On Tue, 14 May 2013 15:53:25 -0700, Daniel Pitts wrote:
> On 5/14/13 3:24 PM, Ivan Vegvary wrote:
>> Trying to sort through 100's of resistors. Do you all sort them by the
>> third color band, or do you get down finer than that?
>>
>> Thanks for answers.
>> Ivan Vegvary
>>
>>
> At my school, they are "sorted" by value (3 bands). The problem is that
> students don't always know the bands, or they don't look carefully, so
> you'll find resistors off my a magnitude or more.
You may have some undiagnosed color blindness at work, too. The most
common color blindness is a complete or partial inability to distinguish
green and red (the red cones are actually missing, or are sparse, or the
pigment is too close to the yellow cones' pigment, I'm not sure which).
When that happens violet and blue look the same, as do green and gray,
and red and orange (or orange and yellow, or red and brown). Basically
the blues and yellows work just fine, but blue + (red or green), yellow +
(red or green), and gray + (red or green) don't.
I have this condition in the partial form. For the E96 series I can
usually get the first two digits because not all of the bands are used,
but I need to use a meter for the multiplier band (and 220 looks like
330, and 120, etc.)
> It depends on how you use resistors. If you find more often that you
> need one of a specific magnitude, rather than a specific value, sorting
> by the third band makes sense. I don't yet have enough that I need to
> worry about sorting, but if I did, I think I'd sort by the first two
> bands, if not all 3.
>
> It also depends on how many "buckets" you have to sort into. If you have
> only 5 buckets and don't have anything higher than 9.9MΩ, then that's
> your answer ;-)
I have enough bins to cover 47 to 470k in the 20% value range. Within
that I just look at the bands.
Besides, these days resistors don't have color bands -- if you're lucky
they have numbers, and if you're not they're just little black rectangles
with silver ends.
--
My liberal friends think I'm a conservative kook.
My conservative friends think I'm a liberal kook.
Why am I not happy that they have found common ground?
Tim Wescott, Communications, Control, Circuits & Software
http://www.wescottdesign.com