BAC Water

masonstoner

New Member
Hey guys,

I'm gonna brew my own BAC water, and I need some input.

I got 100 ml of sterile injection water, and the BA.
I was thinking, instead of adding an extra step, and maybe fuck up the sterile process with adding the BAC water to individual 10 ml vials, can I take off 9ml of water from the 100 ml vial, had 9 ml of BA directly, and get 100 ml of BAC water?

The 100ml water vial is glass, has vacuum, and sealed with a stopper.
Also, if possible, what is the shelf life of the BAC water if done like this?
 
Hey guys,

I'm gonna brew my own BAC water, and I need some input.

I got 100 ml of sterile injection water, and the BA.
I was thinking, instead of adding an extra step, and maybe fuck up the sterile process with adding the BAC water to individual 10 ml vials, can I take off 9ml of water from the 100 ml vial, had 9 ml of BA directly, and get 100 ml of BAC water?

The 100ml water vial is glass, has vacuum, and sealed with a stopper.
Also, if possible, what is the shelf life of the BAC water if done like this?
Gtfoh with this shit, its been discussed in detail, had you at least put some effort in you would have found your answers, try using the search function, i found several hits on bac water , by simply using the search function, And while your at it, did you make a new member introduction in the "New member thread" ? asking to be spoonfed rudimentary information 2 posts in is really pathetic, IMG_0666.webp
 
I guess I didn't make my question very clear.

My question is if there is any issue doing the BAC water directly on the sterile water vial/bottle of 100ml.
I know that the stopper is gonna see a lot more pins than a 10ml vial (it's like 10 vials in one), but I was thinking that if I use 27G to get the BAC, that would be kosher.

Just asking to make sure I'm not missing something, and if that by doing this way, would that have any affect on the shelf life of the BAC water.

And to answer your question, yes I did.
 
You have to filter it regardless
Might as well filter into smaller vials
You mean the water or the BA?

Because the BA I can filter in the process of getting inside the water vial, right?
The sterile water is pharma, ready for injection. Still need to filter that?
 
You mean the water or the BA?

Because the BA I can filter in the process of getting inside the water vial, right?
The sterile water is pharma, ready for injection. Still need to filter that?
It depends how risk averse you are. I don't see any issue with mixing it in the larger container. You'll end up with a much more accurate mix that way. I'm not sure how I feel about storing it in there longer term. Is that sterile water bottle rated to have BA left inside it, or will it break down?
 
I'm not sure how I feel about storing it in there longer term. Is that sterile water bottle rated to have BA left inside it, or will it break down?
My dilemma as well. Don't not how long that 100ml of BAC is going to hold up. Even if I put a spike on it, and pin it less.
As for the bottle, is glass, not plastic, so better I suppose. And it would be 9% of BA, but as you can see I don't have a clear answer for that.

I was just thinking about doing this way to streamline the process and avoid the 10ml vials all together and needed a sanity check on this from you guys that know a lot about this stuff than I do.
 
My dilemma as well. Don't not how long that 100ml of BAC is going to hold up. Even if I put a spike on it, and pin it less.
As for the bottle, is glass, not plastic, so better I suppose. And it would be 9% of BA, but as you can see I don't have a clear answer for that.

I was just thinking about doing this way to streamline the process and avoid the 10ml vials all together and needed a sanity check on this from you guys that know a lot about this stuff than I do.
Not necessarily. If the glass isnt coated, it will depyrogenate over time.
 
New vials are cheap. I would mix it in the bigger bottle for accuracy, and then transfer to the smaller vials. That way, you can store them for years without worry. As always, don't store vials on their side- keep the stoppers dry.
 
New vials are cheap. I would mix it in the bigger bottle for accuracy, and then transfer to the smaller vials. That way, you can store them for years without worry. As always, don't store vials on their side- keep the stoppers dry.
Yeah, I agree. It would be easier, even for peace of mind.

Thank you for the input BigDad.
 

Sponsors

Latest posts

Back
Top