Deinonychus
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2012
- Messages
- 401
Hey! So what was once a seemingly completely forbidden topic here on Bluelight – laying blotter – seems to have recently become a legitimate topic of discussion in the name of harm reduction. With the advent of n-benzyl PEAs, many people are attempting to lay their own blotter. Previously, the argument against discussing the laying of blotter was focused on the likely hood that an individual asking questions on the subject would likely be trying to lay the blotter as a distribution medium for acid, and as we don't discuss how to and how not to sell drugs, the subject was consequently off limits.
However, unlike acid, poorly-laid blotter that contains NBOMes adsorbed (with a D) onto the internal fibers of the blotter paper can quite possibly kill you, and so harm reduction seems to have reluctantly trumped the other factors to the moderators weighing the subject. The topic is important because laying blotter well is anything but easy, with the vagaries of how liquid is distributed throughout a saturated piece of paper being not easily understood.
Seemingly common-sense methods that come to mind will almost always result in totally uneven coverage, leading to certain parts of the blotter holding much more compound than others. If the blotters from a less-concentrated area are mixed with those from the more concentrated area things become even more dangerous, as somebody may take a single, underdosed piece, conclude all the pieces are weaksauce, and take several extra blotters to try to get the full effect, one or more of which may be from the overly dosed areas of the sheet, leading to health complications and possibly death.
My thinking on this subject is that laying down gelatin windowpane may be the ideal alternative to blotter for the home-experimenter / DIY fanatic who wishes to lay doses as thin, easily concealed media. I admit I am not an expert on the subject, and so I can't say with any accuracy whether there are issues with windowpane that mirror those with blotter.
My thoughts are that it may provide a way to avoid the difficulties inherent to liquid distribution in saturated paper, while retaining the benefits of liquid measurement. If this is the case then a set amount of liquid containing a set amount of compound could be made into windowpane sheets, and whatever the resulting 2-dimensional area ends up being could be easily subdivided so as to produce accurately calibrated doses of the active component.
So I'm posting this thread to discuss the subject of windowpane: what sorts of complications and problems exist, what the best and most effective techniques are for laying windowpane, how the ingredients in the liquid mixture prior to gelling affect the end product, what recipes are good, etc. If anybody has experience with this subject their input would be great, and anybody who would be down to engage in a little bit of practical experimentation on the subject is welcome as well. I for one would be willing to try out some recipes and post my results if the interest in the subject is great enough.
With all that in mind, let's keep this clean: I believe that if the scope of this thread is limited to practical techniques and considerations regarding windowpane gelatin sheets it will likely be allowed to stay open. So in the interest of not antagonizing the mods, keep your drug distribution stories and dealer advice to yourself please!
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I'll start things off with a recipe I have been informed about. It uses measurements of mass, with a total of 250 grams of water being used to 3 grams of agar and 1/2 a packet of gelatin. Using the density of water we then arrive at a volume of 250 ml for the listed quantities of agar and gelatin. Unfortunately the gelatin packets you buy in a store are not all sized the same as far as how much gelatin they contain. I recall an episode of America's Test Kitchen (yeah, public radio and PBS junkie here for sure) where the quantity of gelatin in a packet was found to vary by as much as a tablespoon, if I recall correctly. So specifying a half packet is not very helpful in determining how much to use.
The technique is to lightly grease a rectangular baking dish like you would use for a casserole with some sort of oil, so as to allow the finished, dried sheet to be easily released from the bottom of the dish. The mixture of warm water, agar, gelatin, and active compound is then poured into the dish in such a way as to have only a very thin layer of this solution, so that when dried it will be a thin sheet. Alternately to pouring, a spoon or needleless syringe may be used to put in the proper amount of solution. The dish is then set aside to dry.
My commentary on the subject is thus: it may well serve to make up the full 250 ml batch, and use several dishes to use up all the solution, rather than trying to subdivide the recipe, because if you are using a milligram balance to measure out your NBOMe, the things aren't perfectly accurate and you may end up with as much as five milligrams too much or too little. By making 250 ml of a 1 mg/ml solution, you are using enough drug that a five milligram difference will not be hugely significant.
Think of it this way: at 250 mg and 250 ml, a difference of 5 mg will result in anywhere from 245 to 255 mg in that 250 ml of solvent. If 245, then you'll actually have 980 mics per milliliter, and if 255, you'll have 1020 mics per milliliter. Whereas if you only made up 30 ml of 1 mg/ml solution, that 5 milligram I accuracy would result in either 833 mics/ml for 25 mg in 30 ml or 1166 mics/ml for 35 mg. So as you can see the inaccuracy in the balance is rendered less significant the more compound is used.
Also, I wonder what the effects of using a portion of another solvent in place of 100% water would be. I wouldn't recommend using anything that may be nasty for the human body, like methanol, as the potential for blinding wood alcohol to get stuck in the end result gel sheet is too scary, so ethanol is probably best, or possibly acetone as I've seen a thread in ADD that seems to indicate that it is not toxic (but don't take my word for it, you don't want to take the risk if you're not 100% sure, right? Right.)
So lets get to discussing windowpane then, how to lay it, what's the recipe, etc etc. I'd be willing like I mentioned to try out a recipe or three (without including any product, as its just for practice and to proove or disproove a method or recipe) to see how they work if there's enough interest in the subject. So yeah, have at it, discuss, etc!
However, unlike acid, poorly-laid blotter that contains NBOMes adsorbed (with a D) onto the internal fibers of the blotter paper can quite possibly kill you, and so harm reduction seems to have reluctantly trumped the other factors to the moderators weighing the subject. The topic is important because laying blotter well is anything but easy, with the vagaries of how liquid is distributed throughout a saturated piece of paper being not easily understood.
Seemingly common-sense methods that come to mind will almost always result in totally uneven coverage, leading to certain parts of the blotter holding much more compound than others. If the blotters from a less-concentrated area are mixed with those from the more concentrated area things become even more dangerous, as somebody may take a single, underdosed piece, conclude all the pieces are weaksauce, and take several extra blotters to try to get the full effect, one or more of which may be from the overly dosed areas of the sheet, leading to health complications and possibly death.
My thinking on this subject is that laying down gelatin windowpane may be the ideal alternative to blotter for the home-experimenter / DIY fanatic who wishes to lay doses as thin, easily concealed media. I admit I am not an expert on the subject, and so I can't say with any accuracy whether there are issues with windowpane that mirror those with blotter.
My thoughts are that it may provide a way to avoid the difficulties inherent to liquid distribution in saturated paper, while retaining the benefits of liquid measurement. If this is the case then a set amount of liquid containing a set amount of compound could be made into windowpane sheets, and whatever the resulting 2-dimensional area ends up being could be easily subdivided so as to produce accurately calibrated doses of the active component.
So I'm posting this thread to discuss the subject of windowpane: what sorts of complications and problems exist, what the best and most effective techniques are for laying windowpane, how the ingredients in the liquid mixture prior to gelling affect the end product, what recipes are good, etc. If anybody has experience with this subject their input would be great, and anybody who would be down to engage in a little bit of practical experimentation on the subject is welcome as well. I for one would be willing to try out some recipes and post my results if the interest in the subject is great enough.
With all that in mind, let's keep this clean: I believe that if the scope of this thread is limited to practical techniques and considerations regarding windowpane gelatin sheets it will likely be allowed to stay open. So in the interest of not antagonizing the mods, keep your drug distribution stories and dealer advice to yourself please!
---
I'll start things off with a recipe I have been informed about. It uses measurements of mass, with a total of 250 grams of water being used to 3 grams of agar and 1/2 a packet of gelatin. Using the density of water we then arrive at a volume of 250 ml for the listed quantities of agar and gelatin. Unfortunately the gelatin packets you buy in a store are not all sized the same as far as how much gelatin they contain. I recall an episode of America's Test Kitchen (yeah, public radio and PBS junkie here for sure) where the quantity of gelatin in a packet was found to vary by as much as a tablespoon, if I recall correctly. So specifying a half packet is not very helpful in determining how much to use.
The technique is to lightly grease a rectangular baking dish like you would use for a casserole with some sort of oil, so as to allow the finished, dried sheet to be easily released from the bottom of the dish. The mixture of warm water, agar, gelatin, and active compound is then poured into the dish in such a way as to have only a very thin layer of this solution, so that when dried it will be a thin sheet. Alternately to pouring, a spoon or needleless syringe may be used to put in the proper amount of solution. The dish is then set aside to dry.
My commentary on the subject is thus: it may well serve to make up the full 250 ml batch, and use several dishes to use up all the solution, rather than trying to subdivide the recipe, because if you are using a milligram balance to measure out your NBOMe, the things aren't perfectly accurate and you may end up with as much as five milligrams too much or too little. By making 250 ml of a 1 mg/ml solution, you are using enough drug that a five milligram difference will not be hugely significant.
Think of it this way: at 250 mg and 250 ml, a difference of 5 mg will result in anywhere from 245 to 255 mg in that 250 ml of solvent. If 245, then you'll actually have 980 mics per milliliter, and if 255, you'll have 1020 mics per milliliter. Whereas if you only made up 30 ml of 1 mg/ml solution, that 5 milligram I accuracy would result in either 833 mics/ml for 25 mg in 30 ml or 1166 mics/ml for 35 mg. So as you can see the inaccuracy in the balance is rendered less significant the more compound is used.
Also, I wonder what the effects of using a portion of another solvent in place of 100% water would be. I wouldn't recommend using anything that may be nasty for the human body, like methanol, as the potential for blinding wood alcohol to get stuck in the end result gel sheet is too scary, so ethanol is probably best, or possibly acetone as I've seen a thread in ADD that seems to indicate that it is not toxic (but don't take my word for it, you don't want to take the risk if you're not 100% sure, right? Right.)
So lets get to discussing windowpane then, how to lay it, what's the recipe, etc etc. I'd be willing like I mentioned to try out a recipe or three (without including any product, as its just for practice and to proove or disproove a method or recipe) to see how they work if there's enough interest in the subject. So yeah, have at it, discuss, etc!
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