Yes, cat and dog urine contains urinary acids which will damage paint. On modern water based paints, the damage can be quite severe if the urine is not washed off quickly. The same goes for bird droppings, which should not be 'scrubbed off' as it contains grit particles which can scratch the paint. Soak bird droppings with fresh water, and when softened, rinse off with more clean water.
As with any foreign substance, a good coat of quality car wax will provide a barrier between the paint and contaminants.
Scratches?
You can remove cat urine from your car seat by applying a product called D-Molish. D-Molish actually neutralizes the urine smell, it will be totally gone!
Cat urine can stain clothing and smell bad, some people can actually be allergic to cat urine. Cat urine will not make you blind.
yes, cat is only very light damage
Any liquid has the potential to de-laminate products like this. Urine will soak into the wood and be permanent. A blacklight will make cat urine glow.
Only around 67% of cat urine is absorbed by the average cat litter.
It isn't. Cat urine is not fluorescent, and it does not glow in the dark. I'm not sure where this myth comes from. Cat urine is yellow, like human urine. To the naked eye, it is indistinguishable from human urine, except for the smell. Cat urine is ammonia-based (unlike human urine) so it smells of ammonia.
Yes, the acid from the cat urine will kill grass.
In the UK, a Cat D car is a reference used by the insurance industry that refers to a vehicle that has the least serious amount of damage, as compared to CAT A, B, C, D and F cars. These five levels of damage are used by insurance agencies when referring to cars that have been involved in accidents.
A cat's urine does not cause rashes. Cat's like to urinate in a litter box or a sand box if outside.
Yes, in some cases Blue Buffalo Cat Food does cause crystals in Cat urine.
NO
Due to the presence of ammonia in urine, it is feasibly possible, assuming the levels of ammonia in the air reach unprecedented concentrations, for the ammonia to alter the internal chemistry of the lungs and cause damage. Under normal circumstances, this is nearly impossible.