Little Bird
200 Ohm 0.5 Watt Metal Film Resistors - Pack of 8
$0.45
$0.65
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A pack of eight 200Ω metal film resistors rated at 0.5W with 1% tolerance. These through-hole axial resistors are the same physical size as standard 1/4W car...
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A pack of eight 200Ω metal film resistors rated at 0.5W with 1% tolerance. These through-hole axial resistors are the same physical size as standard 1/4W carbon film resistors, making them a drop-in upgrade with double the power rating.
Specifications
- Resistance: 200Ω
- Power Rating: 0.5W
- Tolerance: 1%
- Type: Metal Film
- Package: Axial, through-hole
- Body Dimensions: 3mm diameter × 60mm length (including leads)
- Lead Length: 8mm
- Marking: Colour code bands
Ideal For
- LED current limiting
- Breadboard and PCB prototyping
- Electronics education and experimentation
- Signal conditioning and voltage dividers
Package Contents
- 8× 200Ω 0.5W Metal Film Resistors
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- Axial
- Axial components have one lead coming out of each end, so they lie flat or span holes on a circuit board or breadboard. This matters when checking whether the resistor will physically fit your prototyping or through-board assembly method.
- LED
- A light-emitting diode (LED) is a small electronic component that emits light when current flows through it in the correct direction. Because it only conducts one way, its polarity matters, and a through-hole LED must be soldered the correct way around to light up.
- PCB
- A printed circuit board (PCB) is a board, usually rigid, with etched copper tracks that connect electronic components together without loose wiring. Components are mounted on the board and signals route between them through the copper layout.
- through-hole
- A mounting style where the component leads pass through holes in a circuit board and are soldered on the other side. Through-hole parts are often easier to handle and solder by hand, which is useful for classroom and hobby projects.
- Tolerance
- Tolerance tells you how far the real resistance value may be from the printed value. A 1% resistor is useful when a circuit needs more predictable behaviour than a looser 5% or 10% part.
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