Silk Road forums

Discussion => Drug safety => Topic started by: trolololo on July 25, 2012, 09:42 pm

Title: identification
Post by: trolololo on July 25, 2012, 09:42 pm
heres the problem a friend ordered 2cb and mdma at the same time one turned up this morning in a plain envelope i dont know which it is, if i take 150miligrams of 2cb i will likely die, it tastes to me like mdma but i havent tried 2cb yet, it does look like crushed crystals as opposed to powder but I dont know if 2cb is crushed from crystal, please help lol.
Title: Re: identification
Post by: Banjo on July 25, 2012, 10:41 pm
You should definitely get a reagent test. Or, if you got them from different vendors, message each one asking, "is this the return address you used" or something like that, and explain you're trying to figure out which is which.
Title: Re: identification
Post by: weedsaves on July 26, 2012, 07:39 am
You say you tasted this mystery substance? That was pretty stupid, unless you weighed it with a mg scale first.

According to Erowid, an oral threshold dose of 2C-B is 2-5mg, so eyeballing doses is not recommended. Since you didn't say that you tripped after your taste test, I would guess that it is MDMA but I still would not take a 150mg dose until I knew for sure.
Title: Re: identification
Post by: digitbh on July 26, 2012, 01:46 pm
Don't taste test your drugs. That's not smart.

Buy a Marquis Reagent test or an EZ test. It'll be worth your while, and you'll have it around for in the future when you order drugs. That way you can always test to make sure that the drug is what it's supposed to be.
Title: Re: identification
Post by: SwordWizard on July 28, 2012, 06:26 am
Don't taste test your drugs. That's not smart.

Buy a Marquis Reagent test or an EZ test. It'll be worth your while, and you'll have it around for in the future when you order drugs. That way you can always test to make sure that the drug is what it's supposed to be.
I think this is a great idea. It might not be necessary for the current situation, but I think you'd enjoy the benefits of a reagent test well after this little mix-up is solved.