Given this broad definition, though, there can be many types of resistors that optimize different features of this component, including cost, power-handling, size, weight, temperature range, high reliability, accuracy, noise, and frequency response. These many types of resistors offer a wide range of strengths and weaknesses.
Typically, though, when just the term “resistor” is used, it implies either a through-hole or surface-mount (SMT/SMD) linear, fixed resistor. But within this smaller category, there are still a multitude of types with very different physical and electrical properties.
Through-hole resistors of many sorts have a wire either coming from the bottom or sides of the resistor body. These are the type that come in many DIY kits and are responsible for many soldering iron burns. Yet even these resistors come in many shapes and sizes. It’s likely that anyone who has purchased a few resistors hasn’t accidentally overlooked the mechanical drawing in a datasheet to confirm the actual size and shape of a resistor. With through-hole resistors, the size and resistance or power rating are sometimes correlated, sometimes not. This makes checking the datasheet mechanical drawing necessary if footprint is a consideration. Sometimes it makes for an ugly and hard-to-troubleshoot circuit if the resistor has to take on a yoga position to fit via hole spacing that’s much smaller than its body. Microhm Electronics always check wihth customers about the resistance value, watt, tolerance, TCR as well as voltage and size.
SMD resistors are some of the small black squares on a highly dense or small-form-factor PCB. Hobbyist projects may contain professionally assembled parts with SMD resistors, but without the right hot air or specialized soldering tools, SMT resistors are difficult to work with. These resistors usually have much lower power handling and are much smaller than through-hole resistors. Microhm Electronics MPR series, NMS series, LMK series are all SMD resistors.
There is another type of resistor less commonly encountered, which is the screw-mounted or bracket-mounted resistor. These are typically used in high-power, high-reliability, or testing scenarios in which precise resistances with low noise operate at DC or with low-frequency signals, such as NUAL series.