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OT: Early Friday trivia: What does the name "WD-40" stand for?

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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:01 AM
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Default OT: Early Friday trivia: What does the name "WD-40" stand for?

I used it to get bugs off my TT (obligatory on topic content)

If you are a real man or woman you will not go to their website to find out!

We just had fun with this one around the office. It's not obvious.
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:02 AM
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The same thing as "33" on Rolling Rock bottles.
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:02 AM
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water displacer or something like that...40'th try
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:07 AM
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I saw one of the company big wigs on CNBC..so, I know the answer....but, I won't spoil it for others
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:14 AM
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I have to be creative .Umm. Why Debris ?
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:17 AM
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Water Displacement perfected on the 40th try.
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:19 AM
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Default Re: The same thing as "33" on Rolling Rock bottles.

The official explanation for the number, which is not entirely coterminous with the REAL explanation, is that 33 signifies two things: the year Prohibition was repealed (1933), and the number of words in the legend printed above the number on cans and returnable bottles. I quote:

"Rolling Rock from glass lined tanks in the Laurel Highlands. We tender this premium beer for your enjoyment as a tribute to your good taste. It comes from the mountain springs to you."

Now, this is a touching sentiment, and there is no question it has 33 words in it. But from the standpoint of intellectual satisfaction, it sucks.

Therefore, I hunted up James L. Tito, who at one time was chief executive officer of Latrobe Brewing, the maker of Rolling Rock beer.

Mr. Tito's family owned Latrobe from the end of Prohibition until the company was sold to an outfit in Connecticut in 1985. After some prompting, he told me the sordid truth.

Based on some old notes and discussions with family members now dead, Mr. Tito believes that putting the 33 on the label was nothing more or less than a horrible accident. It happened like this:

When the Titos decided to introduce the Rolling Rock brand around 1939, they couldn't agree on a slogan for the back of the bottle. Some favored a long one, some a short one. At length somebody came up with the 33-word beauty quoted above, and to indicate its modest length, scribbled a big "33" on it.

More argument ensued, until finally somebody said, dadgummit, boys, let's just use this one and be done with it, and sent the 33-word version off to the bottle maker.

Unfortunately, no one realized that the big 33 wasn't supposed to be part of the design until 50 jillion returnable bottles had been made up with the errant label painted permanently on their backsides. (I suppose this bespeaks a certain inattentiveness on the part of the Tito family, but I am telling you this story just as it was told to me.)


This being the Depression and all, the Titos were in no position to throw out a lot of perfectly good bottles. So they decided to make the best of things by concocting a yarn about how the 33 stood for the year Prohibition was repealed.

In retrospect, this was a stroke of marketing genius. Next to cereal boxes, beer labels are probably the most thoroughly scrutinized artifacts in all of civilization, owing to the propensity of beer drinkers to stare morosely at them at three o'clock in the morning.

The Rolling Rock "33" has baffled beer lovers for generations, and accordingly has become the stuff of barroom legend. I have letters claiming that the number has something to do with a satanic ritual, that it was the age of Christ when he died, even that it signifies the number of glass-lined tanks in the Latrobe plant.
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:20 AM
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Does anyone know what the 33 really means? I am serious. Pleez?
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:22 AM
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Default True story of the "33" inside ...

Old Latrobe is in the heart of metal production country (iron, steel, zinc, etc.). When Rolling Rock was introduced, it was, of course, instantly popular with the miners and steelworkers of the area. The same year Rolling Rock was introduced, the Deptartment of Commerce came out with its Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes. The Rolling Rock folks wanted to put some acknowledgement of their loyal customers on the bottle, without being too obvious about it and ending up with the stigma of just being a blue collar steelworkers beer (like Iron City). So they chose the SIC code for the Primary Metals industry: 33.
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Old Jun 21, 2001 | 11:25 AM
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Damn, that's believeable. But the SIC code one is the true story
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