DIY Bacteriostatic Water (cheap)

TomoIsLearning

TomoIsLearning

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A small bottle of bacteriostatic water costs ten to fifteen dollars. This liquid is simply distilled water mixed with nearly one percent benzyl alcohol. Most people do not realize they could prepare a full liter at that cost. The ingredients are basic, yet the price feels high when viewed another way.

The tricky part involves cleanliness. Get it wrong, then harmful microbes enter your system. Yet stick to the process, everything stays safe. Users have managed this successfully over long periods.

Here's how.



What You Need

A single gallon of distilled water works best - skip the spring, tap, or mineral kinds. Pick it up at any grocery outlet. Cost ranges between one and two dollars.
Benzyl alcohol, purity at 99.9%, is available through internet retailers. Priced between fifteen and twenty dollars per hundred milliliters. Once obtained, a container tends to remain usable indefinitely.
A small glass container, either ten or thirty milliliters in size, works best when sterilized. Empty versions are available through web retailers. Ten of them cost about ten dollars.
Starting off, a 0.22 micron syringe filter stands out as key equipment. It works by eliminating bacterial contamination. Priced at fifteen dollars per ten-unit set.
· 10ml or 20ml syringe without needle.
· Alcohol wipes.

A few hundred vials come from this system. Setup runs roughly forty to fifty dollars.



The Ratio

A tenth of a percent means nine-tenths of a milliliter sits in every hundred milliliters. Water carries that amount precisely when measured right.

A single 30ml container holds nearly all purified liquid - just under 30ml - with a small addition of 0.27ml BA mixed in. The majority, 29.73ml, comes from clean, distilled water blended evenly throughout.

A single 10ml container holds a mix where 0.09ml of BA combines with nearly ten milliliters of purified liquid. Water volume here reaches 9.91ml, balancing the stronger component precisely within the total space.

A tiny volume requires precision, so opt for a 1ml syringe when measuring the BA. Accuracy matters here - estimating won’t suffice. The quantity is minimal; therefore, careful measurement becomes essential.



Step by Step

1. A damp cloth soaked in alcohol should cover every inch of the surface. Staying free of debris matters more than speed.
2. Wearing gloves makes sense, when available. Not mandatory - just a sensible choice.
3. Start by cleaning the cap area of the distilled water container using an alcohol wipe.
4. A small volume of distilled water fills the syringe first. Through steady pressure, the liquid moves by way of a 0.22-micron barrier. Into either a clean beaker or sealed container it flows afterward. Anything unwanted gets left behind due to the filtration step.
5. A single syringe is used to measure benzyl alcohol. This liquid then moves into water that has already been filtered. The transfer happens carefully, keeping steps distinct.
6. Close the small bottle first. After that, a light shaking motion blends the contents inside.
7. A small tag showing when it was filled goes on the container. Kept away from light and heat, it stays stable. A refrigerator works - though warmth would spoil it, cold is not mandatory.



Why The Filter Matters

Benzyl alcohol comes unsterilized straight from the source. Even if labeled as distilled, water isn’t guaranteed germ-free. Only after passing through a 0.22-micron filter does safety become likely. Without that step, infection risks rise sharply - abscesses may follow.

Do not skip the filter.



Storage and Shelf Life

A single sealed sterile vial of homemade BAC water typically remains usable for half a year to one full year. Storing it in the refrigerator helps maintain stability. After breaking the seal to extract liquid, finish its contents within four weeks. This timeline matches what is advised for store-bought versions.

Batches work better when tiny - think 10 to 30 milliliters. A full liter? Only if patients line up outside your door. Otherwise, stick to drops, not jugs.



Cost Breakdown

Item Cost Uses
Distilled water gallon $2 400+ vials
Benzyl alcohol comes in a 100-milliliter container priced at eighteen dollars. More than one hundred vials are available. Quantity is noted before cost in this listing
Sterile vials 10 pack $10 10 vials
0.22um filters 10 pack $15 10 batches

Each of the first ten vials cost about four dollars and fifty cents, totaling forty-five dollars. Priced individually, they run far below commercial rates. Most market options range between ten and fifteen dollars each. The initial purchase offers a noticeably lower rate per unit.

Once supplies arrive, every vial runs just a few cents. Benzyl alcohol stays usable indefinitely. Water does too.

Where to Buy

Pure water can be found at most food markets. Shops that sell everyday items usually stock it near beverages.
Get benzyl alcohol through online marketplaces or scientific suppliers. Look up “benzyl alcohol 99.9 percent” to find high-purity options. While availability varies, major retail platforms often carry it. Alternatively, specialized chemistry vendors list it under research chemicals. Purity matters most - check product details carefully before deciding. Though packaging differs, concentration should remain consistent across trusted sources.
One option for sterile vials is online marketplaces like Amazon. Another possibility includes specialty suppliers that focus on peptides. A useful search term might be “sterile empty vial” to locate suitable containers.
A tiny filter, just 0.22 microns, can be found on Amazon or through scientific suppliers. Try looking up “syringe filter PES 0.22um” online. One option works well for clean liquid prep - this size traps small particles effectively. Availability varies by region, yet most researchers get them without trouble. Though not expensive, shipping might add cost depending on locations

Most people stick to old habits. For one payment of forty-five dollars, skip buying bottled water forever.
 
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Reactions: lichtfromverse
Nice ai slop

It’s better to get a reverse osmosis filter and do it all in a closed system

If you are brewing your bac in a fucking water glass it’s over for you
 
  • Ugh..
  • WTF
Reactions: Newday*V3 and TomoIsLearning
Nice ai slop

It’s better to get a reverse osmosis filter and do it all in a closed system

If you are brewing your bac in a fucking water glass it’s over for you
Not over if you sterilize the glass and use a filter. People have been doing it for years. Yeah a closed system is cleaner but not everyone has lab equipment at home. The 0.22um filter catches anything bad. It's fine.:lasereyes::lasereyes:
 
Nice ai slop

It’s better to get a reverse osmosis filter and do it all in a closed system

If you are brewing your bac in a fucking water glass it’s over for you
Are you retarded
 
  • +1
Reactions: TomoIsLearning

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