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Common household products bearing names with no obvious relationship to their manufacturers or functions often pose mysteries to consumers, conundrums some feel duty-bound to solve. Sierra Mist makes sense as a name for a lemon-lime soda (it's cool and refreshing), but why 7-Up? It's not hard to fathom why a cleaner/degreaser might be called Tough Task, but what's the reasoning behind the name Formula 409? Cryptic product names involving numbers are often explained away as having been inspired by the Nth attempt at formulating a product (or its name). Hence legend has it that the manufacturer of Bib-Label Lithiated Lemon-Lime Soda, after the first six tries at selecting a less cumbersome name proved unsatisfactory, finally threw in the towel and opted for the simple choice of 7-Up instead. And if a cleaner is called Formula 409, surely that must be because the first 408 formulas didn't work out: Usually such explanations are simply attempts to make some sense of the seemingly nonsensical, but occasionally they're on the mark. Consider WD-40, the ubiquitous lubricant (or, as its manufacturer describes it, the multi-purpose problem solver) found on nearly every workbench and in every toolbox in America. Why WD-40? Because, as the WD-40 Company (formerly the Rocket Chemical Company of San Diego) explained to us:
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