TheMadHasher
Member
WOW! That stuff looks incredible! Wanna hang out sometime?
Amber chips made from crispy dry 3 mnth cured mostly indica hybrids.
Hey Jump,
Do you think that allowing the butune to "boil" while it's mixing with the herb, changes anything chemically, in relation to the THCA?
Here, in California, our temps are sometimes 78-80F and the butane is sometimes evaporating as it's mixing with the herb.
Also, what do you think allows THC to turn back to a crystalized state with age and oxygen? I have noticed after months, it tends to do this.
Do you think there is a component to butane purging, that necessitates it being done all under a certain degree of temps in order to keep THCA from converting to THC in the purge process?
I appreciate it. Thanks.
I have always freeze loaded extractor and the butane can before extraction
In order to minimize the rapid evaporation of butane at the beginning of the process
And avoid accidental ejection of the staff and evaporation losses.
I do not know whether decarboxylation is reversible and whether this process occurs
during crystallization, which you describe.
Many times I read the description of crystallization by the type of honey sugaring,
waxing, formation of spongy porous surface, I never saw such changes, is it autobuddering?
Is it what you asked?
Crystallization or offgasing of residual butane and/or/? terpens, sorry I don't know.
I do not think boiling butane can affect THСA/THC ratio,
Chemical composition of butane is not changed by boiling,
In a gaseous state it is no longer involved in the extraction and does not benefit as a solvent
Except for the extraction efficiency of mixing caused by the motion of bubbles.
I have always freeze loaded extractor and the butane can before extraction
In order to minimize the rapid evaporation of butane at the beginning of the process
And avoid accidental ejection of the staff and evaporation losses.
In the process of evaporation, collection and give amber a convenient form
It is melted several times at about 70°C (158°F) and returns to brittle at room temp.
imo its hard brittle texture indicates a high content of THСA, which may crystallize.
That means decarboxylation didn’t happened.
I regularly observe the change in consistency after decarboxylation.
When smoking at home, I use digital soldering iron with an open ceramic heater.
Sometimes happens that a shard of brittle amber does not have time to evaporate,
It melts, wraps around the heater and drips on the bottom glass plate.
Fragility never returns to this drop,
It is sticky forever because of the decrease in the THСA/THC ratio
after decarboxylation from THCA to THC, which may not crystallize.
I do not know whether decarboxylation is reversible or not
and whether this process occurs during crystallization, which you describe.
Many times I read the description of crystallization by the type of honey sugaring,
waxing, formation of spongy porous surface, I never saw such changes, is it autobuddering?
Is it what you asked?
Crystallization or offgasing of residual butane and/or/? terpens, sorry I don't know.
The last time I tried making AA, I tried soaking the herb in butane instead of running butane through the herb.. I wound up losing pretty much all the butane b/c it evaporated by the time I tried pouring it out.. Any recommendations for this?