So far I tried 1.25 mg, 5 mg, and 7.5 mg.
100mg? Dude, that is an insanely high dose. What was it like?
Dude, he's saying that he dissolved 100mg into 400ml of water so that he could dose volumetrically / without using scales, not that he took 100mg![]()
An allergy test, wise move.
Dude, he's saying that he dissolved 100mg into 400ml of water so that he could dose volumetrically / without using scales, not that he took 100mg![]()
Try adding a few drops of vinegar and it should help any remaining material to go into the solution.As mentioned above, I tried to dissolve 100 mg of 2C-B*HCl in 400 mL of tap water. Not everything went into solution and some colorless sediment remained, even after heating to about 60 °C.
Any idea what this could be? I checked the usual methods for the synthesis of 2C-B in PiKAL and other sources but it is not evident to me what could remain after converting the freebase to the HCl salt. Even the acetate salt should have a good solubility in water. Any ideas here?
For now, I keep the solution frozen but the next time I will filter of the sediment and try to run a Marquis test on it.
Also good MDMA will never need more than 150mgs. Doing much more of highly pure MDMA could easily kill you...
Your 2C-B hcl should be entirely HCL with no freebase in it. When I've had problems getting the last bit of chemical into solution a bit of vinegar seems to always do the trick.Ballz_Trippington, thanks for the advice. Do you have any idea why adding a bit of acid will force the rest into solution? If there is some freebase left, that would be an oil (which would be on the button of the solution). I guess the people who made this added enough HCl to convert all freebase to the salt.
Thanks for the advice with the alcohol solution for long term storage. I was considering this but I went for water as I do not want to consume alcohol and 2C-B as ethanol has a very strong sedating effect on me, even at low doses. Thus, I created a solution in water and put the bottle in the freezer to prevent it from going bad. What do you think?
Thanks!
Your 2C-B hcl should be entirely HCL with no freebase in it. When I've had problems getting the last bit of chemical into solution a bit of vinegar seems to always do the trick.
You should also be able to get your 2C-B to go into a higher concentration per ml with alcohol rather than water and alcohol will prevent bacteria from developing in your solution.
I understand the dilemma about using alcohol if you don't wish to injest it though!
Firstly, I must say that it really looks like you are truly doing your due diligence here and I must commend you!!My apologies for my late reply. I did some research and there seems to be a rationale that lowering the pH can help to force salts into solution. Specifically I had a look at this paper: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1016382426347
I will go for citric acid as you can buy it in high quality and use it as a power. First I will test with Marquis if the sediment is really 2C-B, then add some citric acid to force everything into solution.
Do you think storing in water and freezing is not as good as storing in an ethanol water mixture?
Thanks!
Firstly, I must say that it really looks like you are truly doing your due diligence here and I must commend you!!
I do feel that an alcohol solution is superior to water for storage ( in both situations I would still store in the freezer though).
Putting the solution in the freezer should cause it to store less material as it gets cold so you might see that crystals have formed when you take it out of the freezer and you might have to shake it up after it returns to room temperature to get it all back into solution.
I find most chemicals are more soluable in ethanol over water but there are a few exceptions. So you should be able to concentrate it down to a dose being even just a few drops to a couple ml. Not even close to a shot.
I also find that alcohol helps preserve your chemical from degradation over water but that should be less of a problem with Phenethylamines than with Tryptamines.
As mentioned above, I tried to dissolve 100 mg of 2C-B*HCl in 400 mL of tap water. Not everything went into solution and some colorless sediment remained, even after heating to about 60 °C.
For now, I keep the solution frozen but the next time I will filter of the sediment and try to run a Marquis test on it.