Thanks for the advice. I have read from other sources also that the more (non THC) plant matter gets into your concentrate, the gooier it gets. I tried making a batch with ground up weed and it was not glassy at room temperature at all.I don't want to sound like a no it all but
i get different consistancys only when I don't clean my extractor
you have to clean it with iso every third time you run or the plant break matter gets into the oil
i hope that helps
This isn't true dude...by breaking up a bud you are able to expose more surfaces to solvent and also effect boundary layer mixing.The trichomes are on the outside of the plant, so grinding doesn't improve yield, it improves packing density.
Think of it like a filo dough pastry where the dough layers are the leaves. If you take the whole pastry and dunk it in a glass of milk, only the outside is wetted, but if you crack it open and then dunk it, the outside pastry layer AND the interior layers are easily soaked. If I have a dense nug, the resins on an interior stem, or leaf, are not going to be effectively extracted with a bunch of other material overlaying it...it's just common sense.Where do you think the cannabinoids reside in the plant? I have been led to believe that the cannabinoids that we seek are produced in the Trichomes, which grow on the outside of the leaves, flowers, and stems. Those surfaces are already exposed without grinding.
In my experience, all that is exposed by grinding, is broken leaf boundaries, which expose more water solubles and chlorophyll. It improves packing density and helps even out the flow, but exposes no new cannabinoids, and increases our vulnerability to non actives and chlorophyll pickup.
We do it for non polar solvents, but not for polar solvents.
1/2 can per OZ on the initial soak and between 1/2 and 1 can per OZ for second washes.you use a full liter of liquid butane for only 7-10 grams of weed with the thermos rinse?!
Are we speaking semantics? We break up our buds by hand, but don't grind them, when using a polar solvent. Beyond exposing more of the surface, it has no other benefit that I can see.Think of it like a filo dough pastry where the dough layers are the leaves. If you take the whole pastry and dunk it in a glass of milk, only the outside is wetted, but if you crack it open and then dunk it, the outside pastry layer AND the interior layers are easily soaked. If I have a dense nug, the resins on an interior stem, or leaf, are not going to be effectively extracted with a bunch of other material overlaying it...it's just common sense.
Packing density is a non-issue using the thermos and soak method.
This is the whole point!Beyond exposing more of the surface, it has no other benefit that I can see.
So which is it man? Is it your position that the cannabinoid rich surfaces are exposed without grinding, or does grinding expose said surfaces? Experience and common sense tell me the latter...Where do you think the cannabinoids reside in the plant? I have been led to believe that the cannabinoids that we seek are produced in the Trichomes, which grow on the outside of the leaves, flowers, and stems. Those surfaces are already exposed without grinding.
Enough to cover the material plus about an inch or so.What goin on my dabbin dabbers..im a noob here nd theres probably a thread out there butI nneed some help with second solvent..how much do you guys use for saaay an oz ? Im using the ethanol wash
Yes, I've frequently washed out the BHO with the absolute least amount of ethanol possible, filtered it, and then evaporated it away under vacuum.So the OP took wet BHO and mixed it with ethanol to purge the butane then evaped the ethanol out?
I don't believe that was the point but this is something I've wondered about; it sounds much easier and safer in the end.
Has anyone else used ethanol to purge butane without winterizing? What results did you get?