Do you know about CBG9?
Recently, there are various products such as CBD9 and CBG9, but are they fake?
Do you know about CBG9?
Recently, there are various products such as CBD9 and CBG9, but are they fake?
New to me let’s,see,what others say
Sounds like you are correct.
Maybe just a marketing thing, would be interesting to see new cannabinoids
This sounds like a marketing gimmick to me. If you look at CBD for example, the double bond in the upper ring is sitting between the 9th and 10th carbons, similar to its positioning in d9-THC. There is also a double bond in a similar position for the CBG molecule. So we would be dealing with a d9-CBD or d9-CBG if you want to see them under that same distinction.
Theoretically, a d8-CBD or d8-CBG could exist or could be synthesized, but I’m not sure if anybody is doing this or if there is a real demand for these compounds in the present market.
EDIT: it could also mean they have some sort of d9-THC mixed into the product blend as well? IDK without seeing the actual packaging or advertising I’m just taking a guess based on the nomenclature.
Anyway that’s my interpretation so I’d be curious to see what others think as well.
Testing testing testing…
Only way to have any clue what you’re dealing with.
@Tre_HoneyGold @Bret_HoneyGold are not these your nutrraceticals dear bros???
Is the numbering for CBD still the same because you have that open ring?
I think it’s actually spelled CBGB’s. God bless The Ramones.
Thank you for the detailed information. In Japan, as regulations are becoming stricter, the number of names used for marketing purposes is increasing
Based on some documents i have come across CBG9 is some version of alkylated CBG maybe, CB9 is still a mystery
2-[(2E)-3,7-Dimethylocta-2,6-dienyl]-5-pentyl-4 ethyl carboxy- benzene-1,3-diol, Alkylated CBG
C23H34O4= 384.59 g/mol
Is that long form structure not just slightly non-compliant IUPAC for CBGa-ethyl ester?
Whatever you’ve found, my bet is still on anything pinning these CB9/CBG9 noids to actual hemp derived stuff (benzopyran cannabinoids) is a smokescreen and instead they’re super potent synthetic CB1 agonists with a high 90s% cut, so that the cut is the only thing showing up on the spectroscopy (unknowns are fine as long as ND THCs, and easy to get ND when you aren’t using cannabis at all!) and the potency is still around that of THC.
Cb9 s main ingredient is 8-oh -thc
It s the hardness of product the stable shatter like consistency that is telling
Hello,
I hope this message finds you well.
I am writing to request detailed information regarding the compounds known as CBG9 and CB9. Specifically, I would like to obtain their exact scientific names and graphical representations of their molecular structures.
Additionally, I am interested in determining whether these compounds are classified as benzo[c]chromenes or benzopyrans. Therefore, it would be highly beneficial if the molecular structures provided could clearly illustrate their chemical frameworks to facilitate this classification.
Thank you in advance for your assistance. Your expertise and support in providing these details are greatly appreciated.
Best regards,
It has cost the company I work for
57k to chroma ever compound out and toss them into the NMR we indentified
Over 40 compounds but 4 main ingredients I can lead you to the lab that does this work if you wish
You figured which are the “active” ingredients?
Sort of yes
We identified them and are pretty confident we know Wich is responsible for the psychoactivity
But must admit I have not tried each compound on it s own but our
Cannabinoids knowlidge is pretty good when it comes to psychoactivity
What were the active ingredients that you found? Inquiring minds and all that jazz…
I hate to tell you, but pretty much every cannabinoid-like molecule is gonna be a benzo[c]chromene scaffold. There’s not like a secret magic cannabinoid that gets you high, is safe to consume, and isn’t a benzo[c]chromene. But also, those fake sounding cannabinoids (CB9, CBG9, etc) are formulations of multiple undisclosed cannabinoids/drug compounds - there’s not a single finite structure that describes CB9 or CBG9.
Guy in alt cannabinoid group did an analysis on cbg9. Believed 4 chlorinated noids as well as another.