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ForumsCompounding & FormulationCompounded peptide reconstitution water — looking for input Page 2

Compounded peptide reconstitution water — looking for input

maria_elpaso Fri, Oct 18, 2024 at 11:14 PM 33 replies 2,392 viewsPage 2 of 7
tony_orlando
Member
234
1,123
Nov 2024
Orlando, FL
Oct 19, 2024 at 2:04 AM#6
BothLabsUser nails it. This isn't a competition — both labs serve the community well. Let me add a few more data points from my testing experience: Consistency within each lab (same sample tested twice): Janoshik: - Test 1 purity: 97.8%, Test 2 (retest 2 weeks later): 97.5% - Reproducibility: ±0.3% — excellent PeptideMeter: - Test 1 purity: 97.2%, Test 2 (retest 3 weeks later): 97.4% - Reproducibility: ±0.2% — excellent Both labs demonstrate good intra-lab consistency, which is what you want. If a lab gives you 97% one day and 93% the next on the same sample, there's a problem. Neither lab has that issue. Turn-around reliability: - Janoshik: stated 5-10 days, actual average from my 6 submissions: 6.8 days. Very reliable. - PeptideMeter: stated 7-14 days, actual average from my 4 submissions: 10.5 days. A bit slower but within their stated window. Neither lab has ever missed their turnaround window for me. No lost samples, no unreported results.
25 19NauseaFreeNow, SteveThurs, B12Beth and 22 others
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hans_munich
Member
534
2,345
Jul 2024
Munich, DE
Oct 19, 2024 at 2:21 AM#7
For the budget-minded among us, here's the absolute cheapest way to get useful testing data: If you only have $50 to spend: Get ESI-MS identity confirmation only ($50 at Janoshik, $60 at PeptideMeter). This answers the most critical question: "Is this actually semaglutide?" If it passes, you at least know you have the right compound. Purity and content are unknowns, but you're not injecting a completely different substance. If you have $80: Get HPLC purity ($65 at Janoshik). This tells you how clean the product is. Combined with the price above, for $115 you have identity + purity — the two most important tests. If you have $130-$160: Get the full panel. Identity + purity + content. You now know what it is, how pure it is, and how much is actually in the vial. This is the sweet spot of value for money. If you have $250+: Full panel + sterility. Now you also know if it's safe to inject from a microbiological standpoint. This is the gold standard for community testing. If you're pooling resources with 10+ people: Full panel + sterility + endotoxin at both labs ($520). Nuclear option. Inarguable data. The cost-per-person math makes the advanced testing very accessible. At 15 contributors, the nuclear option costs $34.67/person. That's less than a pizza delivery.
18 13alex_tucson, kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE and 15 others
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oliver_london
Member
312
1,345
Aug 2024
London, UK
Oct 19, 2024 at 2:38 AM#8
Great cost breakdown. Let me close with my final recommendation matrix: | Priority | Budget | Lab Choice | Tests | |----------|--------|-----------|-------| | Safety first | Any | Both labs | Full panel + sterility | | Best value | $130 | Janoshik | Full panel | | Best resolution | $160 | PeptideMeter | Full panel (UPLC) | | Identity only | $50 | Janoshik | ESI-MS | | Liquid sample | $160+ | PeptideMeter | Full panel | | Aggregation concern | $245 | PeptideMeter | Full panel + SEC | | Community round | $290-520 | Both | Full or extended panel | Both labs are legitimate, competent, and trustworthy. The peptide community is lucky to have two independent options. Use whichever fits your needs, or use both when it matters. I'll update this comparison if either lab changes pricing, capabilities, or turnaround times. And if anyone knows of a third independent lab worth considering, drop the info and I'll investigate.
13 11Dr.LeslieOBGYN, MikeNYC_runner and 10 others
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