I think this proves you can over communicate.

Fred

Erhan Kaya wrote:
well, if you check the link below, "01" means 100
ohms, "A" means the multiplier is 1. That's where 100
ohms came from.

but again, the subject component does not read 1A, so
my argument is only for info, it does not help to
answer the initial question.

Erhan

--- Fred Townsend <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  
but 1A in hex is equal to 26 decimal.



Erhan Kaya wrote:

    
Wait a sec! Sorry guys, I thought the 1A was on the
component, apparently that's a marking on the
      
board.
    
Oh well, we can never over-communicate, as my old
      
boss
    
always said. :-)

Erhan

--- Erhan Kaya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 

      
I think it's a 100 Ohm 1% resistor marked per
        
method
    
EIA-96. 

I've seen this before and searched for it in the
past.
Please see the below reference:

http://www.marsport.demon.co.uk/smd/res.htm

Erhan
-----------------------------------------
Happy New Year to all...
Hopefully Without Wars and Disasters...

--- Richard Purdie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

   

        
Fred Townsend:
     

          
Something like this?


       

            
http://rocky.digikey.com/WebLib/Panasonic/Web%20data/ERB%20Series.pdf
    
 

      
Yes, I suspect it is something like that. I just
can't find any manufacturer
that makes them with the marking "LB". (I've
     

          
checked
   

        
AVX, Bussmann,
Littelfuse and now Panasonic).

Further to my previous comments about the large
current rating 1A (if that's
what it is), the LTC1932 can draw upto 600mA upon
startup according to the
datasheet so a 1A fuse would suddenly make a lot
more sense.

The closest I can get is this fuse from Wickmann
marked "LD" which is 1A,
0603 in size and from the looks of the picture,
white ceramic with a black
top!


     

          
http://www.wickmann.com/download/t1/vol1/sonst/adm/links/public/multi_lng/FCD0603_Datenblatt.pdf
    
 

      
Having typed the above, I found a cross reference
     

          
of
   

        
chip fuses: 

     

          
http://www.aem-usa.com/hrc/indcatalog/chipfuse_xref.pdf
    
 

      
. This lists 
manufacturers so I searched each manufacturer in
turn for 0603 sized fuses 
starting with the Japanese looking names as this
     

          
is
   

>from a Japanese device.
        
http://www.kamaya.com/2005_catalog/fccfhc.pdf

lists an FCC16 102 AB with a marking LB so I
     

          
appear
   

        
to have found it!

Now I know what it is, I can look into a
substitution :)

Cheers,

Richard 



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