Your customers, or Boots? If yours, with just a superficial bacterial infection showing, Boots may still have wanted them to refer back to you, and/or see a GP, to exclude toxaemia - otherwise it's an over the counter general purpose chemical product (no different to chlorine bleach in that sense), as well as a pharmaceutical product not subject to prescription. The only regulation affecting it I can quickly find on Google, is an EU ban on offering it for sale specifically for whitening teeth.Badger inkslinger wrote:yeah but hydrogen peroxide says on it use for mouthwash ect, iv had a few people try to buy it in our local boots but they wouldn't sell it them as its some form of rule or something? just what customers have saidRon Miel wrote:If you're buying it to de-mould tent fabric (any fabric), don't hesitate to say so if you are asked. It's a well accepted use, and chemists will not have any problem with it.Badger inkslinger wrote:this had already been said but just to let you know, when buying hydrogen peroxide, dont tell the people behind the counter what you want it for, sometimes they can be arsey if your not using it for what it says on the bottle, as i know from being a body piercer myself it is basicaly a drying agent, we recommend it to our customers who get keloids around their piercings, (due to lack of care or quite a bad knock) it dries up the bad bacteria and dead skin and sha-tttingall sorted, worked for my bongo, as i have lots of the stuff, (not the stuff you die hair with) haha
hope that helped
Savvy chemists though would report any large scale purchasing to their local MI5 person, as concentrated H2O2 has other applications we should not discuss here - let's just say it was the "T-stoff" component, mixed with "C-stoff", a methanol compound, to propel Nazi Germany's Me 163 rocket fighter even faster than a V6 Bongo. How did you get hold of a large quantity?
Q.) How do you refuel an Me 163, Fritz?
A.) Very very carefully

