I recieved powder told to be 2c-e.. I did a test on it and it came out to be a yellow at first and fading to an orange-dark brown.. What could this be? I'm a assuming a number of things. Has anyone used this test before?
2C-E: Marquis – Very faint brown, fading to clear. Mecke – Dark brown Mandellin – Yellow w/tinge of green fades to clear over time
your test kit should come with a color chart or something, no? either that, or you should be able to research what reaction 2ce should have with your specific testing kit. go look it up on bluelight. it's already established what they should be, but posting a new thread asking the question isn't gonna get you the best answer. only the active posters will answer, not necessarily those that KNOW the answer. your source for 2ce had no reason to lie about what it was. it's been described by others to be consistent with 2ce. i THINK it's 2ce, and that you don't know what you're looking for in your test figure it out yourself. don't ask us because you apparently don't trust us
HUMAN TEST KIT: When applied to a human body, 20mg of 2c-e will turn bright rainbow colors and dance around on all the walls and ceilings. Try it and see...
So would you recomend taking a micro gram dose to make sure I'm not allergic or it's not bromo then take a 10-20mg dose?
I have the kit that has 4 different reagents and it didnt' come with a color chart for different things, its geared towards mdma. But ya, there's posts out there that people have put out. I don't think they are consistent, just a general guide. Zactly. 15-20.
I've tested 2 batches of 2C-e, and 2C-p. I don't find the common tests useful (simons, mecke and marquis) You're a better scientist than I, but here's my understanding. Correct me if I'm wrong. These reagents test for the presence of something. That doesn't mean they test for the presence of (or lack of) other things. So, if a certain reaction is expected for presence of say, 2C-e, and the result is as expected, that doesn't mean there isn't something else present. And furthermore, I can find no distinction between what should be expected in different variations, such as hcl and fumarate. I "assume" that the freebase of something should match the expected parameters but then again, that's an assumption. As well as assuming different salts might react with different acids in different ways. I'm untrained in this stuff. It would be nice for people to have access to proper analytical services.
I could be wrong but my take on "allergy test" has been that yes, maybe you could have an "allergic" reaction but it is to determine if 1. You could have any kind of bad reaction. If you check say, 2mg, and don't have any adverse reaction, thats a good thing. 2. If something was mislabeled, as has happened, if you're expecting a response from 20mg+ and don't have any response from 2, then chances are that a theoretically psychoactive dose won't severely hurt you. It doesn't guarantee you that your purported 4-xx or 2-xx is actually that. In other words, the use of the word allergy is not literal.
yes, voyage you are right. they don't test for anything else, so you still no nothing about purity. so you used marquis to test 2ce and 2cp? they gave the right color at least?