Resistor Calculator – Color Code Decoder, Series/Parallel & Conductor Resistance Calculator

Free resistor calculator for color code decoding (4/5/6-band), series/parallel resistance calculations, and conductor resistance. Includes IEC 60062 color code reference table and material conductivity data.

Resistor Calculator

Color Code Decoder, Series/Parallel Calculator & Conductor Resistance - Complete Resistor Tools

🔌 Pro Tips for Resistor Calculations: Resistor color codes standardized by IEC 60062. Read left-to-right with spacing gap between 3rd and 4th band. 4-band: 2 significant figures + multiplier + tolerance. 5-band: 3 significant figures + multiplier + tolerance. 6-band adds temperature coefficient. Series = sum all. Parallel = reciprocal sum. Temperature affects resistance (ppm/K).

Resistor Color Code Decoder

Instructions:
Select band colors from left to right
First band: 1st digit, Second band: 2nd digit
Multiplier band: power of 10
Tolerance band: accuracy percentage
✅ Color Code Results:

Parallel Resistor Calculator

Instructions:
Enter all resistance values separated by commas
Example: 10,20,30 or 1.5,2.2,3.3
Formula: 1/R_total = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + ...
Parallel Information:
  • Total resistance always less than smallest resistor
  • Voltage across each resistor is equal
  • Current distributes among branches
  • Useful for current limiting and load sharing
✅ Parallel Resistance Results:

Series Resistor Calculator

Instructions:
Enter all resistance values separated by commas
Example: 10,20,30 or 1.5,2.2,3.3
Formula: R_total = R1 + R2 + R3 + ...
Series Information:
  • Total resistance sum of all resistors
  • Same current through all resistors
  • Voltage divides among resistors
  • Useful for voltage division circuits
✅ Series Resistance Results:

Conductor Resistance Calculator

Instructions:
Formula: R = (ρ × L) / A
ρ = resistivity (material property)
L = conductor length
A = cross-sectional area
✅ Conductor Resistance Results:

Color Code Reference Tables

Resistor Color Code Chart (IEC 60062):
Color Digit Value Multiplier Tolerance (±%) Temp Coeff (ppm/K)
Black0×1250
Brown1×10±1%100
Red2×100±2%50
Orange3×1K±0.05%15
Yellow4×10K±0.02%25
Green5×100K±0.5%20
Blue6×1M±0.25%10
Violet7×10M±0.1%5
Grey8×100M±0.01%1
White9×1G
Gold×0.1±5%
Silver×0.01±10%
Material Conductivity Values:
Material Conductivity (S/m) Resistivity (Ω·m) Common Uses
Copper59.6 × 10⁶1.68 × 10⁻⁸Wiring, conductors
Aluminum37.7 × 10⁶2.65 × 10⁻⁸Busbars, overhead lines
Silver62.9 × 10⁶1.59 × 10⁻⁸Circuits, contacts
Gold44.6 × 10⁶2.24 × 10⁻⁸Contacts, connectors
Constantan2.0 × 10⁶5.0 × 10⁻⁷Heating elements, sensors
Nichrome0.1 × 10⁶1.0 × 10⁻⁵Heating coils, rheostats
Common Resistor Configurations:
4-Band Resistor: Standard general-purpose resistor. 2 significant figures + multiplier + tolerance. Typical tolerance ±5% to ±20%.

5-Band Resistor: Precision resistor with 3 significant figures. Increased accuracy. Typical tolerance ±0.1% to ±1%.

6-Band Resistor: Premium precision resistor. Adds temperature coefficient band. Tight tolerance. Used in critical applications.

Reading Direction: Left to right with spacing gap between 3rd and 4th band. Gap indicates direction to read. Always read from correct direction.
🔌 Understanding Resistors in Electrical Circuits
What is Resistance?:

Resistance opposes electrical current flow, measured in ohms (Ω). Formula: \(R = V / I\) (Ohm's Law). Resistors are passive components dissipating energy as heat. Physical materials have intrinsic resistivity affecting their resistance. Temperature affects resistance (positive or negative temperature coefficient).

Resistor Circuit Configurations:
  • Series: R_total = R1 + R2 + R3. Same current. Voltages add.
  • Parallel: 1/R_total = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3. Same voltage. Currents add.
  • Mixed: Combinations of series and parallel. Analyze section by section.
Resistor Types and Applications:
  • Fixed Resistors: Predetermined resistance. Most common type. Used in circuits, networks.
  • Variable Resistors: Potentiometers, rheostats. Adjustable resistance for tuning.
  • Wirewound Resistors: High power dissipation. Precise values. Heating applications.
  • Thin-film Resistors: High precision (±0.01%). Temperature stable. Expensive.
  • Carbon Composition: General purpose. Cost-effective. Tolerance ±5-20%.
Power Dissipation and Ratings:
  • Power dissipated: \(P = I^2 R = V^2 / R = VI\) (watts)
  • Resistor ratings: 1/8W, 1/4W, 1/2W, 1W, 2W, etc.
  • Must select resistor rated for application power
  • Derating required at elevated temperatures
  • Safety margin: typically 2× calculated power
Practical Resistor Selection:
  • Determine required resistance value from circuit design
  • Select appropriate tolerance for application accuracy
  • Choose power rating for heat dissipation
  • Consider temperature coefficient stability
  • Verify availability (standard E-series values)
  • Factor in cost vs. performance requirements
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How do you read a four-band resistor color code? +
First band (largest): first digit. Second band: second digit. Third band (gap): multiplier. Fourth band: tolerance. Example: Brown-Black-Red-Gold = 1-0-×100-±5% = 1000Ω ±5% (1kΩ ±5%).
What's the difference between tolerance bands? +
Gold (±5%): general purpose. Silver (±10%): less precise. Brown (±1%): precision. Red (±2%): medium precision. Orange (±0.05%), Yellow (±0.02%): high precision (expensive). Choose based on circuit requirements and cost constraints.
How do two 100Ω resistors behave in series vs parallel? +
Series: 100Ω + 100Ω = 200Ω total. Parallel: 1/(1/100 + 1/100) = 50Ω total. Series increases resistance. Parallel decreases resistance (always less than smallest resistor).
What does "ppm/K" mean on resistor specs? +
ppm/K = parts per million per Kelvin (temperature coefficient). 100 ppm/K resistor: 0.01% resistance change per °C. Lower values more stable. Precision applications require tight temperature coefficient control.
Why does wire gauge affect resistance? +
Resistance inversely proportional to cross-sectional area. Formula: R = ρL/A. Doubling diameter quadruples area, reducing resistance to 1/4. Thicker wire (lower gauge) = lower resistance = better for power transmission.
What's a standard E-series resistor value? +
E-series standardizes resistor values (E6, E12, E24). E12 common: 10, 12, 15, 18, 22, 27, 33, 39, 47, 56, 68, 82Ω (×10ⁿ). Reduces manufacturing, ensures availability, simplifies stock keeping. Choose E-series values when possible.
How do you calculate power dissipation in resistors? +
Three formulas (same result): P = I²R, P = V²/R, P = IV. Example: 100Ω resistor, 1A current = 1² × 100 = 100W. Choose resistor rated for this power (use 2× safety margin = select 200W rated resistor).
What's the difference between resistivity and conductivity? +
Resistivity (ρ): opposes current flow (Ω·m). Conductivity (σ): allows current flow (S/m). Inverse relationship: σ = 1/ρ. Copper high conductivity, low resistivity. Nichrome low conductivity, high resistivity. Choose material based on application.