Typical electrical conductors are mercury, iron, copper, gold and silver (in fact apart from some special alloys like a mixture of Nickel and Chromium, ALL metals are good conductors of electricity).
Non-conductors, or insulators are generally the non-metals like the gases, sulphur, etc. Paper, rubber and most plastics are non-conductors (or "insulators") of electricity.
The most
common "semi-conductors" are Carbon, Germanium and Silicon.
![]() Symbol for a Resistor |
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![]() A Circuit Schematic showing resistors. |
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A light globe has a resistance in the order of tens of ohms. Your skin has a resistance in the order of millions of ohms.
| The most
common resistor is the Carbon resistor. Inside a carbon resistor is a 'ceramic 'core' on which is deposited a spiral carbon 'track'. The track may have been machined, or it may have been 'burnt' away with a laser beam.
High-power "wire-wound" resistors have a spiral of high-resistance wire wound around the ceramic core.
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When current
flows through a resistor it heats up due to the voltage drop across the resistor. The
amount of heat a resistor can handle is indicated by its "power rating"
or "wattage". Common carbon resistors have a power rating of
half a watt. Where larger ratings are required the resistor may be made of a spiral of
Nickel-Chromium alloy which is able to handle much higher currents and much more heat.
These resistors are usually termed: "wire-wound" resistors.
They are physically much larger than Carbon and metal-film resistors.
In the early days of electronics, resistors were large enough to have their resistance printed directly onto the body of the device. Modern resistors, however are far too small to allow values to be marked and use a "colour code" consisting of 'bands' painted onto the device. Each colour and its position represents a specific value.
A typical Carbon Resistor rated at 5% Tolerance |
The "Tolerance" band indicates the accuracy of
the resistor.
Silver = +/- 10% (Resistors with a blue body (metal-oxide types) have a Tolerance of +/- 1%.) |
Resistor Colour Chart |
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Reading Resistance Values:
On 5% resistors (ie the ones that don't have a blue body) the first two bands represent
the first two digits in the number. The third band represents the "multiplier"
ie the number of zeros to be added after the first two numbers. The value is in 'ohms'.
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The digits
are red, red - therefore: 2, 2 The multiplier is orange - therefore: 000 (ie three zeros) The value is therefore: 2 2 0 0 0 ohms, or 22 thousand ohms, or 22kohms, or 22 k |
| eg2
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The digits
are brown, black - therefore: 1, 0 The multiplier is black - therefore: nil (ie no zeros) The value is therefore: 10 ohms, 10 The common mistake is to interpret this combination
as 100 |
On metal-oxide resistors the Tolerance
bands are: |
First digit
is red - therefore: 2 Second digit is red - therefore: 2 Third digit is orange - therefore: 3 The multiplier is Brown - therefore: 1 zero The value is therefore: 2230 ohms, or 2.23k |

To cater for the 'overlap' in resistor values, a standard 'series' of values is used. The most common series is called the "E12 series" and was developed in the days of +/- 10% values. (You can confirm the 'overlap' status of this range for yourself.) The E12 series is:
in 'tens' this would become:
in 'hundreds:
100, 120, 150, 180, 220, 270, 330, 390, 470, 560, 680, 820
and so on ....
When designing projects using the E12 series resistors the 'nearest' value in the series
is chosen. Since the manufacturers only guarantee their product to be within +/- 5% of the
marked value there seems little point in worrying about precisely calculated values.
NOTE: You can purchase exact values down to the several decimal places, but the
cost is significant. A special value resistor for a digital multi-meter, for example, may
cost up to $10 !!
The following Modules in this Course will discuss the applications of Resistors in electronic circuits.
Resistors - QUIZ