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A mother from Missouri warns people against warning labels on products after an aerosol of dry shampoo has exploded in her daughter's car, pulled through the sunroof and torpedoed into the air , landing at about fifty meters.
Christine Debrecht wrote on Facebook on Thursday that no one was in the Honda Civic when the Equate Tea Tree dry shampoo canister burned in hot weather, blew the hinges from the car's closed center console, where his daughter l? kept, and pulled straight through the sunroof. The photos that she posted show debris in the car and an almost completely glazed hole where the sunroof was located.
Debrecht said the can had landed about 50 meters from the car.
"I just want to remind you (as well as your children) of these warnings about the products you use, do not leave spray can (especially dry shampoo, as it seems to be a problem with some brands) in your car. "I am so grateful that no one has been hurt," wrote Debrecht.
She told NBC affiliate KSDK in St. Louis that the damage was so severe that she and her daughter could not immediately understand what had caused them. "We thought something had fallen from the sky, but the glass was coming out, so we know that's not the case," she said.
Walmart, owner of Equate, said in a statement: "The Equate dry shampoo contains a specific warning, like most aerosol products, that it can explode when heated and not stored as directed . " The warning, printed on the front of the bobbin, reads: "DANGER.Extra flammable.The container may explode when heated."
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