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Resistor Color Codes & Primer

Resistor color codes

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
132 views3 pages

Resistor Color Codes & Primer

Resistor color codes

Uploaded by

mulabbi brian
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Resistor Color Codes & Primer

NEW!!! Resistor Color Code Calculator

Common Resistor
Resistor Color Code
Chart
1st. & 2nd Digit it -----
Color Band Represents Multiplier-----

BLACK 0 X1

BROWN 1 X10
Resistors are color coded for easy reading.
RED 2 X100
Imagine how many blind technicians there
would be otherwise.
ORANGE 3 X1,000 or 1K
To determine the value of a given resistor look
for the gold or silver tolorance band and rotate YELLOW 4 X10,000 or 10K
the resistor as in the photo above.(Tolerance
X100,000 or
band to the right). Look at the 1st color band GREEN 5 100K
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" BLUE X1,000,000 or
6
color to the "Digit it represents". Write this 1M
number down. Silver is divide
VIOLET 7 by 100
Now look at the 2nd color band and match that Gold is divide
color to the same chart. Write this number next GRAY 8 by 10
to the 1st Digit.  Tolerances
 Gold= 5%
The Last color band is the number you will  9
WHITE  Silver=10%
multiply the result by. Match the 3rd color  None=20%
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 Tolerance
multiplication sign before it. Example : 2 2 x Explanation
1,000.

To pull it all together now, simply multiply the Resistors are never the exact value that the
first 2 numbers (1st number in the tens column color codes indicate.Therefore manufacturers
and 2nd in the ones column) by the Multiplier. 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
Example:
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
 First color is red which is 2 the number that the resistor may go either way.
 Second color is black which is 0
 third color is yellow which is 10,000
 Torerance is silver which is 10% Example: A 1,000 Ohm resistor with a gold
band maybe any value between 950 to 1050
Therefore the equation is: Ohms.

Example: A 22,000 Ohm resistor with a silver


2 0 x 10,000 = 200,000 Ohms band maybe any value between 19,800 and
24,200 Ohms.

Direct questions to: electronics@pobox.com

FAQ
BACK
Just a few common questions to help
you out.

Copyright 1997 -- Infinet-FX 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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