Do you know what you are injecting when using an underground lab? (Graphic Video)

9 times out of 10 infection, etc comes from not using sterile needles and using sterile injection methods...not the actual product being injected...
Just saying.
I reuse needles all the time and never sterilize and haven’t gotten an infection from that , when I was just UGL gear I was sterilizing and using new needles getting infections frequently, hasn’t been a problem since I started making my own stuff
 
I reuse needles all the time and never sterilize and haven’t gotten an infection from that , when I was just UGL gear I was sterilizing and using new needles getting infections frequently, hasn’t been a problem since I started making my own stuff
Great post !


Not the best advise above.

Alwas use new needles and for draw up and inject. The cost of needles are about 5 bucks for 100 medical needles like BD.

Don not play with your personal hygiene.
 
Great post !


Not the best advise above.

Alwas use new needles and for draw up and inject. The cost of needles are about 5 bucks for 100 medical needles like BD.

Don not play with your personal hygiene.
Agreed, I never claimed to not be an idiot, just putting my personal experience out there
 
Agreed, I never claimed to not be an idiot, just putting my personal experience out there
bumping a 15 year old thread to tell the world you reuse old needles. That experience will help people how?

Testing is readily available at a decent price for heavy metals now. Thread is less relevant. @readalot pushed for heavy metal testing and it doesn't appear to be the issue it used to be.
 
bumping a 15 year old thread to tell the world you reuse old needles. That experience will help people how?

Testing is readily available at a decent price for heavy metals now. Thread is less relevant. @readalot pushed for heavy metal testing and it doesn't appear to be the issue it used to be.
While it's true that testing for heavy metals is more widely available, this thread still is relevant and informational. Bummer the video in the OP post was long taken down.

But yeah necrobumping it with something not so relevant is a bit annoying.
 
reusing needles is more likely to lead to scar tissue, painful injections, and more intense infections than the alternative.

if you cant afford a solid needle protocol, you're not ready. whether that means monetarily, time management-wise, or anything else. if it's impossible to not reuse them, you're not ready to cycle.

if you absolutely MUST reuse them, then reuse only the drawing needles, and take a moment to try and sterilize them beforehand.

if anyone is reusing needles on 2xweekly pins, you're beyond any cogent advice. but for the daily pinners, I've found back loading insulin syringes with a 30g 1/2" needle permanently attached to be both fun and effective. I keep a small bubble at the top so the stopper isnt touching the oil.
 
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