Thread: Fuses
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John Rumm John Rumm is offline
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Default Fuses

On 18/08/2020 11:41, wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 August 2020 00:33:28 UTC+1, John Rumm wrote:
On 17/08/2020 22:09, Scott wrote:
On Mon, 17 Aug 2020 21:57:17 +0100, John Rumm
wrote:

On 17/08/2020 16:59, Scott wrote:
On Mon, 17 Aug 2020 16:20:35 +0100, John Rumm
wrote:

On 17/08/2020 14:04, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Mon, 17 Aug 2020 02:12:17 +0100, John Rumm
wrote:


Why do you think the system was introduced with 1, 2, 3, 5,
7, 10 and 13 amp fuses unless a lower rated fuse had safety
benefits?

For the limited cases where overload protection is useful. They
will all handle fault currents.

Whatever you call it, if there is only 2 amps of it instead of 13
amps nothing will convince me that is not safer.


Define safer?



You're barking at nonexistent shadows there. Any appliance can get a
smouldering insulator fault that takes 3A but not 13A. That's one
way appliances catch fire.


And will that smouldering insulation result in an large enough rise in
current draw to blow a fuse?

(note the word "insulation" not well known for passing high currents)

Now there are some appliances that do have overload failure modes.
If


any insulator can fail smouldering. All appliances include
insulation.


See above.

The problem is, its easy to generate more than enough heat to start
combustion with only a kW of power to play with, and a fuse in a plug
will happily deliver that.

IMHO Smoke alarms, RCDs etc will make a far more meaningful contribution
to safety then obsessing about fuses in the vast majority of cases.

they are old enough, they may not include their own protection,
for


many modern ones don't either as your tablelamp example shows


Because it does not need it...

those, yes its important they are fitted with the "right" fuse.
For


ah, we agree after all


I said that right from the outset.

others it matters less than many worry about.

[1] 100A should be a fusing time well under 0.1 secs on a 13A fuse.
So for a PVC flex we can work out the conductor size required to
cope with the I^2 . t let through energy with the adiabatic
equation:

s = sqrt( 100 ^ 2 x 0.1 ) / 115 = 0.27mm minimum CSA

(115 being the k factor for PVC insulated cable)

So even the smallest typical 0.5mm^2 CSA flex would be fine with
any fuse.


Yup. But the chinese flea bay special with copper coated steel mains
lead would catch fire.


Since it probably has the dodgy non fused plug to go with it, its a moot
point!

(and many of those "fake" flexes would not take 3A sustained load anyway)

Proper flex that's partway broken also would
not cope, and that is not a rare failure mode.


Under fault conditions it may well blow at the weak part of the flex as
well. A fuse is not going to necessarily help even if it blows at the
same time. Under normal operating conditions the appliance may stop and
start or not work reliably - but again the fuse is not going to help.



--
Cheers,

John.

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