Raving Loony
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2002
- Messages
- 3,181
Disclaimer : Work in progress only. There is no information about how to consume GHB or any of it's analogues here. Please visit the GHB/1,4B draft FAQ instead.
Hi,
I would have put this in with the GHB/1,4B draft FAQ, but I didn't want to confuse it with anything misleading.
Anyway...
I've got a very honest and open question about perhaps determining the difference between GHB and it's analogues. I remember something back in high school saying that some metals (icluding metal ions) give off a distinct colour under a flame. For instance copper would emit green under a flame(from memory).
Given that GHB analogues GBL and 1,4B don't have Sodium as part of their structure. Could one crudely determine whether the substance is likely to be GHB on the basis of what colour the substance emits under a flame? (obviously the test could be easily screwed up if the dealer put common salt in the mixture).
[ 22 August 2002: Message edited by: Raving Loony ]
Hi,
I would have put this in with the GHB/1,4B draft FAQ, but I didn't want to confuse it with anything misleading.
Anyway...
I've got a very honest and open question about perhaps determining the difference between GHB and it's analogues. I remember something back in high school saying that some metals (icluding metal ions) give off a distinct colour under a flame. For instance copper would emit green under a flame(from memory).
Given that GHB analogues GBL and 1,4B don't have Sodium as part of their structure. Could one crudely determine whether the substance is likely to be GHB on the basis of what colour the substance emits under a flame? (obviously the test could be easily screwed up if the dealer put common salt in the mixture).
[ 22 August 2002: Message edited by: Raving Loony ]