this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2026
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Is this a thing? Have you encountered resistors with 5 color bands without a multiplier?
Personally? No. Mainly because while I have had to ID and work with resistors at work a few times, I am a hobbyist, and I haven't worked on anything older than the 90s.
Again, from an amateur perspective, the color codes we're familiar with wasn't globally adopted until 1969. We don't know where or when this resistor was made. It even looks different from the others. Considering that the reading is very close to one of the interpretations you have from the coding, I would guess it's non standard but close and probably within the intended spec. It could very well be just the manufacturer's coding, not our standard. Again, grain of salt, etc.
But check this out (third heading down):
The color coded resistors are inserted in circuit boards, and the PCB assembly manufacturing is finished by thru-hole pin soldering.
Resistors that are produced according to military specifications, sometimes include an extra band to indicate reliability. This is specified in failure rate (%) per 1000 hours of service. This is rarely used in commercial electronics. Most often the reliability band can be found on four band resistors. More information about the reliability can be found in the US military handbook MIL-HDBK-199.
A resistor with a single black band is called a zero-ohm resistor. Principally, it is used as a wire link that functions to connect traces on a printed circuit board (PCB). Using the resistor package allows the same automated pick-and-place machines to place the components on a circuit board.
Five band resistors with a fourth band of gold or silver form an exception and are used on specialized and older resistors. The first two bands represent the significant digits, the 3rd is the multiplication factor, the 4th is the tolerance, and the 5th is the temperature coefficient (ppm/˚C).
For high voltage resistors, the colors gold and silver are often replaced with yellow and gray. This is to prevent having metal particles in the coating.