Sounds tasty, I have been exploring the world of synthetic opioid receptor binding drugs lately. There are a ton of things that have been cooked up over the years in pharmaceutical labs, but from what I can see, most of them are in very limited use due to the high tolerance curve, and physical addiction potential.
The best of the bunch seems to be Levorphanol, but I think you need to be on your last legs for it to be prescribed. It is totally selective to the opioid receptors, and has a potency 10x that of morphine, with double the half life.
This is obviously not a one pot meth cook, and I will assume the method is also corrupted in a number of ways obvious only to someone who knows what they're doing, as are many of the synths in the Rhodium archive on Erowid. The reason this is not being synthed as a street drug is obvious, it lasts for 8-10 hours, who wants to sell opes you only need to do once or twice a day?
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The best of the bunch seems to be Levorphanol, but I think you need to be on your last legs for it to be prescribed. It is totally selective to the opioid receptors, and has a potency 10x that of morphine, with double the half life.
Here is the wiki;Levorphanol - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia@@AMEPARAM@@/wiki/File:Levorphanol.svg" class="image"><img alt="" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8d/Levorphanol.svg/120px-Levorphanol.svg.png"@@AMEPARAM@@commons/thumb/8/8d/Levorphanol.svg/120px-Levorphanol.svg.png
And here is the synthesis, in case anyone is feeling ambitious, and has a degree in organic chemistry, and a basement lab;
http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/levorphanol.html
This is obviously not a one pot meth cook, and I will assume the method is also corrupted in a number of ways obvious only to someone who knows what they're doing, as are many of the synths in the Rhodium archive on Erowid. The reason this is not being synthed as a street drug is obvious, it lasts for 8-10 hours, who wants to sell opes you only need to do once or twice a day?
C/O
"a man can dream, can't he?"