Originally Posted By: IgorFeghali
I don't know, maybe for the same reason why Coca-Cola doesn't sell its formula to rum manufacturers ?
I think you're comparing apples and oranges here. Coca-Cola makes substantial profits by just selling their standalone beverages, and many rum producers turn a sizable yearly profit without worrying about selling a product which contains both the aforementioned premixed. Both markets are so large, that there isn't a need to tap into a tiny market of people who would buy a premixed bottle of rum and coke. Plus, how would it taste? You're comparing beverages which are for human consumption and enjoyment, to an additive product whereas the company makes unfounded claims, keeps their formula a secret which thwarts the prospect of making a lot of money, and somehow is, in one sense, technologically ahead of the oil manufacturers that have been at the cutting edge of tribology since their inception; consider the ancient Egyptians were using olive oil and animal fat to lube chariot axles. The oil manufacturers can reverse engineer any product, and formulate their oil to contain the best of the best. Why are these magical potions only available from companies peddling their products through the means of hype and by making spurious claims?
Originally Posted By: IgorFeghali
Keep in mind that I am not a believer, yet. I am just trying to collect data to draw my own conclusion about whether Molykote A2 is effective or not. Raising questions regarding the business model of this product won't make it any less legitimate, though.
When people realized they'd been duped into buying the cure-all tonic by the huckster known as William Rockefeller, he skipped town. Additive manufacturers rely on people who fall for their clever marketing scheme, and as long as this earth continues on, there will always be people who will take the bait. Just as the saying goes: "History repeats itself".