Resistor Values – How to Read Resistor Value

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Home hobbyist here. I'm trying to be a little more automated in my reading of resistors. I've gotten pretty good at reading the 4 bands with the beige background, I find the colors easy to read, and the tolerance band obvious (gold or silver).

But these blue resistors drive me nuts. Honestly, I could read this in both directions. Is this just a case of cheapo manufacturing and the need to manually measure it, or am I missing something?

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BTW, this measures to 10 kΩ, but to me, the tolerance band looks to be the same color as the brown first band, and could easily be read (from right to left as pictured) as "brown-red-black-black", or 120 Ω.

Is there some trick I don't know about?

Best Answer

It's just bad markings. The bands are supposed to be shifted in position so there's a larger gap between the multiplier and tolerance bands than the first and second digit bands.

Those bands are horribly misshapen (looks like a toddler painted them on) and your guess would be as good as mine. The only vague indication that the right hand band might be the tolerance band is that it's very slightly thinner, but honestly there's every chance that if you picked out another resistor from the same batch it'd be just as thick as the other bands.

In cases like this you just have to measure the resistance.