Scrofula
Bluelight Crew
The invisible strands swirling around are distortions from solvent at different densities mixing. That can happen with extreme temperature differences or with different concentrations of solutes.
Same as pouring freezer-vodka slowly over ice or warm mixer. It's definitely not unique to codeine.
You could get the same stirring a very salty solution that you let sit.
It sounds like you're just washing with very cold filtered water. You should expect to see those swirls when it meets the first, warmer, saltier (as in, drug salts) solution. It is not indicative of any additional drug, but it doesn't mean there's none, either. I don't see any issue with the protocol.
It's a question of whether absolute temp or time at low temperature is more important to crash out your acetaminophen.
At -24C, you don't have very long before your water freezes, and since you don't stir, hard to know if the temperature is uniform throughout your glass. Leaving it at 4C in your fridge overnight might be more effective.
Same as pouring freezer-vodka slowly over ice or warm mixer. It's definitely not unique to codeine.
You could get the same stirring a very salty solution that you let sit.
It sounds like you're just washing with very cold filtered water. You should expect to see those swirls when it meets the first, warmer, saltier (as in, drug salts) solution. It is not indicative of any additional drug, but it doesn't mean there's none, either. I don't see any issue with the protocol.
It's a question of whether absolute temp or time at low temperature is more important to crash out your acetaminophen.
At -24C, you don't have very long before your water freezes, and since you don't stir, hard to know if the temperature is uniform throughout your glass. Leaving it at 4C in your fridge overnight might be more effective.
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