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#21
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basskisser writes:
Any of the examples that you've given can not possibly conclude that WD-40 is kerosene. No. You seem to naively conclude that because the manufacturer (who wishes to evoke a certain "secret formula" marketing image) employs other terms than "kerosene" for a petroleum distillate, that the product cannot not fall under the general meaning of "kerosene". Your earlier error in capitalizing "kerosene" further implies that you have some unscientific notion of just what kerosene is, mistakenly thinking that it is some particular chemical compound with a brand name. This sort of analysis requires some knowledge of organic chemistry, which you apparently don't have, and which I am not going to teach you, although I gave a reference to the material. You don't know what an "aliphatic petroleum distillate" is, and therefore you don't know that it means kerosene. You keep saying I haven't shown this, and you use nothing but bald denials, which makes you a troll, that is, someone who repeats nay-nay without engaging in a knowledgeable debate of the technical questions. And if "kerosene" isn't a proper description, then what type of petroleum distillate are you claiming is the right one, because the MSDS list of ingredients points to nothing but kerosene-like refinery products? Hmmm? Look, WD-40 is a petroleum distillate. Just that, a blend of ordinary hydrocarbon stuff found in any refinery, nothing secret or special or proprietary. It has a weight (density) and boiling point. That weight happens to correspond to the petroleum distillate generally called kerosene, versus lighter fractions like naphtha or heavier fractions like heating oil or machine oil. Now the CAS numbers and nomenclature in the MSDS don't say "kerosene", because "kerosene" is a broad term that doesn't have commercial specificity or a particular feedstock or process connection, but mostly because the WD-40 people don't want you to know you're paying $$$/gallon for something cheap, close to diesel fuel, that they have refined and perfumed to not *smell* like kerosene. The chemical industry loves to make various technical terms for the same thing, to confuse the consumer. When it comes to petroleum products this is facilitated by the fact that the same stuff comes out of widely different industrial processes. There are lots of examples of WD-40 type marketing of cheap petroleum distillates. Three-in-1 oil is just cheap mineral oil with a certain camphor-like perfume. Liquid Wrench is just kerosene, as is Kingsford charcoal lighter fluid and Tiki torch lamp fuel and (with a pinch of insecticide that doesn't work) Ortho wasp killer. Why does Home Depot stock a half dozen brands and containers of stuff that is all the same? Because people will pay a premium for a package that is application- specific instead of generically descriptive, since they don't have to think about it. It's like you're denying your cup of espresso is nothing more than coffee. Yes, it smells better and all, and there are a lot of cheaper ways to buy coffee, and it is better to some tastes, but really, coffee is all that went into it. |
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