GHK-Cu: PBS vs. BAC water?

Bobby2005 said:
I'm trying to figure out how much BAC water to add to my vials. I have a 5mg Ipamorelin vial and want to take 300mcgs twice a day. How much water should I add?

An easy way is to add the same amount of water as the drug you're using. So, if it's a 5mg vial, add 5mL of water.
 
Found threads through cheaperseeker about GHK sting-adding BAC to each shot helps dilute it and reduce pain. Also grabbed GLOW70 with BPC157 and TB500.
 
Learned about peptides from a gun forum of all places — not the best source. Biggest help was finding a mentor who explained stuff I didn't get yet, like vials are only 3ml so reconstitution ≤3ml. Didn't even know peptide calculators existed over there. Asking here is good but some folks forget being new. Thick skin helps!
 
Try calling local pharmacies or hospitals that work with Pfizer reps. They can order it, especially if it's for research purposes. A hospital connection is gold - my doctor helped me get bulk orders so I'm set on BAC water for ages.
 
honestly not confident enough to jump in yet. know too little and have no idea where to start. don't wanna risk my health over something small like muscle or height. but peptides interest me — stuff like recovery benefits sound cool and i don't wanna be late on the trend. trying to learn as much as i can first.
 
PBS maintains copper chelation better than BAC in theory, but most people using BAC at standard dilutions don't see a meaningful difference in effect. The concern is more relevant at very low reconstitution volumes.
 
get the pfizer one from hospira. they're fda and health canada approved, made in cgmp-certified sterile facilities. purple label = usa, the other = canada. both have facilities and the only difference is the label.
 
that escalated quick lol. lots here are skeptical because the testing's shown to be sketchy. search the forum. theory is investors behind the service also invested in other peptide companies so conflict of interest.
 
BAC water is the standard for GHK-Cu - the copper chelation concern is real but the window is slow enough to be non-issue for typical vial runs. Fatty sites absorb more evenly than lean tissue, which explains what you're noticing by injection location.
 
The copper stability issue with BAC is about chelation over time, not immediate degradation - shorter reconstitution windows are generally fine, PBS matters more for extended storage.
 
Diluting to 5ml+ cuts the sting significantly for most people - the concentration drops enough that injection comfort improves without affecting the dose. The KPV add is a nice stack with GHK.
 
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