THE ANSWER TO THIS IS QUITE SIMPLE IT STOPS A PRESURE BUILD UP WHEN YOU PUSH 
THE TOP ON WHICH COULD PRESS DOWN THE SPRAY HEAD AND IT STOPS THE TOP POPPING 
OFF IF THE TOP WAS PUT ON COLD LIKE IN THE MORNING OUTSIDE THEN BROUGHT INTO 
ROOM TEMPRATURE HOPE THIS HELPS aNDREW 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Boyce 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 8:55 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Why is there a small hole on the top of spray-can 
lids?


  These little holes are a good example of "a feature built into a product so 
  that it can handle unusual or unexpected situations." We don't think about 
  or
  see these situations in the normal use of the product. For example, if you 
  look at the sheet metal under the hood of your car, you will see little 
  bends
  in it. Those bends are placed there so that in an accident the front of the 
  car will fold like an accordion and absorb the impact. The bends don't do 
  anything
  unless a crash occurs, and then they are very important.

  With a can of Pam, the lid fits very tightly so that oil won't ooze from the 
  nozzle down the side of the can and onto your shelf. If the manufacturer 
  puts
  the caps on the cans in New Jersey and then ships the cans to Denver (the 
  "Mile-High City"), a funny thing happens -- the air pressure inside the lid 
  pops
  the lid right off. So the poor stock boy at the grocery store has to put the 
  lids back on 30 cans before he can put them on the shelf. What a pain!

  When the lid was put on the can in New Jersey, the air inside the lid had a 
  certain pressure (the same pressure as the air outside the lid). The outside
  air pressure in Denver is lower than the air pressure in New Jersey 
  (pressure decreases as elevation increases), so when the can arrives in 
  Denver, the
  pressure outside the lid is lower than the pressure inside the lid. With 
  this imbalance, the air inside the lid tries to expand and ends up popping 
  the
  lid off.

  By putting a small hole in the lid, the air can exit through the hole, and 
  the lids stay on during shipping! 



   

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