I have tried warming up my sust to about 90 degrees in a glass of warm water just before injecting and it injects must easier. is this a common or good practice?
I have tried warming up my sust to about 90 degrees in a glass of warm water just before injecting and it injects must easier. is this a common or good practice?
yup its common
Yes lot's of people warm their gear before injecting....
It can reduce pain slightly and will make the oil less viscus thus easier to push though the needle....
Well i believe it will not cause any problem coz even your body temp is 98.7 approx until you do not heat it directly with heat. And even when you warm it up with water its only warmed upto 75 degrees. I do not recommend it but I think there is no problem with it. What do other guys have to say ?
be a man.....just inject it...
^ Some do not want to hurt their @SS you know the needle factor...)
i warm it in water - i forgot the other day cos was in a hurry and didnt notice a difference lol but since then i still warm it up haha
like he said above, since your internal temp is 98.6* the added energy makes no difference. a little simple chem can tell you that Q = ms /\t ( thats my delta) so unless you're injecting ~a pint of something, it'll quickly heat up to your temperature.
Whatever fellas.....Inject and quit being a *****!!
yeah same thing. the amount * specific heat * change in temp = energy
although i can't say i know the specific heat of a test susp, i'm sure the q is negligible when the m of blood in the body is taken into consideration.
agreed, i just asked cause i just did a specific heat experiement to determine an unknown metal my professor wanted to know the composition of and i used a ^H=(mass in grams)(CsX)(^T) formula as a base and if you had another formula i was gonna memorize it and use it to check my results
Lol, yeah know that i reread what i wrote it does sound kinda weird, lol, oh well
no, they seem to be pretty much the same idea. i doubt there are many trick formulas to get around things in chem, unless you're pretty smart and can devise one. getting off topic, you're not majoring in chem are you?
ouch... i have to ask why. besides math, i've always had a huge interest in chem, but bio and physics; not so much. physics is ok, but i've never really had a good teacher. bio i can't stand because i don't like memorizing facts as much as equations or ideas and implementing them.
i'm on the fence about chemical engineering for my major, and my mom double majored in chem/ chem eng, and got a phd in physical chemistry, so i was subjected to it from the beginning lol
i'm doing a double M.D. in Nuclear physics/radiology and Endocrinology so i need all the bio/biochem/phys/chem i can get
i'm lucky, i have a major photographic memory, like my friend lauren today forgot her test review that she wanted me to tutor her on, well she showed it to me about a week ago and i called up the image in my head and she told me the numbers she had questions on and i could pull them from my head, helps me in music alot too
well thats pretty ridiculous.. i bet that makes studying a breeze. thats a pretty intense set of degrees, what kind of job are you looking for? it sounds like more than an ordinary ent doc lol.
there's not a job for what i want to do yet, but basically i want to merge radiology and endocrinology and create a field that studies hormonal changes in response to radioactive stimulus which can then be used for alot of good uses like using radioactive substances to fight cancer by creating an anti-environment around the infected area
and yeah, i very rarely have to study, i mostly use a combination of photo/tactile/sensory association to memorize material for exams
chemistry rocks, but only if it's o-chem, the elegant science, hehe.
Other than that, advanced chemistry is just physics disguised by a mesh of molecules...
And personally, if I see enthalpy equations start to pop up here, I may have to leave and never come back![]()
well thats definitely not an impossible idea. the biggest problem i can think of is finding an initial investment to start the research. the best bet might just be to find a nice school and get all their grant money to research through them. otherwise i'm sure some big companies would donate some, but starting up a business would be pretty hard on your own.
also, it might be a hard thing to test, since i'm sure you can't legally subject people to radiation for your tests, and the difference between things like test rats and humans might be drastic enough to nullify any findings in the former. nonetheless, it sounds like a very proactive venture forward
i guess when you think of it in a practical manner it makes sense...the conversion would be smoother i guess
Can we talk in laymans terms please? You fvcks. hahahahahahaahahaha
well I got a A- my highschool freshman year w/o studying....but havn't touched it since...balancing equasions f ucked me
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