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You can buy brand new empty plastic 1 gallon "cans" for this purpose:
There is a difference - the plastic of supermarket water (and milk) bottles is quite thin in comparison to the ones I mentioned. I used to recycle motor oil in milk jugs, and had a couple of bad experiences where, say, a push into something would pinch the plastic or otherwise puncture into a pinhole. Also, the lids - once the purchase seal is broken - are not secure enough for vigorous shaking.I think the riskiest of the batch are the disinfectant bottles. Even after several rinses the fragrance remains overwhelming, so residual surfactants must still be clinging to the plastic. I'll relegate those to oil changes. I found the stash of empty fruit punch bottles, but in thinking about it we want to keep those for potable water, something we can't do with the disinfectant or windshield washer solution bottles, and probably don't want to do with the vinegar jugs.Still leaning towards the washer solution bottles, unless somebody knows something we don't yet.
No cans, that's what I'm trying to get away from with this job. I have plenty of empty paint cans which I have dutifully cleaned and set aside. Cans are an enormous PITA to handle with a spray gun. I"m taking advantage of the lower viscosity of the reduced paint with the bottle idea.
Ah, gotcha! then there is this if you already have the cans:
I searched for "bottle" at Menards since they have everything, hoping to find new empty bottles. Instead, this is what I got:Figures.