Difference between revisions of "WD-40"
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[WD-40 Company] A registered trademark for a light machine oil. WD-40® was developed in 1953 by Norm Larsen and the name is an abbreviation for 'water displacement, 40th attempt'. It contains a mixture of 50% volatile petroleum distillates in a petroleum base oil. WD-40® is used to lubricate metal surfaces especially for delicate machinery. Other applications include cleaning lightly rusted parts and removing adhesive residues. | [WD-40 Company] A registered trademark for a light machine oil. WD-40® was developed in 1953 by Norm Larsen and the name is an abbreviation for 'water displacement, 40th attempt'. It contains a mixture of 50% volatile petroleum distillates in a petroleum base oil. WD-40® is used to lubricate metal surfaces especially for delicate machinery. Other applications include cleaning lightly rusted parts and removing adhesive residues. | ||
+ | == Risks == | ||
+ | |||
+ | WD-40 aerosol: [https://files.wd40.com/pdf/sds/mup/wd-40-multi-use-product-aerosol-low-voc-sds-us-ghs.pdf SDS] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Physical and Chemical Properties== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row"| Density | ! scope="row"| Density | ||
− | | 0.817 | + | | 0.817 g/ml |
|- | |- | ||
! scope="row"| Boiling Point | ! scope="row"| Boiling Point | ||
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|} | |} | ||
− | == | + | ==Resources and Citations== |
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− | * | + | * WD-40 company: [https://www.wd40.com/ Website] |
− | * | + | * Conservation News Number 33, July 87 |
− | * Website | + | * Website: www.hants.org.uk/museums/ofr/cmeth_t.html |
− | * Wikipedia | + | * Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WD-40 (Accessed Dec. 29, 2005) |
[[Category:Materials database]] | [[Category:Materials database]] |
Latest revision as of 10:51, 26 June 2022
Description
[WD-40 Company] A registered trademark for a light machine oil. WD-40® was developed in 1953 by Norm Larsen and the name is an abbreviation for 'water displacement, 40th attempt'. It contains a mixture of 50% volatile petroleum distillates in a petroleum base oil. WD-40® is used to lubricate metal surfaces especially for delicate machinery. Other applications include cleaning lightly rusted parts and removing adhesive residues.
Risks
WD-40 aerosol: SDS
Physical and Chemical Properties
Density | 0.817 g/ml |
---|---|
Boiling Point | 323 F |
Resources and Citations
- WD-40 company: Website
- Conservation News Number 33, July 87
- Website: www.hants.org.uk/museums/ofr/cmeth_t.html
- Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WD-40 (Accessed Dec. 29, 2005)