I am fairly new to the electronic component world. I have been slowly learning what they all are but I have found one that I am not sure what it is. It looks like a resistor but it doesnt have a gold or silver band to tell its tolerance. I have attached a picture to let you see what it is. Sorry if the pics quality isnt the best. The component is broken on the one side and has 5 bands. green blue green white white. If anyone can tell me what it is, it would be much appreciated. Thanks
You should be able to check the component with an ohmmeter. If your from the states, try to ask a radio shack employee to measure it for you. At such a low value and, it will nearly read shorted. It doesn't look overheated, so it could be good except for the lead.
That is a resistor the physical size is 1/2 watt. The color bands are codes that tell you how to read it. Green is 5, Blue is 6. 1 or 2 white color bands tell you where the decimal point belongs. NO silver NO gold band replaced by 2 white color bands tells you it is a fractional value. If I remember correctly 1 white band it would be 5.6 ohms and 2 white bands it is .56 ohms. The other green band is 5 that = 5% tolorance. This type resistor does not follow the standard color code rules. I have not seen or thought about this type resistor in 40 years.
Use your DMM and set it to the ohm scale and take a reading of the resistor. Now you buy a resistor of the readout you get from the DMM and decide on the tolerance you need (1,2 or 5 %)