Denatured Ethanol with n-heptane

At Solvent Direct, we feel it is very important to provide complete transparency into our manufacturing process. Please find the below statement and attached COA’s for review regarding our Denatured Ethanol product, 710 Solution.

While Denatured Ethanol also known as CDA-12-A pursuant TTB formula 27 CFR part 21.26 can be made with lesser grade products, Solvent Direct uses the following mixture.

Solvent Direct 710 Solution contains USP Food and Beverage Grade 200 proof Ethyl Alcohol and High Purity n-Heptane. This product meets USP monograph specifications and is approved KOSHER – Pareve. No USP Class 1, 2, 3 or other residual solvents are used in manufacturing or handling. Results attached.

Solvent Direct High Purity n-Heptane has been evaluated according to the procedures set forth by USP General Chapter <232>. Eurofins Scientific has analyzed Solvent Direct High Purity n-Heptane for over 20 heavy metals to USP monograph specifications and has been approved for use in GMP facilities meeting the most stringent international standards. Results attached.

As our clients continue to revolutionize the future of our industry, Solvent Direct is working around the clock to supply operations globally with the safest manufacturing products, at the most competitive prices, delivered on time every time.

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@SolventDirect Bruh… if ur gonna be in the forum, dont just post ads, respond…
Fyi, this annoys the hell out of me, when companies drop blanket statements and dont just respond directly. Look at true Terps and how they handled the whole viscosity thing… same thing…

Atleast with @spdking you know your talking to him and not some staff at his company…

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i wouldnt want to fail for foreign stuff from my solvent that i didnt know about. @spdking i get all mine from you anyway but I appreciate that you care about that.

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@SolventDirect

Why are all of your coa documents redacted and rewritten. Just show the actual coa from the manufacturer. For instance show Kaplan Industries coa, your supplier for butane/propane. All the high purity hydrocarbons in the country come from one well in Illinois. Diversified cpc owns it and it trickles down from there. There’s no need for smoke and mirrors. Also every coa from the plant is always signed by the plant manager. From dcpc down. And that’s with all products… Why are none of your signed. I know. Because you redacted certain info and rewrote it.

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He was jumping around with below 99.3% rating while we were selling 99.9 etc. And called me a shit salesman. I didn’t know 99.3 was something to brag about

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If anyone needs a plug on denatured ethanol I can send u to a place in the Bay Area , California and Detroit Michigan that has 55 gallon drums for $550 otd. They have all sizes in stock usually

I keep seeing people post that they can get their excise tax money back, but when I read the document from TTB I get the impression I’d need to be a charity, do this for research, or be a non-profit. Am I missing something?

The link at the end of the post?

If nobody drinkin it, they can’t very well tax you as if you were…

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the link leads to this page.

Fair enough.

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Don’t drink distilled water

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And when I did find the right TTB regulation this is what I found.

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Hmmmm…

However, when manufacturers use that alcohol in the production of a food, flavor, medicine, or perfume, and nonbeverage Products Laboratory approves the product as unfit for beverage purposes, they can claim a return on most of the distilled spirits excise tax paid

Haven’t dug around in a while…

Tax free sure, $1 excise tax is not tax free

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I’m fine with a $1 excise tax, but an excise tax around $25 is nuts.

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I’m going to apply and see what they say. Can’t hurt (I hope).

What makes you say that? Ive personally experiences incredible results from switching to distilled water. Just dont buy it in plastic jugs.

This will save me a lot of explaining

We ordered from solvent direct and got iris drums also. Why is that not right ?

Best to talk to an accountant. There are ways to write it off.