What could these floaters be?

Val

New Member
Hey guys,

I got this 200mg Test E/ 200mg Tren E blend, and it came with some floaters around in the bottle.

If I let it stand a few days, they get stuck to the glass, usually at the bottom.
I tried to heat it up, and they did not dissolved.
I got another similar bottle, same color same everything, but no floaters.
If I had to describe it in words, I wold say it looks like a thin piece of transparent tape or something.

I'm asking here since you guys might have some ideas.
C360_2015-06-10-11-14-17-738.jpg
 
So I ordered some "PALL Acrodisc 25mm, 0.2um Syringe Filter Sterile"
Thought those could do the job, am I correct on that?

And what could those things be? is it un-melted gear?
If I filter it out, what am I injecting? and if not... again same question
 
It's Mission laboratories, and they sent me a replacement.

I'm just curious to know what that stuff might be, since if it made it in one vile, who is to say it didn't made it in other viles.
 
I have never seen a product with so much crap floating in it. Having said that, I think running it through a .22 filter should fix the problem.
 
Sometimes amatuer brewers will blow out a filter with too much pressure or vacuum. Filter media can look similar to what you posted.
 
Open it up and check, or get it tested. I have a new bottle of Test E 400 I'll give away for free if someone wants to test it. I have floaters to.
 
If it was raw powder when heated it would dissolve even if it crashed again later. Not sure what it is, but I would guess it's not raw powder. If it were me I would toss it and question Wether or not to use that lab again. It's one thing to have gear crash and another to sell gear with stuff in it. I do know some large ug labs don't even filter their gear. Just use ba and bake. How does a lab not see that when sending it out?
 
Lol, they crimped the vial, so it could literally be anything. I would say toss it. If you heated it and whatever that thing is didn't go into solution, it's more than likely a contaminant.
 
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