tryptographer
tryptamine photographer
My own findings are not entirely consistent with some things mentioned here.
Nice toys you have there!
Just read this thread, my 2 cts...
I use very small test tubes and suck hard as it evaporates. Some of it always condenses on the walls. If I don't inhale fast enough, some will escape at the open top.
I simply stick a thin glass tube into the test tube and keep it a few centimeters above the dmt. Ideally, the thin tube is bent 45 degrees such that the end is a few cm above the bottom of the test tube. Very efficient but requires some practice.
I find underheating more often a problem than overheating. The glass is supposed to protect the spice from the open flame and I think it does that well. The risk of actually burning your dmt is much higher in open-flame methods even despite protective layers of ashes etc... at least in my experience.
I wonder if what's called 'burning the dmt' actually is pyrolysis of residues and/or scorching of DMT vapor by the hot glass - not literally burning, in the sense of reacting exothermally with oxygen. Try to burn a bit of naphta, xylene, candle wax or other flammable stuff in a testtube!
A boiling pure liquid substance doesn't rise in temperature: adding heat results in more vigorous boiling. At least, that's the theory... we all know something like 'burned dmt' exists and is not nice
Nice toys you have there!
Just read this thread, my 2 cts...
I use very small test tubes and suck hard as it evaporates. Some of it always condenses on the walls. If I don't inhale fast enough, some will escape at the open top.
I simply stick a thin glass tube into the test tube and keep it a few centimeters above the dmt. Ideally, the thin tube is bent 45 degrees such that the end is a few cm above the bottom of the test tube. Very efficient but requires some practice.
I find underheating more often a problem than overheating. The glass is supposed to protect the spice from the open flame and I think it does that well. The risk of actually burning your dmt is much higher in open-flame methods even despite protective layers of ashes etc... at least in my experience.
I wonder if what's called 'burning the dmt' actually is pyrolysis of residues and/or scorching of DMT vapor by the hot glass - not literally burning, in the sense of reacting exothermally with oxygen. Try to burn a bit of naphta, xylene, candle wax or other flammable stuff in a testtube!
A boiling pure liquid substance doesn't rise in temperature: adding heat results in more vigorous boiling. At least, that's the theory... we all know something like 'burned dmt' exists and is not nice