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Common
Resistor
Resistors
are color coded for easy reading. Imagine how many blind technicians
there would be otherwise.
To determine
the value of a given resistor look for the gold or silver tolorance
band and rotate the resistor as in the photo above.(Tolerance
band to the right). Look at the 1st color band and determine
its color. This maybe difficult on small or oddly colored resistors.
Now look at the chart and match the "1st & 2nd color band"
color to the "Digit it represents". Write this number down.
Now look
at the 2nd color band and match that color to the same chart.
Write this number next to the 1st Digit.
The Last
color band is the number you will multiply the result by. Match
the 3rd color band with the chart under multiplier. This is
the number you will mulitple the other 2 numbers by. Write it
next to the other 2 numbers with a multiplication sign before
it. Example : 2 2 x 1,000.
To pull
it all together now, simply multiply the first 2 numbers (1st
number in the tens column and 2nd in the ones column) by the
Multiplier.
Example:

First color is red
which
is 2
Second
color is black which is 0
third
color is yellow
which is 10,000
Torerance
is silver
which is 10%
Therefore
the equation is:
2 0 x 10,000 = 200,000
Ohms
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Resistor
Color Code Chart
| 1st.
& 2nd Color Band |
Digit it Represents |
-----Multiplier----- |
|
BLACK
|
0
|
X1
|
|
BROWN
|
1
|
X10
|
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RED
|
2
|
X100
|
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ORANGE
|
3
|
X1,000
or 1K
|
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YELLOW
|
4
|
X10,000
or 10K
|
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GREEN
|
5
|
X100,000 or
100K |
|
BLUE
|
6
|
X1,000,000
or 1M
|
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VIOLET
|
7
|
Silver is
divide by 100 |
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GRAY
|
8
|
Gold is divide
by 10 |
|
WHITE
|
9
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Tolerances
Gold= 5%
Silver=10%
None=20%
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Tolerance
Explanation
Resistors
are never the exact value that the color codes indicate.Therefore
manufacturers place a tolerance color band on the resistor to
tell you just how accurate this resistor is made. It is simply
a measurment of the imperfections. Gold means the resistor is
within 5% of being dead-on accurate. Silver being within 10%
and no color band being within 20%. To determine the exact range
that the resistor may be, take the value of the resistor and
mutiply it by 5,10, 0r 20%. That is the number that the resistor
may go either way.
Example: A
1,000 Ohm resistor with a gold band maybe any value between 950
to 1050 Ohms.
Example:
A 22,000 Ohm resistor with a silver band maybe any value between
19,800 and 24,200 Ohms.
FAQ
Just a
few common questions to help you out.
1) Which
side of the resistor do I read from?
The Gold
or Silver band is always set to the right, then you read from
left to right. Sometimes there will be no tolerance band --
Simply find the side that has a band closest to a lead and
make that the first band.
2) Sometimes
the colors are hard to make out. How do I make certain what
the value of the resistor really is?
Occasionally
the colors are jumbled or burnt off. The only way to read
it then is with a multimeter across the leads
3) How
do I remember this sequence of colors?
Remember
the color codes with this sentence: Big Brown
Rabbits Often Yield Great Big Vocal Groans When Gingerly Slapped.
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