Speedmixer use in cannabis?

ideally room temp and 1-3mm crystals.

im just saying the speed mixer is capable of some things a homogenizer isnt.

2 Likes

You are correct. I was responding to the poster that said:

And I should have specified that mixing cannabinoids for CARTS are where the speed mixer falls short

1 Like

Freeze the distillate and cannabis and put a Hobart and preroll machine in a walk-in fridge

Not if you warm them up a little bit like you would normally with a homogenizer.

its still the SOP at an MSO countrywide, so pretty well id say

Speed mixer works great for purging hte and preserving terps.

Centrifuges are great for separating that hte out from everything else

Or @Waxplug1 new pressure filter.

Can a speed mixer start up, mix, and slow down in 15-30 seconds?

A speedmixer will never work for dry material infusion, for preroll production use.
Not at scale, at least.
Wrong tool

We have SOP’s, equipment and custom tooling made for infused preroll production.
Outside and/or inside infusion.
All types of concentrates.

Not for sale, we are doing license/partnership agreements only at this point to qualified parties.

Dm to inquire, it is real/proven, we have been the advisor for a few of the largest brands/mso’s in the US.
Clients of ours produce well over 8 digits pcs per month over various preroll SKU’s, per state.

Our team will be at our booth at MJBiz.
Please schedule a meeting beforehand, I may not be avaliable to meet much that week, as my schedule gets booked up.

I stand by my statement that homogenizers are a total waste of money. Mixing takes like no time at all and have plenty of analytics to back this up. I don’t want my volatiles seeing temperature necessary for it to work and I certainly don’t want it open to atmosphere while it’s heated/mixing

1 Like

Price point?

Save me the plane ride.

For what? To learn how to make infused prerolls?
If your asking for a price youre not my clientele.

The infusion methods vary on price due to how you wish to infuse.

This is such an arbitrary discussion, loose scope/definitions, DM me if you actually have interest.

Anyone actually interested would need to currently already run their own brand and have P&L’s past 12 months, or have proof of significant CAPEX to attempt a launch of the SKU’s.
We are not giving out IP that is highly desired, or selling it.
I dont need the business either.
Only interested in partnerships or royalties with other proven operators/brands/accredited investors.

1 Like

Hi dear bro @Cannachem I am very please for meet you. I find your proposition of interest for a cannabis vape oil cartridge hardware brand I have as customer in Michigan the United States. This brand is interest in offer infuse ZJ base on widely popular for other market. Can we find a times for discussion and exchange proper document? Many thanks.

1 Like

You need that temperature to fill anyways. If you are filling any colder than 80c, you are already damaging your farmer.

The more time your blend stay’s above a volatiles boiling point, the more of those volatiles evaporate. A homogenizer mixes in 15-30 seconds. That first half minute for a 500 ml blend adds to the 5-600 seconds you have to keep the blend at temp. With your method of stirring, you are adding minutes, where the homogenizer is adding seconds.

The hemp world is more indicative of what will happen after federal legalization and there is a reason all of the 10k per day crew uses homogenizers. Once we have 100k per day guys, we can move on to better equipment, but that day is very far off

Not if I have any say in the matter.

1 Like

Its kinda hard to get people to drop that kind of investment into an industry that could be outlawed any day now

Good thing I’m here in lower canuckistan where it may only be barely legal, but is rather unlikely to become less legal any time soon.

2 Likes

Thats true, its just that the population is much lower in Canadia. Who would smoke all those 2 million carts a month?

Who says I need to run it every day? I’d rather do 100k in a day than spend 10 days getting the same # done.

Especially if I need to do 300k and only have 20 shifts in a month.

1 Like

No because temperature required is based on viscosity and degradation due to heat is not linear. My formulations that have the ultra volatile compound still in tact could sit for hours at 65c and see less degradation than minutes above 80c. I have no problem damaging a $200 syringe to preserve my 100k batch of carts. Hemp may be similar to what mass produced vapes will be like but those mass production vapes are gonna suck compared to the ones done the way I do them. I made both styles of vapes for a while and the ones I’m comfortable heating like that are not the best selling vape in every shop they are in, the ones I take every precaution to preserve are.

You said it yourself, the more time above boiling point the more you lose. Good thing boiling points are influenced by pressure. I can’t use pressure to raise the boiling point if it’s open to atmosphere which is required for a homogenizer.

Why are other companies filling equipment I’ve used able to run at 65c? Low viscosity? Was I damaging things by having to use more pressure?