I'm embarrassed to ask this but here goes...
I'm struggling to understand why I'm getting different readings from my meter on the simplest of circuits. I have a circuit with 1 led, 1 resister and 5vdc. I calculated a resister of 220 ohms to get 22.7mA. But I'm getting different readings based on the color of the led. With a red, I have a 2v drop across the led and 3 volt across the resistor, which was what I was looking for. But with green, I have the opposite. I read that ideally, the LED has no resistance. I know we don't live in an ideal world but my numbers are dramatically different. Why am I having trouble understanding this?
I'm rounding these numbers but the point is, that I'm getting different results, different currents, and different voltages depending on the color of the LED with everything else being the same. I measured the resistor's resistance with my meter and it's dead on. If the resistance is close to 0 on an LED, should I expect the same numbers no matter which color I use?
I've tried this using a 5v pin from Arduino as well as a 5v source from an analog/digital trainer PAD-234-A someone gave me, which I'm pretty excited about.
Sorry for such an elementary inquiry.
Thank you