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Resistor

A passive two-terminal component that opposes current flow. The most fundamental building block for setting operating points, limiting current, and creating voltage dividers.

Properties

PropertyDescriptionDefaultRange
ResistanceOpposition to current flow (Ω)1 000 Ω0.1 Ω – 10 MΩ
Power ratingMaximum continuous dissipation before failure (W)0.25 W0.1 W – 100 W
ToleranceManufacturing accuracy (%)5 %1 %, 2 %, 5 %, 10 %
MaterialResistive element type (affects noise and temperature coefficient)Carbon filmCarbon film / Metal film / Wirewound
Physical sizePackage footprint label (e.g., 0805, 0603, through-hole)Through-hole

Simulation behavior

Power dissipation is calculated as P = V² / R (or I² × R) on every solver tick. If instantaneous power exceeds the power rating, the resistor fails open — current stops flowing and the component is highlighted red in the simulation panel.

Temperature rises proportionally to dissipated power and ambient conditions. Metal-film resistors have a lower temperature coefficient than carbon-film, so they remain more stable under thermal stress.

Tips

  • Use metal-film resistors for precision circuits where the resistance value must stay stable across temperature changes.
  • When a resistor keeps failing, either increase its power rating or add a second resistor in parallel to share the load.
  • The tolerance property affects the displayed value label but does not currently randomize the simulated value — all simulations use the nominal resistance.