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reaction time/dosage

topofthetrees

Bluelighter
Joined
Sep 21, 2008
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247
Location
Dallas, TX
So I was just reading over some pill reports, this one in particular-

http://www.pillreports.com/index.php...15171#comments

The guy says that the Mecke reaction time was 5-6 seconds(dark blue/black), and he has not yet consumed. He then goes on to say that he suspects it's a medium dose of mdma..

Could he be basing this off of the reaction time?




I don't have a kit yet(I know, shame on me..), but I remember reading somewhere that reaction time didn't necessarily indicate the amount of mdma in a tab.. Is that true?

Is the test reaction time relevant to anything?
 
So I was just reading over some pill reports, this one in particular-

http://www.pillreports.com/index.php...15171#comments

The guy says that the Mecke reaction time was 5-6 seconds(dark blue/black), and he has not yet consumed. He then goes on to say that he suspects it's a medium dose of mdma..

Could he be basing this off of the reaction time?

I don't have a kit yet(I know, shame on me..), but I remember reading somewhere that reaction time didn't necessarily indicate the amount of mdma in a tab.. Is that true?

Is the test reaction time relevant to anything?

Honestly, yes and no. Let me see if I can explain it, using Marquis as an example.

Say you have a pill that takes 20-30 seconds to turn a very light purple color, and the color is very faint or almost clear. This will let you know that it is either (1) cut and has very little MDxx or (2) could be cut with something that doesn't react to the Marquis (such as piperazines or fillers/binders). I would think you'd be safe to say this is MDxx Low or MDxx + something else based off that reaction time.

Then you test a different pill and it turns purple/black within 5-15 seconds. You know it's clean but you really can't base MDxx Med/High off that reaction time alone. You don't know what the binders/fillers were, ect.

Remember, testers can only test for the presence or absence of a substance, not the quantity. But, there are times when you just know it's not worth it, like in the first situation I described above.

Hope this makes sense/helps :)
 
Post made no sense, this is not the oxycontin thread or forum.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Post made no sense, this is not the oxycontin thread or forum.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Honestly, yes and no. Let me see if I can explain it, using Marquis as an example.

Say you have a pill that takes 20-30 seconds to turn a very light purple color, and the color is very faint or almost clear. This will let you know that it is either (1) cut and has very little MDxx or (2) could be cut with something that doesn't react to the Marquis (such as piperazines or fillers/binders). I would think you'd be safe to say this is MDxx Low or MDxx + something else based off that reaction time.

Then you test a different pill and it turns purple/black within 5-15 seconds. You know it's clean but you really can't base MDxx Med/High off that reaction time alone. You don't know what the binders/fillers were, ect.

Remember, testers can only test for the presence or absence of a substance, not the quantity. But, there are times when you just know it's not worth it, like in the first situation I described above.

Hope this makes sense/helps :)



That made perfect sense, thanks a ton :D
 
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