Ohms do not relate to power per se. Ohms do however contribute how much power a circuit can deliver. In a given circuit the lower the resistance (measured in ohms) the higher the current & higher the power. This is assuming the voltage remains constant.
The difference in between Ohms and Ohms CT is that in Ohms CT it has CT at the end.
3000 ohms are 3 kiloohms.
97 k ohms is equivalent to 97,000 ohms. Just multiply the value in kiloohms by 1,000 to convert it to ohms.
Ohms are smaller than k-ohms, so number of ohms must be a bigger number. Multiply k-ohms by 1,000 to get the same resistance in ohms.
135 ohms new, and will function properly down to 114 ohms. The chart in the '86-'87 book shows: Empty=110 ohms +/- 7 ohms Full=3 ohms +/- 2 ohms 1/2 full= 32.5 ohms +/- 4 ohms
A Megohm is one million ohms. To convert ohms to Megohms, divide by one million.
0.016 k ohms can be stated as 16 ohms. This is because "k" stands for kilo, which is a factor of 1,000, so 0.016 k ohms is equivalent to 0.016 × 1,000 ohms. Therefore, 0.016 k ohms = 16 ohms.
2 ohms of resistance
35 ohms
1000 ohms.
ohms law.
Here is what I go by, 0 - 15" min 3000 ohms, max 10000 ohms. 15 - 25" min 4000 ohms, max 15000 ohms. 25 - 35" min 6000 ohms, max 20000 ohms. Over 35" min 8000 ohms, max 25000 ohms.