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Decent, but it's tough on the environment.
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Prices may varyThis product ranks #7 of 11 in Spray Bottle.Three above it ↓
Last reviewed July 5, 2026
TL;DR A 32 oz trigger bottle with Viton O-ring seals that the community has documented holding aggressive solvents, including brake cleaner, without pump degradation, but with a documented pattern of trigger base seal dripping and nozzle head brittleness in some units. Plastic construction (material type unconfirmed); nozzle adjusts from fine mist to jet stream, and owner reception is good but not great, with a notable share reporting seal and trigger failures.
The ACC_130 is a 32 oz manual trigger spray bottle with an adjustable twist nozzle and manufacturer-confirmed Viton O-ring seals, a fluoroelastomer significantly more chemically resistant than standard rubber or EPDM. Available as a single unit or 3-pack (B00BCH4WWC); 16 oz variants exist under ACC_121. The bottle body material is listed only as "Plastic" in the product specifications, the specific resin type is unconfirmed. Community use with brake cleaner without pump failure is independently documented, with repeat purchases reported over time, signaling consistent functional value for many users. Counterbalancing that: a 7-month nozzle head brittleness failure is independently confirmed in community reviews, multiple sources document trigger base seal leaking, and community reviews document nozzle adjustment failure and cap self-loosening under repeated trigger use. Nozzle positional retention under repeated trigger presses is not community-confirmed.
The right pick for a detailer who wants a low-cost bottle with above-average chemical compatibility documentation from Viton seals and documented solvent tolerance, and who can tolerate replacing units when trigger or nozzle assembly fails. Skip it if leak-free performance is non-negotiable, the trigger base seal drip is a documented recurring pattern, not isolated, and is specifically problematic when the contents are aggressive chemistry. A confirmed-HDPE bottle with documented tight trigger base seals, or a glass bottle with replaceable trigger, is the better choice when seal integrity matters.
Plastic construction (material type unconfirmed), no SDS or chemical exposure pathway from the bottle itself. The plastic body is likely recyclable when empty and clean, but without a confirmed resin type, curbside recyclability cannot be stated; the trigger assembly is mixed-material and typically landfill-bound, separate the trigger before attempting to recycle the bottle. The chemicals typically dispensed through spray bottles carry their own hazard profiles, the relevant PPE guidance appears in each chemical's product review.
The trigger and cap use Viton O-ring seals, a premium fluoroelastomer confirmed by the manufacturer and significantly more chemically resistant than the standard rubber or EPDM seals found in commodity spray bottles. Community use with brake cleaner, a highly aggressive solvent, over extended periods without pump degradation is independently documented. The bottle body material itself is listed only as 'Plastic' in the product specification, so its resin type is unconfirmed, which limits how far the chemical compatibility claim can be verified beyond the seals.
Community evidence is mixed. Some owners report years of reliable use and repeat purchases of the same bottle, but an independently documented failure shows the nozzle head becoming brittle and breaking during a bottle refill at around 7 months of use. A second documented pattern shows the trigger base seal dribbling liquid down the handle during normal squeezing, which is a particular concern when the bottle holds harsh chemistry, since gloves become necessary to avoid skin contact with the leak.
The Amazon listing and manufacturer specification list the body only as 'Plastic' without naming a resin code such as HDPE or PP, so the exact plastic type is unconfirmed as of this review. Because the resin is unconfirmed, curbside recyclability cannot be stated with confidence. The trigger assembly is a separate mixed material component (spring, plastic housing, Viton seal) that is typically landfill bound and should be separated from the bottle body before any recycling attempt.
The nozzle twist adjusts from a fine mist to a concentrated jet stream, covering the two spray patterns most detailers need for panel coverage versus targeted spot application. Whether the nozzle holds its set position under repeated trigger presses without drifting is not confirmed by community evidence one way or the other, and there is no documented lock position to prevent accidental discharge during transport or storage.
Yes. The 3-pack (ASIN B00BCH4WWC) contains the same 32 oz ACC_130 bottle and sprayer assembly sold individually under the root ASIN, just bundled as three units. A 16 oz variant is also sold separately under the related ACC_121 model number for detailers who want a smaller travel or spot treatment size.
Marketing copy from Chemical Guys, via Amazon. Not editorial.
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