I'm in Cali, and most people I know who dab are very nice people who dab for medical reasons, and they prefer a bit of a stronger dose for pain or sleep.
There is no way to remove all the butane. Butane is a known carcinogen.
The key word to remember is "concentrate". If pesticides were used on the flower the pesticides will be concentrated.
I did quite a bit of research on dabbing a few years back I even did a vid on it (but took it down as my research progressed).
No.1 thing about dabbing is knowing what kind of concentrate you have.
Ice/bubble hash is made without the dangerous chemicals found in solvents (i.e. bute - if its still being used).
Bute based dabs are going to have traces of butane in the mix. There is no way to remove all the butane. Butane is a known carcinogen.
I switched 2 ROSIN.I'm in Cali, and most people I know who dab are very nice people who dab for medical reasons, and they prefer a bit of a stronger dose for pain or sleep.
Sorry, but that's some terrible research and info. Butane is not a carcinogen. There are literally butane occupational exposure limits of 800 ppm allowed for workers 8 hrs per day 5 days per week for what can be multiple decades of work, for example.
FWIW, an occupational exposure limit such as on the 800 ppm is not an acute exposure. And that link is not butane. I postulate there's a very basic reason why butane has not been studied for carcinogenicity, etc. This is basic stuff for those trained in these areas.I agree. One data sheet has 1000ppm before safety equipment. (https://www.praxair.com/-/media/cor...df?la=en&rev=b4b6401855524c07a5e6793ad88db23a) But, the problem is most of that is to deal with acute exposure. The speed it is eliminated from the body indicates it is unlikely to bioaccumulate. (See data sheet.) Cancer incidence, however, has not been studied-even without bioaccumulation.
https://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/search/a?dbs+hsdb:@term+@DOCNO+944 (In part):
No studies on carcinogenicity, reproduction toxicity and teratogenicity, immunotoxicity or allergy were located in the available literature.And concluded:
Occupational exposure of 53 male refinery workers for an average of 11 years to n-butane (concentration varied from 0.0004 mg/l to 0.0178 mg/l) did not cause any clinical symptoms in the workers. ... In conclusion, exposure to low concentrations of n-butane has not been reported to cause adverse effects in humans.Edit:
New Jersey would disagree. They claim it a carcinogen in humans because it has been shown to cause skin cancer in animals.
https://nj.gov/health/eoh/rtkweb/documents/fs/0685.pdf
You mean the link in the "edit", right? My mistake.FWIW, an occupational exposure limit such as on the 800 ppm is not an acute exposure. And that link is not butane. I postulate there's a very basic reason why butane has not been studied for carcinogenicity, etc. This is basic stuff for those trained in these areas.
Butane is not a carcinogen. There are literally butane occupational exposure limits of 800 ppm allowed for workers 8 hrs per day 5 days per week for what can be multiple decades of work, for example.
Sorry CANtalk, but you are wrong (in a way), while butane is not a carcinogen itself in its commercially produced state it contains benzene. Benzene causes leukemia.
Research (from the Science Daily website):
Cancerous toxins linked to cannabis extract
Date:
September 26, 2017
Source:
Portland State University
Summary:
Researchers have found benzene and other potentially cancer-causing chemicals in the vapor produced by butane hash oil, a cannabis extract.
I'm not wrong. It isn't butane. You are drawing erroneous conclusions. Details matter. If you are talking about benzene then say it directly. Benzene is obviously not butane. Have you looked at that study methodology and the detailed results? Because the study you quote isn't finding benzene in their results from "commercial preparations".Sorry CANtalk, but you are wrong (in a way), while butane is not a carcinogen itself in its commercially produced state it contains benzene. Benzene causes leukemia.
Research (from the Science Daily website):
Cancerous toxins linked to cannabis extract
Date:
September 26, 2017
Source:
Portland State University
Summary:
Researchers have found benzene and other potentially cancer-causing chemicals in the vapor produced by butane hash oil, a cannabis extract.
My apologies CANtalk, I tried to recall the data from the top of my head. You are correct, benzene not butane is the problem in BHO. I hope that doesn't mean our on-line friendship is off to an inauspicious start.'m not wrong. It isn't butane. You are drawing erroneous conclusions. Details matter. If you are talking about benzene then say it directly.
Thank you @CANtalk, for your useful posting. For me, "worth it" certainly involves more than financial cost, as I'm sure it does for many others.@OldNewbie, yup and thx. Just trying to get accurate info out there.
I'm not wrong. It isn't butane. You are drawing erroneous conclusions. Details matter. If you are talking about benzene then say it directly. Benzene is obviously not butane. Have you looked at that study methodology and the detailed results? Because the study you quote isn't finding benzene in their results from "commercial preparations".
On an interesting related note, benzene is found in significant concentrations in ambient air quality, especially in urban areas. Most people are breathing in significant benzene concentrations just by living.
The actual concern in that study is something that has already been identified many times before - high temp dabbing. OTOH, there are vape options for dabbing that don't even reach the temps identified where benzene is generated.
Then there is the actual risk which should be the major consideration. Have you looked at the concentrations and toxicology? Carcinogenicity is quite a bit more ubiquitous that most everyone realizes. Coffee is a carcinogen. Deep fried foods have carcinogens; potato chips are bad bad bad for acrolein. Cell phone use is a carcinogen. Then there's living. Just living is a cause of cancer, a very high cause of cancer too, estimated at one in three over one's lifetime.
Decisions on an acceptable level of risk are a personal choice and come from accurate and robust risk evaluation and information. There is no right or wrong decision. OTOH, having good, true and helpful information is very important to making that decision. So I'm here trying to help give such info so that people can make more-informed personal decisions and choices. Hope it helps.
Cheers
If you use BHO you stand a great chance of inhaling a known carcinogen (benzene). If you choose to do this that's fine with me. We all have to live our own lives. Flowers suit me and that's after 49 years of experimentation.
The actual concern in that study is something that has already been identified many times before - high temp dabbing. OTOH, there are vape options for dabbing that don't even reach the temps identified where benzene is generated.
I put up the chart, but there are problems with it. Many would point out the boiling point listed is NOT for the item contained in plant material but for the chemical alone under standard pressure.do you happen to know off-hand at what temperature benzene is generated?
...and, like magic, a chart was posted while I wrote!
This quote is misleading in my opinion and experience. Sure, benzene inhalation should be avoided ideally, but the previously mentioned study measured benzene exposure well below (less than half) 1 μg per draw. They literally measured in nanograms or the ppb range. Quoted from that study,""It's not a huge amount of benzene, but any benzene ingestion is concerning," he said." - Marijuana News -
Updated Oct 30, 2017; Posted Sep 25, 2017
Benzene was not detected below the highest [temperature reading]. Using the same rationale... one dab of BHO delivers 17 ng of benzene. Represented as a concentration in the draw volume, this value is 15 ± 1.8 ppb.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK138708/Indoor levels measured in the United States are in the range 2.6–5.8 μg/m3 (13,14,46,47), which are levels similar to those measured in established buildings in Australia (22) and Europe (48).
I'm sorry I don't know, but I wanted to congratulate you 9n your rig and banger. I'm sure you'll have many happy hours.Bought my first rig yesterday. Got a quartz banger with it. So far I've just used shatter. To this point, when I've used concentrates I've just been making sandwiches in my desktop vape. It's like night and day.
When it comes to temps, I've been torching the banger for 30 seconds and then waiting 30-60 before hitting it. For a low temp dab should I be waiting longer?
I'm sorry I don't know, but I wanted to congratulate you 9n your rig and banger. I'm sure you'll have many happy hours.