There are a LOT of variables here. I don't know where to start.
We use "one hour per drink" as the baseline for alcohol to clear your system. A drink is a 12-ounce beer, a 5-ounce wine or an ounce of distilled spirits. A 40 of Colt 45 is NOT one drink, m'kay? So assuming you didn't have the four beers for breakfast, you should be okay.
We also must assume here that you're going to be tested for alcohol. Most drug tests don't look for alcohol--why would they? It's a legal product not sold by prescription. If you're being tested for alcohol, it's because you've got an alcohol problem. Right now the hip, hot alcohol test of the moment is for ethyl glucoronide, which sees alcohol metabolites for 96 hours after you last drink. If you're being EtG tested, you've had it. If they just want to see if you're drunk now, you're fine (once again, assuming you didn't drink the four beers the morning of the test).
Alcohol metabolizes in the body approx 1 drink a hour, so if you start at 9PM have 5 until midnight, by 5am you should be sober, if not earlier, but it depends on persons weight and other factors, best advice if ur getting tested the next day don't drink
its not likely
yep.
No, it can't.
If you drink six beers on a Saturday night, it is highly unlikely that it would show up in your system on Wednesday morning. Alcohol usually leaves your system within 8 to 12 hours depending on how your body metabolizes it.
Alcohol only stays in they system for about 12 hours depending on how much you have had to drink. Alcohol breaks down in the body and makes it difficult to detect through urine. Alcohol is detected through blood alcohol level more accurately. Alcohol is processed by the liver at a rate of one ounce of pure alcohol in one hour. After that period, they can only test for the metabolites of alcohol. One once of alcohol is equal to one beer. Answer: Not Likely, but drink lots of water anyway to clense your system.
A serving of wine is five ounces of 13-percent-alcohol wine. If that's what you mean by a drink, you'll be fine. OTOH, if a "drink" of wine is a whole bottle of Cisco (18-percent alcohol--a 12-ounce bottle contains about two ounces of alcohol) you would NOT be fine the next day.
Alcohol is gone in a short time, but its metabolites can linger for about five days. Most urine tests are for metabolites.
No. Alcohol does show up in urine screening tests, however; depending on how much alcohol was absorbed into one's system, it doesn't take more than 2 days to dissipate. Even if you had been 3 times the legal limit, BAC of about .24, the alcohol would leave your system in roughly 16 hours. well put
the five letter game show you tell me next time
Theoretically, the amount of alcohol in a non-alcoholic beer (actually such beers must contain less than one-half of one percent alcohol) should be metabolized in fewer than ten minutes. Therefore, the consumer's breath should register for no alcohol on an alcohol breath test after that period of time has elapsed.
Can you show me how to draw an alcohol lamp?
Taking it that one beer is one pint that would be twelve units of alcohol. With normal LFt's (liver function and Gama GT) your body should dispose of one unit of alcohol per hour therfore you should process six beers in twelve hours. This varies from person to person and of course depends on the strength of beer as a result this formula is a generality and not to be taken as fact for legal reasons.
most def
Buzz Beer