Pinning question

Cj2000

New member
I know that you pull back on the syringe approximately as much as you are going to fill it but if your injecting lets say...test and tren and your doing test ed and tren eod so come the tren day how do you mix both in one syringe?i know it sounds like a dumb question but i mean if you pull back on the syringe to get the desired amount of test then how can you pull back on it again while the test is in there to get air in it for the tren?or do you do that with the first stuff then with the second do you just hold the vile upside down and draw back on the syringe?I'm sorry if this question makes no sense but to simplify it all i am asking is,how to get both into one syringe.
 
I'm not sure if I get what you are saying, but I think I do so I am going to try and answer it.

Once you load the Test into the syringe, you push up on the plunger to take the air out of it, then just pull back and load up the Tren. It's simple.
 
- Point syringe up to the sky.
- Pull back on plunger and fill with air equal to amount pulling out of vial.
- Inject air into vial and draw amount needed

Repeat.

Just pick up vial and syringe and hold upside down so air goes into second vial and not the gear.
 
Mk so once you have the gear''test'' in the syringe your able to pull back on the plunger again to get air into it for the second vial''tren''?and when you put the air into the vile it wont release whats already in there?just the air and not the test?
 
is this procedure REALLY necessary? cause i just got my first injection today, and i got some trouble with all this thing of first getting the air and then applying it in the vial.. i got lots and lots of air bubbles both inside the vial and the syringe, is it normal? before injecting i had to push these bubbles out, and i lost some oil too

(sorry if my English is too bad)
 
Its not necessary..but recommended...The air you push into the vial increases the overall pressure in the vial..and makes it vaccuum-like when you're extracting the oil into the syringe to prevent little air bubbles from entering the syringe.

personally i keep about .1 ml of air in my syringe to inject the oils deeper into my muscle fascia. it's a popular technique in the medical world. called the air-lock method
 
ok...i think i got it

just one more little question, sorry if it's too dumb but i have to ask:

after i pulled the air into the syringe, should i apply it into the vial while it's upside down or before i turn it ? or it makes no difference at all? i mean.. if one apply it upside down it will certainly fill the oil itself with air and bubbles, while the other way (syringe facing down) that won't happen, at least with my 23G needle
 
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