Yeah, really. This point of this forum is to spread true information about drugs. Telling people things are stronger than other things when they certainly are not is about as helpful to harm reduction as making your high school's D.A.R.E. officer the Senior Moderators.
So, let's set this straight.
-- Fentanyl is the strongest prescribed opioid, yes, there are others around, but they're used to
sedate elephants and as
chemical weapons (no, I'm not kidding, click the links).
-- Oxymorphone, hydromorphone, morphine, methadone, buprenorphine (Suboxone), heroin (diamorphine) are
some of the strongest semi-synthetics commonly available. StaySedated mentioned some other less common ones. Wikipedia has them all, check it out.
Also, please check out a opiate conversion chart, all this information is right there.
@BrokedownPalace, yes, most formulations of codeine in the US are a form of the Tylenol 1, Tylenol 2, Tylenol 3 or Tylenol 4 series, all of which have APAP in them. I agree that codeine is better than tramadol, however tramadol has other effects which one may consider desirable for certain pain situations. That's between you and your doctor. If those don't work, then its most likely oxycodone with no or very little APAP in it, as Brokedown said.
Please do your research when it comes to opiates/opioids. Once you start getting into the strong stuff it really does matter a lot if you take 10mg or 1mg. So, yes, HIPPIE is wrong, very very wrong.