WD-40 has countless uses for auto repair and around your home, but can it substitute for dielectric grease as a protective ...
Did you know WD-40 was created as a nuclear missile lubricant during the Cold War era? Its name is an abbreviation for "water displacement, 40th attempt." Today the most common use for WD-40 is to ...
This story was originally featured on Field & Stream. If you could take the American spirit—equal parts Daniel Boone, Chuck Yeager, and Elon Musk—and distill it into an aerosol, it would be a blue-and ...
Odds are, you already have a can of WD-40 in the pantry or under the sink. If you only use your WD-40 once in a blue moon though, you’re missing out on this super product’s full potential. This ...
The problem was diabolically simple. Convair was the principal Air Force contractor for the new Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile program and it was coping with an intractable problem: the ...
WD-40 is often thought of as a must-have inclusion in any toolbox, but can it be used to remove rust safely from your hand tools and power tools?
WD-40 is one of the go-to tools for fixing almost any problem, but it's not safe on everything. So what happens if you use it on plastic car parts?
The makers of the handy spray lubricant WD-40 proudly list 2,000 uses for their product, from unsticking rusty screws or squeaky bicycle chains to polishing frying pans. But British police have found ...
WD-40 is a multi-purpose product, but there are some substitutes that simply work better at certain tasks. Here are five you ...