Wd-40

tel0004 said:
My door was only a little bit rusty, so I just used WD 39

from what I know of the robot in your avatar, its door isn't the only thing rusty :)
 
:laugh:
 
I can attest to the cleaning crayon off the walls power of WD-40. My eldest did a wall mural when 2 yrs old and daddy was napping and mommy was at work.

FL Knifemaker said:
You actually have to be careful that you don't over spray them on the floor. It's quite dangerous, not kidding.......again ;)
YOu hagve to watch this with the "spray grease" you use for cooking. I sprayed a cake pan while holding over the floor....and took a step and slid on the spray-over on the floor.
 
Keep in mind this is a petroleum product and should not be used on animals (as the list says to do with cows) or human skin. And if you clean silver with it wash it before you ever eat with it (that would actually be a silly way to clean silver).

The other one that puzzles me is the "keeps ceramics from oxidizing". As far as I know they don't. Metal will oxidize but judging fromt he 200 year old pots I routinely put back together, ceramics don't oxidize.

Here is a link to the MSDS
http://www.wd40.com/Brands/pdfs/msds-wd40_aero.canada.eg.pdf

Wear gloves, keep exposure down to a minimum. Stoddards Solvent acts as a defatting agent leaving your skin more susceptable to entry of other toxins.
 
TKOS said:
The other one that puzzles me is the "keeps ceramics from oxidizing". As far as I know they don't. Metal will oxidize but judging fromt he 200 year old pots I routinely put back together, ceramics don't oxidize.

Soooooooooooooooo, maybe they put WD40 on their ceramic pots 200 years ago?? :dance :)
 
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