Online Mixing Ratio Calculator
Use this Online Mixing Ratio Calculator to work through the same calculation as the main calculator page with clear steps, examples, and result context.
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Run the calculator.
What This Online Mixing Ratio Calculator Helps You Do
This page gives you the two outputs most people actually need from a ratio: the component percentages and the scaled component amounts for a specific batch size. That covers formulation checks and real mixing prep in one place.
Keeping the ratio view and the total-batch view together also makes it easier to spot whether a recipe is balanced or heavily weighted toward one component before you mix it.
How to Calculate Online Mixing Ratio Calculator
- Enter the ratio parts: Use the two-part ratio exactly as the formulation is written, such as 2:1 or 5:3.
- Choose the task: Find percentages only, or enter a total batch amount to scale each component.
- Calculate the component shares: Each component share is its parts value divided by the sum of all parts.
- Apply the scaled result: When a total batch is supplied, multiply each share by the total to get the required amount of each component.
Online Mixing Ratio Calculator Formula
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| A, B | Parts of component A and component B in the ratio | relative parts |
| A + B | Total parts in the mixture | relative parts |
| Amount | Scaled amount of a component | same unit as total batch |
Use the worked examples below to check how the formula behaves with real values. If the result looks unexpected, verify the unit assumptions and the meaning of each variable before interpreting the answer.
Worked Examples
- Part A: 2
- Part B: 1
Result: A = 66.67%; B = 33.33%.
A two-to-one formulation means two-thirds of the final mix is component A.
- Part A: 3
- Part B: 2
- Total batch: 10 L
Result: A = 6 L; B = 4 L.
The batch is divided according to the five total ratio parts.
- Part A: 5
- Part B: 1
- Total batch: 12 kg
Result: A = 10 kg; B = 2 kg.
Strongly unbalanced ratios make one component dominate the mix.
- Part A: 1
- Part B: 1
Result: A = 50%; B = 50%.
Equal parts always produce an even split.
How to Interpret Your Results
| Range | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Balanced ratio close to 1:1 | Both components contribute similar shares. | Expect similar percentages and similar scaled amounts. |
| Moderately uneven ratio | One component is clearly dominant. | Check the scaled amounts before mixing to avoid proportion errors. |
| Highly uneven ratio | A small measuring error can strongly affect the minor component. | Use precise measurement tools when one part is much smaller than the other. |
Frequently Asked Questions
References
Last reviewed: March 2026