
Originally Posted by
Discipline_1
i also am a fan of heating up before injecting, it def helps a little, plus ever since i have started heating up the compound before injection i have not got the test flu
you would need quite a bit of heat to melt the rubber stopper, a heat gun might do it, but i doubt a hair dryer will
i sent a question to the lab that produces the gear i buy asking about heating the compound up regarding on how much heat it would take to potentially alter the compound or affect it in any way but i havent received a reply, does anybody know at what point could heating the compound be potentially damaging to the compound?