Need help identifying resistor

R

Rod Wright

Guest
I need to replace a resistor and can't seem to figure out the value. The
body color is gray and the bands are green, blue, gold, gold, white. I
googled for precision resistor color codes, but had no luck. Any ideas?
 
I am only 95% sure about this, and I trust if I am wrong there will be
plenty of other responses to your post..

Green, Blue, Gold = 0.056 Ohms,
next Gold = 2% tolerance,
White = 100 ppm tempco
 
"Rod Wright" <rwright@thermionic.net> wrote in message
news:xdUDe.27508$oj4.518686@twister.southeast.rr.com...
I need to replace a resistor and can't seem to figure out the value.
The
body color is gray and the bands are green, blue, gold, gold, white. I
googled for precision resistor color codes, but had no luck. Any
ideas?

If you measure it with your DMM, which you _should_ have, it should
measure 5.6 ohms, plus or minus 5%. However most DMMs have a half ohm
or so of resistance in the test leads, etc.

I'm assuming that if you can read the colors, then it hasn't been
overheated, and it should still be its original value.
 
"tlbs" <tlbs101@excite.com> wrote in message
news:1121981334.803612.77450@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
I am only 95% sure about this, and I trust if I am wrong there will be
plenty of other responses to your post..

Green, Blue, Gold = 0.056 Ohms,
next Gold = 2% tolerance,
White = 100 ppm tempco

You'e 95% wrong. Here, duncecap, go sit in the corner and play with
this. http://www.electrician.com/resist_calc/resist_calc.htm

And you've got detention for the rest of the semester! </Harry Potter>
 
OK, so I couldn't remember the multiplier off the top of my head, and I
stated that I wasn't sure -- and that others like yourself would
correct me if I was wrong -- which you did. I've been working with 1%
hi-rel Mil resistors for so long, I can't remember everything.

How about that white band on the end, though??? It is either a tempco
band, or a failure-rate band -- that much I know.
 
tlbs wrote:
OK, so I couldn't remember the multiplier off the top of my head, and I
stated that I wasn't sure -- and that others like yourself would
correct me if I was wrong -- which you did. I've been working with 1%
hi-rel Mil resistors for so long, I can't remember everything.

How about that white band on the end, though??? It is either a tempco
band, or a failure-rate band -- that much I know.
It's probably an NFR25H (non-flammable/fusible-metalfilm-resistor) where
the white band indicates a power of 0.5W.

The band for temp.coeff. is used only with precision-resistors (which
always have more than 5 bands on it)


HTH,
Mark Van Borm
 

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