Finally upgraded my Slide lube.

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Bloo
Posts: 51
Joined: Oct 23, 2018

by Bloo »

I've been using Slid-o-mix since I've been playing trombone. It's always served me well. However, it started getting expensive to oil all 3 of my horns with it weekly.

Finally got the Yamaha Liquid slide oil a month ago, and the difference is night and day. Not only do I have to oil far less often, but the action is so much smoother. It's so much easier to apply and the response is instant.

I could never go back.

My Eastman slide went from decent to one of the best slides I've had in my hand.

I could gush about how nice it feels for hours.
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Doubler
Posts: 435
Joined: Jan 07, 2019

by Doubler »

Thanks for the recommendation. When my Slide-o-Mix gets used up, I'll give it a try.
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HeyMan
Posts: 7
Joined: Nov 03, 2019

by HeyMan »

Yamaha Trombone Slide Lubricant (YAC-1021P). This, with a spritz of water, works amazingly well! It's recommended by some guy named Andy Martin, whoever he is. /S
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Amconk
Posts: 279
Joined: Jun 14, 2018

by Amconk »

I just made this upgrade today. Fully cleaned my shires slide first, then did just the Yamaha lube and a few spritzes of water. I could not believe the difference. Amazingly fast and quiet.
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JLivi
Posts: 870
Joined: May 10, 2018

by JLivi »

Yamaha is far superior to slide o mix. I love using the Yamaha slide oil.

If you’re looking for something to not use that often I love trombotine too. And t lasts forever! But Yamaha is definitely the way to go.
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tbonesullivan
Posts: 1959
Joined: Jul 02, 2019

by tbonesullivan »

Were you guys using the Two part slide O-mix, or the rapid comfort?
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bbocaner
Posts: 315
Joined: Mar 26, 2018

by bbocaner »

My big problem with Yamaha is that on slides that don't get used every day it tends to dry out and turn into this extremely hard residue on the stockings that I have trouble removing. Ideally I should be wiping off my slides after I use them but once in a while after a gig something that isn't my main instrument sits in the case for a while and when I do get it back out I've got a huge problem on my hands. It never happens on my main trombone because I use it often enough, but on small bore, bass, alto, etc. it's a huge problem.
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afugate
Posts: 671
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by afugate »

[quote="bbocaner"]My big problem with Yamaha is that on slides that don't get used every day it tends to dry out and turn into this extremely hard residue on the stockings that I have trouble removing. Ideally I should be wiping off my slides after I use them but once in a while after a gig something that isn't my main instrument sits in the case for a while and when I do get it back out I've got a huge problem on my hands. It never happens on my main trombone because I use it often enough, but on small bore, bass, alto, etc. it's a huge problem.[/quote]

And I've got to believe the same happens to the insides of the outers, unless I swab down the slide before I put it away.

FWIW, I don't seem to have as much residue with Ultra Pure's slide lube. Nevertheless, I think Yamaha's lube is a better overall lubricant.

--Andy in OKC
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Mikebmiller
Posts: 961
Joined: Mar 27, 2018

by Mikebmiller »

I went the other way, from Yamaha to SOM Rapid comfort. They both work great, but I like the SOM a bit more.
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PaulT
Posts: 383
Joined: Jul 18, 2018

by PaulT »

I just checked the slides of two trombones I use Yamaha slide lubricant on but haven't played for about nine months. Each had a couple small patches of dried residue on the stockings. But, the residue wasn't hard (the slides moved smoothly and quietly). The residue came off easily and completely when wiped with a moistened cloth.
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Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

I've used Yamaha only for probably 5 or 6 years now. No water. I don't have any residue that won't come off, even on the horns that sit for longer.
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Doug_Elliott
Posts: 4155
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by Doug_Elliott »

Some of my horns sit for weeks or months between use. It dries up some but still works.
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Pre59
Posts: 372
Joined: May 12, 2018

by Pre59 »

I used to have an issue with a residue building up on the slide. I fixed it by putting some ball bearings in the bottle and now I just give it a good shake before each application, works a treat.
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Cmillar
Posts: 439
Joined: Apr 24, 2018

by Cmillar »

Whatever works, right?

I've gone to Slide-O-Mix classic from Yamaha. I thought Yamaha was the greatest thing since slice bread, but I have a '70s vintage Bach and the SOM seems to last much longer with the same great action as the Yamaha used to give me.

Also....I would think that everyone is different depending on the amount of excess saliva or gunk you happen to blow into the horn as you play.

So that would require the right slide lube depending on the individual.

All that stuff is pretty cheap....experiment!
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Briande
Posts: 207
Joined: Jan 12, 2020

by Briande »

I grew kind of depends on the horn. I think old school

Ponds cold cream works best on my ‘50s 2B. Seems like it’s just thick enough to stick in and smooth out the imperfections.
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tbonesullivan
Posts: 1959
Joined: Jul 02, 2019

by tbonesullivan »

It seems sometimes like every side is different. My Bach 42T loves classic Slide O mix. My King 3b most certainly does not. Rapid comfort works best on my Kanstul horns, while I use super slick cream for my Yamaha bass, and Yama-snot for my Tenor.
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bbocaner
Posts: 315
Joined: Mar 26, 2018

by bbocaner »

huh... it's EXTREMELY hard when it dries up for me. I end up having to do a combination of chipping it off with my fingernail and then wrapping the slide tubes in vinegar-soaked paper towels to soften the last little bit off enough so that it will wipe off. Maybe a combination of the ingredients of the lubrication with my body chemistry?
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CharlieB
Posts: 434
Joined: Mar 29, 2018

by CharlieB »

[quote="bbocaner"]huh... it's EXTREMELY hard when it dries up for me. I end up having to do a combination of chipping it off with my fingernail and then wrapping the slide tubes in vinegar-soaked paper towels to soften the last little bit off enough so that it will wipe off. Maybe a combination of the ingredients of the lubrication with my body chemistry?[/quote]

Bottom line; it isn't working for you.

Something to try........

I have abandoned all the cream lubes. I now use "Superslick Plus Professional Slide Treatment" on all my horns, old and new. It's a silicone oil. I use one drop to lube both inners.The Superslick needs to be reapplied more frequently than the creams, and it does need to be spritzed with water, but it makes my slides super fast and it leaves no gummy residue.
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bbocaner
Posts: 315
Joined: Mar 26, 2018

by bbocaner »

silicone oil seems to be the problem for me, whether it's as a component in Yamaha or the superslick oil or slide-o-mix. I've started using the Berp Bio-Lube which is more of a cream but it's based on beeswax and I haven't had any problems since. Not quite as slick as the yamaha stuff, but it works well.
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HGrobot
Posts: 30
Joined: May 27, 2019

by HGrobot »

[quote="Briande"]I grew kind of depends on the horn. I think old school

Ponds cold cream works best on my ‘50s 2B. Seems like it’s just thick enough to stick in and smooth out the imperfections.[/quote]

I have by and large run into the same sort of thing. On my old Getzen it always worked best with Trombotine. I tried Slide O Mix and Superslick on it and neither worked nearly as well. My 3B on the other hand felt like it had maple syrup on it when I tried Trombotine. Slide O Mix works dramatically better on that one.
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bkessler
Posts: 51
Joined: Oct 23, 2019

by bkessler »

After seeing so many people rave about the Yamaha stuff, I finally got some. I've used Slide-O-Mix (both rapid comfort and the 2-bottle one) for years, and it works well by and large, but does tend to build up if I'm not really on top of maintenance, so I figured the Yamaha stuff was worth a shot. I wasn't immediately blown away, but I got a tip from a great player in the area that has made it fantastic. I haven't used water on my slides in years, but he suggested I not only do that, but put some Hetman Hydro-slide in with the water. The combination of that plus the Yamaha lubricant is pretty incredible. I may be a convert.
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Crazy4Tbone86
Posts: 1654
Joined: Jan 14, 2020

by Crazy4Tbone86 »

I'm wondering if CharlieB realizes that the SuperSlick Plus Professional Slide Treatment is silicone that is supposed to be added to the SuperSlick slide cream. It was never intended to be used alone. I'm not saying it is wrong, I'm just wondering how that would work. If it does work, I'll be buying some industrial silicone in a spray can the next time I shop at a home improvement or auto parts store!

For me the bottled Yamaha bottled Trombone Slide Lubricant got crusty after about 7 or 8 days, even when I used the trombone daily. I wasn't thrilled with it because I was able to get a couple more days of use from the different Slide-O-Mix varieties and good old slide cream. Although.....the Yamaha Trombone Slide Lubricant did have a nice smell!
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

SuperSlick Plus can be used with a lot of different slide creams. I started using it with Trombotine on the advice of a colleague, and also used it with plain cold cream (old Pond's).
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WilliamLang
Posts: 636
Joined: Nov 22, 2019

by WilliamLang »

i like the yamaha trombone slide lubricant, but i also spray my slide with water and gently wipe it down with a cheesecloth between each application, so i've never had the hardening issue.

any lubricant will work well if you regularly service your slide with a good technician and gently clean with water and a cheesecloth like once a week.
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modelerdc
Posts: 352
Joined: May 03, 2018

by modelerdc »

I find that any of the standard slide lubes can give good results when used on a good clean slide. But the Yamaha slide oil, as they call it, gives me results as good as any, with the least build up of old stuff on the slide. So it's my favorite.
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harrisonreed
Posts: 6479
Joined: Aug 17, 2018

by harrisonreed »

The new PHAT bottle of yamaha seems to be even better than the one with the weird disk applicator.
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Garoissimo
Posts: 51
Joined: Aug 13, 2023

by Garoissimo »

Ok, so... meanwhile, years later... (on the Garo Show)

So, ok - I bought the Yamaha Trombone Slide Lubricant (YAC-1021P), (well, either that or a new Air Force attack fighter-drone, judging from the number), and a couple bottles of Hetman Hydro-slide to mix with my water (it's in the Plants and Garden section, of course :) )

In a few days, when they arrive, there shall be much extremely slick sliding in my apt...

"We look for things... things that make us go. This can make us go. We are not dumb. We are smart..."
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Garoissimo
Posts: 51
Joined: Aug 13, 2023

by Garoissimo »

Wow - So, for my 1970 88H the combination (as described by 'bkessler' above) of the Yamaha YAC-1021P, plus the little atomizer/spray bottle with clean water (and several drops of the Hetman Hydro-Slide lubricant mixed-in) on top of it, is totally amazing.

Compared to carefully (properly?) applied Trombotine, I would say it has increased the smoothness of this slide by at least a couple of whole numbers, to what feels close to 9-9.5. For a 23 year old, narrow old school Conn slide, this is... amazing.

Thanks bkessler! Really grateful for the tip!
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BrassSection
Posts: 424
Joined: May 11, 2022

by BrassSection »

After using Blue Juice as a one bottle for everything oil, with good results on my trombone, I decided to try the Yamaha after reading all the positive comments. Week 1…Wiped down slides inside and out good and switched, not really impressed. Week 2…rewiped slides and put on fresh Yamaha…seemed even more sluggish. Week 3, no wipe, just a light application, slight improvement, ready to give my lube to my tuba player buddy to give to his trombone playing brother. Week 4…got horn out and slide felt as good as juiced slide with nothing wiped or no new lube, used and enjoyed playing the horn again. Week 5, light drop of Yammy lube on each slide and the slide felt great. Today, pulled out of case and enjoyed smooth slide without doing anything. Not sure why it took so long to work, but as of now I’m keeping the tube of Yamaha! Still using Blue Juice in all the valved horns, lasts at least a month in trumpet, and at least 3 weeks in the euph. Tuba typically only comes out around Christmas time, otherwise all tuning slides and the valves are removed, cleaned, and stored for no-worry about anything being stuck. They get fresh grease/oil when tuba is reassembled.
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whitbey
Posts: 654
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by whitbey »

I use Yamasnott on my slides.

And because I am a little allergic to the oil and I hate the smell, I use the mixed slideomix on my rotary valves. There is a powdery buildup that seems to be helpful to the valves.
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harrisonreed
Posts: 6479
Joined: Aug 17, 2018

by harrisonreed »

[quote="BrassSection"]After using Blue Juice as a one bottle for everything oil, with good results on my trombone, I decided to try the Yamaha after reading all the positive comments. Week 1…Wiped down slides inside and out good and switched, not really impressed. Week 2…rewiped slides and put on fresh Yamaha…seemed even more sluggish. Week 3, no wipe, just a light application, slight improvement, ready to give my lube to my tuba player buddy to give to his trombone playing brother. Week 4…got horn out and slide felt as good as juiced slide with nothing wiped or no new lube, used and enjoyed playing the horn again. Week 5, light drop of Yammy lube on each slide and the slide felt great. Today, pulled out of case and enjoyed smooth slide without doing anything. Not sure why it took so long to work, but as of now I’m keeping the tube of Yamaha! Still using Blue Juice in all the valved horns, lasts at least a month in trumpet, and at least 3 weeks in the euph. Tuba typically only comes out around Christmas time, otherwise all tuning slides and the valves are removed, cleaned, and stored for no-worry about anything being stuck. They get fresh grease/oil when tuba is reassembled.[/quote]

It probably took a long time for the valve oil to get completely flushed out of the hand slide. I can't imagine that the Yamasnot reacted well to blue juice.

[quote="whitbey"]And because I am a little allergic to the oil and I hate the smell, I use the mixed slideomix on my rotary valves. There is a powdery buildup that seems to be helpful to the valves.[/quote]

:eek:
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whitbey
Posts: 654
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by whitbey »

[quote="harrisonreed"]<QUOTE author="BrassSection" post_id="225664" time="1700437773" user_id="15201">
After using Blue Juice as a one bottle for everything oil, with good results on my trombone, I decided to try the Yamaha after reading all the positive comments. Week 1…Wiped down slides inside and out good and switched, not really impressed. Week 2…rewiped slides and put on fresh Yamaha…seemed even more sluggish. Week 3, no wipe, just a light application, slight improvement, ready to give my lube to my tuba player buddy to give to his trombone playing brother. Week 4…got horn out and slide felt as good as juiced slide with nothing wiped or no new lube, used and enjoyed playing the horn again. Week 5, light drop of Yammy lube on each slide and the slide felt great. Today, pulled out of case and enjoyed smooth slide without doing anything. Not sure why it took so long to work, but as of now I’m keeping the tube of Yamaha! Still using Blue Juice in all the valved horns, lasts at least a month in trumpet, and at least 3 weeks in the euph. Tuba typically only comes out around Christmas time, otherwise all tuning slides and the valves are removed, cleaned, and stored for no-worry about anything being stuck. They get fresh grease/oil when tuba is reassembled.[/quote]

It probably took a long time for the valve oil to get completely flushed out of the hand slide. I can't imagine that the Yamasnot reacted well to blue juice.

[quote="whitbey"]And because I am a little allergic to the oil and I hate the smell, I use the mixed slideomix on my rotary valves. There is a powdery buildup that seems to be helpful to the valves.[/quote]

:eek:
</QUOTE>

Never used oil on a hand slide since middle school. And used the silicone/ Teflon lube on valves since the 1990's.

In the early 90's I had a Besson euph that I used a filtered white wine for a valve oil. Then switched to the Cerveny.
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ghmerrill
Posts: 2193
Joined: Apr 02, 2018

by ghmerrill »

French wine in a British euph? That just doesn't sound right.
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bitbckt
Posts: 298
Joined: Aug 19, 2020

by bitbckt »

There’s nothing more British than French envy.
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ghmerrill
Posts: 2193
Joined: Apr 02, 2018

by ghmerrill »

Well, I suppose it's better than British wine in a French euphonium.
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OneTon
Posts: 757
Joined: Nov 02, 2021

by OneTon » (edited 2024-08-29 10:34 p.m.)

The Czech instrument valve specifies Mad Dog 20/20.
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whitbey
Posts: 654
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by whitbey »

No French wine here.

The cheep stuff in a box at the grocery store. Less stuff to filter out. I used coffee filters back then.

Yes the Czech horn was a good price. But it is a solid horn. I put a lever on the tuning slide and had the receiver changed to hold a bass shank. Had the horn 30 years now and still love the way it plays.
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LetItSlide
Posts: 152
Joined: Sep 01, 2022

by LetItSlide »

Holton used to make some stuff called Trombone Slide Treatment (TST). I used it all through high school. It was excellent, so I thought at the time, and long-lasting. Can't get it any more.
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MTbassbone
Posts: 558
Joined: Apr 21, 2018

by MTbassbone »

I couldn't get past the smell of the Yamasnot. Trombotine for life....literally the tube will last for ever. There is a better chance the tube will fail before I run out of the product.
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ghmerrill
Posts: 2193
Joined: Apr 02, 2018

by ghmerrill »

[quote="MTbassbone"]I couldn't get past the smell of the Yamasnot.[/quote]
Yamasnot has some odor? That's certainly escaped my notice. Now Blue Juice (beloved by many valved instrument players) has always had such a dreadful odor for me that I find it difficult to even sit next to someone using it. But people are sensitive to different things. I don't find the odor of Ballistol to be at all unpleasant, but my wife absolutely can't tolerate it to the point that if I use it in the house I have to clean up thoroughly afterwords, wipe down everything it's touched, and dispose of anything touched by it in my garage trash can.
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OneTon
Posts: 757
Joined: Nov 02, 2021

by OneTon » (edited 2024-08-29 10:35 p.m.)

This thread has real potential to break the current post record.
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LetItSlide
Posts: 152
Joined: Sep 01, 2022

by LetItSlide »

My problem with Trombotine when I tried it in college was that it broke down pretty fast, though it seemed quite good for the first couple of scales (ok maybe a little more playing than that). Not so with Holton TST.

bkessler's comment caught my eye, and I will probably try it: "...I haven't used water on my slides in years, but he suggested I not only do that, but put some Hetman Hydro-slide in with the water. The combination of that plus the Yamaha lubricant is pretty incredible. I may be a convert."
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Bach5G
Posts: 2874
Joined: Apr 07, 2018

by Bach5G »

My main complaint about the Hydro slide was the overspray onto the carpets/floor of my practice space.
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chouston3
Posts: 167
Joined: Dec 19, 2023

by chouston3 »

I tried trombotine today after a few months of yamasnot. The trombotine works but it's not as good.
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Bach5G
Posts: 2874
Joined: Apr 07, 2018

by Bach5G »

Horn Guys is selling:

AlphaSynth Trombone Hand Slide Lubricant

Is this something new or a rebranding of Superslik?
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UrbanaDave
Posts: 97
Joined: Mar 26, 2024

by UrbanaDave »

[quote="Bach5G"]Horn Guys is selling:

AlphaSynth Trombone Hand Slide Lubricant

Is this something new or a rebranding of Superslik?[/quote]

I’m also curious about this. :clever:
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OneTon
Posts: 757
Joined: Nov 02, 2021

by OneTon »

Steve Ferguson is evaluating Alpha Synth as a new unique product on HornGuys site. It looks like he compared

It to some other products. I keep seeing an endorsement by educators as “safe for use,” whatever that means.
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

I assume it means you won't poison yourself if you eat it. I remember my contemporaries eating paste when we were in Kindergarten.

Also, there are huge lists of products that have been reported as carcinogens and you have to report any potential hazards. See any Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for examples. Here's one for a material we should all be familiar with: https://dhmo.org/msds/MSDS-DHMO-2007-ChemSafe.pdf
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ghmerrill
Posts: 2193
Joined: Apr 02, 2018

by ghmerrill »

[quote="BGuttman"]Here's one for a material we should all be familiar with: ...[/quote]
Yeah, but the effects of that can be significantly diluted by previously or simultaneously drinking large quantities of Irish Whiskey (aka "the water of life"). However, NEVER mix the two in a container or glass.
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OneTon
Posts: 757
Joined: Nov 02, 2021

by OneTon »

[quote="BGuttman"]I assume it means you won't poison yourself if you eat it. I remember my contemporaries eating paste when we were in Kindergarten.

Also, there are huge lists of products that have been reported as carcinogens and you have to report any potential hazards. See any Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for examples. Here's one for a material we should all be familiar with: https://dhmo.org/msds/MSDS-DHMO-2007-ChemSafe.pdf[/quote]

I looked for a Proposition 65 Warning but could find no label. I plan to refrigerate it after opening. Maybe right next to the Louisiana Hot Sauce. For anyone who hasn’t tried it, serving below room temperature is a must. Martha Stewart will never steer you wrong. This rivals chopped lIver pate, which should come with a Proposition 65 Warning.
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LetItSlide
Posts: 152
Joined: Sep 01, 2022

by LetItSlide »

[quote="BGuttman"]SuperSlick Plus can be used with a lot of different slide creams. I started using it with Trombotine on the advice of a colleague, and also used it with plain cold cream (old Pond's).[/quote]
For a little while now I've been putting drops of SuperSlick Plus (I think most understand this means the little bottle of liquid, not the jar of cream) in my spray bottle. This was working decently on top of small amounts of the SuperSlick cream (I always found less is more).

Then very recently I started using the Yamaha liquid. It's a big step up from SuperSlick cream.

The water with drops of SuperSlick Plus on top of the Yamaha lube doesn't seem to make anything worse. But just the Yamaha liquid is the best I've ever used. My slides are making me very happy.