J
Jeff Walther
I am trying to identify some surface mount resistors, without desoldering
them and measuring them. The markings on them are 75R0. I am guessing
this is 75 ohms. Is this correct? I am used to the ones with three
digits where the third digit is the tens exponent. I've never seen one
with an R inserted into the number before.
Second, any idea what a P 075 on a SM fuse means? The P is the top line
and it might be a rho. the 075 is on the second line. Or an LF 075 with
the F sitting inside the L and the numbers and letters all on one line.
The fuse is about a size C or D if this were a SM capacitor.
I guess while I'm here. I'm also looking at some tiny SM ceramic
capacitors. Looks like a size 0603 but there are no markings on them of
course. Do I just have to pull those off and measure them to get a
value? These are near the VGA connector of a video card. I don't have a
capacitance meter, although I do have a digital multimeter that measures
V, I and R. Is there any way to measure those without springing for a
capacitance meter? I seem to remember something about using the RC time
delay. Or recommendations on an affordable capacitance meter?
Thank you for any helpful or humorous comments.
them and measuring them. The markings on them are 75R0. I am guessing
this is 75 ohms. Is this correct? I am used to the ones with three
digits where the third digit is the tens exponent. I've never seen one
with an R inserted into the number before.
Second, any idea what a P 075 on a SM fuse means? The P is the top line
and it might be a rho. the 075 is on the second line. Or an LF 075 with
the F sitting inside the L and the numbers and letters all on one line.
The fuse is about a size C or D if this were a SM capacitor.
I guess while I'm here. I'm also looking at some tiny SM ceramic
capacitors. Looks like a size 0603 but there are no markings on them of
course. Do I just have to pull those off and measure them to get a
value? These are near the VGA connector of a video card. I don't have a
capacitance meter, although I do have a digital multimeter that measures
V, I and R. Is there any way to measure those without springing for a
capacitance meter? I seem to remember something about using the RC time
delay. Or recommendations on an affordable capacitance meter?
Thank you for any helpful or humorous comments.