Re: Capacitor notation
- From: "Peter Hucker" <no@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 17 Jul 2006 12:13:55 +0100
On Sun, 16 Jul 2006 20:04:17 +0100, John Popelish <jpopelish@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
Peter Hucker wrote:
I have two capacitors lying here, with the following inscriptions:I could translate these for you, but you should have a crack at them
http://www.hucker.plus.com/temp/caps.jpg
One is blue and circular and reads:
B
102K
2KV
The other is green and a rounded rectangular shape and reads:
104K100V
The blue one reads approx 1nF on my meter, the green one reads approx 100nF.
This makes sense if you take the three numbers (102 or 104) read the same way as resistors - 1, 0, then 2 (or 4) zeroes. I.e. 1000 or 100000, and the units to be pF. So what does the K mean? I originally thought it was a multiplier (1000), but it seems unnecessary, unless the units without the K are in fF!
Also, what is the B on the blue one? I asssume it's not to indicate the colour ;-)
yourself, first. See:
http://www.twysted-pair.com/capidcds.htm
Christ, what a mess! Rather ambiguous when the third number COULD be a multiplier.
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