although I don’t have the experience
of adding NP to black ammonia, so am
at somewhat of a loss in that regard.
Yessir, that would facilitate the black NH3 to be less effective at keeping the ions in solution thereby further reversing the metal to ions effect. It would also cause the NH3 to evap more quickly by reducing the temperature of the solution. This method would ususally leave the chemist with a LITTLE blue liquid, which can be reused if converted back. The safest way to do this is to immerse the metal in NP, thereby eliminating it's exposure to the elements.
When dripped thru a filter into a mag-stirred
reaction vessel, the black drops dissipate
rapidly into the excess ammonia contained
therein, and when color comes to stay it is the
royal blue.
Precisely what these mods are intended to eliminate. Instead of shooting with a pea shooter, we gatlin gun the motherfuckers by pouring the E into the blue solution. As you aptly put it,
for some
reason, once barely blue, the stuff stays that way
until the moisture in the air condenses and quenches it...
I say that whatever it is that finally uses up those ions will have less effect when using the Nail It mods.
But, what if it wasn't condensation that quenched the blue? What if it was molecules of E which were slow? Why can't you get some of your product out of the post reaction crap for days/weeks? Why is it that the longer it takes for the product to come out the more likely it is to be E instead of meth?
(Likely to be some horned-up moose, too,
Jade: so Y()u better stay outa da forests TOO!)
And finally, is there something going on between you two that we shouldn't by privvy to, or better put, "GET A ROOM!"