sexta-feira, 25 de março de 2016

Alpha F1 – Free Trial Testosterone Booster

Alpha F1 Review – Should You Try It?

Alpha F1 is a new testosterone booster that recently popped up online as part of a suspiciously good “free trial”. Will Alpha F1 actually work as advertised to raise testosterone? Let’s find out.

What is Alpha F1?

Alpha F1 is a testosterone boosting supplement that promises to offer the following benefits:

Increase muscle mass
-Cut recovery times
-Improve metabolic efficiency

Like many other bodybuilding supplements we’ve recently seen online, Alpha F1 is available exclusively through a free trial. You can’t buy the supplement straight-up: you’ll need to pay $5 for that “free trial”. Then, 14 days after you order, you’re required to pay the full price of $89.87.

With a total cost of around $100, Alpha F1 is one of the world’s most expensive testosterone boosting supplements. What makes it worth this high price tag? Let’s look at how the supplement claims to work.

How Does Alpha F1 Work?

Alpha F1 claims to be “scientifically designed to provide a number of benefits to you, right away, with the positive results growing each month.”

Once you get past that oddly-worded description, you’ll learn that Alpha F1 is a simple blend of just four relatively weak doses of ingredients, including:

-LJ100 Eurycoma Longifolia Extract
-Zinc
-Vitamin B1
-Vitamin B6

There are just 20 servings of the above ingredients in each container of Alpha F1, so you don’t even get a monthly supply for your $89.87 price tag.

We’ll take a closer look at the dosages of these ingredients below.

Alpha F1 Ingredients

Alpha-F1-Ingredients

Alpha F1’s official website and product packaging lists the following ingredients:

As mentioned above, there are just 20 small servings of Alpha F1 in each container, and the total weight of the active ingredients in each capsule is just 90mg – which is surprisingly small for a nutritional supplement. Typically, average-sized nutritional supplement capsules come with doses between 400mg to 800mg.

Of course, that’s not necessarily a bad thing if the ingredients are included in the right amounts.

Unfortunately, that doesn’t appear to be the case with Alpha F1.

Zinc, for example, is typically taken in doses of 25 to 45mg when used to raise testosterone levels.

Some people have also recorded benefits when taking up to 100mg of zinc per day for 2 to 4 months. That makes the 10mg of zinc in each capsule of Alpha F1 (20mg in each serving) look relatively tiny.

LJ100 Eurycoma Longifolia extract, on the other hand, is a patented formula containing tongkat ali, also known as Longjack. This herb has been used since ancient times as a natural aphrodisiac, although it hasn’t demonstrated significant results in many modern studies.

As Examine.com explains, there’s a “lack of evidence for testosterone boosting” at any dosage. Nevertheless, those who do take this herb to raise testosterone typically take 200 to 300mg once or twice per day. So once again, the 100mg dose we see here is surprisingly tiny.

Meanwhile, the B vitamins – including vitamins B1 and B6 – are popular energy boosters found in energy drinks and other stimulant-packed formulas. The dose in Alpha F1 is best-described as a moderate dose – it’s not very powerful or very weak either.

The bad news for Alpha F1 is that B vitamin and zinc supplements can be found for under $10 for a larger monthly supply than what you find in this supplement – so there’s little evidence that Alpha F1 is worth its ludicrously high price tag.

Alpha F1 Pricing

Alpha F1’s manufacturer has been accused of operating under a shady pricing policy. That pricing policy advertises one price upfront, only to charge you another higher price 2 weeks later.

You pay $4.95 for shipping and handling today. You’ll need to enter a credit card number to pay that fee.

14 calendar days after you first ordered your trial, you’ll be charged $89.87. Then, 30 days after you first ordered your trial, you’ll be charged $89.87 again and receive a separate order of Alpha F1.

You’ll continue receiving orders of Alpha F1 every month until you cancel.

Ultimately, none of this information is disclosed to the consumer upfront. You’ll need to read the fine print of the ordering form or the terms and conditions. The manufacturer appears to have deliberately hidden this information while still providing just enough information to cover themselves legally.

After all, you checked the box saying you read the terms and conditions.

Who Makes Alpha F1?

Alpha F1 is made by a Utah-based nutritional supplement manufacturer that never lists its name. That manufacturer doesn’t even list the location of its manufacturing facility, its factory, its ingredient sources, or other important information.

Instead, all we have is one phone number and one post office box. Typically, reputable companies are eager to provide more information than that.

The address, by the way, is:

1812 W. Sunset Blvd #34

St. George, Utah 84770

That address isn’t some big company headquarters: it’s a post office box in a UPS Store.

You can contact the company by phone at 1-888-819-9957.

The company has been linked to a handful of similar bodybuilding supplements in the past, including Nitro X and Xtreme Nitro, both of which are preworkouts. They also both came bundled with the same sort of free trial scam we see with Alpha F1.

Should You Use Alpha F1 to Raise Testosterone Levels?

The only ingredients in Alpha F1 that appear to have any effect on the human body are zinc and B vitamins.

The largest ingredient, tongkat ali, has two problems: first, it hasn’t been shown to raise testosterone in any major studies to date; and second, the dose in Alpha F1 isn’t nearly as high as people normally take (100mg compared to an average daily dose of 400mg to 600mg).

Making things much worse for Alpha F1 is that the manufacturer refuses to disclose complete pricing information upfront. And, they never list the real company address or manufacturing location – just a post office box and phone number.

Ultimately, there’s little reason to spend $10 on a supplement like Alpha F1. At a price of $95, Alpha F1 appears to be little more than a testosterone booster supplement scam.



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