Choose your country or region.

EnglishFrançaispolskiSlovenija한국의DeutschSvenskaSlovenskáMagyarországItaliaहिंदीрусскийTiếng ViệtSuomiespañolKongeriketPortuguêsภาษาไทยБългарски езикromânescČeštinaGaeilgeעִבְרִיתالعربيةPilipinoDanskMelayuIndonesiaHrvatskaفارسیNederland繁体中文Türk diliΕλλάδαRepublika e ShqipërisëአማርኛAzərbaycanEesti VabariikEuskera‎БеларусьíslenskaBosnaAfrikaansIsiXhosaisiZuluCambodiaსაქართველოҚазақшаAyitiHausaКыргыз тилиGalegoCatalàCorsaKurdîLatviešuພາສາລາວlietuviųLëtzebuergeschmalaɡasʲМакедонскиMaoriМонголулсবাংলা ভাষারမြန်မာनेपालीپښتوChicheŵaCрпскиSesothoසිංහලKiswahiliТоҷикӣاردوУкраїна

Resistor Application Fields Classification

Resistors are categorized based on their application domains into general, precision, high-frequency, high-resistance, and high-voltage resistors.

General resistors fulfill the elementary needs of most electronic technologies, presenting a vast array of power and resistance options for various standard circuits. Precision resistors, offering heightened accuracy and stability, are pivotal for precision electronic devices and measurement instruments.

Designed for high frequency circuits, high-frequency resistors exhibit exemplary performance in such applications. High-resistance and high-voltage resistors, crucial in measurement equipment and high-voltage settings requiring significant resistance values, underscore the critical role of resistors in specialized scenarios.

Special-purpose resistors, including sensors like photoresistors and hygroscopic resistors, broaden resistors' application horizons into intelligent sensing and control systems by reacting to particular environmental stimuli.