endlessness wrote:Thanks for the reply
Yes I do think LSD itself may have some electric/metallic taste by itself, though I've had LSD before that was more bitter and the TLC results were just LSD (but we probably wouldnt have detected the BTEG...
Can you talk a bit more about the source for that blotter saying the BTEG was not added so it must have been in the ink? Was this a personal communication, or do you have a source for that comment?
Speaking of LSD and the whole "electric" deal...
Pure salts of LSD are triboluminescent, a phenomena which is thought to be related to electricity*...
Quote:Repeated recrystallizations [of LSD] from methanol produced a product that became progressively less soluble, and eventually virtually insoluble, as the purity increased. As a totally pure salt, when dry and when shaken in the dark, will emit small flashes of white light. -shulgin ; TIHKAL
*
Quote:Triboluminescence is an optical phenomenon in which light is generated through the breaking of chemical bonds in a material when it is pulled apart, ripped, scratched, crushed, or rubbed (see tribology). The phenomenon is not fully understood, but appears to be caused by the separation and reunification of electrical charges. -Wikipedia
This was well known by chemists familiar with LSD...
...so, could this have all started out with early LSD chemists knowing that very pure LSD is triboluminescent?...And through these early LSD chemists such as owsley Stanley, and LSD promoters like Ken kesey and the dead attaching "electric" names and imagery to LSD (like the "steal-your-face" logo, or electric kool-aide, or white lightning LSD) a public who knew nothing of the compounds triboluminescent properties just assumed that very pure LSD had an "electric taste", and psychosomatic response could cover the rest?
It's a "long-shot" theory...but it's always been on my mind when this comes up....
-eg