Brown Black Brown, Gold
As far as I know, nothing. It is the color bands on the resistor that represent the value of the resistor.AnswerIn the, now-obsolete, 'body-tip-spot' colour code system, the 'body' colour represented the first significant figure, the 'tip' colour represented the second significant figure, and the 'spot' colour represented the multiplier. The colours of the 'body-tip-spot' method correspend exactly to the colours used with the 'band' method.With the 'body-tip-spot' method, the body of the resistor was painted in one colour; one end of the resistor (the 'tip') was painted another colour, and a coloured 'spot' or 'dot', was placed roughly halfway along the body of the resistor.
yes
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%
A resistor by itself has no time constant. For a circuit to have a time constant it must contain either capacitors or inductors.
in simple terms, band represent numbers, ex:- 10K resistor have different colour code and that is difference from 5k resistor. if you type in google 'resistor colour code' that will describe how to calculate a resistor value. thanks
Yes..... its like the resistor color code
Colour code used to identify resistance of the resistor
Brown Black Brown, Gold
Orange, Black Black should give you 30R
As far as I know, nothing. It is the color bands on the resistor that represent the value of the resistor.AnswerIn the, now-obsolete, 'body-tip-spot' colour code system, the 'body' colour represented the first significant figure, the 'tip' colour represented the second significant figure, and the 'spot' colour represented the multiplier. The colours of the 'body-tip-spot' method correspend exactly to the colours used with the 'band' method.With the 'body-tip-spot' method, the body of the resistor was painted in one colour; one end of the resistor (the 'tip') was painted another colour, and a coloured 'spot' or 'dot', was placed roughly halfway along the body of the resistor.
yes
Tolerance indicates how much the measured value of a resistance is different from its theoretical value, and it is calculated using percentages.
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 color bands on a resistor indicate its resistance value. Each color corresponds to a digit, which is used to calculate the resistance value based on a specific color code chart. The tolerance of the resistor is also indicated by a separate color band.
its the colour of the fixed and the variable we define it by its power and name
yes you can! you can use a multimeter and a resistor.