orange-orange-orange
A 0.1 ohm resistor is color coded brown (1) black(0) silver (x 10-2).
I don't see a question. Please clarify if you want an answer.
Green - Black - Red, but this is not a standard value. You probably want a 5.1K resistor, and that is Green, Brown, Red
470K ohm at 5% tolerance
Green, Black, Black, Brown!
orange-orange-orange
yellow-violet-brown
The current would be about 20 volts.
1amp
A 0.1 ohm resistor is color coded brown (1) black(0) silver (x 10-2).
3
No, a 2.2k ohm resistor and a 220 ohm resistor are not the same resistance. The "k" in 2.2k ohm stands for "kilo," which represents a multiplier of 1000. Therefore, a 2.2k ohm resistor is equivalent to 2200 ohms, while a 220 ohm resistor is simply 220 ohms. The difference in resistance values is a factor of 10 due to the kilo prefix.
A zero ohm resistor is a piece of wire with a resistor body. It is essentially a jumper. It is useful when a jumper is need on a printed circuit board that is assembled by automated machinery, because the automated machinery can handle resistor insertion far easier than a jumper wire. The color coding on a zero ohm resistor is one single black band.
On a standard four band resistor: yellow, violet, black, and gold.
Green Red Brown
I don't see a question. Please clarify if you want an answer.