke (even if it's clear or fruit colored)
I grew up with "pop", moved to where it was "coke", and then back to where it's "soda" or "pop". I generally call it soda or better yet, use a brand name, as soda seems to be understood everywhere. I definitely have had people not understand when I used "pop" before.
The point? Not much
You left off one... (Score:2)
(However, even living in Georgia, I've never actually heard anyone call any non-cola drink a "Coke." Ever.)
Re:You left off one... (Score:2)
In Huntsville, AL it was hard to tell because so many people were not from there, but many of the natives used Coke or, yep, soft drink
Re:Pop can? (Score:2)
"Pop" calls to mind images of popsicles, blow pops, and someone's dad.
-ks
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Re:Pop can? (Score:1)
Red Dye #3 (Score:3, Funny)
Gimme some more o' dat green "Romulan Ale"!
I am from the Toledo area, history on Owens. (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyone think they'll pay these firms pay after plastic pop cans become all the rage? Yeah, me neither...
Re:I am from the Toledo area, history on Owens. (Score:1)
Re:I am from the Toledo area, history on Owens. (Score:3, Informative)
Define new? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Define new? (Score:2)
Re:Define new? (Score:1)
but! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:but! (Score:1)
Uh, youngster... Crushing a can on your forehead, or with your fingertips, got its reputation as an amusing feat thirty years ago when the beverage cans were steel.
I'll be impressed if you can crush it hard enough to melt it.
But only impressed in a physics way, not a physical way.
and how? (Score:1)
Re:and how? (Score:1)
Re:and how? (Score:3, Interesting)
Where exactly is this? I've always wondered. You see, I've lived in Atlanta, the home of Coca-Cola, for six years, and I've never seen anyone call any non-cola beverage a Coke. I've seen Pepsi, RC, and hundreds of knock-off store brand colas called Coke, but I've never heard a Sprite, a Dr. Pepper, or anything else called a Coke.
Personally, I think the whole "everything's a Coke" bit is an urban legend.
Re:and how? (Score:1)
How recyclable is it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyone know which is more environmentally sound to recycle: plastic or aluminum? I would have guessed the aluminum requires less energy and releases fewer gasses than plastic, but I'm not sure.
If it's a matter of making the can cheaper to manufacture but more expensive to recycle, sorry, but I would rather the manufacturer pay for it than my local co-op recycler.
If there is no downside to the recycling (and separation is still an issue) then it's a neat concept, but I just feel like aluminum is the more ecologically sound method right now. I would love to be proved wrong.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
My guess would be that you are correct that currently aluminium is cheaper and easier to recycle. However, your comment "I would rather the manufacturer pay for it than my local co-op recycler" is a bit naieve. If the aluminum can is more expesive, they'll simply charge you more. That's not to say that, if the composite can is cheaper, they won't just scarf up the extra profit, mind you. If it is cheaper, it will allow them room to move the price down as necessary to encourage use of the new format, though. Once in a while that results in the price staying lower.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
That's probably a waste. They'll still have to pass them under a magnet because of stupid people who don't know the difference, or lazy people who just don't seperate. It's not very hard to automatically seperate steel cans from aluminum cans.
To be or not to be stupid... (Score:1)
However, the magnet that processes steel might be part of a system that can't handle aluminum and vice versa, so the magnet simply causes a small percentage of material to be rejected. In this sense, the stupid people generate rejected material, but the efforts of the smart people are not wasted. It would be interesting if someone who knew explained how the recycling system works.
Re:To be or not to be stupid... (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure technology has advanced sufficiently from when the following happened to prevent it, since it was over 10 years ago, but this is why I bet they still have to pass all the cans under a magnet:
When I was in high school I worked in the kitchen periodically (we all had to rotate through cleanup duty). We had a recycling program run by our trash collection service. They provided statistics for us comparing what percentage (by weight and volume) of the things we threw away went to the landfill or were recycled. They were printed on greenbar and hung weekly on the board in the office. The recycling bins for cans were the extra large barrels with the hook and bar on them to be auto-loaded in the truck. After removing both ends of the can and stomping it flat, you could fit about 700 pounds of steel in the barrel. One week the recycling percentage dropped dramatically. The reason, they explained to us, was that someone had put an aerosol can in with the metal recyclables, and it made the whole load useless when they processed it. It's a great example of the stupidity of the few making everyone else's efforts useless when it comes to recycling.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not in the least. I know I am going to be the one paying in the end no matter who bears the costs.
The issue here is that my co-op recycler operates as a non-profit. They cover recycling costs with garbage [non-recyclable] fees ($2/can). I would rather the for-profit manufacturer deal with extra costs of bottling/canning than trickling it down to the local level.
In fact, I'm purposefully paying -more- this way than if my recycler bore the brunt of the additional recycling cost (at least in the short term) since I pay nothing to drop off the recyclables.
I'm willing to pay the little bit extra in the way of an aluminum fee to make sure I contribute that little bit less to the cost of recycling, thereby making recycling a more economical alternative and thereby making it more common.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2, Interesting)
Aluminum. Virgin aluminum is a bitch on the environment (in terms of pollutants and land use), recycled is a hell of a lot better. Of course, recycled plastic is even better than that.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:4, Interesting)
That is, this product is FAR less recyclable than aluminum cans.
As far as I know that is, I'm no expert.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
here all beverage/soda/juice cans have a pawn on them(15cents), the pawn-o-mats used to return the cans just crush the cans, so these plastic 'cool' cans wouldnt fit in. and they sure ain't going to replace all those automats for pointless one can.
actually most people dislike cans around here anyways, except when trolling tax-free beer from foreign countries/cruises(note that these cans don't fit into the pawn-o-mats, theres a code on the cans that gets read).
one major thing to include: NOBODY WILL BUY BEER IN PLASTIC CONTAINER!!! (even if the plastic wouldnt hurt taste)
iirc the can return system makes them as environmentally friendly as return bottles that get used ~5-10(did a school project on the issue and this is iirc from few years back) times before crashing and making new(both plastic thick soda bottles and glass 0.3-1l bottles, they're not like the usual thin soda bottles i've seen elsewhere).
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
they already do if you haven't noticed, there's been plastic bottles of shitty beer out for years.
and if you drink beer out of a can*, you clearly don't have enough taste to care about what kind of container it comes in.
* - a notable exception to this is draught cans.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
Most REAL snobs don't like Guinness --- they may say, "It's the definitive dry Irish stout," but that's meant to damn it with faint praise.
Real beer snobs will say, "Guinness isn't bad, but Dogfish Head's World Wide Stout is REALLY something," or "Young's double chocolate stout is really much tastier," or "Pyramid's Obsidian Stout is much hoppier, and much tastier."
Moreover (replying to the parent comment, not this one) I'll note that Guinness in cans is worse than Guinness in bottles or on draft: in order for the draught widget to work right, the beer has to be waaaay too cold to properly enjoy.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
It's not the size of the brewery, it's the quality of the beer. There are some very large English and German breweries that make some excellent beer.
Actually, chocolate malts (the kind used in brewing, not the kind from the soda shop) are in fact just malted barley, roasted in a particular way. So many (though not all) chocolate stouts are Rhineheitsgebot compatible. Though of course the Germans don't brew stouts.
The Germans do brew wheat beers, though. Even though they're not rhgbt-compatible, technically. But the Germans don't put cranberries in. ;-)
And the Rhgbt is BS anyway: the Belgians totally ignore it, and even their big breweries put out some of the world's most incredible beers.
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:2)
you don't want to troll few 24packs(4 per person isn't that uncommon) of glass bottles out from a cruiseboat and then from a bus to your home, 4 24packs of cans is much more convenient. and cans aren't considered bad for beer here.
nobody would settle to drink beer from plastic container around here, maybe one could buy IF IT WAS cheaper(it doesn't really matter when drinking to get drunk, and got seperate glass), but the cost of beer doesn't really depend around here on how cheap it is to manufacture or bottle. 0.33l glass bottles is the number one way to drink beer, and there's (also pawned) good plastic packs that hold 24 glass bottles for them(handy as festival chairs&etc, also handy for getting the bottles back to shop plus they make a moody sound when shaked when loaded full, kilikilikili), beer also comes in 1l glass bottles but rarely anyone drinks from them except when drinking with lunch/dinner/or so.
fyi, beer costs here rougly 1$ per 0.33l bottle(or can).
(draught can=keg with valve?)
Re:How recyclable is it? (Score:1)
nah, it's a can with a... well... a widget [howstuffworks.com] inside.
More garbage, less recycling (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:this one is unrecyclable (Score:2)
Personally, this idea pisses me off enough to keep me from purchasing ever again from companies that bottle their beverages in these cans.
Not at all new... (Score:2)
Re:Not at all new... (Score:2, Insightful)
Two words: Brittney Spears
Re:Not at all new... (Score:2)
Of course not. You also need a prize scam!
Now you can get a FREE tricycle, or vacation in the bahamas if you just drink 5e99 cans of Mr. Blech!
"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:4, Interesting)
Otherwise the carbonic acid would react with the aluminum, and leave you with a nasty taste (I believe due to Aluminum Oxide? but its been a while since high school Chemistry).
Re:"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:2)
i dont know anything about the manufactureing process of either, but i think the contents of the can, taste better then the bottle, and avoid plastic for soda containers as a result.
Re:"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:2)
But Coke in glass bottles tastes even better still!
Glass (Score:1)
In Mighigan 10 years or so ago they still had reusable half liter bottles of pop (as they called it there). Excellent. I think these are gone now, though.
Re:"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:4, Informative)
Aluminum oxide is not soluble and almost certainly doesn't have any taste (it's even more stable than silica).
What you get after dissolving aluminum with an acid is hydrogen and an aluminum-based salt. This would be aluminum carbonate for carbonic acid, and aluminum phosphate for the phosphoric acid many drinks use as a flavouring agent.
I left a case of coke unused for about 6 months once. Tasted very odd after the lining broke down.
Re:"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:2)
Did you die from drinking it?
Re:"It doesn't taste the same" (Score:2)
Did you die from drinking it?
Not yet, though I suppose the jury's still out.
Strangely, it gave one heck of a caffeine/sugar rush. Not that I'm about to repeat the experiment.
New for marketing geeks? (Score:1)
Really though, this is nothing new. It is just using old technology to try to make people buy more of something that everyone needs less of (put your own link to children becoming fat on soda/pop/cola/coke here please).
There are nerds, and there are nerds... (Score:1)
DDB (who sees no need to migrate from the all-plastic 20-oz form factor)
the thing that concerns me the most. (Score:1)
How is this different from... (Score:2)
this [attbi.com]?
I remember these transparent plastic cans with standard aluminium top at least ten years ago, selling here in the UK.
AFAICR, the drink itself was foul.
Re:How is this different from... (Score:4, Interesting)
You can already get beer in plastic [plastic.com] bottles in the US but most people think the beer will not taste as good (for the Miller, Lite, and MGD brands that use the technology, taste isn't really a concern anyway - but somehow these consumers consider themselves beer conoisseurs if you change the bottling material). So given the limited acceptance of plastic [plastic.com] bottles I've only seen them at sporting events where it is prefereable not to arm potentially drunken disgruntled fans with glass missiles just in case the home team loses.
A New Revenue Source (Score:2)
At least I hope Slashdot collected some money for the headline. If not, they're bigger suckers than those of us who read the article.
Re:A New Revenue Source (Score:3, Insightful)
Newsflash for you, and for every other maroon who parrots the "Slashdot is selling out" / "Slashdot should charge advertising fees" lines; This is a site dedicated to news for nerds. Nerds like gadgets. They like cool toys, fast processors, high speed RAM, water cooling to make the best out of their new high speed toys, mods to make their toys look good, caffeinated products, sugary foods - how else is a news site supposed to tell people about these products without, oh, mentioning them by name? Are you going to clamour that they should charge AMD for announcing the Athlon 64 release to the market? Or they they should invoice Intel for announcing the Pentium 4 4.0GHz?
It's news. Get over it. If you don't like it, go somewhere else and be uninformed. Stick to your Celeron 400MHz and thinnet LAN and quit bitching. It's old, and nobody cares.
Re:A New Revenue Source (Score:2)
But promoting plastic sugar-water cans is pretty far afield from "News for Nerds". I don't see any way to turn these things into a microwave antenna. What's next, pearlescent eye-shadow colors? Britney's new album? (I'd better be careful, maybe Katz has already done those!)
what's next? (Score:2)
Re:A New Revenue Source (Score:1)
Cool factor? (Score:2)
Or am I just expecting too much?
Plastic/Aluminum (Score:1)
Re:Plastic/Aluminum (Score:1)
Consumers aren't supposed to have memories that long.
Slashdot... (Score:1)
Beam me up, Scotty! (Score:1)
Japan has the opposite! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Japan has the opposite! (Score:1)
Or at least I think that's where this can came from.. I found it in the car, it says taboo on it.. strange.
josh
Excellent! (Score:1)
Should be Using Transparent Aluminum (Score:2)
here's the prior-art non-patent application:
Method for making recycleable transparent beverage containers
Re:Should be Using Transparent Aluminum (Score:1)
Re:Should be Using Transparent Aluminum (Score:1)
A five pound can? Huh? This isn't extra-thick uranium. 'Splains yourself Lucy. Normal cans are made of aluminum.
Re:Should be Using Transparent Aluminum (Score:1)
Glacier Fruit Flavoured Drinks (Score:1, Informative)
It was called 'Glacier' or something similiar, maybe glacial.
Very refreshing fwiw as well, and this was at least 10 years ago.
Nothing new here, move along.
Insulation? (Score:1)
Re:Insulation? (Score:2)
I don't care. (Score:1)
Unless they can convince the folks at Guinness to bottle me Draught in the techno can so I can see the nitro widget kick off, I really could give a rats ass less.
Aha! (Score:1)
in vain to reduce the dangerous aura of aluminium beverage cans by
adding saftey tabs, wider mouth ports, and even larger sized cans.
Now with the technological advent of non-lethal weaponry, can makers
have taken inspiration in the design of so called 'plastic bullets', hence the
new handsome containers and confident consumers.
This just in... (Score:2)
Nearly Ready? (Score:2)
A clear plastic 'can' and that's it? We've had these for several years in the UK - it was indeed just a 'cool' market attempt. They also had small carefully-density-controlled jelly balls floating throughout the drink. Seems to have pretty much died by now.
Sounds pretty cool... (Score:2)
But I wonder how dirty they get? Plastic seems to attract dirt worse than aluminum.
Re:Pop? (Score:1)