Hello, I need specific advice on how people find procedures for reactions. I learned a whole lot of reactions in organic chemistry, and there is a whole bunch of mechanisms and other peripheral information written down in my organic chemistry textbook (Wade), but no specific procedures. Nothing they have you study in organic chemistry class tells you how to find the procedure used to perform one of the reactions you were asked to memorize. For instance, I want to do something just really basic (no pun intended). Condensation reaction of an Aldehyde and Ammonia to an imine. I know it's an established reaction, I know it works, I know it's been done a million times. But I have no procedure for HOW to do it. Obviously I am not going to just mix chemicals and heat them willy nilly. I want to have some procedure look at. So I tried the reaction search feature at SciFinder Scholar. All it comes up with are "This is too general" and when I make it specific enough for the program to handle, I get a whole bunch of complicated articles where the structures are apparently so complicated that half of the images are not even showing up. Ive tried restricting the results to before 1970 (I imagine the reaction was discovered a long time ago). Nothing. Ive tried mapping atoms and establishing specific R groups. Nothing. When you want to perform an easy, basic, established reaction, what resource do you use in order to get a procedure for that reaction? It is not enough for me to know that reactions exist and why they happen. I want to know the methods people generally use to perform those reactions. And I want to do that not just for this particular condensation reaction, but for any reaction I come across in my organic chemistry textbook. Once I get practice searching for the really fundamental reactions, then I will feel more confident in using the various tools (be it SciFinder or something else) to look at more complicated reactions and to apply the knowledge generally. *delete me*