• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

WD-40, it's not just for guns

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Mar 21, 2004
Messages
8,234
Reaction score
359
Location
Oregon
WD-40

I thought that you might like to know more about this well-known product.
When you read the "shower door" part, try it. It's the first thing that has
ever cleaned that spotty shower door. If yours is plastic, it works just
as well as glass. It's a miracle! Then try it on your stovetop...Viola!
It's now shinier than it's ever been. You'll be amazed.

The product began from a search for a rust preventative solvent and
degreaser to protect missile parts. WD-40 was created in 1953 by three
technicians at the San Diego Rocket Chemical Company. Its name comes from
the project that was to find a "water displacement" compound. They were
successful with the fortieth formulation, thus WD-40.

The Corsair Company bought it in bulk to protect their Atlas missile parts.
The workers were so pleased with the product, they began smuggling (also
known as "shrinkage" or "stealing") it out to use at home. The executives
decided there might be a consumer market for it and put it in aerosol cans.
The rest, as they say, is history.

It is a carefully guarded recipe known only to four people. Only one of
them is the "brew master." There are about 2.5 million gallons of the stuff
manufactured each year. It gets it's distinctive smell from a fragrance
that is added to the brew. Ken East (one of the original founders) says
there is nothing in WD-40 that would hurt you.

Here are some of the uses:

Protects silver from tarnishing
Cleans and lubricates guitar strings
Gives floors that 'just-waxed' sheen without making it slippery
Keeps flies off cows
Restores and cleans chalkboards
Removes lipstick stains
Loosens stubborn zippers
Untangles jewelry chains
Removes stains from stainless steel sinks
Removes dirt and grime from the barbecue grill
Keeps ceramic/terra cotta garden pots from oxidizing
Removes tomato stains from clothing
Keeps glass shower doors free of water spots
Camouflages scratches in ceramic and marble floors
Keeps scissors working smoothly
Lubricates noisy door hinges on vehicles and doors in homes
Gives a children's play gym slide a shine for a super fast slide
Lubricates gear shift and mower deck lever for ease of handling on riding mowers
Rids rocking chairs and swings of squeaky noises
Lubricates tracks in sticking home windows and makes them easier to open
Spraying an umbrella stem makes it easier to open and close
Restores and cleans padded leather dashboards in vehicles, as well as vinyl bumpers
Restores and cleans roof racks on vehicles
Lubricates and stops squeaks in electric fans
Lubricates wheel sprockets on tricycles, wagons and bicycles for easy handling
Lubricates fan belts on washers and dryers and keeps them running smoothly
Keeps rust from forming on saws and saw blades, and other tools
Removes splattered grease on stove
Keeps bathroom mirror from fogging
Lubricates prosthetic limbs
Keeps pigeons off the balcony (they hate the smell)
Removes all traces of duct tape
I have even heard of folks spraying it on their arms, hands, and knees to
relieve arthritis pain.

Florida's favorite use was "cleans and removes love bugs from grills and bumpers
The favorite use in the State of New York--WD-40 protects the Statue of
Liberty from the elements.
WD-40 attracts fish. Spray a LITTLE on live bait or lures and you will be
catching the big one in no time. Also it's a lot cheaper than the chemical
attractants that are made for just that purpose. Keep in mind though, using
some chemical laced baits or lures for fishing are not allowed in some states.
Use it for fire ant bites. It takes the sting away immediately, and stops the itch.
WD-40 is great for removing crayon from walls. Spray on the mark and wipe
with a clean rag.

Also, if you've discovered that your teenage daughter has washed and dried a
tube of lipstick with a load of laundry, saturate the lipstick spots with
WD-40 and re-wash. Presto! Lipstick is gone!

If you sprayed WD-40 on the distributor cap, it would displace the moisture
and allow the car to start.
WD-40, long known for its ability to remove left-over tape mung (sticky
label tape), is also a lovely perfume and air freshener!
Sprayed liberally on every hinge in the house, it leaves that
distinctive clean fresh scent for up to two days!
Seriously though, it removes black scuff marks from the kitchen floor!
Use WD-40 for those nasty tar and scuff marks on flooring. It doesn't seem
to harm the finish and you won't have to scrub nearly as hard to get them
off. Just remember to open some windows if you have a lot of marks.
Bug guts will eat away the finish on your car if not removed quickly!
Use WD-40!

The applications appear to be endless
 
I can agree with the fish attracting. We use it on our halibut rigs in Alaska. Works like a charm.

Huntin
 
Reb - two thoughts: (that's all I can handle in one day) :haha:
1. If it removes stains from stainless steel sinks, were they really "stainless" to start with?
2. Just to make this post legal, we'd better add: "Lubricates any or all moving parts on muzzleloading firearms".

Thanks for the list - I'm going to print it out and keep it, 'cause I know I won't remember all those great uses!
 
An amazing list of uses for sure. :thumbsup:

I'm still not letting WD-40 near my guns though.
 
I can agree with the fish attracting. We use it on our halibut rigs in Alaska. Works like a charm.

Do it in front of a Coast Guard or DEC patrol in a foul mood and you'll get a $20,000 federal fine for deliberate discharge of oil overboard. ::

But only if all the drug runners, pirates and salmon rapers got away from them earlier in their shift. :haha:
 
Universal law of the known world: If it moves and it shouldn't, duct tape it. If it don't move and it should, WD-40 it.
 
It starts lawn mowers too,, and it is easier on the motor then starter fluid,, cars and trucks also,, good stuff
 
Keep it off your guns. Stick to modern gun oils instead of WD-40.

WD-40 leaves a film that can build up. When I was at the Remington factory, they told us how one fellow lubed his M700 with WD-40 for many years. A film developed around the sear/firing pin contact point such that the firing pin slipped and Ka-boom! When the gun was examined at the factory, it took three big guys to pry the action off the stock.
 
Keep it off your guns. Stick to modern gun oils instead of WD-40.

WD-40 leaves a film that can build up. When I was at the Remington factory, they told us how one fellow lubed his M700 with WD-40 for many years. A film developed around the sear/firing pin contact point such that the firing pin slipped and Ka-boom! When the gun was examined at the factory, it took three big guys to pry the action off the stock.


:hmm: :hmm: :hmm:

Probably not many bigger Remington bigots than I am, but I wonder if that claim attributed to someone at Remington had anything to do with their maneuvering at that time around huge lawsuits from their model 700 trigger failures...it was on their website, may still be.

Fortunately, due to a good relationship with the service department, it was suggested I send in both of my 700's, and they put new replacement trigger assemblies on them.

They had a run of out-of-spec trigger assemblies which could slip causing accidental discharges...Remington dodged lawsuits where family members, hunting buddies, innocent bystanders, etc, were killed by AD's from model 700's...the "10 commandments" brochure was packed with every firearm which states: "Always keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction".

I use WD40 a lot on all my shotguns, rifles, handguns, muzzleloaders, that I've owned since the 60's...outstanding stuff for me.
Saw a post one time stating it would remove the coloring from case colored locks...I'd been using it on case colored TC locks for 10+ years at that time so I ignored it, continue to use it, and they still look like new.

:thumbsup:
 
When I come home from a hard day, and the wife lays into me for not havin a deer, rabbit or nary a squirrel, I spray WD-40 in the air......smoothes her out in seconds. :blah:
 
Before going to muzzleloaders, I've been to most mfg armorers' schools. None recommended WD-40.
 
Reb - 1. If it removes stains from stainless steel sinks, were they really "stainless" to start with?

"stainless" means just what the word says..... stain less
stainless steel is what it says also. steel that will stains less than carbon steel.
Many people think because they have a stainless steel barrel that they can neglect cleaning it just because it is "stainless".
Such is NOT the case. Many gun barrels are ruined by the neglect from not cleaning and this way of thinking. They need to be cleaned the same as any other barrel does.

Woody
 
My wife's cookies tasted funny for years until she started use'n Pam on the cookie sheets instead of WD40!! :thumbsup:

YMHS
rollingb
 
Before going to muzzleloaders, I've been to most mfg armorers' schools. None recommended WD-40.

I'm not trying to convert you...I was simply offering a counter view that it's never caused a problem for me in my life...I use it a lot on a lot of guns all year long, buy a half dozen cans at a time, etc...
:redthumb:
 
WD-40 is the best and quickest hand cleaner for cold roof tar cement, glue, and silicone caulk :thumbsup:

It's also good for cleanin' a boat motor carburator after you pull it off of an upside-down boat laying at the bottom of the Norfork River, AK a mile from where you docked it......but that's a different story :redface:
 
Quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reb - 1. If it removes stains from stainless steel sinks, were they really "stainless" to start with?



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



"stainless" means just what the word says..... stain less
stainless steel is what it says also. steel that will stains less than carbon steel.
Many people think because they have a stainless steel barrel that they can neglect cleaning it just because it is "stainless".

Clorox will de-passify stainless steel and cause or thereafter allow rust and pitting. And most folks keep Clorox right there in the kitchen or bathroom.
 
WD-40 renders modern cartridges inert. Even sprayed on the gun and not on the cartridge it will get across to the cartridge -- it doesn't take much -- and either into the powder or primer and it aint gonna work. Well duh, it's a penetrating oil, but people continue to discover this the hard way. It will also build up a film as has been previously mentioned in a post. There are two local gunstores whose gunsmiths have admitted to me that they've been able to purchase a number of guns cheap because they wouldn't work anymore. After the purchase all they had to do was clean the WD-40 off the innards.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top