Wishdoctor79
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2018
- Messages
- 104
Hello. There's a lot of pontificating and posturing from people who seem maybe a bit jealous. I've been around the block and have every reason to believe the lady named isotonitazene and the lady named metonitazene are exactly what they say. Protonitazene I'm unsure and ditto for the flunitazene.
That said I was very cautious and transferred the powders to two plastic containers around the size of urinalysis pee-test containers, but the iso container was more robust and was approved for microwave heating. Just for safety, make it the best you got.
This isotonitazene is pure white and tiny uniform crystals it seems they took great care in processing.
The metonitazene can be eyeballed but don't try it with the isotonitazene. OK. Simple math, mods can check my arithmetic. 1 gram per liter is 1 milligram per milliliter. But if your sample is more than a gram it's too dangerous to divide it.
Much safer to dump the whole thing into distilled water wearing protection and outdoors if possible.
If your sample is ~5 grams the logical dilution requiring a minimum of exposure or loss would be a one-gallon container. Then you have ~1.2 mg/ml.
With a 1-ml insulin syringe it's possible to measure 0.1 ml. Do the math!
P. S. Wow I'm still high as the kites 12 hours after putting too many of those teeny tiny little white hygroscopic crystals on very tip of a sharp knife and touching to my tongue. No way I want an injectable solution around.
That said I was very cautious and transferred the powders to two plastic containers around the size of urinalysis pee-test containers, but the iso container was more robust and was approved for microwave heating. Just for safety, make it the best you got.
This isotonitazene is pure white and tiny uniform crystals it seems they took great care in processing.
The metonitazene can be eyeballed but don't try it with the isotonitazene. OK. Simple math, mods can check my arithmetic. 1 gram per liter is 1 milligram per milliliter. But if your sample is more than a gram it's too dangerous to divide it.
Much safer to dump the whole thing into distilled water wearing protection and outdoors if possible.
If your sample is ~5 grams the logical dilution requiring a minimum of exposure or loss would be a one-gallon container. Then you have ~1.2 mg/ml.
With a 1-ml insulin syringe it's possible to measure 0.1 ml. Do the math!
P. S. Wow I'm still high as the kites 12 hours after putting too many of those teeny tiny little white hygroscopic crystals on very tip of a sharp knife and touching to my tongue. No way I want an injectable solution around.
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