2C-B vs 2C-B Fly?

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admin
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Does anyone know what the difference between 2Cb and 2cb Fly is, if any? Or is it just a bunch of horse shit?

Anonymous
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PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE do

PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE do your research. the "flys" are so named for their molecular structure- essentially having wings. (from Shulgin:The "FLY" name was inspired by the two dihydrofuran rings that extend oppositely from the sides of the benzene ring. When they are aromatized (furan rings) they are planar with the benzene ring and the code name is "DRAGONFLY" and they are listed as DFLY derivatives. ) They are often more potent then their relatives- and also seem to have a higher incidence of health concerns.

2c-b has a fairly established history of human use in the 10-20mg range being common 2c-b-fly is much rarer- with reports from the microgram range up to ~15mg.

safer_raver
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2C-B-fly

2cb fly is the drug 1-(8-Bromo-2,3,6,7-tetrahydrobenzo[1,2-b:4,5-b'] difuran-4-yl)-2-aminoethane

http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/2cb_fly/2cb_fly.shtml

according to erowid its been in the past it has been Bromo-Dragonfly mislabeled and sold as 2cb fly.

"October 2009: 2C-B-Fly Warning: Bromo-dragonfly mislabeled as 2C-B-fly may have contributed to at least two deaths in October 2009. A death in Denmark was related to a batch of 2C-B-fly reportedly labeled "b1", and another death and two hospitalizations occurred in California."
 

Anonymous
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As usual, consult the Oracle