Electronic color code

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Resistor color code)
Jump to: navigation, search

The electronic color code discussed here is used to indicate the values or ratings of electronic components, very commonly for resistors, but also for capacitors, inductors, and others. A separate code, the 25-pair color code, is used to identify wires in a cable or bundle.

The electronic color code was developed in the early 1920s by the Radio Manufacturer's Association, now part of Electronic Industries Alliance and was published as EIA-RS-279. The current international standard is IEC 60062[1].

Advantages of color coding (over printed text) on physically small components are the inherent increase in marking area, which makes the values easier to read without magnification, and a 360 degree viewing angle which cannot be achieved with text. Color coded markings are also more resistant to abrasion.

A significant drawback, on the other hand, is color degradation due to aging, oxidation and overheating. In the days of classical chassis televisions, for example, overheated resistors would change their color bands, making it virtually impossible to distinguish brown from red from orange, except by circuit analysis and deduction. This could mean the difference between a 330 Ω, 3.3 kΩ or 33 kΩ resistor respectively (a factor of 100). An overheated 33 kΩ resistor often looked like 330 Ω. Dirt, unusual lighting, and color blindness can also make it difficult to read color codes.

Contents

Color-coding of this form is becoming rarer. In newer equipment, most passive components come in surface mount packages. Many of these packages are unlabeled, and those that are normally labeled with alphanumeric codes, not colors. In one popular marking method, the manufacturer prints 3 digits on components: 2 value digits followed by the power of ten multiplier. Thus the value of a resistor marked 472 is 4,700 Ω and a capacitor marked 104 is 100 nF (100,000 pF). This can be confusing; a resistor marked 472 might seem to be a 472 Ω unit, and we must rely upon experience to interpret markings. Another way is to use the "kilo-" or "mega-" prefixes in place of the decimal point:

1K2 = 1.2 kΩ = 1,200 Ω
4M7 = 4.7 MΩ = 4,700,000 Ω

For 1% resistors, a three-digit alphanumeric code is sometimes used, which is not obviously related to the value at all. For instance, a resistor marked 68C is 499(68) × 100(C) = 49,900 Ω.

It is sometimes not obvious whether a color coded component is a resistor, capacitor, or inductor, and this may be deduced by knowledge of its circuit function, physical shape or by measurement (capacitors have nearly infinite resistance; unfortunately, so do faulty open-circuit resistors and inductors).

A decade of the E12 values shown with their electronic color codes on resistors.
A decade of the E12 values shown with their electronic color codes on resistors.

A diagram of a resistor, with four color bands A, B, C, D from left to right

Resistor values are always coded in ohms, capacitors in picofarads (pF), inductors in microhenries (µH), and transformers in volts.

  • band A is first significant figure of component value
  • band B is the second significant figure
  • band C is the decimal multiplier
  • band D if present, indicates tolerance of value in percent (no color means 20%)

For example, a resistor with bands of yellow, violet, red, and gold will have first digit 4 (yellow in table below), second digit 7 (violet), followed by 2 (red) zeros: 4,700 ohms. Gold signifies that the tolerance is ±5%, so the real resistance could lie anywhere between 4,465 and 4,935 ohms.

Resistors manufactured for military use may also include a fifth band which indicates component failure rate (reliability); refer to MIL-HDBK-199 for further details.

Tight tolerance resistors may have three bands for significant figures rather than two, and/or an additional band indicating temperature coefficient, in units of ppm/K.

All coded components will have at least two value bands and a multiplier; other bands are optional (italicised below).

The Standard EIA Color Code Table per EIA-RS-279 is as follows:

Color 1st band 2nd band 3rd band (multiplier) 4th band (tolerance) Temp. Coefficient
Black 0 0 ×100    
Brown 1 1 ×101 ±1% (F) 100 ppm
Red 2 2 ×102 ±2% (G) 50 ppm
Orange 3 3 ×103   15 ppm
Yellow 4 4 ×104   25 ppm
Green 5 5 ×105 ±0.5% (D)  
Blue 6 6 ×106 ±0.25% (C)  
Violet 7 7 ×107 ±0.1% (B)  
Gray 8 8 ×108 ±0.05% (A)  
White 9 9 ×109    
Gold     ×10-1 ±5% (J)  
Silver     ×10-2 ±10% (K)  
None       ±20% (M)  

Note: red to violet are the colors of the rainbow where red is low energy and violet is higher energy.

As an example, let us take a resistor which (read left to right) displays the colors yellow, violet, yellow, brown. We take the first two bands as the value, giving us 4, 7. Then the third band, another yellow, gives us the multiplier 104. Our total value is then 47 x 104 Ω, totalling 470,000 Ω or 470 kΩ. Our brown is then a tolerance of ±1%.

Resistors use specific values, which are determined by their tolerance. These values repeat for every exponent; 6.8, 68, 680, and so forth. This is useful because the digits, and hence the first two or three stripes, will always be similar patterns of colors, which make them easier to understand.


There are many mnemonic phrases used to remember the order of the colors.

The easiest way to remember the colors is probably to think of the color spectrum, then add in the numbers. Starting at the lowest values, one goes from black (no color) to brownish (infrared) red (2) green (5) to blue (6) and from there to ultraviolet, almost white, and white light.

In essence, the higher the energy, the higher the number code. In this way, one learns both the basics of visible light in the electromagnetic spectrum and the color codes. They are, but are not limited to, and variations of:

  • Bad Boys Ravish Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly to Gentlemen Speaking Nicely
  • Bad Boys Race Our Young Girls But Violet Generally Wins
  • Bad Beer Rots Our Young Guts But Vodka Goes Well Good Sir.
  • Bye Bye Rose, Off You Go - Birmingham Via Great Western
  • Bad Bacon Rots Our Young Guts But Venison Goes Well. Get Some Now!
  • B.B. ROY of Great Britain had a Very Good Wife, Good Son
  • Buffalo Bill Roamed Over Yellow Grass Because Vistas Grand Were God's Sanctuary
  • Bully Brown Ran Over a Yodeling Goat, Because Violet's Granny Was Gone Snorkeling
  • Buy Better Resistance Or Your Grid Bias May Go Wrong
  • Bongo's Buy Randy Ocelot Young Girls Buy Very Groovy Walruses
  • Black Beetles Running Over Your Garden Bring Very Good Weather

Grieve Sadly

  • Better Be Right Or Your Great Big Venture Goes Wrong
  • Black Brown Richard Of York Gave Battle in Vain and the Good Women Grieve Sadly
  • Big Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly

Black Brown ROY G. BIV Grey White (So really you only have to remember the first two and last two color code values.) (Only problem is, there is no "i")

All of the above are mnemonics for the order: Black Brown Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet Gray White (Gold Silver None)

Saran's mnemonics

Bad Boys Reap Only Yellow Grass But Victor Grows White Grass Says Newton

This mnemonic has many specialities:

Bad for Black

Boys for Brown

But for Blue

   * The vowel in the name of the color matches the vowel in the corresponding word, thus the three "B"s will not get mixed up.

Grows is for Grey---They rhyme well.

Grass is for Green---They are matching words (grass is green).

   * The "G"s also will not get mixed up.

Since B can stand for both "black" and "brown", variations are formed such as "black boys rape only young girls...". It is well-known that humorous, offensive, or sexual mnemonics are more memorable (see mnemonic), but these variations are often considered inappropriate for classrooms, and have been implicated as a sign of sexism in science and engineering classes.[2] (Dr. Latanya Sweeney, associate professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon, a black woman, mentions the mnemonic as one of the reasons she felt discriminated against and dropped out of MIT in the 1980s to form her own software company.)[3][4] An alternative way to recall that black comes before brown in the color code is to use the position of white at the end of the color code as a key to remember that its opposite, black (and not brown), is at the beginning, or to simply make a connection between black and zero (emptiness, nothingness, or absence of color).

Other languages have other mnemonics for this color code. A rough translation of the French is "Don't eat anything or I'll beat you violently, big animal."

From top to bottom:

  • Green-Blue-Brown-Black-Brown
    • 560 Ω ± 1%
  • Red-Red-Orange-Gold
    • 22,000 Ω ± 5%
  • Yellow-Violet-Brown-Gold
    • 470 Ω ± 5%
  • Blue-Gray-Black-Gold
    • 68 Ω ± 5%

Note: The sizes of the resistors depend only on the power they can dissipate, and do not affect their value.

  1. ^ International Standard IEC 60062. Marking codes for resistors and capacitors. Section 3: Colour code for fixed resistors. International Electrotechnical Commission, Geneva, 5th edition, 2004.
  2. ^ Morse, Mary (2001). Women Changing Science: Voices from a Field in Transition. Basic Books, 308. ISBN 0738206156. 
  3. ^ Roth, Mark. "The Thinkers: Data privacy drives CMU expert's work", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 2005-12-26. Retrieved on 2007-07-24. 
  4. ^ Walter, Chip. "Privacy Isn't Dead, or At Least It Shouldn't Be: A Q&A with Latanya Sweeney", Scientific American, 2007-06-27. Retrieved on 2007-07-24. 

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.