Tirzepatide batch color odd?

FiberLean

Active member
Has anyone recently (like, November/December) gotten their 30mg Tirzepatide and the tops were a yellow-gold color? I'm trying to find some testing results. I wanted to order during that big group thing but my payment was late (wire transfers are the worst!). Wound up getting the weird-top batch and now I have no idea what's in it. I really don't have the funds to get it tested myself, so I guess my options are find results, sell it, or inject and hope for the best.
 
I'd say just go for it...

I heard that samples for Jano weren't taken for everything before stuff was sent to the warehouse. So, some products might not be tested. I'm not sure if this is one of them.
 
I saw a discussion elsewhere about acute reactions to peptides. One person tried ACE-031, starting with a small dose (100mcg) even though the recommended dose was much higher. The testing showed 99% purity, and they were fine. But when they bumped it up to 500mcg, they felt sick pretty quickly. It's a reminder to be cautious and start small!
 
Thanks Care_Wine! It would be great to see those results if you don't mind sharing. Maybe it'll give me some peace of mind before I decide what to do.
 
TrueCrew said:
I saw a discussion elsewhere about acute reactions to peptides. One person tried ACE-031, starting with a small dose (100mcg) even though the recommended dose was much higher. The testing showed 99% purity, and they were fine. But when they bumped it up to 500mcg, they felt sick pretty quickly. It's a reminder to be cautious and start small!

That's a good point. People need to remember to start with a low dose to see how they react. Even if the testing looks good, everyone's different.
 
I'm super new to this, but what's the consensus on using research peptides for weight loss? Are they generally considered safe for people to use?
 
Yellow lid variability shows up across specific batches - batch number plus color is the right data to log for community variance tracking.
 
The cap and crimp color for distinguishing compound vials is inherently unreliable - those visual identifiers are manufacturing choices, not standardized across producers. If you are genuinely uncertain whether you received Reta or Tirz, independent lab testing is the only way to confirm, not visual inspection.
 
The opaque versus clear cap distinction is one of the more reliable visual markers for batch variation - transparent or semi-transparent caps allow a quick visual check of the powder at the vial neck, while fully opaque caps remove that option entirely. It doesn't confirm quality either way but it changes what you can visually verify before reconstitution.
 
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