CarCareTruth Score
Mediocre, but wear gloves and ventilate.
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Prices may varyThe manufacturer's Safety Data Sheet classifies this product with one or more GHS Category 1 health hazards — the most severe tier. The hazard statements in quotes below are the verbatim GHS language from the SDS, as required by OSHA's Hazard Communication Standard. The line under each statement translates the GHS classification into plain language.
GHS Category 1 aspiration toxicity — thin, oily liquids can slip into the lungs if swallowed, causing chemical pneumonia.
If swallowed, inhaled, or splashed in eyes:
Call Poison Control immediately at 1-800-222-1222 (US, 24/7, free) and have the product container with you. Poison Control's standing guidance is to not induce vomiting after chemical exposure; they will direct first-aid steps based on the specific product.
About this product's hazards. This product's Safety Data Sheet uses signal word danger. Read the manufacturer's SDS and follow all safety instructions before use. CarCareTruth ratings translate the manufacturer's safety sheet. They do not replace the SDS or substitute for a hazard assessment specific to your task.
Health score is for adult use as intended, per the manufacturer's SDS. It does not model child ingestion, accidental spill cleanup, or off-label use. See the safety panel below for full hazard classification, and /disclaimer for the full editorial scope.
GHS hazard codes are quoted from the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet. PPE tiers below translate those codes and the listed ingredient chemistry; they are not CarCareTruth recommendations.
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From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“SDS §8 imperative: "Wear goggles/face shield." Backed by the product's DANGER classification and hydrocarbon solvent mist during aerosol application.”
— Slick Products
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“H317 skin sensitizer confirmed in SDS §2. SDS §8/P280 imperative: "Wear protective gloves, protective clothing, eye protection and face protection."”
— Slick Products
U.S. regulatory standard
29 CFR 1910.138(a)
“appropriate hand protection when employees' hands are exposed to hazards such as those from… chemicals which produce an adverse effect on the skin or eyes…”
OSHA standards apply to workplaces. Cited here as the U.S. reference threshold for the underlying hazard class.
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
From the manufacturer’s Safety Data Sheet, Section 8
“H336 (may cause drowsiness or dizziness) confirmed in SDS §2 for this aerosol format, alongside H373 (organ damage from prolonged/repeated exposure). SDS §8 also flags a respirator "in case of inadequate ventilation." The hydrocarbon-solvent-heavy propellant system (n-Hexane, methylcyclopentane, propane/butane) and DANGER classification place this above the routine enclosed-space-only case.”
— Slick Products
U.S. regulatory standard
29 CFR 1910.134; 1910.138; 1910.1000
“the primary objective shall be to prevent atmospheric contamination…”
OSHA standards apply to workplaces. Cited here as the U.S. reference threshold for the underlying hazard class.
UN GHS hazard statement
H373“May cause damage to organs through prolonged or repeated exposure”
UN GHS Rev. 9 (2021)
CarCareTruth publishes the cited sources verbatim and does not advise what action a user should take. Consult the full SDS before use.
The published Safety Data Sheet for this product does not specify ventilation protection for consumer use.
Workplace context
29 CFR 1910.134(a); 1910.1000
“the primary objective shall be to prevent atmospheric contamination [via] accepted engineering control measures (for example, enclosure or confinement of the operation, general and local ventilation…).”
Triggered by GHS H336 on the SDS.
OSHA standards apply to workplaces. Cited here as the U.S. reference threshold for the underlying hazard class.
PPE tiers translate the manufacturer’s SDS and U.S. regulatory standards. Not professional safety advice. How we report safety.
This product ranks #10 of 10 in Exterior Dressing.Three above it ↓
Last reviewed July 7, 2026
TL;DR Aerosol dressing that renews faded plastic, vinyl, rubber, and trim with a wet-look silicone finish in one pass. UV protection is manufacturer-claimed only; no independent comparison confirms it. The SDS signal word is DANGER, a real step above the typical water-based dressing in this category; see Safety below.
A silicone-based aerosol spray for plastic, vinyl, rubber, and trim: point, spray, done, no buffing needed. The manufacturer claims no-drip, no-sling application and enhanced UV protection across cars, trucks, and powersports vehicles; no independent comparison confirms it.
Owners wanting a fast, no-buffing aerosol shine on plastic, vinyl, rubber, and trim, including off-road gear, will find this convenient. Buyers wanting lower chemical exposure should pick a water-based silicone emulsion instead; this formula carries a higher hazard profile than the category median.
The SDS signal word is DANGER: an aspiration hazard (H304, harmful if swallowed and it enters the lungs), a suspected reproductive toxin (H361), a skin sensitizer (H317), organ damage from repeated exposure (H373), and drowsiness or dizziness (H336) from the vapor. Do not induce vomiting if swallowed; seek medical attention. Prop 65 names five substances: n-Hexane, Toluene, Benzene, Naphthalene, and Ethylbenzene. The SDS calls for goggles, gloves, and outdoor or well-ventilated use. Propellant and solvent make up an estimated 90%+ of the formula; the SDS reports no ecological data, so biodegradability and aquatic safety are unconfirmed.
The SDS carries a DANGER signal word driven by real chemistry: an aspiration hazard (H304), a reproductive toxicity classification (H361), and organ-damage risk from repeated exposure (H373), not generic legal boilerplate. Outdoor or well-ventilated application, gloves, and eye protection are the precautions the SDS specifies.
No PFAS ingredients are listed in the SDS Section 3 composition.
The SDS classifies the product as an extremely flammable aerosol (H222) with an aspiration hazard if swallowed (H304), a skin sensitizer (H317), and a suspected reproductive toxin at the mixture level (H361). The California Prop 65 warning names five substances: n-Hexane, Toluene, Benzene, Naphthalene, and Ethylbenzene.
The SDS does not report biodegradability or aquatic toxicity data for the product as a mixture. Section 12 (Ecological Information) lists "no data available" across every field. The propellant and solvent carrier make up an estimated 90%+ of the formula by weight, which the CCT environment score reflects.
Marketing copy from Slick Products, via Amazon. Not editorial.
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