{"id":176278,"date":"2019-08-09T16:00:28","date_gmt":"2019-08-09T15:00:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/?p=176278"},"modified":"2024-11-19T15:35:02","modified_gmt":"2024-11-19T15:35:02","slug":"duct-tape-facts","status":"publish","type":[],"link":"https:\/\/www.factstoryhub.com\/duct-tape-facts\/","title":{"rendered":"The Origins of Duct Tape and It’s Varied Uses"},"content":{"rendered":"
Everyone\u2019s used duct tape for something at some point. It is, by far, one of the handiest everyday tools you could use in life.\n
So you\u2019ve got to have wondered at some point: where did it come from? And what practical uses was it originally invented for?\n
Well, let’s find out together!\n
\n
Duct tape was first thought up by a lady named Vesta Stoudt.\n
A mother of two Navy servicemen who worked in the Green River Ordnance Plant, Illinois, packing cartridges used for rifle-launched grenades.\n These cartridges were packed in boxes of eleven, taped and waxed to make them waterproof and damp-proof.\n Only the thin paper tape would often break, making it hard for soldiers to open the cartridges in the heat of battle.\n Vesta proposed a strong, cloth-based tape to close the seams and to make easy pull tabs.\n Although lots of people said it was a good idea, nobody ever moved towards changing the tapes. This was until Vesta wrote a letter to FDR himself with the suggestion.\n Roosevelt, also the parent of serving sons, sent the letter over to the War Production Board who put out a request for a cloth-based waterproof tape.\n A subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson answered this request with a rubber-based adhesive material applied to a durable duck cloth backing.\n It worked perfectly as a water-resistant sealant.\n The US Army used it to mend windows, seal ammo crates, and even as a type of temporary bandage for sealing wounds.\nDuct Tape Uses in The Army\n
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