Hpt homepeptide T120mg

Gr33dyOctopus

GLP-1 Enthusiast
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I did see the other T120mg thread but this is a different vendor, and I have questions.

They are literally offering a kit of T120 for 310 bucks AND.... They take paypal.

Im going to hit stairway to gray and see what others there think of them, wondering if you guys have any experience with them. And the other thread mentioned they'd co.e on a 5mg vial...

What size vials would I need to reconstitute in? My math fucking sucks but what I imagine is mixing it into a larger ml vial with maybe 10ml of bac water and then splitting it back out into three 3ml bottles?

Jesus. I effed that all up. Don't let me reconstitute your peptides kids, at least without a real guide. Could so.eone point me to that guide if they know of one??

😃
 
I can't help you with the vendor, but I've bought 124mg tirzepatide (tested mass) kits before from a different vendor. Unlike the usual peptides which come in 3mL vials, they came in 5mL vials.

Here's what I did: reconstituted the whole vial (in the vial it comes in) without breaking it up or transferring to potentially dodgy "sterile" vials, then kept it in the fridge for up to 3 months of use (which assumes alcohol-swabbing the top before each use, including when reconstituting).

While the official usage time (with Hospira bac water) is 28 days, many on these fora are comfortable with 3 months refrigerated. Some even longer than that.

Tirz shows no significant degradation over much longer periods of time, but of course microbial growth becomes more of a possibility over very long periods of time.
 
I can't help you with the vendor, but I've bought 124mg tirzepatide (tested mass) kits before from a different vendor. Unlike the usual peptides which come in 3mL vials, they came in 5mL vials.

Here's what I did: reconstituted the whole vial (in the vial it comes in) without breaking it up or transferring to potentially dodgy "sterile" vials, then kept it in the fridge for up to 3 months of use (which assumes alcohol-swabbing the top before each use, including when reconstituting).

While the official usage time (with Hospira bac water) is 28 days, many on these fora are comfortable with 3 months refrigerated. Some even longer than that.

Tirz shows no significant degradation over much longer periods of time, but of course microbial growth becomes more of a possibility over very long periods of time.
Insolent. Really appreciate you coming into this thread. Two more questions,

1st being: I noticed youre not using a syringe filter on that and transferring to a "potentially dodgy" sterile vial. Whats your opinion on syringe filters? From the looks of it you weren't terribly interested in using one?

2nd question, potentially dodgy sterile vials. Should I assume that the individually wrapped sterile 3ml bottles are not sterile?? Is it actually safer to reconstitute in the vials that the freeze dried tirz came in, not worrying about filtering and doing a lot less potentially dodgy liquid transfers?

Sorry for all the questions
 
Lyophilized vials from Chinese vendors have a near 100% negative test record (per Janoshik) for sterility issues. And I trust that Hospira bac water is sterile and not counterfeit (until that starts happening!). And same for syringes purchased from real pharmacies in states where Rx isn't needed. So all in, at least for the GLP-1 peptides and for researchers who aren't immunocompromised, filtering seems about as useful as a magic incantation. A "why not, it's so cheap?" that makes little actual sense. To me.

The vast majority of "sterile" empty vials purchased online failed laboratory testing conducted by the grey community. Do a search on this or similar forums and you'll find threads about it. Many researchers who use them will buy relatively expensive sterilizing machines (some of which are near-fraudulent in themselves, and don't properly sterilize the vials). In some cases, the technology doesn't work with stoppers and caps. I step away from all that.
 
Lyophilized vials from Chinese vendors have a near 100% negative test record (per Janoshik) for sterility issues. And I trust that Hospira bac water is sterile and not counterfeit (until that starts happening!). And same for syringes purchased from real pharmacies in states where Rx isn't needed. So all in, at least for the GLP-1 peptides and for researchers who aren't immunocompromised, filtering seems about as useful as a magic incantation. A "why not, it's so cheap?" that makes little actual sense. To me.

The vast majority of "sterile" empty vials purchased online failed laboratory testing conducted by the grey community. Do a search on this or similar forums and you'll find threads about it. Many researchers who use them will buy relatively expensive sterilizing machines (some of which are near-fraudulent in themselves, and don't properly sterilize the vials). In some cases, the technology doesn't work with stoppers and caps. I step away from all that.
Thank you!!! It would be much easier to just shoot the original bottles. I
 
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