What do you do with a batch like this of substandard purity. Is it still safe to use? Or do you try to clean it up using the method shared in the homebrew section?

Try and get it refunded.
Dump it.

Find better raws.
or
Buy used oils from the vendors who bought the 98% purity batch.

Why would you use something 88% when you can get it brewed from 98% raws...It's just unnecessary risk..

Nobody knows whats in that..

Isn't the purpose of buying raws to make sure you get safe quality products?
 
How the hell do you not know the temperature? I think that’s the problem there… Do you not have digital temperature on your hot plate? How do you know if you’re getting it to the melting point or not? With all this “experience“ you have… Makes me wonder. It brews up perfectly fine for me… Here’s 800ML test c brewed perfect. Sounds like user error to me.
Thank you for this post, it says everything we thought!

What pisses me off is he is obviously having other people inject his crap.
 
Thank you for this post, it says everything we thought!

What pisses me off is he is obviously having other people inject his crap.
There are brewers here
who don't heat above 80 degrees.

I heated 500ml for two hours at over 150 degrees.

And this crap still won't dissolve.

BB has oxidized and started to change color.

What are you talking about?

I can easily brew test prop from aasraw
which has higher melting point than cyp
 
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Ofc adding some heat speeds up the process. But dissolving != melting!!

Ofc adding some heat speeds up the process. But dissolving != melting!!
The solvent holds the liquid form of the compound in solution. How does it become liquid… By hitting the fucking melting point.
There are brewers here
who don't heat above 80 degrees.

I heated 500ml for two hours at over 150 degrees.

And this crap still won't dissolve.

BB has oxidized and started to change color.

What are you talking about?
USER ERROR!!!!! :rolleyes:
 
You are wrong my friend. Are you saying it is not possible to dissolve a raw material into a solution, unless the melting point is explicitly reached?
Thank you. Dissolution vs melting. Very different physical processes.

Dissolution amounts dependent on temperature and solvent(s).
 

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