Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
I know everyone here loves a nice WD40 story ...
A fabrication worker sprayed a colleague in the face with WD40 in a row about a new pair of overalls, a court heard last Tuesday (26 August). However, James Burt (54) was cleared of assault after his defence lawyer argued that he had sprayed his subordinate, Mariusz Adamowicz (36), with the penetrating water-displacing oil by mistake. http://www.alloaadvertiser.com/news/...f-wd40-frenzy/ Owain |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Thu, 04 Sep 2014 14:33:22 -0700, spuorgelgoog wrote:
WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
WD40 is fine for releasing stuff, but normal lubrication methods need to be
implimented long term. It don't arf pong though. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Cursitor Doom" wrote in message ... On Thu, 04 Sep 2014 14:33:22 -0700, spuorgelgoog wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 04/09/2014 23:55, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Thu, 04 Sep 2014 14:33:22 -0700, spuorgelgoog wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote:
WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote:
On 04/09/2014 23:55, Cursitor Doom wrote: On Thu, 04 Sep 2014 14:33:22 -0700, spuorgelgoog wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me ツ」30a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
In article ,
Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: On 04/09/2014 23:55, Cursitor Doom wrote: On Thu, 04 Sep 2014 14:33:22 -0700, spuorgelgoog wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! 2p J. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile.
Does that mean it's any _good_? I no longer get to read it whenever I want but I used to hold it out as the best example of Plain English in the land. So that's one sense in which I'd say it was and still is bloody good. Another sense is that it's good at writing for rather a lot of people who live in the UK (admittedly biased towards C2-E males outside Liverpool). You may not like their views but that doesn't make The Sun any less "good" than, say, The Guardian which writes for a different readership - more graduate, metropolitan, and public sector. And I'll wager that a greater proportion of The Sun's sales are still to people buying out of their own pocket than The Guardian's sales. -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
In article ],
Another John writes In article , Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the テ「ぎナ典op 100 Inventions of All-Timeテ「ぎ? by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! It came top in a tools' survey? -- fred it's a ba-na-na . . . . |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Friday, September 5, 2014 6:18:19 PM UTC+1, Adrian wrote:
The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? It has tits (at least I think it did the last time I looked at it). Owain |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote:
That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. Brown-coloured sugar water with a dash of caffeine wouldn't sell by the description alone. But brightly label it "Coca Cola" and it mysteriously becomes a storming worldwide success... |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 21:49:41 +0100, fred wrote:
In article ], Another John writes In article , Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the テ「ぎナ典op 100 Inventions of All-Timeテ「ぎ? by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! It came top in a tools' survey? More likely top in a fools' survey. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 21:49:41 +0100, fred wrote:
In article ], Another John writes In article , Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the テ「ぎナ典op 100 Inventions of All-Timeテ「ぎ? by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! It came top in a tools' survey? The whole idea of a WD40 frenzy makes me chuckle. However, good mixed metaphor on BBC Breakfast today (I forget what it was about). They said: "XXX is another tool in our arsenal". No doubt WD40 is another. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me ツ」30a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
In message , Adrian
writes On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? We've been around this loop many, many times. WD40 may not the ultimate lubricant, rust proofer, release agent, sticky label remover, barbecue lighter fuel etc - but it's pretty good at all of its claimed functions, and it's all there in a single can. -- Ian |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 06/09/2014 10:46, Ian Jackson wrote:
WD40 may not the ultimate lubricant, rust proofer, release agent, sticky label remover, barbecue lighter fuel etc - but it's pretty good at all of its claimed functions, and it's all there in a single can. This. If it doesn't give long lasting lubrication to something like a lock or a hinge, it's not exactly difficult to spray it on every month or two. I use it on the car door lock, and one squirt in November stops it freezing up for a whole Winter, while a quick squirt stops the hinges squeaking for months at a time, as does the proper, much more expensive stuff. As you say, for all its functions, there are better products, but it is acceptable for all of them, and available just about anywhere. -- Tciao for Now! John. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Sat, 06 Sep 2014 10:52:27 +0100, John Williamson wrote:
As you say, for all its functions, there are better products, but it is acceptable for all of them, and available just about anywhere. Aye, I'll cheerfully agree to that. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
In article , Bob Eager
writes On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 21:49:41 +0100, fred wrote: In article ], Another John writes In article , Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the テ「ぎナ典op 100 Inventions of All-Timeテ「ぎ? by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! It came top in a tools' survey? The whole idea of a WD40 frenzy makes me chuckle. God knows what the Sheriff was thinking about, how can you spray someone _twice_ by accident during an argument? Perhaps a new concept of Sheriff nullification, maybe he thought the 'victim' was in need of a good wetting down. -- fred it's a ba-na-na . . . . |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 05/09/2014 20:49, Robin wrote:
The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? I no longer get to read it whenever I want but I used to hold it out as the best example of Plain English in the land... That is because it is written for people whose reading skill stopped developing at age six, as compared to age 14 that the broadsheets write for. -- Colin Bignell |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Sat, 06 Sep 2014 19:50:52 +0100, Nightjar \"cpb\"@ wrote:
The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? I no longer get to read it whenever I want but I used to hold it out as the best example of Plain English in the land... That is because it is written for people whose reading skill stopped developing at age six, as compared to age 14 that the broadsheets write for. Even then, two-thirds don't read, just look at the pictures. |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 05/09/2014 18:18, Adrian wrote:
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. The Sun is the best selling newspaper in the UK, by a country mile. Does that mean it's any _good_? It means its very good at doing what it was designed to do. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 05/09/2014 22:35, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 21:49:41 +0100, fred wrote: In article ], Another John writes In article , Bob Eager wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the テ「ぎナ典op 100 Inventions of All-Timeテ「ぎ? by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. A triumph of marketing. Not lubrication. Pah. I use WD40 a lot, mostly for tool and other metal object preservation/cleaning, but also for mild lubrication. It's a lot less messy than the alternatives, and the one can serves for many applications. I'd say a can of WD40 goes in my Top Ten Tools! It came top in a tools' survey? More likely top in a fools' survey. It was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 05/09/2014 22:34, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the 弋op 100 Inventions of All-Time by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. Brown-coloured sugar water with a dash of caffeine wouldn't sell by the description alone. But brightly label it "Coca Cola" and it mysteriously becomes a storming worldwide success... Coca Cola & WD40 are a success because they meet a specific need. Game over. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Sunday, September 7, 2014 4:36:31 PM UTC+1, The Medway Handyman wrote:
On 05/09/2014 22:34, Cursitor Doom wrote: On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman wrote: That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, why it's sold in 180 countries worldwide, was ranked as one of the "Top 100 Inventions of All-Time" by UK Consumers in a 2010 Tesco Survey and why they sell $300 million worth a year. Brown-coloured sugar water with a dash of caffeine wouldn't sell by the description alone. But brightly label it "Coca Cola" and it mysteriously becomes a storming worldwide success... Coca Cola & WD40 are a success because they meet a specific need. Game over. Coke meets the same need as all soft drinks. NT |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 07/09/14 16:36, The Medway Handyman wrote:
Coca Cola & WD40 are a success because they meet a specific need. I've not tried drinking both. Hmmm ' ' Ahhhhh..... Game over. Hope not. hic :-) -- Adrian C |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On Fri, 05 Sep 2014 18:11:21 +0100, The Medway Handyman
wrote: WD40 is about as much use as water, anyway. IOW, a slightly better product than Hammerite. That would be why it's the worlds best selling maintenance spray, Only proves a lot of people believe bull****e. Now **** off with your hidden advertising. How much are you being paid to promote this ****ing paraffin-based ****e? |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
On 07/09/2014 16:36, The Medway Handyman wrote:
Coca Cola & WD40 are a success because they meet a specific need. If WD40 was such a success when it was sold as a universal "does everything" product, why are there now a confusing number of separate "specialist" products (I think there might be 7 at Screwfix)? (Not saying it sales weren't high enough to be called "successful", but have questions over its performance.) Either they needed to introduce products that actually work in each role. Or they are ripping us off. Or both. -- Rod |
Man not guilty of WD40 'frenzy'
"polygonum" wrote in message ... On 07/09/2014 16:36, The Medway Handyman wrote: Coca Cola & WD40 are a success because they meet a specific need. If WD40 was such a success when it was sold as a universal "does everything" product, why are there now a confusing number of separate "specialist" products (I think there might be 7 at Screwfix)? (Not saying it sales weren't high enough to be called "successful", but have questions over its performance.) Either they needed to introduce products that actually work in each role. Or they are ripping us off. Or both. In a word, marketing. Three of the products on the Screwfix site are lithium grease, silicone lubricant, and PTFE lubricant. These are quite separate products which are marketed by a number of different suppliers. Quite possibly all sourced from the same one or two manufacturers. WD40 are simply selling their own "badged" version making use of their "trusted" WD40 brand name Other lines are simply WD40 in different pack sizes or with different applicators Other than that, possibly a lot of potential customers simply didn't believe the versatility of the basic WD40 product, and so its necessary for the manufacturer to spell this out for them by marketing a number of diffferent lines Contract Cleaner, Lubricant, Degreaser quite possibly are all based more or less on exactly the same basic formula. So that while basic WD40 might well do the job the "tweaked" more expensive product will work even better. Allegedly. michael adams .... |
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