What this tool solves
Mixed vials can make a single syringe draw represent more than one compound. The split calculator keeps the syringe mark the same, then breaks the total dose into each compound share.
Split compound math template
Open a 50/50 split-compound calculator template for mixed-vial math, syringe marks, and per-compound dose breakdowns.
Free CJC ipamorelin split calculator for BAC water, dose volume, and U-100 syringe mark math.
Example calculation
This split-vial example keeps the syringe mark calculation separate from the compound split. The total draw stays the same, then the app breaks the dose into each compound share.
In this example, the visual syringe guide would point to the 4th mark. Change the vial, water, or dose values in the calculator to match the exact instructions you are using.
Saved snapshots, protocol notes, printable sheets, reminders, and advanced split tools for repeat calculator workflows.
Mixed vials can make a single syringe draw represent more than one compound. The split calculator keeps the syringe mark the same, then breaks the total dose into each compound share.
This page does not provide a CJC-1295 or ipamorelin protocol. It opens a 50/50 split math template that users can edit for measurement planning.
If a split adds to 100%, each compound receives that exact percentage of the total dose. If it does not, PeptiCalc normalizes the entered split to the full syringe draw.
No. It only demonstrates split-vial math. Dose decisions should come from an appropriate licensed source and reviewed instructions.
No. PeptiCalc is a measurement calculator. It helps translate vial strength, BAC water, and a selected dose into syringe marks, but it does not prescribe treatment.
Yes. Every value that opens in the calculator is editable, including vial amount, BAC water, syringe size, and dose.
Most U-100 insulin syringes show 100 marks per mL. The calculator converts the liquid dose into the mark to pull to on that syringe scale.