[HomeBrew] Questions about passive components

John Marshall johnmars at mindspring.com
Fri Jan 22 11:32:09 EST 2016


Hmmm, I didn't explain this completely enough for the numbers to make sense...
In the number series I gave, the numbers increment by 10 percent, not 5 percent. They are still called "5 percent values" based on plus-or-minus 5 percent, which gives a total range of 10 percent. For example, 1.0 plus 5 percent and 1.1 minus 5 percent both give 1.05.

John, KU4AF
Pittsboro, NC

On Jan 22, 2016, at 11:00 AM, John Marshall wrote:

> ** Please do NOT cross-post messages when posting to HOMEBREW **
> 
> Richard,
> 
> A good topic for a wintry day. Sometimes we hear these values referred to as "standard 10 percent" or "standard 5 percent" values. The numbers are derived by starting with 1 and repeatedly increasing it by 5 or 10 percent and rounding off to two significant figures. Thus the standard 5 percent values:
> 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.5, 1.6, 1.8, 2.0, 2.2, 2.4, 2.7, 3.0, 3.3, 3.6, 3.9, 4.3, 4.7, 5.1, 5.6, 6.2, 6.8, 7.5, 8.2, and 9.1.
> 
> Larger and smaller values are the from this series multiplied by powers of 10. Same way with 1, 2 or 10 percent values.
> 
> John, KU4AF
> Pittsboro, NC
> 
> On Jan 22, 2016, at 10:01 AM, R. Blackman wrote:
> 
>> ** Please do NOT cross-post messages when posting to HOMEBREW **
>> 
>> Hello to group.
>> Not much activity these days so I thought a discussion would be fun.
>> Question:
>> 
>> why do components have the 'standard' values that the have?
>> for example:  resistors have 47 , 470, 4.7K 47K etc,  instead of perhaps 48 which is easier math  for 12 volts
>> Why does a 1/4 watt resistor have the value 49.9 instead of 50 ohms? ( just checked digikey)
>> Capacitors:  seem to like the numbers 22, 33  or 68 for example.
>> 
>> does this refer back to the old days of high voltage systems?
>> 
>> Happy to hear any ideas
>> 
>> Have fun
>> 
>> Richard VA3NDO 
> 
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