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KY Jon #632669 07/08/23 01:50 PM
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Originally Posted by KY Jon
WD-40 does not last forever. It is a light machine oil. Not a lubricant and left out in the open will evaporate in about 15 minutes.
.
Sorry Jon, but with all due respect, that's bullshit. WD-40 is an oil, as you stated, not a solvent that evaporates. It does have solvent characteristics, but it is not evaporative. I have a can of WD-40 that quit spraying so I released the gas with a nail and kept the oil. Been using it for 4-5 years.
JR

Last edited by John Roberts; 07/08/23 03:55 PM.

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God bless America, long live the Republic.
campero #632673 07/08/23 04:16 PM
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Call it what you want. Wd40 is a poor choice for long lasting protection for guns. It is water displacing formula 40, hence wd40 as a name. Not a long lasting oil for metal protection. I tried in on a table saw surface and it did not last long. It is a blend of very light machine oils.

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Joe Webster
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WD-40 is composed of many different chemicals, and only about 10-20% of these are lubricants. Even then this small amount is only a very light mineral lubricant. Most of the other components are intended to help penetration, but are volatile and are intended to evaporate. Its defined as a petroleum-based solvent that evaporates, leaving behind a non-volatile lubricant. So, 15 minutes is the lenght of time for the solvent to evaporate, leaving of course a nice finish. The recommended shelf-life is 5 years after buying the item

Best youtube video that compared many different type of protection. WD-40 was near the bottom. You can find a lot of videos on youtube that do a good job or real testing of different products.




It is your gun, do what you want. I used WD-40 for years but have not used it for a gun for 20 years or more. I do you it if I have to cut and clean rust off a table saw or joiner cast iron surface. Then a good paste wax to follow. WD-40 will not protect them for long. I learned that lesson the hard way.

Last edited by KY Jon; 07/08/23 07:12 PM.
campero #632676 07/08/23 05:10 PM
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I suppose you would have to define “long-lasting protection”. If we’re talking a year or more storage, no I wouldn’t recommend WD40, but I can assure you, a shotgun bore sprayed until dripping wet with WD-40 and stored for 6 months will not rust if stored inside a controlled atmosphere. CorrosionX HD or LPS #2.is probably the best for long term and rough service storage.

I know this: I’ve been using WD-40 for 50 years for cleaning and lubricating firearms and I’ve never had it fail to do the job intended. Lots of other choices out there for sure, and I use them as well. The best “gun oil” I’ve found is a high performance transmission fluid:
https://www.swepcolube.com/products/swepco-714-heavy-duty-4c4-transmission-fluid/

Last edited by John Roberts; 07/10/23 10:56 AM.

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campero #632687 07/10/23 11:26 AM
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If you can’t rust a gun in Mississippi where can you. Take care.

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campero #632711 07/10/23 09:00 PM
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Last edited by Jimmy W; 10/11/24 07:43 AM.
KY Jon #632720 07/11/23 05:00 AM
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Originally Posted by KY Jon
Call it what you want. Wd40 is a poor choice for long lasting protection for guns. It is water displacing formula 40, hence wd40 as a name. Not a long lasting oil for metal protection. I tried in on a table saw surface and it did not last long. It is a blend of very light machine oils.

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Joe Webster
Chief Technical Officer at Stabilization Technologies LLC (2000–present)Author has 1.9K answers and 1.2M answer views1y

WD-40 is composed of many different chemicals, and only about 10-20% of these are lubricants. Even then this small amount is only a very light mineral lubricant. Most of the other components are intended to help penetration, but are volatile and are intended to evaporate. Its defined as a petroleum-based solvent that evaporates, leaving behind a non-volatile lubricant. So, 15 minutes is the lenght of time for the solvent to evaporate, leaving of course a nice finish. The recommended shelf-life is 5 years after buying the item

Best youtube video that compared many different type of protection. WD-40 was near the bottom. You can find a lot of videos on youtube that do a good job or real testing of different products.




It is your gun, do what you want. I used WD-40 for years but have not used it for a gun for 20 years or more. I do you it if I have to cut and clean rust off a table saw or joiner cast iron surface. Then a good paste wax to follow. WD-40 will not protect them for long. I learned that lesson the hard way.
.

Last edited by Jimmy W; 10/11/24 07:43 AM.
campero #632721 07/11/23 05:44 AM
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This thread is getting interesting and thank you all for the information.

I'll get my little gun out later and see if the cotton mop is still impregnated with the oil. I think it is and the chamber will be fine.

WD-40 is the oil I use for my guns (I find it here easily) and a great gunsmith told me it is good for steel and even wood.

Regards!


28 ga, hammerguns and all shotguns and rifles made by hands.
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Jimmy W #632727 07/11/23 10:13 AM
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Regardless of what product you use, NEVER go to the excess of applying so much it can run. Plenty of good products for firearms that are thin enough to run into the wood. Another good example of "less is more". I didn't think this needed to be mentioned on a forum as knowledgeable as this one. Another example of the Great American Tradition of over-oiling firearms.
JR

Last edited by John Roberts; 07/11/23 10:14 AM.

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God bless America, long live the Republic.
campero #632731 07/11/23 11:49 AM
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Jimmy, I bought a used cabinet table saw that had boxes stored on it in an unheated garage for many years after the man died. It was rusted and pitted so badly I had to sand the top down to get most of the worst rust and pits. It had grooves from rust. Then I had to get it flat again and then I used Johnson paste wax as a protection. Wood slides well over this wax as well. I did use about a gallon of WD-40 as lubricant during the sanding and to clean the rust and metal. I spent a full day getting the top back into shape. That saw never rusted for about a decade, until I sold it and replaced it with a SawStop table saw. Those old Powermatic table saws were built like battleships. Heavy, with a 5 HP motor, it cut through stuff like a hot knife through butter.

campero #633483 07/29/23 05:04 AM
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Some time has passed...

The cotton mop is slightly wet from the oil and the chamber is in perfect condition.

[Linked Image from i.ibb.co]


28 ga, hammerguns and all shotguns and rifles made by hands.
Waidmannsheil 🌿📯
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