I am not disagreeing with you on your comment. But I want the product here for when I am ready to use it. If I continue just to read nothing will stick for me. I am a use or lose it kind of person and I am reading so much stuff that things just run together. I plan on continuing to research and just put the goods in the freezer and have everything in advance of using it. I am a bullet point person. Not a paragraph person. I will not start until I am ready.
And I don't think you were being rude.
I hear you. All the stuff everyone talks about on these forums does make more sense when you can touch and feel it in real life.
To your original questions,
1. I can't vouch for them personally but I've seen a couple people say they got what they ordered from Jeep.
2. Personally I wouldn't bother with 0.5mg of tirz, I would start at least 1 or 1.5mg, the clinical starting dose is 2.5mg
3. The vials will hold a maximum of 3ml or 300 units and I think most people just mix up 1.5 or 2ml. It's easiest to draw syringes accurately with doses of at least 0.25ml or 25 units.
4. So you want to size your vials so that you can add 1.5 or 2ml of back water and then draw your preferred dose at 20, 25, 50 units.
5. If you do a 1mg dose, then a 10mg vial would get you 10 doses, and if you use 2ml of water, that's 0.2ml or 20 units each dose. That's pretty good.
6. That leads me to think you shouldn't trifle with the 5mg vials unless you are dead set on trying 0.5mg doses.
The thing is, if the math requires you to draw 5 or 10 units, then a 1 unit variance is a big change in dose. If you are drawing 25 or 50 units, a 1 unit variance is not as big of a deal. That's why I always try to get my doses at least 20 or 25 units.gives me a little more margin for error