the posted pill here:
http://www.pharmer.org/node/6431
is a 10 mg diazepam generic called "Apaurin". these pills are perfect quality. they are produced in some state of former yugoslavia and they are on the market in serbia, bosnia, ex-chechoslovakia, as far as i know. they are made by "KRKA Slovenia"
hope this helps,
greets - chem
The best diazepam bar none,inc Roche.
The worst Diazepam has to be Mylan hands down.
I have been taking APAURIN for many months now and find them to be the best generic diazepam, just as effective as ROCHE, which I think you just have to pay for the name, thats all. This is my opinion as well as others and I am also not a qualified pharmacist but have tried many other generic valium.
Stevieboy
Hi there everyone, in my opinion as a diazepam addict, I have tried lots of diferent kinds, I still say APAURIN are the best quality valium going around, and you can get them at a reasonably cheap price. They originate from Serbia, I never realised I had already posted a post about them, sorry for repeating myself,
Stevieboy
Stevie boy,
Bo'ness gone to your head? APAURIN do NOT originate in Serbia at all. They are made by Krka-EU in Krka, Slovenija. As are LEXAURIN, the same company's brand of bromazepam. I take issue with the assertion that they are generic; they are brand-name.
Right enough, they are the finest diazepam produced. Much better than Roche Valium or any other brand I have tried. Closest in quality would probably be the Honduran brand DIAZAM by Laboratorios Karnel.
LEXAURIN are not up to the quality of APAURIN; to find the best bromazepam, find somewhere that sells LEXILIUM by Alkaloid/Roche of Skopje, Macedonija. Again they beat the Roche product (Lexotanil) hands down. I would rate Lexaurin as being about the equal of Lexotanil, second or third best to Lexilium.
Apaurin are sold across a large region of Europe and are, as somebody said, the perfect pill. If I require diazepam, then there is only one word that comes to mind, and that is 'Apaurin', unlike most Americans wh would automatically say 'Valium' for some odd reason. Probably because they use the word as interchangeable with 'diazepam'.
I also agree that I have never yet had an American diazepam that is any good whatsoever. I agree too that the green 10mg Mylan generic is without a doubt the very worst it has been my misfortune to come across. Worse than Panfarma, and that is saying something! Even the diazepam made by TEVA-US is garbage, yet the UK TEVA makes some of the best codeine phosphate on the market; they do not make benzos to my knowledge.
A quick return to Mylan - I once had several 75mcg Mylan fentanyl patches and they did practically nothing for my pain, yet as soon as I put on a Durogesic D-trans patch, I suffered no pain at all.
APAURIN is nothing short of the finest diazepam made. BUT NOT IN SERBIA!
"NEVER ingest anything unless you are 100% sure what it is."
Pigpen,
SURELY you can't think that Serbian diazepam is much good? There is only one brand from Serbia that I would happily buy and use regularly and that is BENSEDIN by ICN Galenika. Panfarma are absolute trash, but Habitpharm are reasonable, though feeling more like 7.5mg than 10mg.
If you want the best bar none, then take a short trip across the border to Slovenija, where you will find that they make APAURIN, which definitely IS the best diazepam bar none.
Whilst Bensedin is perfectly respectable and will do the job, nothing made in Serbia comes even close to Apaurin. It even outsells all Serbian diazepam put together within Serbia! Serbs aren't atriotoc when it comes to their diazepam habits - Apaurin is the best seller there as in many other countries. It even sells a LOT in Russia.
No, the best diazepam is definitely Slovenijan. No doubt. Apaurin by Krka-EU.
"NEVER ingest anything unless you are 100% sure what it is."
Hey GAUCHO. It was yourself once in the street that told me APAURIN came from SERBIA. I suppose I should have done my Homework first before posting, eh?!!! TA-TA
Stevieboy
nah'...the german blue STADAs are the best, but aren't available at iops (there might be a few with ridiculous prices)
p:
ALL of Mylans benzos are no good!
I suffer with a high tolerance for benzo's but these are top quality and everyone I know who has tried them thinks the same, never heard anyone complain about the Apaurine make of diazepam 10mg.
editmod3
They were a brand I stumbled upon years back, and fell in love with them. They beat any foreign made 'Roche' hands down...that 10 Roche stamp has probably gone thru so many hands/labs since the 50s/60s and I dont give a &*&? if they have that name on them, Ive never ever had any decent foreign roche 10mg valium.
Auparin is the best! 10 full mg's of a finely made diazepam that is top notch! Next up, I'll settle for Bensedine, very good, and then perhaps Terpia out of Romania.
The N. American gens sound hit or miss....I've always wondered what a K cut Valium would be like. anybody ever try?
It would be like klonopin. K cut is clonazapam.
"... just as effective as ROCHE which I think you just have to pay for the name, thats all..."
If i may correct you, that is not all. Roche is not a generic producer who just needs to buy a ton of 99,9 % pharmaceutical grade diazepam from a bulk producing chemical company and then press it into little pills. Roche is not only a manufacturer, but also a developer of new substances, which costs them millions and millions of dollars/euri/pounds/whatever.
And then there is no guarantee that the substance they developed maybe after many years of research and testing will be licensed to put it on the market.
And if the new substance is put on the market, but within a year or two thousands of consumers suffer from badest side effects that were not known until then, who has the loss? Right, the developing company, not those companies that produce generics after the patent for producing and then selling the substance expired 15 years later.
Hey! Lets go ride bikes! ^^^^^^
lol jk, that was kinda outta the blue.
But yeah, has anyone ever had the original v cut USA Valium?
I still agree that Auparin is the finest, after all I was the first to try it here and post up some nice pictures of it!
I have no experience with any benzodiazipines made from this company but I do have a quick question I have been taking clonazepam for about 2 years now and before I was on alprazolam I think the klonopin is much better due to it not to be as addicting and just a better benzo for my type of problem.. I also like the halflife on them they seem to last until the next day if i take one a night time.. but my question is I have only tried two manufactures for the clonazepam first was purpac and it was not very good at all so I went to another pharmacy and got caraco brand and they seem to be much better.. Has anyone had any experience with any better brands of klonopin then these two manufacturers?
i have been on klonipin for the last 5 years and at first i thought they were great for my panis attacks i have only got ahold of the roche brands the majority from mexico i just started getting a hold of the pakistan ones and they give the mexicans a run for the money.i live in u.s.a. and if i could get the brand name rouches with the k cut in the middle same with the rouch v,s with the v cut out they are quality top shelf but redicuously expensive and medicaid only pays for generic.but getting back to the pins they take so long to kick in especially if you get panic attacks i am trying to switch to xanax,they are quick acting but they are short acting,they say you have to take xanax every 4 hrs. to maintain constant blood levels where klonipin has such a longer half life when i run ot of klonipin after a 3 week jag they will actully buy me 3 or 4 days untill i order or make it to doctors office amazing
After making these photos of Auparin for this site waaay back in 07, technically earlier, (but thats another story), it seems many people here really like these. I thought it was just me who noticed their superiority. I have been scripted noticeably weaker, or almost as good diazepam up here in North America....but still not even close to these Auparin.
I read that short changed diazepam pills are abundant and some says "pills from India are weak". I think if 1mg was passed on as 10mg, then users would notice it subjectively, but how do you go about identifying sneakier scammers, who would do press 8mg into a pill marked 10mg deliberately?
8mg vs 10mg would be nearly impossible to tell subjectively.
I know that there are laboratory analytical assay test procedure, however, that is not something most people are able to do.
Now for Xanax, I don't know how useful this will be for people here, but the UV spectroscopy for alprazolam is:

Yeah, I'm not 100% sure the meaning behind the above poster, but thanks for posting.
The diazepam discussed here is called Auparin and its a name brand made by a reputable company called KRKA within the European Union. So I believe each pill is a full 10mg, and the filler/binder seems to work very well in making the diazepam so effective!
Believe me I've tried "roche" stamed products from india and pakistan, and unmarked pharmacy generic diazepam, that are specially made for one pharmacy in the UK and the roche valium were at most 6-7mg.....
## "Has anyone had any experience with any better brands of klonopin then these two manufacturers?"
I only could recommend Klonopin (same stuff called "Rivotril" in other countries, also
made by or under license of Roche)
or the german product "Antelepsin" made by Desitin®, also producing 0.5 mg and 2.0 mg pills.
In my opinion the Antelepsin even are better than the Roche brand. But quite expensive, if
you got a script and have to pay for the medication, it is ~ 37.- €urodollars for 100 x 2 mg, no
matter which Brand you choose.
I once had panfarma Lorazepam, and i was totally satisfied with these.



thanks so much for the help!
we will try to verify it through the manufacture.
your insight as to "who,what" ect ect is greatly appreciated.
all thoughts and opinions expressed are those of my own and should not be mistaken for medical advice. i am not a doctor nor a pharmacist. all medical questions should be answered by a licensed pharmacist, doctor, or primary care manager.