Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many.
Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many.
so many hours
many
too many too many too many
33 kilohms = 0,033 megohms
1000 kiloohms in 1 megaohm 120+2200=2320 kiloohms
First of all, let's get the units of measurement correct, which are kilohms (not 'kil ohms'), megohms(not 'magha ohms'), milliohms, and picohms(not 'pico ohms').Resistors are generally rated in ohms, kilohms, and megohms because, generally, these are the values most widely needed in practical applications.
To convert ohms to: microohms - multiply by a million milliohms - multiply by 1000 kilohms - divide by 1000 megohms - divide by a million
That is 366,300 ohms.
Unrelated items ... no conversion possible.
0.00002 megaohms
kilohms.
The answer is 1.5 ohms. The 'R' is a multiplier (x1), and its position is the decimal point. So 1R5 means 1.5. Similarly, 15R would mean 15 ohms, and R15 would mean 0.15 ohms. If the letter 'k' was used, then 1K5 would mean 1.5 kilohms If the letter 'M' was used, then 1M5 would represent 1.5 megohms, etc.
the answer is .017 kilohms. To get this answer you will do a unit converions knowing that 1 kilohms is equal to 1 ohm.So...17 ohm * (1 kohm/1000 ohm) = .017I realize that's a typo, but that conversion should read 1 kilohm is equal to 1000 ohms.
The plural of 'ohm' is ohms, not ohm's.The alpha-numeric code for identifying the resistance of a resistor is quite straightforward.The letter is used as a multiplier. For example, k= x1000 and M = x1000 000. In other words, k represents kilo, and M represents mega.The position of the letter represents the position of the decimal marker.So,1M5 represents 1.5 x 1000 000, or 1.5 megohms.15M represents 15 x 1000 000, or 15 megohms.etc.Similarly,1k5 represents 1.5 x 1000, or 1.5 kilohms.15k represents 15 x 1000, or 15 kilohms.etc.
A megohm is 1000 kilohms. So 295k is 0.295M