I would like to make sure I'm reading this value correctly as 22.10 ohm. I think the first color on the left is white, but the second color I am nearly certain is gold. The gold band must be the multiplier then, and I am miss-reading the first color which may actually be silver. Let me know what you think, I'd like a second opinion.
Edit: Is it possible for this resistor to be a 220 ohm 5% with a white reliability band?
Edit1: Additional info.
- I can't physically measure this component, this is an image of an identical board I received from a supplier of the part.
- This is on an oven control board. This resistor burnt up on my board and I would like to replace the part.
Best Answer
I'm guessing the leftmost colour is grey, but I'm wondering what the device is that would have an exotic high-precision low value resistor on an SRPB circuit board.
If you can convince yourself the leftmost colour is to be ignored for value, you have a very ordinary 220Ω 5% resistor. Wikipedia says that a fifth band is sometimes used as a temperature coefficient. Grey = 1 PPM/K. (White and silver not listed for this.) As this is in an oven, it may well have parts specified for good thermal coefficient. But a 1 PPM/K resistor is also pretty exotic. Might just possibly be a temperature range indicator -- but I know of no markings for that.
Digikey's standard 5-band decoder says 22.1Ω 0.05%, which really isn't convincing.