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Ganesha

Transcendence

Bluelighter
Joined
Jul 19, 2006
Messages
2,502
Has anybody here tried 3C-G, also known as Ganesha? Apparently it's sold as dark red crystals, but I can't find much information on it. It's the amphetamine analogue of 2C-G, but oddly it is reported to be very relaxing.
 
3-CG would also be possibly known and DOG, unless I am mistaken, each DO is the amphetamine analogue to its 2C counterpart.

I have two DOGs
 
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It's made its way around before.. I think before WebTryp.. maybe a little afterwards.. but my sources nor my luck have found an active supply of the stuff. Pretty much anything other than Custom Synth, you SOL
 
2C-G:s amphetamine counterpart is not known as DOG or 3C-G, it is simply G which stands for GANESHA. Read it in pihkal...

The G-series --- the 2C-G series

G or GANESHA --- 2C-G
G-2 --- 2C-G-2
G-3 --- 2C-G-3
G-4 --- 2C-G-4
G-5 --- 2C-G-5
G-N --- 2C-G-N
 
it would be badass if they had a yinyang pill and it was red and white, the red being ganesha and the white being amt

*pop*
 
It would be a small pill... dosage of Ganesha is 20-32 mg and dosage of AMT is 15-30 mg, so the pill could weigh 62 mg at max.
 
2C-G:s amphetamine counterpart is not known as DOG or 3C-G, it is simply G which stands for GANESHA. Read it in pihkal...

the OP got his info from the wiki page on it. im (very) far from knowledgeable when it comes to chemistry, but shulgin does describe it as "the related three-carbon amphetamine" referring to GANESHA in the 2c-g entry. im assuming shulgin consistently uses the term 'counterpart' for the 2c-x - DOx relation. the OP however uses the term amphetamine analogue? can someone clear this up for said humble chemistry nitwit?
 
^Amphetamine analogues are drugs which contain the alpha-methyl-phenyethylamine structure as part of their inherent structure. The term analogue here could also be said as 'the related". Bolded the term amphetamine.
 
^i see. GANESHA having this aplha-methyl group attached next to the amino group makes it its amphetamine analogue. so the difference between GANESHA and say "DOG" is the additional alpha-methyl group on the 5 position? making it a 3-carbon amphetamine. whereas a phenethylamine has only one being the OCH3 on the 4 postion? (what is this group? seing as how phenethylamines are a subcategory of amphetamines, phenethylamines are then single carbon ampetamines?

edit: im guessing this is why the term homologue is perhaps more adequate
 
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^i see. GANESHA having this aplha-methyl group attached next to the amino group makes it its amphetamine analogue. so the difference between GANESHA and say "DOG" is the additional alpha-methyl group on the 5 position? making it a 3-carbon amphetamine. whereas a phenethylamine has only one being the OCH3 on the 4 postion? (what is this group? seing as how phenethylamines are a subcategory of amphetamines, phenethylamines are then single carbon ampetamines?

What? Sorry but you're not making any sense.

The 2-carbon vs. 3-carbon (2C vs. 3C / DOx) refers to the chain that connects the phenyl to the amine. If the chain is 2 carbons long as in phenethylamine, it is a plain phenethylamine. If the chain is 3 carbons long as in alpha-methyl-PEA (ethyl + alpha-methyl = 3 carbons) then it is an amphetamine.

GANESHA is the amphetamine homologue of 2C-G.

2C-G is the 2-carbon homologue of GANESHA.

The ring substitutions are same on both.

ps. The alpha-methyl can't be on the 5-position. It is simply a methyl group which is on the alpha-position, as the name implies. Alpha being the carbon next to the amine on the ethylamine chain. Beta would be the carbon next to the benzene (phenyl). Positions 2-6 are the ring substitutions, on the phenyl ring.
 
pk85.png
 
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What? Sorry but you're not making any sense.

first baby steps :\
thanks for clearing that up.
could you (or anyone else) pm me with any books they could recommend an absolute chemnitwit in order to start his venture to begin understanding the structural nuances behind tikhal and pikhal? or is one better off signing up for a master in chemistry?
 
I got blotters depicting ganesha but thats not what in them (obviously). I'm so confused! They're called shiva's around here though, which confuses me even more. Might be the acid now that I think about it.
 
^ Shiva and Ganesha are both Hindu deities, perhaps that's the confusion. The Shiva blotters that have circulated around these parts have been very potent LSD tabs.
 
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