As long as it isn't going to General Motors, yes.
Mega is 8 X 10^6 and Kilo is 8000 X 10^3. For every 3 you go down in powers you divide by 1000, so 8 Mega ohms is 8,000,000 ohms. 8,000 Kilo ohms or 0.008 Giga ohms.
A Megohm is one million ohms. To convert ohms to Megohms, divide by one million.
Yes, one mega ohm is more than one kilo ohm. Mega means million, kilo means thousand.
1 megohm is 0.1 gigaohm. 1 gigaohm is 1000 megaohm. 1 megohm = 1,000,000 ohms = 106 ohms. 1 gigaohm = 1,000,000,000 ohms =109 ohms.
An acceptable resistance for a ground to ground plate system is 2 ohms with a maximum allowance to 5 ohms. If the measured resistance is above 5 ohms more grounding rods or plates have to be added to reduce the resistance down to the acceptable levels.
This is relative to the purpose or application. 1 mega ohm may be considered "low resistance" when testing insulation levels; when testing a cable, 1 ohm may be too much. When testing substation ground grids, I believe 1 ohm is the maximum allowable value in some countries.
10 mega ohms.
10 mega ohms.
M is a si siffix for mega. It means million. 20 mega-ohms is 20 million ohms.
It is 0.00000002 megaohms.
Mega is 8 X 10^6 and Kilo is 8000 X 10^3. For every 3 you go down in powers you divide by 1000, so 8 Mega ohms is 8,000,000 ohms. 8,000 Kilo ohms or 0.008 Giga ohms.
A Megohm is one million ohms. To convert ohms to Megohms, divide by one million.
Yes, one mega ohm is more than one kilo ohm. Mega means million, kilo means thousand.
It is a stronger isolator, meaning that it leaves less current through.
A megohm is 1000 kilohms. So 295k is 0.295M
10 ohms or less is considered a good earth ground reference. The lower, the better.
S = 1/R Where S = Conductance in Siemens R = Resistance in Ohms If R is in Mega Ohms, S will be in Micro Siemens