 |  | | dimethyl sulfide?. Discuss dimethyl sulfide?, on Health Forums.
| | 
04-15-2007, 02:43 AM
| | | dimethyl sulfide? How would one make this substance pleasE?
TIA | 
04-15-2007, 09:54 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? I'm sure a friendly phone call to the DEA would lead to assistance.
"daytime" <validatpart@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1176588517.354920.28120@y5g2000hsa.googlegrou ps.com...
> How would one make this substance pleasE?
> TIA
> | 
04-16-2007, 04:24 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? Miguel?
"daytime" <validatpart@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1176588517.354920.28120@y5g2000hsa.googlegrou ps.com...
> How would one make this substance pleasE?
> TIA
> | 
04-17-2007, 02:22 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? On 16 Apr, 04:17, "Just Me" <jus...@nospam.com> wrote:
> Miguel?
>
> "daytime" <validatp...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
>
> news:1176588517.354920.28120@y5g2000hsa.googlegrou ps.com...
>
> > How would one make this substance pleasE?
> > TIA
help please? | 
04-17-2007, 09:05 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? There was an article in a news magazine about ten year ago about a
woman who went into an emergency room in the last stages of a cancer in
her neck. She had previously taken dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) for the
pain and she was saturated with it. But it wasn't good enough anymore.
Then the DMSO started to break down. It first broke down into dimethyl
sulfide, and then, I forget the name of it, a paralysing gas which
killed 14 of the hospital employees. Of course, she died too. This
series of chemical reactions was actually imposible without an outside
source of energy to force it. This reaction constituted endothermic
ectropy. It appears that her state of mind must have accessed the
globally bent timespace, that is discussed in http://groups.yahoo.com/group/alchemy61/ , Miguel's group, that also
facilitates the transmutation of base metals to gold. | 
04-17-2007, 09:05 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? Ya, I can't tell you how to make dimethyl sulfide from DMSO. It's
so dangerously close to that paralyzing poison gas. I'd do those
reactions in nothing less than a P4 laboratory. | 
04-17-2007, 09:06 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? On 17 Apr, 11:57, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> Ya, I can't tell you how to make dimethyl sulfide from DMSO. It's
> so dangerously close to that paralyzing poison gas. I'd do those
> reactions in nothing less than a P4 laboratory.
I have noticed when I take out the copper from the vinegar and salt
solution it corrodes immediately-can I do this and reinsert the copper
into the solution,thus getting my fabled copper acetate? | 
04-18-2007, 03:20 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? You guys are crazy to be messing around with these chemicals...
I hope you don't hurt yourself or anyone else. | 
04-18-2007, 08:30 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? On 18 Apr, 06:33, themsje...@gmail.com wrote:
> You guys are crazy to be messing around with these chemicals...
> I hope you don't hurt yourself or anyone else.
It is for the greater good!
Would like your help still please Miguel?
TIA | 
04-19-2007, 01:44 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? Coincidently, it was just mentioned in Discover Magazine that
dimethyl sulfide itself is poisonous.
It is a product of the breakdown of dimethyl sulphoxide, DMSO. I
have some. I bought it about fifteen years ago from a company in
Louisiana. It's used for health purposes but it is sold as a solvent.
It's a pain killer. But also, whatever is mixed with it penetrates the
whole body. If you mix a drop of lemon juice in a drop of DMSO and touch
it with your little toe, you'll taste the lemon juice. If it were mixed
with cyanide and brushed on a door knob, whoever touched that door knob
would drop dead.
But, unglazed porcelane, platinum, and an alloy of copper & silver
can catalyse the breakdown of DMSO into dimethyl sulfide. If you put the
words dimethyl sulphoxide or dimethyl sulfide into the search slot of
Google or the MSN search engine you will find out much more about
dimethyl sulfide and how to make it. | 
04-20-2007, 02:59 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? On 19 Apr, 11:03, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> Coincidently, it was just mentioned in Discover Magazine that
> dimethyl sulfide itself is poisonous.
> It is a product of the breakdown of dimethyl sulphoxide, DMSO. I
> have some. I bought it about fifteen years ago from a company in
> Louisiana. It's used for health purposes but it is sold as a solvent.
> It's a pain killer. But also, whatever is mixed with it penetrates the
> whole body. If you mix a drop of lemon juice in a drop of DMSO and touch
> it with your little toe, you'll taste the lemon juice. If it were mixed
> with cyanide and brushed on a door knob, whoever touched that door knob
> would drop dead.
> But, unglazed porcelane, platinum, and an alloy of copper & silver
> can catalyse the breakdown of DMSO into dimethyl sulfide. If you put the
> words dimethyl sulphoxide or dimethyl sulfide into the search slot of
> Google or the MSN search engine you will find out much more about
> dimethyl sulfide and how to make it.
I have DMSO-what could I mix it with to make the awful smell I have
been after? | 
04-20-2007, 01:16 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory What a bad memory. Discover magazine mentions hydrogen sulfide not
dimethyl sulfide. But, now I remember what the dimethyl sulfide broke
down into in that emergency room to kill all those people. The DMSO
broke down into dimethyl sulfide and the dimethyl sulfide broke down
into poisonous hydrogen sulfide.
Hydrogen sulfide is apparently painless. Of course it paralyses,
among other things. But what it actually does is block the cytochrome
oxidase that produces adenosine triphosphate, ATP. ATP is the mainspring
of the body's energy. Monsterous Dr. Frankenstein like medical
experimenters are experimenting with putting dogs and monkeys into
suspended animation with hydrogen sulfide. The animals are revived a few
hours later as good as new. Most of the poor animals, that is. There are
hopes to use hydrogen sulfide masks in ambulances to put serious cases
into suspended animation for later repairs. Again the freemasons are in
the way. Yogins in India can put themselves into suspended animation,
have themselves burried in the sands of the Ganges for two weeks (much
longer than has been done with hydrogen sulfide), and resurrect as good
as new. They simply do the Khechari Mudra (fig gesture), which is
putting the tongue up the back of the nose. The ligature that holds the
tongue down has already been cut for this. It apparently causes so much
vagal stimulation that it causes a vagal syncope into suspended
animation which is maintained by the continued vagal stimulation from
the position of the tongue. Certainly this condition could be easily
duplicated medically. But it is a suppressed secret in "the land of the
free".
Now with schizophrenia and memory, it is now being said that we
have such bad memories that common things in daily life cause suprises
that spike our dopamine and epinephrin so much that it poisons our
brain. That's a new one. What a wopper! | 
04-21-2007, 06:07 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 20 Apr, 11:17, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> What a bad memory. Discover magazine mentions hydrogen sulfide not
> dimethyl sulfide. But, now I remember what the dimethyl sulfide broke
> down into in that emergency room to kill all those people. The DMSO
> broke down into dimethyl sulfide and the dimethyl sulfide broke down
> into poisonous hydrogen sulfide.
> Hydrogen sulfide is apparently painless. Of course it paralyses,
> among other things. But what it actually does is block the cytochrome
> oxidase that produces adenosine triphosphate, ATP. ATP is the mainspring
> of the body's energy. Monsterous Dr. Frankenstein like medical
> experimenters are experimenting with putting dogs and monkeys into
> suspended animation with hydrogen sulfide. The animals are revived a few
> hours later as good as new. Most of the poor animals, that is. There are
> hopes to use hydrogen sulfide masks in ambulances to put serious cases
> into suspended animation for later repairs. Again the freemasons are in
> the way. Yogins in India can put themselves into suspended animation,
> have themselves burried in the sands of the Ganges for two weeks (much
> longer than has been done with hydrogen sulfide), and resurrect as good
> as new. They simply do the Khechari Mudra (fig gesture), which is
> putting the tongue up the back of the nose. The ligature that holds the
> tongue down has already been cut for this. It apparently causes so much
> vagal stimulation that it causes a vagal syncope into suspended
> animation which is maintained by the continued vagal stimulation from
> the position of the tongue. Certainly this condition could be easily
> duplicated medically. But it is a suppressed secret in "the land of the
> free".
> Now with schizophrenia and memory, it is now being said that we
> have such bad memories that common things in daily life cause suprises
> that spike our dopamine and epinephrin so much that it poisons our
> brain. That's a new one. What a wopper!
Once again your posts keep going to the Wiki! I learn so much from
your supreme knowledge-however can you explain what can be mixed with
DMSO please? to make an odour?
ALso was my idea about taking the copper out of the solution to
corrode and the n put it back in,a valid idiom?
TIA | 
04-21-2007, 06:07 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory The DMSO broke down in the body of the girl with cancer first into
dimethyl sulfide and then into hydrogen sulfide, which killed everyone
in the emergency room. She had been gorging on DMSO for months, but just
at hat time it broke down like that. It could have been enzymes and
biochemicals of decay that were able to break down the DMSO like that.
If you could get that monthly "blood of the moon" it might break down
your DMSO.
There was a kid named Dick whose father worked in a chemical
manufacturing plant. Dick was an exceptionally smart kid who was
interested in chemistry. His father would bring him home chemicals that
were unavavilable to the general public. Big accidents started to
happen. First, Dick's dad brought him home nitric acid. Dickie mixed it
with everything and came up with explosives everytime. There were some
explosions. Then Dick's father brought him home some sulfuric acid.
Dickie mixed this with everything and stunk up the neighborhood. Dick's
father then brought home some phosphoric acid. Dickie mixed this with
everything and got spastic and paralyzed. He was rushed to the hospital
and they barely saved his life. After that his father would only let him
play with dilute hydrochloric acid, and things got like in Alchemy 61.
The stink came from sulpher alcohols called mercaptans. Dickie
mixed sulphuric acid with everything he had and couldn't help but come
up with mercaptans. They stink to high heaven. | 
04-21-2007, 05:39 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 21 Apr, 00:34, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> The DMSO broke down in the body of the girl with cancer first into
> dimethyl sulfide and then into hydrogen sulfide, which killed everyone
> in the emergency room. She had been gorging on DMSO for months, but just
> at hat time it broke down like that. It could have been enzymes and
> biochemicals of decay that were able to break down the DMSO like that.
> If you could get that monthly "blood of the moon" it might break down
> your DMSO.
> There was a kid named Dick whose father worked in a chemical
> manufacturing plant. Dick was an exceptionally smart kid who was
> interested in chemistry. His father would bring him home chemicals that
> were unavavilable to the general public. Big accidents started to
> happen. First, Dick's dad brought him home nitric acid. Dickie mixed it
> with everything and came up with explosives everytime. There were some
> explosions. Then Dick's father brought him home some sulfuric acid.
> Dickie mixed this with everything and stunk up the neighborhood. Dick's
> father then brought home some phosphoric acid. Dickie mixed this with
> everything and got spastic and paralyzed. He was rushed to the hospital
> and they barely saved his life. After that his father would only let him
> play with dilute hydrochloric acid, and things got like in Alchemy 61.
> The stink came from sulpher alcohols called mercaptans. Dickie
> mixed sulphuric acid with everything he had and couldn't help but come
> up with mercaptans. They stink to high heaven.
Is it possible to make sulpher alcohols safely at a home lab? | 
04-22-2007, 01:41 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory You have to be careful with sulphuric acid, but, Dickie at 12 years
old was able to handle it on a table in his basement. Just mixing it
with whatever he could find he came up with the incredible stink of
sulphur alcohols. The only trouble he got into with it was stinking up
his whole neighborhood. Sulphuric acid is in common car storage
batteries. Dickie's father brought sulphuric acid home in a bottle, but
you can buy it in most hardware stores, for clearing drains. | 
04-22-2007, 11:01 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 22 Apr, 11:11, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> You have to be careful with sulphuric acid, but, Dickie at 12 years
> old was able to handle it on a table in his basement. Just mixing it
> with whatever he could find he came up with the incredible stink of
> sulphur alcohols. The only trouble he got into with it was stinking up
> his whole neighborhood. Sulphuric acid is in common car storage
> batteries. Dickie's father brought sulphuric acid home in a bottle, but
> you can buy it in most hardware stores, for clearing drains.
I am thinking of rotting some organic material and mixing it with said
acid-I believe in the US it is called Drano?there is a warning not to
mix it with caustic soda | 
04-23-2007, 02:11 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory Draino is definately not sulphuric acid. Drano is essentially
sodium hydroxide, lye, an extreme alkali. Acids can hurt the plumbing,
but alkalis don't attack the metal.
There isn't much that stinks worse than a rotten dead animal. | 
04-25-2007, 01:21 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 23 Apr, 10:48, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> Draino is definately not sulphuric acid. Drano is essentially
> sodium hydroxide, lye, an extreme alkali. Acids can hurt the plumbing,
> but alkalis don't attack the metal.
> There isn't much that stinks worse than a rotten dead animal.
I understand you cant mix Drano with bleach as you will create
chlorine gas? I know what substance you mean now-sulphuric acid mixed
with a decaying organic matter will result in a very nasty pong? | 
04-26-2007, 11:17 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 23 Apr, 10:48, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> Draino is definately not sulphuric acid. Drano is essentially
> sodium hydroxide, lye, an extreme alkali. Acids can hurt the plumbing,
> but alkalis don't attack the metal.
> There isn't much that stinks worse than a rotten dead animal.
I understand to get said ACid -1 needs to purloin a car battery-then
by adding organic rotting matter-things will be smelly? | 
04-26-2007, 11:18 AM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory That's right. It should produce maximum stink, but it's hazardous
to handle and must be done with caution. | 
04-26-2007, 11:24 PM
| | | Re: dimethyl sulfide? And a Bad Memory On 26 Apr, 10:48, gellie...@webtv.net (Miguel Lahunkun) wrote:
> That's right. It should produce maximum stink, but it's hazardous
> to handle and must be done with caution.
Many,many,many thanks-I am extremely grateful for all your help and
knowledge that you have been gracious enough to share with me. I wish
you only happiness in your endeavours-thanks for assisting a Limey! | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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