Capacitor Code Calculator
Decode a 3-digit ceramic capacitor code to capacitance.
About the Capacitor Code Calculator
Decodes the 3-digit code printed on ceramic capacitors into a capacitance value in picofarads, nanofarads and microfarads.
How to use this calculator
- Enter the 3-digit capacitor code exactly as it appears on the capacitor.
- Read the first two digits as the significant number.
- Use the third digit as the number of zeros to add, which gives the value in picofarads, \(\text{pF}\).
- Check the result, then convert it to other units if needed, such as \(\text{nF}\) or \(\mu\text{F}\).
The formula explained
The code gives the capacitance in picofarads by taking the first two digits as a number and multiplying by \(10^{\text{third digit}}\). So \(103\) means \(10 \times 10^3 = 10000\) \(\text{pF}\).
- code = the 3-digit capacitor code printed on the part
- \(d_1\) = the first digit of the code
- \(d_2\) = the second digit of the code
- \(d_3\) = the third digit of the code, which tells how many zeros to add
- C = capacitance in picofarads, \(\text{pF}\)
Step by step method
- Take the first two digits and combine them into a number, \(10\) for the code \(103\).
- Count the third digit as the number of zeros to add, so \(103\) means add \(3\) zeros.
- Write the final capacitance in \(\text{pF}\), then convert if needed by using \(1000\) \(\text{pF} = 1\) \(\text{nF}\) and \(1000000\) \(\text{pF} = 1\) \(\mu\text{F}\).
Worked example
Problem. Decode the capacitor code \(104\).
- The first two digits are \(10\).
- The third digit is \(4\), so add \(4\) zeros, which gives \(100000\) \(\text{pF}\).
- Convert if needed, \(100000\) \(\text{pF} = 100\) \(\text{nF} = 0.1\) \(\mu\text{F}\).
Answer. \(104 = 100000\) \(\text{pF}\), or \(100\) \(\text{nF}\), or \(0.1\) \(\mu\text{F}\).
Tips and common mistakes
- The result is usually in picofarads, so do not forget to convert if the circuit uses \(\text{nF}\) or \(\mu\text{F}\).
- A code like \(101\) is not \(101\) \(\text{pF}\). It means \(10\) with \(1\) zero added, so \(100\) \(\text{pF}\).
Frequently asked questions
How does the code work?+
First two digits are significant figures; the third is the power-of-ten multiplier, in picofarads.
What does 104 mean?+
10 followed by 4 zeros = 100,000 pF = 0.1 µF.
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