It turns out that unassuming can is pure persistence in aerosol form. In 1953, Norm Larsen and the Rocket Chemical Company were racing corrosion, not fixing sticky zippers. Their job was to keep missile parts from rusting apart in the sky. “Water Displacement” was the mission, and it took 40 tries to get it right. Formula 1 failed. Formula 12 failed. Formula 39 failed. Formula 40 finally did exactly what they needed: drove moisture off metal and kept it away.
That quiet little origin explains everything—why it works on rusted tools, frozen bolts, creaky hinges, and mystery gunk you swear is permanent. It was built for stakes higher than a stuck garden nozzle. Now, every time you grab that can, you’re holding a tiny Cold War success story, born from stubbornness and repeated failure. And when someone asks what WD-40 stands for, you won’t even hesitate.
