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2d • Peptide Tips
How To Reconstitute Based On Net Peptide Content From A COA 🧪
Stop wasting peptides by blindly following label dosing!
Your COA (Certificate of Analysis) is your best friend - it tells you the ACTUAL peptide content, not what's printed on the vial.
Real Example: Thymosin Alpha-1
  • Label says: 10mg
  • COA shows: 7mg actual content
  • Solution: Adjust your reconstitution ratio
The Math Made Simple
Standard reconstitution: 10mg peptide + 1ml BAC water = 10mg/ml concentration
COA-adjusted reconstitution: 7mg peptide + 0.7ml BAC water = 10mg/ml concentration
Why This Matters
āœ… Consistent dosing - You get the same concentration every time
āœ… No waste - Use exactly what you need
āœ… Better results - Accurate dosing leads to predictable outcomes
āœ… Cost effective - Maximize every vial
Quick Formula
New BAC water volume = (Actual mg from COA Ć· Label mg) Ɨ Standard volume
Example: (7mg Ć· 10mg) Ɨ 1ml = 0.7ml BAC water
Pro Tips
šŸ”¬ Always check your COA before reconstituting
šŸŽÆ This method works for ANY peptide
šŸ’” Some peptides test HIGHER than label - adjust accordingly
S/O Peptira for making this process easy the net content right on the label
Code Derek at Peptira
Who else adjusts based on COA results? Drop your experience below! šŸ‘‡
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Derek Pruski
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How To Reconstitute Based On Net Peptide Content From A COA 🧪
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