Care Components (Proprietary Mixture)
- Other
Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) appears in 1 of the 1,812 car-care products CarCareTruth tracks (as of June 2026).
Proprietary care blend — exact composition not disclosed in SDS Section 3. Listed as 'Care components (mixture) <5%.' No H-codes associated with this component in the product SDS. Health properties assessed from mixture-level classification which carries no H-codes.
'Care components (mixture)' is a proprietary additive blend appearing in Autosol Metal Polish SDS Section 3 at <5% concentration. The exact composition is not further specified — this classification is used by some manufacturers to protect trade-secret formulation details for protective or shine-enhancing additives.
At <5% concentration and with no associated H-codes in the SDS, this component does not contribute to health or environmental deductions. The mixture-level SDS classification (Section 2) confirms no hazard classifications for the product as a whole.
Health & environment profile
- VOC
- no
- Prop 65 listed
- no
- Asthmagen
- no
- EPA Safer Choice
- no
- Aquatic toxicity
- no
- Biodegradable
- no
- Bioaccumulative
- no
- Persistent
- no
- Ozone depleting
- no
- Microplastic
- no
- PFAS
- no
- Env. score
- 5/5
Common questions about Care Components (Proprietary Mixture)
- What is Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) used for in car care?
- Proprietary protective or conditioning additive blend in metal polishes; contributes to post-buff surface protection and shine enhancement; composition not further specified in SDS
- Is Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) a VOC?
- No. Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) is not classified as a volatile organic compound (VOC).
- Is Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) on California's Proposition 65 list?
- No. Care Components (Proprietary Mixture) is not on California's Proposition 65 list.
1 product contain this
Autosol Metal Polishchrome-polish
Related
Health and environment notes translate the manufacturer Safety Data Sheet, the GHS classification, and authoritative regulatory listings (California Prop 65, EPA). Not medical advice. They describe the ingredient itself; whether a hazard applies to a finished product depends on its concentration and how it's used.