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Revision History for A072554

(Underlined text is an addition; strikethrough text is a deletion.)

Showing entries 1-10 | older changes
A072554 E24 range of preferred resistor values in electronic engineering.
(history; published version)
#15 by Michel Marcus at Fri Oct 30 02:26:11 EDT 2020
STATUS

reviewed

approved

#14 by Joerg Arndt at Fri Oct 30 02:25:42 EDT 2020
STATUS

proposed

reviewed

#13 by Kevin Ryde at Fri Oct 30 01:30:28 EDT 2020
STATUS

editing

proposed

#12 by Kevin Ryde at Fri Oct 30 01:28:53 EDT 2020
LINKS

<a href="/index/Res#resistances">Index to sequences related to resistances</a>.

CROSSREFS

Cf. A072198 (E12), A220401.

#11 by Kevin Ryde at Fri Oct 30 01:27:43 EDT 2020
LINKS

Electronix Express Newsletter, <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20021017175040id_/http://www.elexp.com/t_eia.htm">EIA standard resistor values</a>

STATUS

approved

editing

Discussion
Fri Oct 30 01:28
Kevin Ryde: Link gone.  Wayback of approximately the sequence vintage.
#10 by Susanna Cuyler at Sun May 13 20:45:34 EDT 2018
STATUS

proposed

approved

#9 by Jon E. Schoenfield at Sun May 13 13:14:41 EDT 2018
STATUS

editing

proposed

#8 by Jon E. Schoenfield at Sun May 13 13:14:39 EDT 2018
COMMENTS

These values under 100 Ohms are meant to show the significant digits. All resistors would have these values multiplied by the appropriate power of 10. For example, a 1% resistor could be 10.2 Ohms, 102 Ohms, 1020 Ohms, 10200 Ohms, and so forth. [. [_Jonathan Vos Post, _, Dec 11 2012]

STATUS

approved

editing

#7 by T. D. Noe at Tue Dec 11 16:24:49 EST 2012
STATUS

editing

approved

#6 by T. D. Noe at Tue Dec 11 16:24:45 EST 2012
COMMENTS

These values under 100 Ohms are meant to show the significant digits. All resistors would have these values multiplied by the appropriate power of 10. For example, a 1% resistor could be 10.2 Ohms, 102 Ohms, 1020 Ohms, 10200 Ohms, and so forth. [Jonathan Vos Post, Dec 11 2012]

LINKS

Electronix Express Newsletter, <a href="http://www.elexp.com/t_eia.htm">EIA STANDARDstandard RESISTORresistor VALUESvalues</a>

These values under 100 Ohms are meant to show the significant digits. All resistors would have these values multiplied by the appropriate power of 10. For example, a 1% resistor could be 10.2 Ohms, 102 Ohms, 1020 Ohms, 10200 Ohms, and so forth. [Jonathan Vos Post, Dec 11, 2012].

STATUS

proposed

editing

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Last modified September 11 17:54 EDT 2024. Contains 375839 sequences. (Running on oeis4.)