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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsLSD Residue On 1960s Synth Sends Repair Tech On Accidental "Trip" [Watch]
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide, more commonly known amongst the cool kids as LSD, has been the culprit of countless wild adventures since its psychedelic properties were accidentally discovered by Swiss chemist Albert Hofman in 1938. One of the more recent stories involving the hallucinogenic drug brings back memories of the San Francisco music scene of the 1960s, when musicians and adventurous minds alike would use LSD for liberation from the squares of normal society.
According to a fascinating new report from San Francisco-based news outlet KPIX 5, one of their own Broadcast Operations Managers recently stumbled upon a vintage Buchla Model 100 synthesizer. While attempting to repair it, the technician unexpectedly ingested a dose of LSD from residue which had apparently remained on the digital instrument from many years ago.
Related: Read Butch Trucks Acid-Fueled Story About When ABB & Grateful Dead Members Played NYE In 1973
Last year, a technician manager named Eliot Curtis had volunteered to repair a vintage synth owned by Cal State East Bay. The instrument was initially brought into the universitys ownership by a pair of avant-garde musicians who taught in the schools music department back in the 1960s. The synth eventually fell out of favor with the curriculum and was stored in a cool, dark closet where it was left for decadesallowing for the ideal conditions for keeping LSDs potency intact over a long period of time.
While attempting to repair the old piece of music equipment, Curtis discovered a crystalline-like residue stuck under one of the knobs and attempted to remove it using his fingers. It turns out that residue was leftover LSD from the bygone era, and within an hour Curtis had begun to feel the effects of the mind-altering substance. What began as tingling in his fingers eventually stuck around for nine hours as Curtis continued to feel how the drug was impacting his nervous system. Fun times, right?
https://liveforlivemusic.com/news/synth-repair-technician-lsd/
CentralMass
(15,265 posts)orangecrush
(19,555 posts)FirstLight
(13,360 posts)That is definitely some strong stuff, that it can have that effect 50+ years later!
And the worst part is that you can't just "make it stop"
crud
(619 posts)You have to plan your day around it, kinda like going to the amusement park or beach without leaving the house.
orangecrush
(19,555 posts)Was common on good stuff like Orange Sunshine.
Count about 1 to 2 hours going up, and more for landing.
All phases were interesting.
Blue Owl
(50,374 posts)walkingman
(7,616 posts)orangecrush
(19,555 posts)Good source
walkingman
(7,616 posts)RFCalifornia
(440 posts)orangecrush
(19,555 posts)Boxerfan
(2,533 posts)He made a few large posters entirely soaked in LSD-or so the story goes.
If just kept as a collectable poster the same conditions might allow it to stay fully potent. I know my Mom had some sheet acid she kept in her wallet for years before we stole some. It had not lost anything potency wise.
orangecrush
(19,555 posts)Since long after the statute of limitations ran out.
I imagine storage conditions would be the determining factor.
madville
(7,410 posts)I couldnt imagine getting hit with it unexpectedly 30 years later though lol
orangecrush
(19,555 posts)If you never did it before and had a very straight mindset
Response to madville (Reply #15)
CentralMass This message was self-deleted by its author.
Mr.Bill
(24,292 posts)he owes someone a dollar.
It was up to 3 by 1973
Mr.Bill
(24,292 posts)When you considered the food you wouldn't be interested in eating for the next 12 hours, it was a break even deal.
orangecrush
(19,555 posts)Never held more than what I needed.
Wicked Blue
(5,832 posts)Haven't had any for almost 50 years.