@U_Stormcrow Thanks for making this feed calculator available. How did you arrive at the reference values for the methionine, lysine, threonine and tryptophan levels in the various components? I've looked at both feedipedia and feedtables and am not entirely certain what units you're using. The numbers seem very different from both the % protein and g/16gN numbers. Most of my feed formulation experience is with horses, so I'm used to just working with methionine and lysine as %. Or is there something about chickens that's different?
My target numbers (that is, the levels I desire) are based on my readings into studies of various (production) chicken breeds/lines, but the
NRCS numbers make a good (if old) jumping off point.
Almost all of my numbers come from Feedipedia, but they require math to arrive at.
I'll demonstrate (or you could look at the formulas). Let's take "
Standard Oats" since for some reason they've suddenly become popular with folks that know next to nothing about chicken nutrition, but want to make their own feed anyways...
Screenshot:
If you look at Methionine, it says 1.8 Average, expressed as a % of protein. And looking up at protein, you see its expressed as 11% of DM. 1.8 multiplied by .11 = .198 (which is actually 0.198% of dry matter). The minimum target (from NCRS and others) is at least 0.3% in your final feed.
This actually reveals a problem with my spreadsheet - it doesn't correct for "as fed", accounting for the moisture content of the feed. In the case of standard oats, Feedipedia found them to be (on average) 87.1% dry matter, so I'd need to multiply the .198 by 87.1% for a final ("as fed") Met level in the average standard oat of 0.1725%
It would take adding one more column and altering a formula or five, I've just not gotten around to it. Since most dry ingredients seek a level around 90% dry matter, mentally adjusting the outputs by 0.9 when it matters (rarely) to get a rough estimate is adequate.
Now in other cases, see for instance,
Soybean meal, the amino acids are listed as g/16gN.
That is pretty close to the same thing as % protein, written differently, for reasons that have to do with chemistry (and more averages).