Tren Mix 250 – C4 Special Blend

$65.00

One of the most popular steroids in professional bodybuilding.The perfect steroid for the professional aesthetic bodybuilder.

Description

Hormone content: Trenbolone Enanthate 100mg + Trenbolone Acetate 150mg
Classification: Anabolic/Androgenic Steroid
Presentation: 10mL vial
Dose: 250mg/mL
Water Retention: None
Aromatization: None
Half Life: 7 days

Trenbolone Enanthate (Tren Mix 250)

In Tren Mix 250, Trenbolone enanthate, known by the nickname Trenabol, is a synthetic and injected anabolic–androgenic steroid (AAS) and a derivative of nandrolone which was never marketed. It is the C17β enanthate ester and a long-acting prodrug of trenbolone. Trenbolone enanthate was never approved for medical or veterinary use but is used in scientific research and has been sold on the internet black market as a designer steroid for bodybuilders and athletes.

Trenbolone is indicated for treatment of severe cachexia resulting from AIDS, severe illness or unexplained medical reasons. This steroid was originally synthesized for the use in cattle, however it has fast become one of the most popular steroids in professional bodybuilding.

This particular ester of Trenbolone is a slow acting longer ester and has a half life of approximately seven days. It has all the same benefits to the Acetate ester (builds quality hard and lean muscle mass, increases strength dramatically and decreases body fat), however it’s a slower acting version and considered to be a stronger ester. Again it is the perfect steroid for the professional aesthetic bodybuilder.

Trenbolone Acetate (Tren Mix 250)

Trenbolone acetate the other component of Tren Mix 250, is sold under brand names such as Finajet and Finaplix among others, is an androgen and anabolic steroid (AAS) medication which is used in veterinary medicine, specifically to increase the profitability of livestock by promoting muscle growth in cattle. It is given by injection into muscle.

Trenbolone acetate was discovered in 1963 and was introduced for veterinary use in the early 1970s