Yep. The engineer who did the flow chart should have specified K-Y Jelly, but probably lacked the real-world experience to know...Error, Error, Error. In spite of popular opinion WD40 Is not a lubricant.
Those were my exact thoughts, must be the DIY'er in me.Error, Error, Error. In spite of popular opinion WD40 Is not a lubricant.
Otherwise a great scheme.
Error, Error, Error. In spite of popular opinion WD40 Is not a lubricant.
Otherwise a great scheme.
Error, Error, Error. In spite of popular opinion WD40 Is not a lubricant.
.
It also stops stuff from squeakin'...Not to be pedantic (OK, I am), the flowchart doesn't specify "lubricate," it just says that WD40 will make stuck stuff move. You can always follow up with the lubricant of choice later...
Not to be pedantic (OK, I am), the flowchart doesn't specify "lubricate," it just says that WD40 will make stuck stuff move. You can always follow up with the lubricant of choice later...
Error, Error, Error. In spite of popular opinion WD40 Is not a lubricant.
Otherwise a great scheme.
WD-40 is the trademark name of a United States-made water-displacing spray.
Per Wikipedia...
The flow chart is inaccurate at best, in that it does not include a hammer, nor does the final arrow point to "blame somebody else"...
I guess population growth accounts for the increase. I've had the same can of WD-40 for over twenty years.
Well, then clearly you're not properly following the flowchart procedure.I guess population growth accounts for the increase. I've had the same can of WD-40 for over twenty years.