Xorkoth
Bluelight Crew
Well, 2C-B-fly's duration is not all that much longer than 2C-B's... maybe twice as long at most. Less in my experience. I'd still love to see 2C-E-fly.
I'm dying for 2C-D-fly. Hell, I'd be happy if someone would just put some plain old 2C-D back on the market. Bring it on!hugo24 said:On the fly's,since they have a much increased duration,it cuts the selection mainly to 2C-D,2C-T,maybe 2C-T-2 and DOM fly just for historical reasons.
I'm dying for 2C-D-fly. Hell, I'd be happy if someone would just put some plain old 2C-D back on the market. Bring it on!
Dr.Heckyll said:To hell with all these boring phenethylamines, I want to see some Lysergic Acid Amides on the market!
Dr.Heckyll said:To hell with all these boring phenethylamines, I want to see some Lysergic Acid Amides on the market!
The little vials in my freezer (which will probably never see the light of day) are marked 1-(8-bromobenzo[1,2-b;4,5-b']difuran-4-yl-2-aminopropane. Is this not DOB-dragonfly? I am under the impression that the non-aromatized fly's have "tetrahydrobenzo" in their IUPAC names referring to the ring substitutions.nuke said:^^ I'm pretty sure most of what was made available was the racemic non-aromatised DOB-Fly rather than DOB-DFly (because of toxicity concerns). But, maybe not?
Figure 1. (A) Top view of mescaline (1) virtually docked into the 5-HT2A receptor homology model with key residues known to be important for
binding. (B) Similar view of the docked R-enantiomer of 2. The view is from the extracellular face of the receptor, with ASP155 in TM3, PHE243
in TM5, and PHE339 and PHE340 in TM6.