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red-orange
Press dark red, orange, orange, red, light blue, orange, green, orange, red. See related link for screenshots.
Yes, but it does remind people of Halloween. If you put a rust shade, gold, brown or a red ( yes red and pink actually works) that may look better.
orange
When red and yellow are mixed together, they produce orange.
Using a resistor color code chart below, you will find that the resistance is calculated this way: Resistance = (1st Digit x 10 + 2nd Digit) x Multiplier Hold the resistor with the gold or silver band to the right and read the resistor from the left to the right. So, in this case, the resistor is: RED RED YELLOW GOLD Using the formula and resistor color chart found in the link below, the resistance would be: R = 1st Digit x 10 + 2nd Digit) x Multiplier R = (RED x 10 + RED) x YELLOW R = (2 x 10 + 2) x 10,000 R = 22 x 10,000 R = 220,000 ohm (220 K ohms) Since the final band is gold, the tolerance is 5%
red = 2violet = 7silver = 0.01gold = 5%The value is 27 * 0.01 ohms 5% or 0.27 ohms 5%
red is 2 , orange is for three zeroes, gold is the tolerance which is 5per cent, first two colours are the numerical value , the next is the number of zeros (3zeros)
Green, Black, Orange, (gold / silver) Green = 5 Black = 0 Orange = x10^3 50x10^3 = 50,000 or 50k Ohm
The first band, brown, indicates the digit 1.The second band, red, indicates the digit 2.The third band indicates the multiplier. For yellow, this is 10000.12x10000 = 120,000 ohms.The last band is an indication of the tolerance of the resistor; gold means the actual value is within 5% of the stated value.
Its red red red
Grey (9) Red (2) Blue (6) stands for 92 x 106, or 92 megohms. Gold stands for +/- 5%, so the minimum value would be 87.4 megohms.
Resistors have standard colors for identification of the resistance value. In order, the colors are: black, brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, gray, and white. Reading resistors is a very simple procedure if you use the chart and formula below. Hold the resistor with the gold or silver band to the right and read the resistor from the left to the right. http://www.westfloridacomponents.com/reschart.html
The first three bands on a resistor tell you what its resistance is. The first band is the first digit, the second band is the second digit, and the third band is the number of zeros to add. Use the resistor color code to convert... 0 Black 1 Brown 2 Red 3 Orange 4 Yellow 5 Green 6 Blue 7 Violet 8 Grey 9 White As an example, a 27000 ohm resistor would be Red - Violet - Orange. If the third band is Silver, the multiplier is 0.1 and, if the third band is Gold, the multiplier is 0.01. For example, a 0.39 ohm resistor would be Orange - Gray - Gold.
A 5 percent tolerance resistor would only have two significant digits in its stated value, so we are talking about 82000 ohms plus or minus 5%. The coloured bands would be grey (8), red (2), orange (times 1000), and gold (5%).
It's the tolerance of the resistor - +/- 10% (grey), 5% (tan/orange), 2% (red), 1% (dark red/maroon), etc.
Red, orange-red, and deep, rich blue.