best resistor for CRC circuit

It's important to properly size the power rating of the R in the CRC filter.
The voltage ripple on the first C is mostly dissipated in the R,
in addition to the dissipation due to the DC voltage drop across the R.

You can approximate the equivalent DC voltage due to the ripple by
measuring the peak to peak ripple voltage, and dividing that by 2.
Or measure it with a true RMS DVM across the R, instead.

For example, if the R is 0.47R, and if the ripple on the first C is 0.5Vpp,
and the DC voltage drop across the R is 1V, then the total dissipation in the 0.47R is:

( 0.5V/2 )^2 / 0.47R + ( 1V )^2 / 0.47R = 2.7W, so use a 5W part.

Often several lower rated parts are used, in parallel, to make up the total R.
 
It also has to survive start up, preferably even start up when the second (presumably electrolytic) capacitor's dielectric has degraded due to long inactivity.

During start-up, an energy C2 V2/2 where C2 is the second capacitor's capacitance gets dissipated in the resistor. If I don't have the resistor's pulse ratings, I usually assume that its thermal time constant is likely to be more than a second, so a 5 W resistor should be able to survive an energy of 5 J.
 
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Do you seriously claim that different resistors in a PSU CRC arrangement do sound differently? Well, my claim is, due to the 2nd C the resistor's impact on sound will be shorted - if a resistor »sounds« at all. Hence, any WW resistor of proper wattage and value will do.

Bst regards!
 
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