It's not about stacking. This is for mixing peptides in one vial/syringe.So, reta shouldn't be stacked with anything?
Yeah, this chart is nonsense.
Thats what I thought when I reviewed this several weeks ago. Mixing in a syringe, not our bodies.It's not about stacking. This is for mixing peptides in one vial/syringe.
The forum where this originated from had this filed under "the convenience of one shot" or something to that effect, so yeah, that's exactly what it was meant for.Thats what I thought when I reviewed this several weeks ago. Mixing in a syringe, not our bodies.
That is a valid point, but I don't think it's the only concern. From a cursory search on the subject, it seems that cross reactivity, solubility, and pH are some other concerns when it comes to compatibility. Some combinations may not necessarily cause visual issues like gelling or cloudiness, but they may reduce efficacy of one or all peptides in the mix, or even render them inert depending on above factors.I think what ever they buffer each specific batch with plays a bigger role than “these two peptides react with each other”.
I was looking for this the other day! could not find again lol.Saw this somewhere thought of sharing with ya'll...View attachment 4068

Is there a limit to have many peptides you would mix in a syringe. 2? 3?
I already do BPC and GHK, but was thinking of including Epithalon. Based on the chart, seems ok…?
I thought opposite. STG recommends filtering everything into a sterile vile so I was thinking I could draw up portions of each in the correct ratios and put into a vile and look for gelling, clouding etc…. If this happens I only wasted one sterile vile and only a small amount of each peptide. If it works, I have my weekly regimen in one place. Could also monitor for the effects of time and tweak ratios if needed by starting on a small scale. At least that’s my thinking. When I get a new kit or new vendor, I could go back to small scale testing. That’s my rationale anyway.Seems “safer” on the peptides to just mix them in the pinning syringe versus mixing in the vial. As mentioned above though, be careful not to let the contents of the syringe get vacuumed sucked into the next vial though. Sure there is some mixing going on in the syringe but less chances of a complete screw up. Also, if it clouds up when it’s mixed it’s probably a bad idea !