From Riedon, Inc.

Perhaps your early electronics experience was with communications equipment when vacuum tubes were king. Tubes had personality. They emitted a warm glow from their filaments and cherry-red anodes, and mercury-vapor rectifiers added a blue tint to the drab gray and black equipment.

The gentle hum of high-voltage power transformers could put you to sleep. If a current needed "tweaking" you looked at a 3-inch panel meter, and took control with a knob you could get your whole fist around!

Power resistors were big wirewound guys. They had hollow cores and were covered with shiny brown enamel. Typical markings were "20,000 Ohms" and "100 Watts" in characters you could read without a magnifying glass. Everything was hot. After operating an hour or so, the radio "shack" was warm and comfortable even with a gale blowing outside. The good old days...
...well, maybe. In today's solid-state circuits, nothing glows. Heat is a design "no-no." The only noise might be an anemic whine from a small pancake fan cooling a microprocessor so it won't fry its fragile brain. We measure currents with milli-ohm resistors, and adjust them with transistors. If there are knobs, they are so small that your fingers cramp trying to get hold of them.

Yet there is one common thread: when modern circuits need power resistors, the choice is often wirewound. Today's wire-wound resistors are rugged and reliable. They are small and compatible with modern PC-board and surface mount manufacturing systems. And, new technology resistors still fall short of wire-wounds. Look at the chart: athough metal foil technology is a close second to wirewounds, other technologies are generally unable to measure up in power rating, tolerance and TCR.

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Product Announcements
Mouser Electronics, Inc. - Yageo PNP High Power Wirewound Resistors
Yageo PNP High Power Wirewound Resistors feature a power rating range of 1 W to 4 W and a resistance tolerance range of ± 1% to ± 5%. (read more)
Mouser Electronics, Inc. - TT electronics WHS Series High Surge Resistors
TT electronics WHS Series Wirewound High Surge Resistors offer the industry’s highest surge energy ratings from 2W to 7W sizes. The WHS2, rated at 2W, is the smallest resistor of its type on the... (read more)

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Perhaps your early electronics experience was with communications equipment when vacuum tubes were king. Tubes had personality. They emitted a warm glow from their filaments and cherry-red anodes, and...

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