Hey, the valve on your spray can is basically the thing that lets the stuff out when you want it to. It's not complicated: the gas inside pushes everything with pressure. You press the button (that's the actuator), the stem inside drops down, opens up a path, and the product shoots up the dip tube, through a little hole, and out the nozzle. Let go, spring bounces it back, gasket seals it shut. No mess, no fuss.

Main bits:
Knowing this stuff makes fixing problems easier. Sometimes these valves leak, get clogged, or rust up. Here's some straightforward ways to deal with 'em.
Leaks? Try this:
Clogged up?
Rust showing?
Bluefire Cans makes solid metal packaging stuff. They've been at it over 13 years, with guys on the team who've got more than 24 years experience. They do high-pressure spray cans and little gas containers, like for refrigerants, valves, and camping gas bottles. Their valves hit the EN417 standard, get checked hard for leaks and pressure. All automated lines, good materials – stuff holds up for refrigerant work, camping fuel, whatever high-pressure job.
These tips'll keep your spray cans going longer, sprays nice and even every time. Little upkeep saves hassle down the road. Bluefire Cans focuses on quality gear to handle real everyday needs.
