I've seen a report somewhere else (I forget where) about a subject gaining strength while cutting from 13 to about 9% at 190# (caliper measured, fwiw) with 30-40mgs of Havoc, no subjective side effects. It was said that it generally took a lot of any substance to get a response out of this subject -- For reference, no great advantage, plenty of hassle with 250mg TE/week for 12 weeks, would probably double it next time, didn't respond much to previous experiments with HD50, or real OT at recommended doses (though good results the first time), but Havoc was definitely worthwhile. Tried SD at 10/20mg once, but abandoned due to unlivable side effects.
Would guess that var is hands down the best substance in this class in terms of strength increases, based on reports. Same subject mentioned firming/hardening on var, though no appreciable change in weight or size on 80mgs, FREAKISH strength gains, sustained only while taking the substance though, quickly evaporated afterwards.
For my own part, as a person who's curious about how the body works, I'd really like to know what causes the later effect, as it seems to have some cause other than spontaneous manifestation of slabs of muscle. If one looks at some of these substance profiles on the Internet, there's always a reference to the following explanation:
QUOTE
Oxandrolone does not increase strength through androgenic stimulation, at least not primarily. It stimulates the formation of phosphocreatine, a body compound that can replenish ATP (adenosine tri-phosphate) , the main energy currency of the living organism. This gives an incredible increase in short term anaerobic performance, the type needed for explosive action such as sprinting and lifting weight.
Don't know who's quoting who, but they always say something like that. I've never seen a source to substantiate this claim, other than the many 'profiles' which effectively say the same thing. Can "stimulating the formation of phosphocreatine" really result in that kind of rapid and enormous strength increase, or is that BS? If so, are there other, non-androgenic means to encourage this? Certainly we're not talking about the sort of strength gains on might expect with creatine supplementation.