N_Cook wrote:
W for Wood's metal for the fusible part ?
Googling "wood's metal" AND "fusible resistor" produces nothing
It shouldn't. You don't want molten metal loose inside equipment.
Older fusible resistors were nichrome wire in a fiberglass, asbestos or
sand housing. A few manufacturers used carbon resistors, but running
them right at the rated current caused them to age, and the resistance
to rise, which caused false trips. The original Motorola 'Quasar, Works
in a drawer' TV chassis did this on the audio output transformer. You
had to use the specified brand and wattage resistor for repairs, because
of variations between brands. Metal film has replaced nichrome wire in
modern equipment. You wand the failed fuse to vaporize the conductor,
not melt it and let it still make contact, or worse, create plasma which
will carry a lot higher current than the fuse did.
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