Petrol can

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I am getting a petrol can and seeing plenty for sale that have no labels on them. I think it's a requirement for labelling/marking. Can anyone explain why non-compliant cans are allowed to be sold?
 
If you are talking about plastic ones I always thought it was a colour code. Green for petrol. Black for diesel. But I think both are only intended for emergency use not storage.
 
If you are talking about plastic ones I always thought it was a colour code. Green for petrol. Black for diesel. But I think both are only intended for emergency use not storage.
Storage is allowed for a certain limit. The regulations says the can has to be marked as flammable. If they are selling unmarked ones, that seems to suggest marking isn't a legal requirement. But google says different:

Legal Labelling Requirements
To be legal, a portable petrol container must be marked with:
  • The words "PETROL" and "HIGHLY FLAMMABLE".
  • An appropriate hazard warning sign (typically the flame symbol).
  • The nominal capacity in litres.
  • The manufacturer's name and the date/month of manufacture.
 
I have wondered about this before - however when I have fill;ed all manner of containers up for the lawn mower / chain saw, no one has ever questioned me at the filling station

make sure it doest have a hole in the bottom, years ago it was fair stinking on my short drive home, where I realised a small puncture hole had allowed half of it to leak out all over the floor in my van, just left the doors and windows open all night, it just evaporated away.
 
The words "PETROL" and "HIGHLY FLAMMABLE".

Is moulded on the sides of all my plastic containers, except the last one I bought is such a poor, cheap moulding, the the screw top plastic lid, leaks like a sieve, and the thread so flimsy, it could never possibly ever seal.
 
I was trying to save £2 on an unmarked one, but splashed out for a marked one. It doesn't matter if it leaked, I am sure I can find a way to fix it with a tpu print. I just don't need any hassle with the regulation bull ox, what with house insurance invalidation etc.
 
What about house insurance invalidation etc? Do tell.
if your plastic petrol can bursts into flames (and does not melt in the intense fire) and does not have the wording "Petrol- highly Flammable" written on.....
 
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