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hey people
can you give me a little bit of infomation in relation to resistor colur codes in relation to cable lengths i tried to look it up but failed |
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Um... I think you may be refering / confusing two different things.
Resistors are labled according to a standard color coding scheme. This is demonstrated here: http://www.dannyg.com/examples/res2/resistor.htm Seperately, some people lable cable lengths with their own color codeing systems distinguishing different lenghts of cable, having nothing to do with resistance. I hope this helps abit!
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yeah maybe my school is just strange i worked it out from the site you included in your post
thanks |
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So your saying you put a band of colour every 5' so you just add up the bands of colour to tell how long a cable is?
This sounds horribley enefficent, Try some heat shrink with printed length lablels. and use a colour code to determine the type of cable. or use a printed length with a single colour band to determine length such as red for 8' green for 16' blue for 32' white for 56' etc...... JH
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Jonathan Hirsh Black Horse Productions [url]www.JonathanHirsh.com[/url] |
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Quote:
Also, you put the bands at each connector, not every 5' or so. |
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but if you put numbers that say 5' on the connector end its sooooo much simpler no counting you can tell at a glance.
As to the 50' long cables not being prevelent in the lighting world, i feel that that opinion might be specific to your area but everywhere i work we almost never use multi unless its a tour. The TV show im on now has no twist or edison shorter then 56' and they top out at about 96' (christie lites does 8' increments btw.) so when your talking about supper long cables having a simple way to tell length is key. JH
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Jonathan Hirsh Black Horse Productions [url]www.JonathanHirsh.com[/url] |
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Well, if you're going to use resistor code, use it for ORDER, not NUMBER. IE, Brown=5', Red=10', Orange="25', Yellow=50', Green=100', etc. Typically you don't code lengths other than this, instead using combinations. So a 75' would be orange and yellow, a 300' would have three green stripes, etc.
Although we use a different color scheme, this is the basic concept we use in our shop, and in most other shops I've worked at/with. Why not just write a number? Because now from across the stage I can spot a 50' cable and point it out to somebody, or know which pile I need to head to. After a little while working with a particular code, it'll become second nature. FWIW, the color code that our shop uses, as well as at least one lighting shop that I know, is: 10'=green 15'=blue 25'=purple 50'=orange 100'=yellow There is a code for 75', but it's fallen out of use in place of purple+orange, so I couldn't even tell ya what it is off the top of my head. --A
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