Displacements for Proviron & Winny?

Oakley6575

Member
Does anyone have the displacements for Proviron and Winstrol?

I'm needing to make a liquid oral suspension and can't seem to find any displacement values for these two drugs. Thanks in advance!
 
Do you actually need them for a suspension? When I've made suspensions I just top up with liquid to the target volume. Eg 5g powder, top up to 100ml for 5%
 
Chat gp
t thinks this, after I gave it density data from Mesterolone | 1424-00-6

Given the density of Proviron powder as 1.156 g/cm³, we can use the formula to calculate the volume displaced:

\[ \text{Volume displaced (cm³)} = \frac{\text{mass (g)}}{\text{density (g/cm³)}} \]

Substituting the given values:

\[ \text{Volume displaced} = \frac{1 \text{ g}}{1.156 \text{ g/cm³}} \approx 0.865 \text{ cm³} \]

Since 1 cm³ is equivalent to 1 mL:

\[ \text{Volume displaced} \approx 0.865 \text{ mL} \]

Therefore, 1 gram of Proviron powder would displace approximately 0.865 mL of water.
 
Chat gp
t thinks this, after I gave it density data from Mesterolone | 1424-00-6

Given the density of Proviron powder as 1.156 g/cm³, we can use the formula to calculate the volume displaced:

\[ \text{Volume displaced (cm³)} = \frac{\text{mass (g)}}{\text{density (g/cm³)}} \]

Substituting the given values:

\[ \text{Volume displaced} = \frac{1 \text{ g}}{1.156 \text{ g/cm³}} \approx 0.865 \text{ cm³} \]

Since 1 cm³ is equivalent to 1 mL:

\[ \text{Volume displaced} \approx 0.865 \text{ mL} \]

Therefore, 1 gram of Proviron powder would displace approximately 0.865 mL of water.

You are the man! I'll go dig into Winny and see if I can come up with a displacement for it using your method.

Thanks a ton!
 
I dont have the numbers sorry but I was wondering if you could share your recipes?
I really don't think this is right. The Winny came out with quite a bit more in the bottle than the proviron so the displacements have to be off. But I used the following displacements:

Winny: 0.886mL
Proviron: 0.886mL

I found the density of Winny to be 1.129 on a few online chemistry sites. So I'm not sure which displacement is wrong but it would be nice to figure it out so I can adjust my recipes.
 
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