Resistors use colored bands to indicate their resistance value, with the first band representing the first digit, the second band the second digit, and the third band the number of zeros, while the fourth band specifies the tolerance. To determine the resistance of a resistor, match the colored bands to the resistor color code chart and calculate the resistance value and tolerance based on their positions and represented values. Memorizing the mnemonic "Big Brown Rabbits Often Yield Great Big Vocal Groans When Gingerly Slapped" can help remember the color code values.
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4 Band
Resistors use colored bands to indicate their resistance value, with the first band representing the first digit, the second band the second digit, and the third band the number of zeros, while the fourth band specifies the tolerance. To determine the resistance of a resistor, match the colored bands to the resistor color code chart and calculate the resistance value and tolerance based on their positions and represented values. Memorizing the mnemonic "Big Brown Rabbits Often Yield Great Big Vocal Groans When Gingerly Slapped" can help remember the color code values.
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Resistor Color Code
Or how to read those little
resistors! Resistor Color Code 1st band color gives 1st number
2nd band color gives 2nd number
3rd band color gives # of zeros
4th band color gives tolerance or ±
How to read it Resistors are color coded for easy reading. To determine the value of a given resistor look for the gold or silver tolerance band and hold the resistor with this band to the right. Then read the colored bands left to right. How to read it Look at the 1st color band and determine its color. This maybe difficult on small or oddly colored resistors. Now look at the chart and match the "1st & 2nd color band" color to the "Digit it represents". Write this number down. How to read it Now look at the 2nd color band and match that color to the same chart. Write this number next to the 1st Digit. Match the 3rd color band with the chart under multiplier. This is the number you will multiple the other 2 numbers by. Write it next to the other 2 numbers with a multiplication sign before it. How to read it Example: First color is red which is 2
Second color is black which is 0
Third color is yellow which is 10,000
Tolerance is silver which is 10%
Therefore the equation is:
2 0 x 10,000 = 200,000 Ohms ± 10% Resistor Color Code Chart 1st. & 2nd Color Band Digit it Represents -----Multiplier----- BLACK 0 X1
BROWN 1 X10
RED 2 X100
ORANGE 3 X1,000 or 1K
YELLOW 4 X10,000 or 10K
GREEN 5 X100,000 or 100K
BLUE 6 X1,000,000 or 1M
VIOLET 7 Silver is divide by 100
GRAY 8 Gold is divide by 10
Tolerances Gold= 5% WHITE 9 Silver=10% None=20% How to remember the code Remember the color codes with this sentence: Big Brown Rabbits Often Yield Great Big Vocal Groans When Gingerly Slapped. K or M? Many resistors have large amounts of resistance, so we use prefixes to have a handy short name “k” is for kilo and means 1000 times “M” is for mega and means 1,000,000 times (million) Practice If you have an Orange Orange Brown Gold resistor What is it’s resistance? The first orange means 3 The second orange means 3 The brown means 1 zero The gold means ± 5% So answer is 330 ohms ± 5% Now you try Determine the resistance of each of the 3 resistors you have Then do the Resistor Color Code worksheet