Peptide Guide

Why Peptide Blends Are a Bad Idea

Blends look convenient, but convenience often comes at the cost of control, stability, and clean research design.

The main problem: less control

When multiple compounds are pre-combined, it becomes harder to adjust one variable without changing all of them. That is bad for clean observation.

  • Different peptides may have different preferred handling conditions.
  • pH and stability needs may not match.
  • Ideal research timing may differ by compound.
  • Measurement flexibility is reduced.

Better approach

Separate vials usually give better control. You can track each compound, handle it according to its own profile, and avoid forcing one schedule or concentration onto everything.

Blends save a step. Separate compounds preserve control.