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7bees | 1 month ago
This is an oversimplification, in a way that is likely not obvious to a lot of people on this (software-focused) forum. An SDS does not have to list exact amounts, does not have to disclose some details of how an ingredient or mix of ingredients was processed, and (depending on jurisdiction) may not have to identify some "safe" ingredients at all. Some ingredients may be identified in relatively vague ways, that are sufficient for safety purposes but do not reveal the exact product. As the SDS you linked to says "The specific chemical identity and exact percentages are a trade secret". An SDS is certainly very helpful to reverse-engineering a product, but it doesn't tell you everything.
All that said, yes, the main strength of WD-40 is its marketing and ubiquity, and claims about its secrecy have more to do with marketing than anything practical.
Scoundreller|1 month ago
Where I find this can be fun is that different countries seem to have different requirements for precision. Or just straight up different formulations for the same thing.
German wd40 says it’s all c9-c11 carbon chains:
https://smarthost.maedler.de/datenblaetter/EG_SIDA_WD40_EN.p...
US has a CARB and non-CARB formulation which are also different:
https://files.wd40.com/pdf/sds/mup/wd-40-multi-use-product-a...
https://files.wd40.com/msds/latam/GHS-SDS-WD-40-Multi-Use-Pr...
lazide|1 month ago
OhNoNotAgain_99|1 month ago
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Incipient|1 month ago
It's absolutely not a BOM to reproduce a product.
logifail|1 month ago
Depending on what the product is, this may still be a long way from the full "recipe" (or method) to recreate the product.
TeMPOraL|1 month ago
wolfi1|1 month ago
anticodon|1 month ago
Although I must admin WD-40 helped me in the past opening an old door lock.
unknown|1 month ago
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echelon|1 month ago
NMR and gas chromatography to the rescue!
NedF|1 month ago
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