A COA is a lab report on a batch of peptides. Here is what the label on the vial never tells you.
A vendor pays a lab to test their peptide so they can hand you a certificate. The lab runs exactly what it is hired to run, and it reports the results straight. All 7 checks are always on the menu. The catch is that the vendor decides how many to order, and plenty of them buy just enough to look legitimate, then hope you never ask about the rest. That gap is not the lab cutting corners. It is the manufacturer.
The 7 gates, in plain language
A machine reads the sample and matches it to the label. If this one fails, ignore everything else on the page.
How much peptide is actually in there versus what the label claims. You want it close to full. A little over means you got more.
The famous 99 percent number. It is real, and it matters. It is also just one of the 7.
Bacteria can be gone and still leave poison behind. That is why it gets its own line, even on a vial that looks clean. A vendor who skips it is skipping a real risk.
Did anything grow in the tested sample. You want a flat no.
Lead or factory residue that hitched a ride in from the raw materials. A germ-free vial can still fail here, so it is a separate check.
Whether more than one vial was tested. One good vial does not vouch for the whole batch. This is the gate almost nobody checks.
And you do not have to read it alone
Knowing the 7 gates is the mindset. Running them is the tool. Point TR8CE at any lab report and it reads all 7 for you in ten seconds. Snap the page, or scan its code, and it tells you what passed, what fell short, and which gates the vendor never paid to run, in plain words, in your hand.
Grade a COA in ten seconds
All seven gates, read for you, in plain language. On your phone.
Open the graderWhat this does not support
- A COA is a report on a tested sample, not a promise that every vial in a batch is identical.
- Reading a report is reading a document. It is not medical advice, and it is not a safety clearance.
- A clean report does not make a compound approved, and it does not make it safe to use.
- Research compounds are not for human consumption. Consult a qualified professional.