How Cook Crack Cocaine
Crack cocaine is less pure than using ether to make freebase cocaine (there is. The correct method for making 100% pure freebase cocaine is to dissolve 1.
When you make it with ammonia you need ether or pet ether to extract the freebase that has precipitated. There is no ammonia in the final product and it makes the best freebase hands down. The pet ether evaporates quickly and you can smoke right away. And Pet ether is not anywhere near as dangerous as ether that Pryor and Crosby used. Many just A/B with ammonia and wash with water rather than extract with ether. That is probably what you are referring too. This can have the ammonia stink.
Also, i've read about coke, NH4 and a shot glass in a microwave to make crack. But I will stick with my 1979 recipe as it beats all. Peace • • • • •. As little water as possible. Just enough to create a 'solition.'
When I've done this, the resulting product is more of a paste than a rock, but ive onky made small quantities in a spoon. Add you blow, sprinkle in a very small amount of baking soda, add water dropwise until they begin to mix in the solution. Carefully heat (dont contact the spoon with the actual flame) until it's a paste consistency. I always smoke this on top of a bud I do spoon cleanup with. It's more of a novelty than anything.
Now there is a method to do something like this with aluminum foil that I hear is way easier and more efficient. Never done it. People call it 'foils, ' so they dont feel like they're smoking crack.
Simplemind pro crack. The Gangs That Inherited Pablo Escobar's Drug Empire: Cooking with Cocaine In Colombia, the heirs to Pablo Escobar's drug empire are conducting business as usual — though with a somewhat lower profile. Today's Medellin drug cartels are highly structured and run much like multinational corporations. But violent gangs operating in the city's slums provide the muscle; known as combos, they’ve carved Medellin into fiefdoms, imposing invisible borders between gang territory — borders that, when ignored, often get people killed. VICE News travelled to Medellin to meet gang members — along with top cartel leaders and assassins — who revealed the inner workings of the city's modern-day cocaine industry.