It will depend on quality of ingredients, the percentage of fat and so on, but most formulated cattle feeds will produce 1 pound of gain from 5.5 to 9 pounds of feed.
on a 1000 pound steer of exceptional quality you will get about 400-450 pounds of meat with about 150-170 pounds being steak.
varies on the frame score, an average steer at 600 pounds starting needs about 3 pounds of grain
It all depends on what feed is being fed to that steer, as in what feed is available, what the ratio of forage to grain is for that steer, and the steer's breeding and genetics. Some breeds or crossbreeds of steers will require less feed to achieve a pound of gain than other breeds or crossbreeds. For instance, an Angus steer will gain a pound on less feed than a Simmental steer.
For such a general question, it requires a general answer: It depends on the steer and the type of feed corn being used to feed that steer. There is some sort of general "rule of thumb" out there that it takes around 9 lbs of grain to get one pound of beef, but that is pretty ambiguous. It takes more pounds of corn to get a pound of gain on a Holstein steer than it would on an Angus steer, for instance. Also, cracked corn will get a steer to gain more weight than whole corn will.
Bobcats usually weigh between 15 and 30 pounds.Bobcats usually weigh between 15 and 30 pounds.
That's a pretty large steer. Assuming that the carcass weight is 40% of the steer's live weight, you'd get a carcass weight of 680 lbs; with that, minus the weight from bones, you could get about 620 lbs of meat off of him. But it's hard to say without knowing the carcass weight.
Your numbers seem to be off a bit. $100 for a 500lb steer sounds quite low. Or is that 91.58/100?What is the price per pound at the selling price. It is not necessarily that a 1225 pound steer would be sold at the same price per pound as a 500 lb steer. And, with time, the market can go anywhere.Once you have the total prices or price per pound for the buying and selling price, then you can calculate the profits.
A 1000 lb steer will eat 2.5% of his body weight. In other words, he will eat around 25 lbs of feed per day.
A year old Jersey steer typically weighs between 400 to 600 pounds, depending on genetics, diet, and overall health.
The average weight of calves used in steer wrestling is about 250 to 300 pounds. This weight varies but usually stays within these parameters.
2nd law of thermodynamics
Does it matter? It's sick to kill horses