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Exactly. I totally spaced out in my post and failed to explain that. Actually those k, M, G numeric prefixed are the same for any units. Most people are familiar with computer memory or disk space sizes. Kilo (k), mega, (M), or giga (G) are multipliers most of us are familiar with. Kilogram is thousand grams, or thousand ohms, or thousand bytes, and so on.Mega byte is million bytes, mega ohm is million ohms. LOL, actually most aluminum electrolytic caps have rather broad tolerances (like -10% +50%). Tantalums have tighter tolerances.
Checked out two Katos last night.One a Dash9, early run had a surface mount resistor with a "271" mark.The other was a SD45 latest run, with a "561" mark.Not sure if these marks are Kato part numbers or resistor values??The Dash 9 has brighter lights, but the light comes on as soon as the throttle is cracked, and before the loco moves.The SD45 lights aren't as bright, and the engine has to be moving at about 30smph to be constantly "on". Any speeds lower, the lights will flicker and going slow enough go out completely.Any input appreciated, but this "when does it light up" makes me scratch my head.
Well, sometimes. I've only been using ones rated at 20% or better lately. But what I was really referring to is the wayno-name electrolytics from China are sometimes complete fakes that aren't even the right value or voltage rating.
Curious what the application might be for a 1million Ohm resistor... Would that be for running an LED off of the 220v line my dryer runs on?Or could I simulate the glowing tip of Raymond Burr's cigar in "Rear Window"?Lee
First of all, yes those numbers on the SMD resistor are the value of the resistance. They are equivalent to the color codes on larger leaded resistors.Easy way to figure those out is to use online calculator:https://www.digikey.com/en/resources/conversion-calculators/conversion-calculator-smd-resistor-codeHere is a more techincal explanation (most popular are the 3- and 4- digit codes).https://eepower.com/resistor-guide/resistor-standards-and-codes/resistor-smd-code/271 is 270 ohms and 561 is 560 ohms.Next question is if both models have white LEDs, or does one model have white LEDs, while the other one has yellow LEDs? Also does each model have same type of LEDs (like 3mm leaded package or small surface mount LEDs). That all makes a difference in brightness.White LEDs need around 3V to light up while Yellow will only need around 2V. White LEDs are also usually brighter (more efficient) than yellow LEDsOf course the lower value resistor will also allow higher current to pass through the LED, so it will glow brightly.I don't like the 270 ohm resistor Kato uses for their LEDs. With a 270 ohm resistor, at full throttle (12V) it will pass 37mA through a yellow LED and 33mA through white LED. The 570 ohm resistor is a bit more conservative as it will pass 18mA through a yellow LED and 16mA through white LED.Of course at lower throttle settings (lower voltage) the current will be lower.The currents with the 270 ohm circuit at full throttle are a bit over the typical maximum current rating for small LEDs Kato uses. I guess they assume that most modelers will not run those models at full throttle (since we all know Kato models are geared way too fast).
Thanks again. The locos were recently serviced and cleaned.The "flicker" that I described is not like a dirty section of track flicker. It's like a quick pulsation with a few brighter moments in between.May just need to find some white LEDs and my little world problem will be solved. Thanks again.
While I'm not talking about cheap parts, I seem to recall that aluminum electrolitics in general (even the "good"ones from Digikey) had a fairly wide tolerance, especially in the "plus"direction. But I have not bought any of those for some time.
You just have to look for them. If you select "+- 20%" in the Digikey filters, you'll see lots of them. I tried that for a 1000 uf 35v cap just now. If you go to + or - 10%, there is only one choice, a Nichicon. It ain't cheap, at about $2 each. At +-20%, you can get a lot of good ones for more like 50 cents. So I usually go with 20%, since that's the sweet spot for tolerance vs cost. The brands that commonly pop up are Panasonic, United Chemicon, Rubycon, Nichicon, and some others. I tend to stick with those, since the Japanese manufacturers really seem to have "the touch" when it comes to electrolytics these days.