Key Facts about Resistors, Resistor Colour Codes and Resistor Tolerance

Resistors perform two basic functions in electronics:

  • To limit current flow
  • To set voltage levels within a circuit

These two Resistor features of current limiting and voltage setting are implemented in various ways in electronics as listed below:

  • Resistors are used to set operating current and signal levels in circuits.
  • Resistors provide voltage reduction.
  • Resistors set precision gain values in precision circuits.
  • Special kind of resistor is used as a fuse.

The figure below shows how a resistor is used as a current limiter:

Current limiter for brightness control
Figure 1.0: LED current limiting for brightness control

The figure below demonstrates how a resistor is used to create a voltage divider capable of providing a dc voltage that is a fraction of the input.

Light ON/OFF detector
Figure 1.1: Light ON/OFF detector

A Photoresistor replacing one of the voltage divider resistors acts as a variable resistor whose resistance decreases with light intensity. When this resistance decreases, the voltage present at the microcontroller’s input increases, eventually reaching a logic HIGH level. Once a logic HIGH is set up, it is then up to the microcontroller’s program to determine the next course of action.

Resistor Colour Code

Each resistor has coloured bands on it, which enable us to see what value of resistance it has. The most common labelling scheme uses four bands: the first band represents the first digit, the second band the second digit, the third band the multiplier (as an exponent of 10) and the fourth band the tolerance (if there is no fourth band, the tolerance is 20 %).

Table: Resistor Colour Codes

ColourSignificant FigureDecimal MultiplierTolerance (%)
Black      0    1     –
Brown      1    10     ± 1
Red      2    100    ± 2
Orange      3    1000     –
Yellow      4    10000     –
Green      5    100000   ± 0.5
Blue      6    1000000  ±  0.25
Violet      7    10000000   ± 0.1
Grey      8    100000000    –
White      9   1000000000    –
Gold      –   0.1  ± 5
Silver      –   0.01  ± 10
No colour      –    –  ± 20

4-Band Resistor Code-(Label meaning)

4-band resistor
Figure 1.2: 4-band resistor


Note that, the body colour of the resistor doesn’t carry much meaning except in some cases it may specify the temperature coefficient. But if you find resistors within a circuit that are white/grey or blue in colour, they may be non-flammable or fusible resistors. Care must be taken when doing the replacement of such resistors, don’t substitute ordinary resistors in their place.

Additional Facts about Resistor Labels

On precision resistors, you will find five bands: the first 3 bands are used as significant figures, the fourth band is the multiplier, while a space between the fourth and fifth band that is wider than the others is used to identify the fifth tolerance band.

Another five band labelling scheme that is typically reserved for the military specified resistors has a fifth band reserved for reliability level. The reliability band tells you the percentage change in resistance over time interval e.g. 1000 hours, brown = 1%, red = 0.1%, orange = 0.01%, Yellow = 0.001% .

Surface-mount resistors use either a three-digit or four-digit label. In the three-digit scheme, the first two digits represent significant figures, and the last digit is the multiplier.

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Author: John Mulindi

John Mulindi is an Industrial Instrumentation and Control Professional with a wide range of experience in electrical and electronics, process measurement, control systems and automation. In free time he spends time reading, taking adventure walks and watching football.

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