I've had this big box of NOS 1/2W CC resistors that I've been pushing around for more years than I can remember. Last night I got bored and decided to sort them by value and take a few measurements. The results really surprised me.
While the low-R values (yellow decade band and below) were fine, the high-R values (green and blue decade bands) weren't anywhere close to what I was expecting. For example:
* A batch of 1M resistors, which were all gold or silver banded, had values as low as 440k. Most were in the area of 600-700k, some ranged as high as 700-800k, but not ONE of them fell within the 20% tolerance band that I was expecting.
* A batch of 1M2 resistors, with similar tolerances, and all ended up being binned into the same ranges: 400k+, 500k+, 600k+, 700k+, 800k+. A couple of them actually measured 1M2.
* A batch of 3M3 resistors all measured 500k to 1M.
* Higher resistance ratings >= 8-10M were just as bad -- very few ever measured over 1M.
What struck me as odd about this is that none of these resistors had ever been used in-circuit, they're all NOS, and even though they've never been exposed to current or heat, their values are nowhere near what I expected them to be. Only the high-resistance (megohm range) resistors were out of spec, and wildly so.
I verified my tests using a couple of different meters, though I didn't bother using a 4-wire meter on them.
Is this a normal experience for high-value resistors that are probably as old as the 1940s?
Are they really 1M and below, or will the in-circuit resistance of these old guys actually change when they're used in circuit?
While the low-R values (yellow decade band and below) were fine, the high-R values (green and blue decade bands) weren't anywhere close to what I was expecting. For example:
* A batch of 1M resistors, which were all gold or silver banded, had values as low as 440k. Most were in the area of 600-700k, some ranged as high as 700-800k, but not ONE of them fell within the 20% tolerance band that I was expecting.
* A batch of 1M2 resistors, with similar tolerances, and all ended up being binned into the same ranges: 400k+, 500k+, 600k+, 700k+, 800k+. A couple of them actually measured 1M2.
* A batch of 3M3 resistors all measured 500k to 1M.
* Higher resistance ratings >= 8-10M were just as bad -- very few ever measured over 1M.
What struck me as odd about this is that none of these resistors had ever been used in-circuit, they're all NOS, and even though they've never been exposed to current or heat, their values are nowhere near what I expected them to be. Only the high-resistance (megohm range) resistors were out of spec, and wildly so.
I verified my tests using a couple of different meters, though I didn't bother using a 4-wire meter on them.
Is this a normal experience for high-value resistors that are probably as old as the 1940s?
Are they really 1M and below, or will the in-circuit resistance of these old guys actually change when they're used in circuit?
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