Electronic – Why did the LED burn

ledresistors

I made the simplest circuit with a 9V battery, a green LED (3.3v and 20ma) and a 550 ohms resistor (green green brown gold)

The LED was brand new and died immediately and the resistor was burning hot.

The same circuit with a red LED worked fine.

Does it matter where the resistor is in the circuit (in this case I put it at the end, between the LED and the – of the battery as I read it doesn't matter)

Does it matter which end of the resistor you connect to the battery? (does it have a + and -?)

According to http://www.hebeiltd.com.cn/?p=zz.led.resistor.calculator a 330 ohm resistor would have been enough for a 3.3v LED in a simple circuit.

Best Answer

Maybe you used a 5-band resistor like here: -

enter image description here

Or maybe it was a four band without tolerance?

Green, green, brown, gold would give you 55.1 ohms and this would fry the resistor/LED with about 120mA.

OR maybe it's an inductor!!