Trust documentation

About & Editorial Standards

Peptide Calculator is an educational reference site for peptide reconstitution math, dose conversion, concentration logic, and U-100 syringe interpretation. The goal is simple: keep the formulas visible, keep the assumptions explicit, and make every core page easier to verify by hand.

Reviewed March 30, 2026

Editorial stance

Tools first, explanations second. The calculators answer the immediate math problem, while support pages explain the formulas, assumptions, and mistakes that sit behind the result.

01

Educational use only

The site is for formula-based peptide reference and should not be treated as diagnosis or treatment advice.

02

Visible math

Core pages expose mg, ml, mcg, and U-100 relationships directly so users can cross-check outputs manually.

03

Tool-first publishing

The homepage and calculators solve the immediate task first, while support pages handle verification and explanation.

Editorial standards

How pages are written and maintained

The site keeps its trust signals close to the math: clear formulas, repeated assumptions, and internal consistency across tools, FAQ, and support guides.

Formula-first explanations

Pages explain concentration, reconstitution, dose conversion, and syringe units with visible formulas rather than hidden logic.

Worked examples

Guides include example number sets so users can compare hand math with the calculator output.

Clear limitations

Core pages state when a result is educational math only and should be independently verified before real-world use.

Calculator assumptions

Default rules used across the site

Unless a page explicitly says otherwise, these are the assumptions used for the calculator outputs and worked examples.

1000 mcg = 1 mg

Dose normalization starts by converting mcg into mg before any liquid volume calculation.

U-100 syringe standard

Unless a page states otherwise, the site assumes 1 ml equals 100 units on a U-100 insulin syringe.

Concentration drives the final draw amount

Water volume and total peptide mg establish concentration, and concentration determines the final ml and unit outputs.

Corrections and updates

How revisions are handled

When a calculator workflow, FAQ answer, or guide example changes, the page is updated so formulas, explanatory copy, and internal links remain consistent with the core tool pages.

If you spot a mismatch between a formula, a worked example, and a calculator output, send the page URL plus the exact numbers you were reviewing. Corrections are easier to process when the full context is included.

Contact

Reach the editorial contact

Use email for corrections, support questions, broken links, or unclear assumptions.

support@peptidecalculator.site

Best for corrections, calculator questions, and content feedback.