Any help appreciated :)
bertus Joined Apr 5, 2008 22,270 Jun 1, 2014 #3 Hello, If it is an NTC, have a look at the PDF in the link: http://www.vishay.com/doc?29049 Wich is a link from this page on NTC's: http://www.vishay.com/resistors-non-linear/ntc/ Bertus
Hello, If it is an NTC, have a look at the PDF in the link: http://www.vishay.com/doc?29049 Wich is a link from this page on NTC's: http://www.vishay.com/resistors-non-linear/ntc/ Bertus
ericgibbs Joined Jan 29, 2010 18,766 Jun 1, 2014 #4 hi, Look thru this pdf of colour codes, it may help. E Attachments 23226261.pdf 69.8 KB Views: 14
D Thread Starter doby Joined Aug 17, 2011 54 Jun 1, 2014 #5 crutschow said: Can you not measure it with an ohmmeter? Click to expand... That's a bit tricky when the resistance varies according to temperature. I've found the answer anyway, R - 15k ohm (-/+ 5%), B - 3470K. Thanks for the help (and yeh I used the pdf from Vishay)
crutschow said: Can you not measure it with an ohmmeter? Click to expand... That's a bit tricky when the resistance varies according to temperature. I've found the answer anyway, R - 15k ohm (-/+ 5%), B - 3470K. Thanks for the help (and yeh I used the pdf from Vishay)
#12 Joined Nov 30, 2010 18,224 Jun 1, 2014 #6 Thermistors are usually declared by their resistance at 25 degrees C. It shouldn't be awfully hard to get them close to that temperature. Measuring them with a wire broken off is a different problem!
Thermistors are usually declared by their resistance at 25 degrees C. It shouldn't be awfully hard to get them close to that temperature. Measuring them with a wire broken off is a different problem!
THE_RB Joined Feb 11, 2008 5,438 Jun 3, 2014 #7 Yeah those old one-legged style parts are hard to measure for ohms.