If you don't know how to do this, find an electrical engineer to do it for you, because you'll probably do it wrong.
How you add resistance values depends on exactly how the resistors are arranged and it's not always straightforward. Using two resistors together might give you an overall resistance that's less than either of the resistors individually.
Multiply by 1000. 1K ohm = 1000 ohms
It stands for kilo or 1000 ohms.
It is the same, you can use ohm, µ, R or E to represent Ohm, like 2E2 or 2R2 = 2.2 Ohm and 2K2 = 2.2 Kilo Ohm also 2M2 will be 2.2 Mega Ohm.
m (milli) ohm = 1/1000 ohmµ (micro) ohm = 1/1000000 ohmn (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000 ohmp (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000000 ohm
10.2 kilo ohms is the resistance necessary for 1 volt to induce a current of 98.04 micro amperes. Ohm's law: voltage equals current times resistance.
56000 ohm or 56 Kilo ohm
For smaller values (eg below 1000), simply use ohm, for biggers (above 1000000) use megohm, between them use kilo-ohm.
Multiply by 1000. 1K ohm = 1000 ohms
Yes, one mega ohm is more than one kilo ohm. Mega means million, kilo means thousand.
It stands for kilo or 1000 ohms.
It is the same, you can use ohm, µ, R or E to represent Ohm, like 2E2 or 2R2 = 2.2 Ohm and 2K2 = 2.2 Kilo Ohm also 2M2 will be 2.2 Mega Ohm.
the k is the Metric value kilo, or ,1000 so this is a 1000 ohm resistor
1000 Ohms = 1 kilo (not killow) Ohms
You should use the same size resistor; a 47 kilo-ohm.CommentThe correct spelling is 'kilohm'.
m (milli) ohm = 1/1000 ohmµ (micro) ohm = 1/1000000 ohmn (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000 ohmp (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000000 ohm
10.2 kilo ohms is the resistance necessary for 1 volt to induce a current of 98.04 micro amperes. Ohm's law: voltage equals current times resistance.
The answer is .047Megohms. 1kilo ohm is 1,000 ohms. 1mega ohm is 1,000,000 ohms. Just move the decimal over to convert.