Calculate resistance (Ω) from V, I, P, or Z in DC and AC circuits using Ohm’s Law. Includes power factor handling for real-world accuracy.
“Tendency of a body to oppose the passage of an electric current.”
This is the fundamental definition of resistance: the property of a material that resists the flow of electric current. Accurately calculating resistance is essential for circuit design, troubleshooting, and energy efficiency analysis—whether in direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC) systems.
| Scenario | Application |
|---|---|
| Motor winding inspection | Measure voltage and current to back-calculate equivalent resistance and detect inter-turn short circuits. |
| Heating element verification | Given rated voltage and power (e.g., 220V / 1500W), compute theoretical resistance to assess aging or failure. |
| Lighting system design | Calculate equivalent resistance of LED drivers or incandescent loads to ensure voltage drop stays within limits. |
| UPS and inverter testing | In single-phase AC output, combine apparent power and power factor to isolate the resistive component of the load. |
| Educational labs | Help students visualize why V/I ≠ R in AC circuits due to reactance and phase shift. |
The calculator is based on Ohm's Law and its derived forms. Resistance (R) can be computed using any of the following equivalent formulas:
R = V / I
R = P / (I^2)
R = (V^2) / P
R = Z / Power Factor
Where:
Note: In AC circuits, these formulas are only fully equivalent when the power factor equals 1 (purely resistive load).
This calculator currently supports DC and single-phase AC inputs. For three-phase systems, convert line-to-line voltage to phase voltage first: V_phase = V_line / sqrt(3), then treat as single-phase.
Voltage is the difference in electric potential between two points. Input method depends on system type:
Example: A standard 220V household outlet is single-phase → input 220V. An industrial 380V supply is three-phase → for per-phase calculation, use 380 / sqrt(3) ≈ 220V.
Current is the flow of electric charge through a conductor, measured in amperes (A). It is one of the most direct inputs for resistance calculation via R = V / I.
Electric power is the rate at which energy is supplied or consumed by a component, measured in watts (W).
In AC systems, distinguish between:
Important: The "P" in the formulas above refers to active power (W). If you input apparent power (VA), you must also provide the power factor; otherwise, results will be inaccurate.
Power Factor = cos(phi), where phi is the phase angle between voltage and current.
In AC circuits, resistance is derived from impedance and power factor:
R = Z * Power Factor = Z / (1 / Power Factor)
Impedance (Z) is the total opposition to alternating current flow, combining resistance (R) and reactance (X), measured in ohms (Ω).
The relationship is: Z = sqrt(R^2 + X^2)
Therefore, resistance can only be extracted from impedance if the power factor (or phase angle) is known.
Because V / I gives you impedance (Z), not pure resistance (R). To get R, multiply by the power factor: R = (V / I) * cos(phi).
No. In DC, there is no phase shift, so power factor is always 1, and Z = R.
No. Resistance relates only to active power. You need either active power (W), or apparent power (VA) plus power factor.
Yes, but treat it per phase. Measure phase voltage and phase current, or convert line values using V_phase = V_line / sqrt(3), then apply single-phase formulas.
This tool adheres to international electrical standards (IEC 60050) and is suitable for education, engineering design, and field maintenance—helping users quickly and accurately determine the effective resistance in real-world circuits.