NeoNewfie
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Hi everybody. I'm a longtime lurker, first-time poster.
Like many on these boards, I am interested in trying ecdysterones at doses similar to those recommended by the existing literature from Russia. If 5mg per kg is the proven dose for anabolic enhancement, then someone my size requires 500mg per day to notice anything positive. And, like many on these boards, I am foiled in this by the sheer costliness of using E-Bol, Ecdysten, Omnibolic, and other products in worthwhile quantities. Rhaponticum is too expensive, turkesterone too elusive; and nothing else, we are told, actually works.
Enter, or rather, EXIT Xyience. Nowadays you see their products, once so overpriced, going for pennies just about everywhere. XTest is one of these; it includes as its main ingredients extracts of the plants Anjuga Turkestanica and Rhaponticum. I remember thinking that at the original price, XTest and its non-standardized extracts hardly seemed appealing. Their ecdysterone content, after all, is probably only around 5%. But now that XTest is so easy to find at $10 a bottle, I'm wondering if this is the solution to the problem of unaffordable ecdysterone. At these prices, most people could afford to triple or even quadruple the recommended serving, thereby getting a good amount, and also a great range, of ecdysterones, and from the very sources the Russian scientists used in their original studies.
Before I stock up on a supplement I so strenuously ignored when it first came out, I thought the many people on this forum more informed than myself in supplement science might have some advice!
Like many on these boards, I am interested in trying ecdysterones at doses similar to those recommended by the existing literature from Russia. If 5mg per kg is the proven dose for anabolic enhancement, then someone my size requires 500mg per day to notice anything positive. And, like many on these boards, I am foiled in this by the sheer costliness of using E-Bol, Ecdysten, Omnibolic, and other products in worthwhile quantities. Rhaponticum is too expensive, turkesterone too elusive; and nothing else, we are told, actually works.
Enter, or rather, EXIT Xyience. Nowadays you see their products, once so overpriced, going for pennies just about everywhere. XTest is one of these; it includes as its main ingredients extracts of the plants Anjuga Turkestanica and Rhaponticum. I remember thinking that at the original price, XTest and its non-standardized extracts hardly seemed appealing. Their ecdysterone content, after all, is probably only around 5%. But now that XTest is so easy to find at $10 a bottle, I'm wondering if this is the solution to the problem of unaffordable ecdysterone. At these prices, most people could afford to triple or even quadruple the recommended serving, thereby getting a good amount, and also a great range, of ecdysterones, and from the very sources the Russian scientists used in their original studies.
Before I stock up on a supplement I so strenuously ignored when it first came out, I thought the many people on this forum more informed than myself in supplement science might have some advice!