G7 North American part list?

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ubxf

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2004
Messages
809
Location
los angeles
Anyone have a parts and numers list. I'm having trouble locating the 33M
resistor.
Cheers
francois
 
I was also looking for this to no avail. I am sure digikey part numbers would be great for most people if anyone has them.

Also, anyone have some boards already made up? I'd take a set.

Shane
 
I got my set from Gustav it looks great. I checked Digikey, Mouser, Newark and a couple of other places but no luck for the 33M
it looks like in the UK it's no problem to get it Farnel or RS componnents
both carry it.
francois
 
Some quick Googleing turned up these guys:

http://www.micro-ohm.com/highvolt/rv.html

Their RV-50 series goes up to 33M and apparently they have online ordering.

Peace,
Al.
 
elecro-sonic in Canada has these resistors :sam: :sam: :sam: :razz: :guinness: :guinness: :guinness:
:twisted: :guinness: :sam: :guinness: :evil:
 
Thanks Freddy G,
I got the 33M from electro-sonic in fact a lot more than what i need
(there was a minimum order) so if anyone need some let me know.
 
sorry for another lame question but what's a 220R resistor and where can i get one .i see through web search that caddock makes MK132_220R
but i can't find it at the big places
 
A 220R resistor is nothing more than a 220 ohm resistor,
just another way of writing it down.
 
Hey guys,
this is a quote of an email I got from newark. So check these part numbers out and see if you can get these 33m..

Vishay offers the following 33 M ohm resistors in an axial lead
package:
54C4601, 54C4938, 54C5069, 13J3378, 71H6387, and 96C8679. These are
special
order items with minimums and multiples that apply. Please call the
1-800-463-9275 for pricing and availability.

Ohmite also offers 67C0688 which is also a special order item. The
above
statement also applies
Let me know which one works the best...
thanks
Gil
 
super newbie shame on me sorry guys

"The R is the rest takes the place of a decimal point
220R ie 220
10R is 10
0R47 is 0.47 Ohms"
i should have researched a little more before asking
 
> super newbie shame on me

Don't be ashamed. Nobody is born knowing this stuff.

And research may not help: I've never run into an explanation for "220R".

And nobody wrote that way (or 2K2) when I was young. I think one magazine did explain 2K2 when they switched to that style. (It is better than decimal points that are hard to see: 22 and 2.2 look a lot alike in some fonts, or when the printer is low on ink, or when you make a copy of a copy of a schematic.)

I had to head-scratch and look at a few values to realize that 220R, 0R22, etc are the same as 2K2, 220K, 2M2, etc when you want to show where the decimal goes but there is no K or M or G to put in the number.

> trouble locating the 33M resistor.

Too late now, but anyway:

For an initial crack, just use 22M, which is still a standard value in US resistors. It isn't quite right, but in this case it isn't so critical that the result will suck. If you want to aim closer, and have space, try 10M and 22M or 22M and 22M in series for 32M or 44M.
 

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