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Vishay resistor query - Red Black Gold Gold?

Hi all,

I have searched everywhere but to no avail, so I am hoping that one of you can assist.

I need a replacement resistor for a project I am working on, and the coloured bands are red, black, gold and gold. I will upload a pic shortly, but in the meantime can anyone tell me where I can find the exact type? I know it's a Vishay but there are hundreds.

Thanks.
 
D26C980D-54CD-4DE5-A01E-A545D0BB4969_zpsclvxhhk5.jpg
 
2Ω 5% - without some comparison for scale it looks like a 1/4 watt device, maybe 1/2 watt.

why do you want an 'exact' replacement?
 
Thanks guys. Reason I asked is that some chaps on a different forum thought it was a 200 ohm version as it’s powering LEDs. But as you say the calcs bring it out as a 2 ohm one.

Ok so I got these, do you think they will suffice given the tolerance is not quite correct?

8C12B0D5-86EB-411D-B22D-EAA58F5C0A88_zpsrmoydx2h.jpg




24FE54E6-6A8F-4319-AB14-BA82BB120A64_zpsq6uj5uiv.jpg
 
Also the resistor is the same size in terms of scale as the one in the bottom photo as you can see it’s small! Thanks.
 
The tolerance you actually have is better than what you're replacing it with - not highly important but better than a 'worse' tolerance.... so yes, use it.
 
The tolerance you actually have is better than what you're replacing it with - not highly important but better than a 'worse' tolerance.... so yes, use it.

So you mean the new one (1%) would be better than the existing, or the other way around?

If anyone can post a link to a suitable or even the exact match that would be great. Thanks fellas.
 
1% is better than 2% is better than 5% is better than 10% etc

If it is, as you say, a current limit for an LED then you can ignore the tolerance all together..... it won't make a blind bit of difference.
 
1% is better than 2% is better than 5% is better than 10% etc

If it is, as you say, a current limit for an LED then you can ignore the tolerance all together..... it won't make a blind bit of difference.

Ok thanks. And with regard to the wattage, I assume there is no way to calculate this without testing the resistor using a multimeter?

Basically this board runs a small series of LED arrays to illuminate a logo.
 
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