6-Fluoro-AMT
6-Fluoro-α-methyltryptamine (6-fluoro-AMT, 6F-AMT) is a tryptamine derivative related to compounds such as alpha-methyltryptamine and 5-MeO-AMT, which has been sold as a designer drug. Animal tests showed it to be somewhat less active than AMT or 5-fluoro-AMT,[1] but it was nevertheless allegedly manufactured and sold from the laboratory operated by Leonard Pickard and Gordon Todd Skinner, who described 6-fluoro-AMT as "a beast".[2]
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Formula | C11H13FN2 |
Molar mass | 192.237 g·mol−1 |
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In interviews, Skinner stated that he first began to experiment with 6-fluoro-AMT in the early 1980s by giving it to high school friends. Their experiences made him cautious about the appropriate dosage amounts, which he says ranges from 25mg to 75mg [Skinner weighed about 250lbs at the time of his own bioassay]. Skinner said that it is a long-lasting psychedelic with significantly more time distortion, and felt the drug was enhanced by combining it with ALD-52.[3]
References
- Kalir A, Szara S (November 1963). "Synthesis and Pharmacological Activity of Fluorinated Tryptamine Derivatives". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 6 (6): 716–9. doi:10.1021/jm00342a019. PMID 14184932.
- Morris H (2010). "Life is a Cosmic Giggle on the Breath of the Universe. A Tour of Gordon Todd Skinner's Subterranean LSD Palace". Vice Magazine. Archived from the original on 2014-10-13. Retrieved 2017-08-23.
- "Unusual Analogues: Drugs Used by Gordon Todd Skinner". thislandpress.com. This Land Press. Retrieved 8 April 2016.