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blew a resistor and cant tell what it is for a 4 led battery indicator i got from an old PW toy

Look, I was messing with this because I want to add the circuit to a 12 v project and on my project board I turned the wrong knob n burnt out this resistor and some of the colors are faded and I can't even find the circuit diagram for this. It's a green resistor but I can't tell what the first and last band colors are, btw that pink looking band is really red the camera picks it us as a funky color. If anyone has any ideas what itcould be or is so I can repllace it I'd appreciate it very much! Thanks.
 

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KrisBlueNZ

Sadly passed away in 2015
I don't see any burnt-up resistor, or inductor. Are we talking about the green resistor just to the left of the "3P-F0355-..." marking? If so, I agree with Steve.
 
Look, I was messing with this because I want to add the circuit to a 12 v project and on my project board I turned the wrong knob n burnt out this resistor and some of the colors are faded and I can't even find the circuit diagram for this. It's a green resistor but I can't tell what the first and last band colors are, btw that pink looking band is really red the camera picks it us as a funky color. If anyone has any ideas what itcould be or is so I can repllace it I'd appreciate it very much! Thanks.
It does not look burnt out to me... How do you know this part is damaged?
 
Hey sorry guys I'm sorry it was a 24v led battery meter circuit not 12 and ya can't see it but underneith but I saw it have a little glow and smoke come from the resistor, it was plugged into a powered breadboard and I'm still a bit new at using it, anyway I turnt the wrong knob and it went way past 24 n that's when I saw the glow n smoke. Whoever said it was a 10k resistor , I put one in it and it's working fine now. Thank you all for your support! I really appreciate it!
 
Well, it would take 50V to exceed the limits of a 10K 1/4 W resistor. 24V across a 10K resistor is only 0.06 W.

Bob
 
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