How much ammonia to make a payment to compost? I have two compost bins, standard 30 gal black trash cans, holes...

I have two compost bins, standard 30 gal black trash cans, holes drilled for aeration and a lid to preserve warmth, turned daily. The problem: the pile has cooled and stopped "cooking" I own way more brown (C )than green hence low N. If I understand right, calculation ammonia to the mix will start the decomposition again, and heat up the pile.
How do I calculate the amount of ammonia to make the addition of? Does it need to be diluted first?
Nope, not gonna pee on the pile :-)
Would Urea be a better buy than ammonia?
BTW, I'm having this problem because of scarce N sources. I solely cut my grass every two weeks.
Thanks!
it would be better for you to use blood and bone to get going the compost and leave for week and then verbs into the garden,nature will take protection of the rest &&...yyyyyyyyy u need ammonia..huh?..jus kidding
You might need more than a short time ago ammonia. I have been making my own compost pile for masses years now...and with unadulterated good results. If for sure you are not willing to pee on the pile, later you will need some cow manure or hores fertilizer or even rabbit manure will work to heat up and trigger your compost pile. Also it will be helpful to add a couple shovelful of moral topsoil to get your compost to start cooking again.
Good luck and happy gardening! Here's a compost accelerator recipe I've used near great success:

2 gallons water
2 can beer (not lite, definitely cheap)
2 cans cola (not diet)
1 cup fluid soap (oil soap, baby shampoo...)
1 cup amonia

have fun
Answers:    zip over to the grocery store and pick up some rabbit food pellets. contain alfalfa... a great 'green' for your pile. ammonia is too thorny to adjust for good 'cookin'.pee on the pile is FINE!!... good for pile!..hang on to your pile watered!... with the alfalfa and water and your already working pile you should see temps rise contained by a day or so. we use only alfalfa pellet with leaves in rope basket-type containers to reduce the leaves quickly and provide a nippy source.. give it a try!!
OK I know nuthin 'bout composting (yet), and copy/pasting is cheating, but I did it anyway! Here's what I found:


Carbon-to-Nitrogen Ratios

Carbon and nitrogen are the two fundamental elements surrounded by composting, and their ratio (C:N) is significant. The bacteria and fungi in compost digest or "oxidize" carbon as an dash source and ingest nitrogen for protein synthesis. Carbon can be considered the "food" and nitrogen the digestive enzymes.
The bulk of the organic matter should be carbon near just enough nitrogen to aid the decomposition process. The ratio should be roughly 30 parts carbon to 1 constituent nitrogen (30:1) by weight. Adding 3-4 pounds of nitrogen material for every 100 pounds of carbon should be conventional for efficient and rapid composting. The composting process slows if at hand is not enough nitrogen, and too much nitrogen may cause the classmates of ammonia gas which can create unpleasant odors. Leaves are a good source of carbon; fresh grass, manures and blood dinnertime are sources of nitrogen

also:

Nothing is happening.Pile doesn't seem to be heat up at all:
1. Not enough nitrogen
2. Not satisfactory oxygen
3. Not enough moisture
4. Cold weather?
5. Compost is finished.
1. Make sure you have satisfactory nitrogen rich sources like manure, grass clippings or food snippets.
2. Mix up the pile so it can breathe.
3. Mix up the pile and water it with the hose so that at hand is some moisture in the pile. A completely dry pile doesn't compost.
4. Wait for spring, cover the pile, or use a bin.