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.
A megohm is 1000 kilohms. So 295k is 0.295M
It is a stronger isolator, meaning that it leaves less current through.
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