Resistor wattage and lead spacing

arficus

New member
Total noob to pedal building, so please correct me if/where I flail..
A bit of searching has led me to believe most pedalpcb boards have 5mm lead spacing for most components with 2.5mm for electrolytics.
Is this true for boards that explicitly call for 1/4 watt resistors?
Reason I ask is that the "standard" body length of 1/4 watt resistor is over 6mm. For instance, the Tayda ones that are talked about hereabouts are 6.8mm.
So:
1. Are all the people who buy "full size" 1/4 watt resistors regularly bending leads and letting all the resistors ride up off the boards?
2. Are most people buying "small bodied" resistors (eg Vishay MBA, Yageo MF0, etc)?
3. Or do 1/4 watt boards have different lead spacing?
 
1. Are all the people who buy "full size" 1/4 watt resistors regularly bending leads and letting all the resistors ride up off the boards?
1/4 watt is the standard size unless otherwise specified (1/8W for some densely packed PCBs, it WILL be specified).

if you're shopping at tayda, just get METAL FILM 1/4 WATT resistors. this is all you need to know about buying resistors for pedalpcb boards.

2. Are most people buying "small bodied" resistors (eg Vishay MBA, Yageo MF0, etc)?
im buying whatever taydas sells.
brands are not important. these are guitar pedals, not hifi consoles.

3. Or do 1/4 watt boards have different lead spacing?
uh what?
please rephrase.
 
Nah dude. That ain't right.

PPCB components tend to be 7.5mm for resistors, 5mm for ceramic/film caps, and 2.5mm for Electros.

Some boards use 1/8 watt resistor footprints. Those aren't super common.
 
7.62mm (0.3") for 1/4W resistors, 5.08mm (0.2") for film caps, 2.54mm (0.1") for electrolytics.
Whoops, yeah 7.62mm.
Thank you both for confirming. 7.5mm pad spacing sounded weird.

I guess the rounding difference is because we're technically working in imperial units, not millimeters.
I prefer to use metric when doing this stuff. I usually only opt for imperial when I'm doing a project that requires the use of a tape measure.
 
Thanks all. This info may be buried in here somewhere, but I searched via google and forum and couldn't find it. Should be easier for others to find now...
 
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