|
HS Code |
482474 |
| Product Name | Dimetridazole Premix |
| Active Ingredient | Dimetridazole |
| Formulation Type | Premix |
| Appearance | Yellowish to brown powder |
| Intended Use | Antiprotozoal veterinary drug |
| Main Targets | Protozoa such as Trichomonas and Histomonas |
| Administration Route | Oral, mixed with feed |
| Species | Poultry and pigs |
| Storage Conditions | Keep in a cool, dry place |
| Shelf Life | 2 years |
| Solubility | Slightly soluble in water |
| Dosage Form | Premix for feed |
| Mechanism Of Action | Inhibits nucleic acid synthesis in protozoa |
As an accredited Dimetridazole Premix factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | The packaging of **Dimetridazole Premix** features a sealed 1 kg foil bag, labeled with product name, dosage, and manufacturer details. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | The 20′ FCL for Dimetridazole Premix typically holds 16-18MT, packaged in 25kg bags or drums, ensuring secure bulk shipping. |
| Shipping | Dimetridazole Premix is shipped in tightly sealed, moisture-proof containers to ensure product stability and safety. Packages are clearly labeled per regulatory requirements and handled with care to prevent spillage. Shipping is typically via ground or air freight, accompanied by required documentation, and stored away from incompatible substances during transit. |
| Storage | Dimetridazole Premix should be stored in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight and moisture. Keep the container tightly closed when not in use to prevent contamination. Store separately from food and animal feed. Ensure storage conditions comply with local regulations and restrict access to authorized personnel only. |
| Shelf Life | Dimetridazole Premix typically has a shelf life of 24 months when stored in a cool, dry place, away from sunlight. |
|
Purity 98%: Dimetridazole Premix with a purity of 98% is used in poultry feed formulations, where it ensures effective control of histomoniasis in turkeys and chickens. Particle size 100 µm: Dimetridazole Premix with a particle size of 100 µm is used in premixed animal feed, where it enables uniform distribution and consistent dosing. Stability temperature 40°C: Dimetridazole Premix with stability at 40°C is used in high-temperature storage environments, where it maintains chemical efficacy during transport and storage. Water solubility 25 g/L: Dimetridazole Premix with a water solubility of 25 g/L is used in medicated water delivery systems, where it allows for rapid and complete dissolution in drinking water for livestock. Melting point 140°C: Dimetridazole Premix with a melting point of 140°C is used in pelleted feed manufacturing, where it preserves its integrity and therapeutic value during feed processing. Shelf life 24 months: Dimetridazole Premix with a shelf life of 24 months is used in warehouse stock management, where it assures prolonged potency for extended inventory periods. Assay ≥98.5%: Dimetridazole Premix with an assay of ≥98.5% is used in quality-controlled feed production, where it delivers consistent pharmacological activity and precise therapeutic dosing. Odorless property: Dimetridazole Premix with odorless property is used in sensitive feed blends, where it prevents alteration of feed palatability for animals. |
Competitive Dimetridazole Premix prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615371019725 or mail to sales7@bouling-chem.com.
We will respond to you as soon as possible.
Tel: +8615371019725
Email: sales7@bouling-chem.com
Flexible payment, competitive price, premium service - Inquire now!
In our factory, every batch of Dimetridazole Premix comes off the line after a process overseen by chemists who have worked with this compound day in and day out. We see firsthand the need for a consistent, high-quality product—especially for a premix that lands in feed mills, farms, and at the end of the supply chain, in the hands of growers whose livelihoods depend on minimizing disease in their livestock. Dimetridazole has earned its place in poultry and pig health management because trichomoniasis and histomoniasis can wipe out weeks of work in a matter of days. Most people only see the finished packaging. In the factory, we see how small changes in raw material quality change everything about the product, from the way it mixes with other feed ingredients to how it handles humidity in storage and transit.
We do not rely on catalog numbers to define quality. Instead, our focus centers on purity, moisture content control, and ensuring that the active is evenly distributed throughout each kilogram of premix. Inconsistent blends create uncertainty in final feed. So we calibrate mixing equipment daily, audit suppliers and ensure every batch of raw dimetridazole meets strict in-house testing before it goes into the blending tanks. Our Dimetridazole Premix most often enters the market with an active concentration of 20%. That is not a marketing decision—it comes from decades of feedback from nutritionists and veterinarians who need to hit specific dosing rates in their feed formulations.
Every minute spent on the production line demands attention to detail. Small errors in dosage, blend, or packaging directly lead to fluctuations in field performance. Feed mill operators often request granule-size consistency that pours evenly into mixers because dust can clog screens and cause environmental and human exposure issues on the premises. Our technical team spends much of their time monitoring particle size, moisture, density, and flow characteristics. They run their hands through product by the bucket, not just in lab dishes, checking with eyes and skin for the proper texture. Moisture can creep in and turn premix into clumps or cakes, ruining an entire ton of feed. That risk drives our focus on robust, moisture-resistant packaging and production runs that don’t outpace what downstream users can store safely.
People ask about flavor or odor, concerned that feed acceptance might drop if the premix carries a sharp scent. In our experience, the right carrier matrix dulls any strong Dimetridazole odor and produces a neutral powder. To answer questions about traceability, we bar-code every batch, linking every bag to a specific date, raw material lot, and machine line. Quality isn’t something our customers have to worry about after the bag leaves the door—each link in that chain is already checked, and we re-run assays at our in-house lab before shipping pallets.
After years on the manufacturing floor, we understand that a premix does not solve every health challenge. Dimetridazole works by targeting certain protozoal infections. It is no substitute for proper farm management, biosecurity, and overall feed formulation. That said, producers have come to expect reliable results when including Dimetridazole Premix as instructed. The 20% concentration allows for accurate adjustments based on animal weight, expected intake, and local disease pressure. Compared to liquid formulations, dry premix offers less risk of dosing errors and easier integration with standard feed mixing equipment. Transport and storage benefit as well; powders do not freeze or separate. That matters for rural distribution points with limited infrastructure.
Several customers have approached us with the idea of using Dimetridazole Premix in species or conditions outside label claims. We stress from experience that legal, regulatory, and ethical considerations must take precedence. While chemists can manufacture to precise specifications, final user safety depends on adherence to established guidance. We maintain a robust data set on safety and pharmacokinetics under recommended conditions, and we keep lines of communication open with those in the field who spot new trends or emerging concerns.
Product differentiation is not just about tweaking active percentages or using a new color for packaging. Most alternatives in the antiprotozoal field—ronidazole, carnidazole, and older nitroimidazoles—have their own pharmacological characteristics, tissue retention times, and documented safety margins. In daily factory routine, the real contrast comes down to reliability in production and predicted outcomes on the farm.
Some competitors cut corners by adding more carrier or blending at higher speeds to increase output. We’ve dismantled enough returned samples from the market to see the effects: active ingredient “hot spots,” powder with odd coloration, or uneven spread of the compound. These shortcuts save time but result in animals receiving an inconsistent dose—either too much, risking residues in tissues, or too little, jeopardizing disease control. We never have to explain residue complaints because we respect withdrawal period guidance and keep analytical records back through each shipment. Every batch can be traced by lab results and ingredient sources, not just by the date on a sack.
Some premix suppliers chase novelty, launching combinations with vitamins, minerals, or even other drug molecules, claiming “synergy.” Our experience shows that every additive changes the compatibility profile and stability, especially over months in unpredictable storage conditions. Dimetridazole has a long record of single-compound success when handled right. Complexity for the sake of “innovation” adds risk and often reduces final practical value.
We frequently receive direct feedback from veterinarians and growers. Stories from the field tell us that, once a protozoal outbreak starts, switching to Dimetridazole Premix as part of a control program rapidly restores flock or herd health trends—when disease is caught early, the cost in lost production is reduced. We never ignore reported performance failures. Instead, we promptly audit recall samples, rerun content and blend assays, and visit farm sites to check for user preparation mistakes that may have affected dosing.
A common misconception involves the expectation that any premix behaves identically regardless of supplier. Those of us producing at scale understand otherwise. Raw material quality, blend uniformity, and freshness play a bigger role than many distributors acknowledge. We know the exact shelf life and storage sensitivities of our material. Customers storing premix in humid conditions have reached out to describe minor caking or changes in color. That is why, long ago, we invested in double-layer moisture barriers in every package. Inside the factory, we only shift from one blend to another after thorough equipment cleaning, verified by swabbing and chemical analysis.
Regulatory compliance is not just paperwork to us—it is the core of staying in business. Regional regulations, changing residue tolerance limits, and periodic review of maximum safe inclusion rates keep our production standards under constant scrutiny. We do not see audits as interruptions. Instead, they provide valuable checkpoints to measure our processes against global best practices.
Occupational health concerns matter in a production facility handling concentrated Dimetridazole. Our staff wears proper PPE, and we have regular medical check-ups in line with handling guidelines for nitroimidazoles. Proper air filtration, controlled access, and robust waste collection are not just compliance tasks—they protect our team, who are exposed day after day. Our commitment to in-plant safety carries over into every bag shipped and reassures end users that the premix leaving our doors meets more than minimum standards.
No process is free from environmental impact. Factory management remains focused on minimizing dust release, solvent residues, and wash water from cleaning blending tanks. Waste premix does not enter regular disposal streams; we partner with chemical waste processors to handle disposal in line with local environmental regulations. Solvent vapors, a reality during raw material processing, are captured and scrubbed using activated carbon units. We constantly audit emission controls and water discharge to confirm adherence to our own targets, which often exceed national mandates. This vigilance reduces accidental discharge risks and protects downstream users and communities.
Transportation from plant to warehouse follows a strict cold chain and inventory tracking regime. By reducing long storage times at uncontrolled temperatures, we cut product aging and ensure end users receive fresh, fully potent Dimetridazole Premix. We encourage all business partners to follow similar protocols and readily share best practices.
The value of any premix depends partly on how clearly and honestly we share information with our customers. We hold training sessions for feed millers and veterinarians, explaining how improper mixing or storage can alter delivered dosages. Our technical team provides feed conversion calculations and dose guides, based on observed density variations or flow changes. Every question from a customer becomes feedback for our next production run—if someone reports difficulty dissolving the premix in water, we review particle sizing and batch blending logs that same week.
We also recognize the ongoing debate around the use of nitroimidazole drugs in food animals, especially in markets with changing regulatory requirements or concerns about residues. As manufacturers, we neither promote indiscriminate use nor ignore regulatory trends. We track policy discussions, residue limits, and research on alternative protozoa treatments, keeping our product line responsive to shifts in demand and expectations.
Real improvement rarely comes from a single “eureka” moment. Instead, the manufacturing floor teaches lessons slowly—batch by batch, through successes and problems alike. Our current process for Dimetridazole Premix looks nothing like it did several decades ago. Humidity-resistant packaging, advanced blending controls, shorter production lots, and traceable ingredient tracking have all come about because users pointed out problems and we listened.
Once, we relied on basic paddle mixers and manual inlet checks. Today, we use programmable blenders, laser particle-size sensors, and automated weighers. Every addition and upgrade is tested for its impact on the premix’s behavior in both the lab and in actual feed production settings. This transition has required not just investment, but also a change in culture—from “good enough” to “data-driven perfection.” Our pride in a high-quality premix comes directly from feedback and, occasionally, complaints that prompt new thinking and innovations.
Our philosophy remains simple: if a farmer reports a problem, the solution probably originates in the factory rather than the field. Many support calls reveal a need for advice, not just a product replacement. Feed density, mixing time, or storage moisture all convert to measurable variables in the laboratory. Our support staff includes seasoned plant operators as well as field veterinarians. A product improvement is only useful if it solves a real-world problem faced by those using our premix on farms. We stay available to collect stories of both success and failure, understanding that continual transparency advances product reliability.
Every grain of powder that moves through the facility represents a promise to the people who invest their trust, money, and hopes in our ability to produce safe and effective Dimetridazole Premix. Stories of old production glitches—batches that didn’t flow right or caked after three months of storage—remind us of the reality of progress. Progress starts with recognizing the smallest inconsistency and refusing to dismiss it as “good enough.”
Looking back on years of manufacturing, we know that change brings new challenges. Nutritionists and veterinarians face increasing expectations for food safety, animal welfare, and environmental responsibility. Our position as a manufacturer demands that we anticipate regulatory changes, plan product upgrades, and maintain open channels of dialogue with both independent labs and end-users. Robust in-house QA, real-world application support, and ongoing dialogue with all stakeholders form the backbone of our responsibility.
Dimetridazole Premix will continue to play a key role in addressing protozoal infections when managed with care, compliance, and attention to dosing accuracy. We invest in plant upgrades, staff training, and ongoing relationships with raw material suppliers so that our customers receive a product they trust, every time, from bag to barn.
The question never centers just around purity or batch size or packaging. The heart of the matter comes back to trust—trust earned over years by producing Dimetridazole Premix that delivers what is promised, standing behind every batch, listening to the people who rely on us in the field, and using every bit of feedback to make tomorrow’s product better than today’s. No fancy slogan or sales sheet can substitute for the daily discipline of data-driven production, thorough audits, robust staff safety practices, and genuine respect for both the science and the art of chemical manufacturing. We see every kilogram leave our gates as another step in a tradition worth defending: reliable, honest, and responsible manufacture of animal health solutions that work where it matters most—on the ground, on the farm, and in the lives of those who feed the world.