Rocket Chemical Company pursued a corrosion fighter for missile casings, perfecting the fortieth attempt. WD-40 escaped the lab to quiet hinges, unstick locks, and protect tools. The blue-and-yellow can carries triumphs in garages everywhere. A whiff evokes problem-solving Saturdays, reminding us that industrial breakthroughs often become personal, tucked beside bicycles, lawn chairs, and the stubborn screw we finally freed.
Searching for clear plastics in the 1940s, Harry Coover stumbled onto cyanoacrylates, dismissed them, then later recognized their extraordinary bonding power. Marketed as Eastman 910, then super glue, it patched models, mended mugs, and even temporarily closed wounds under controlled conditions. A drop can bridge impatience and repair. Respect the fumes, honor the chemistry, celebrate the miracles on your workbench.
During World War II, factory worker Vesta Stoudt proposed a waterproof cloth tape for ammunition boxes; Johnson & Johnson produced it, and soldiers praised its toughness. Postwar, silver “duct” tape fixed everything from venting to book spines. It slices, seals, and improvises handles. Share your oddest use case; somewhere, a clever strip is saving the day again.
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