The colour code of a 0.27 ohm resistor is red (2) violet (7) silver (0.01) ______123456______Example of a 4 band resistorNote that band 1,2,3 and 5 makes up the 4 in use 27x0.01=0.27 The fourth band (number 5) indicate how accurate this resistor is. In this example, Gold, indicates accuracy within 5% of indicated value. For more information regarding calculation, please have a look at related question below.
1000 ohms = 1Kohm; silver is the tolerance band of the resistor. Silver signifies plus or minus 10%. The fourth band is always the tolerance band. If there is no tolerance band, the tolerance is plus or minus 20%. A gold band would signify plus or minus 5%.
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: Not all application need close tolerance of values some application only need 5% and some 10% so the band is there to specify the -/+ % tolerance that the part is in compliance with. Designers decide what parts % is needed for proper performance of the circuit.
It's the tolerance of the resistor - +/- 10% (grey), 5% (tan/orange), 2% (red), 1% (dark red/maroon), etc.
The resistor is identified by a colour code. Most common is the 4 band resistor, band values are as follows - Black- 0, Brown - 1, Red - 2, Orange - 3, Yellow - 4, Green - 5 , Blue - 6, Violet - 7, Grey -8, White 9. The 4 th band is the multiplier.If the picture above is headed "Chicago7" then check the colour bands, they are Blue, 6 green 5 , orange 3, indicating a 65 K ohm resistor.
Hi You can find the value of the resistor by using colour code printed on the resistor. 1. Hold the resistor such that the colour code starts from left. 2. Each of the colour bands present on the resistor specifies a value. 3. The first colour band represents the first significant figure, the second band represents the second significant figure and the third band indicates the multiplier. The fourth band represents the tolerance. Gold band- 5%, Silver band-10%, No band-20% 4.Find the appropriate values for the colour by using the chart 1. 5. Find the value of the resistor by using the formula 1. Chart1 Example: Here first band represent brown. Second band represent black. Third band represent red . Fourth band represent gold. The value of resistor = 10 x 102 ± 5% = 1kΩ ± 5%
The colour code of a 0.27 ohm resistor is red (2) violet (7) silver (0.01) ______123456______Example of a 4 band resistorNote that band 1,2,3 and 5 makes up the 4 in use 27x0.01=0.27 The fourth band (number 5) indicate how accurate this resistor is. In this example, Gold, indicates accuracy within 5% of indicated value. For more information regarding calculation, please have a look at related question below.
1000 ohms = 1Kohm; silver is the tolerance band of the resistor. Silver signifies plus or minus 10%. The fourth band is always the tolerance band. If there is no tolerance band, the tolerance is plus or minus 20%. A gold band would signify plus or minus 5%.
That depends on the resistor, the resistors that are color coded come with either 4, 5 or 6 bands. On resistors with 4 bands, the 3'rd band is the multiplier. F.ex if we have a Resistor colored brown:red:orange it would mean 1 : 2 : 3 which translates to (10+2)*10^3, or 12*1000 = 12k Ohm On resistors with 5 or 6 bands, the 3'rd band is just another digit For examle a 5-band resistor starting with brown|red|orange|yellow would mean 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 which translates to (100+20+3) * 10^4 or 123*10000 = 1,23M Ohm
There are 2 main resistor color code systems in use today: 3 or 4 band for standard resistors and 5 or 6 band for precision resistors. The full coding for multiplier digit, tolerance digit, and temperature coefficient bands is too complicated to fully explain here, as they include several special case exceptions.Standard resistors:10s digit1s digitmultiplier digitoptional tolerance - no band 20%, silver 10%, gold 5%Precision resistors:100s digit10s digit1s digitmultiplier digittolerance digit - numeric % from 1% to 5%optional temperature coefficient
A: It just tell you the resistor has a +- % tolerance in its value. Like a 1000 ohms +-5% it can be off + or - that much. That has being the standard for forever however that band is disappearing since most resistors are made +-5% as a rule.
On a standard four band resistor: yellow, violet, black, and gold.
it needs a blower motor resistor to make the fan settings work.If you replace the Blower MOTOR Resistor it should resolve the problem.
The answer is 5, the question originates from CDX
i think you need to replace the blower resistor and or relay
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.