SpicyMeatball
Member
He often doesn't identify the contaminant. Basically the target is a range, and if it happens that the contaminant's target would be close to the one he is looking for, he will see there is something there and can either test for it as well or make an educated guess as to what it is. This is what happened when the testing discord sent him and Peptide Test a sample known to be contaminated with BPC-157; Jano noticed something there because his target was fairly wide, PT did not because their target was very narrow. If it was a peptide that was out of the target range neither would have noticed it. BPC-157 happened to be at the borderline where one lab caught it and the other didn't. As he has become busier I believe he's also become less open to doing the extra work to identify this stuff free of charge.Based on my experience this isn't true, at least with Jano. How else would he identify when a vendor accidentally sends you the wrong product, or sends you contaminated product? So far as I am aware he doesn't charge extra for that.
@janoshik might be able to clarify this if he wishes, my understanding of it isn't perfect but I do think I'm correctly capturing the contours.

