BAC Water & Peptide Reconstitution Guides
Filter our BAC water and peptide reconstitution guides, comparisons, and FAQs by topic, content type, or peptide. Short, honest, and in plain language.
- GuideWhat is BAC Water?
Bacteriostatic water is sterile water mixed with 0.9% benzyl alcohol. The alcohol prevents bacterial growth, which is why the same vial can be used across multi
Read - GuideHow peptide reconstitution works
Peptides are shipped as a freeze dried powder. To use them, you add BAC water to the vial, which dissolves the powder into a stable solution you can draw from.
Read - GuideHow to read a peptide vial label
A peptide vial label shows: the peptide name, the strength (usually in mg), a lot number, and sometimes an expiration for the powder. The strength is the total
Read - GuideHow to use an insulin syringe
Insulin syringes are marked in units on the U 100 scale: 100 units = 1 mL. A 1 mL insulin syringe has 100 markings; a 0.5 mL has 50; a 0.3 mL has 30 (often with
Read - GuidePeptide Reconstitution Quick-Reference Chart
How to Use This Chart Find your peptide below. The chart shows common vial strengths, a suggested BAC water amount, the resulting concentration, and the syringe
Read - GuideBAC water for peptides
Why bacteriostatic water is the standard solution for reconstituting peptides, how much to add, and what to use instead of sterile water or saline.
Read - GuidePeptide reconstitution glossary
Plain-English definitions of BAC water, benzyl alcohol, reconstitution, lyophilization, U-100, and more.
Read - GuideFree printable peptide vial labels
Generate printable vial labels with a QR code showing strength, concentration, dose, mix date, and discard date.
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