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Fuse (electrical)

 
Fuse (electrical)

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Fuse (electrical)



 
 
In electronics
Electronics

Electronics refers to the flow of charge through nonmetal electrical conductor , whereas electrical refers to the flow of charge through metal electrical conductor....
 and electrical engineering
Electrical engineering

Electrical engineering, sometimes referred to as electrical and electronic engineering, is a field of engineering that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism....
 a fuse (short for fusible link) is a type of overcurrent
Overcurrent

In electricity supply, overcurrent or excess current is a situation where a larger than intended electric current exists through a conductor, leading to excessive generation of heat and the risk of damaging infrastructure and equipment and causing fires....
 protection device. Its essential component is a metal wire or strip that melts when too much current flows, which breaks the circuit
Electrical network

An electrical network is an interconnection of electrical elements such as resistors, inductors, capacitors, transmission lines, voltage sources, current sources, and switches....
 in which it is connected, thus protecting the circuit's other components from damage due to excessive current.

A practical fuse was one of the essential features of Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison

Thomas Alva Edison was an American inventor and businessman who developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph and the long-lasting, practical electric light bulb....
's electrical power distribution system.

Fuses (and other overcurrent devices) are an essential part of a power distribution system to prevent fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
 or damage.






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200aindustrialfuse
In electronics
Electronics

Electronics refers to the flow of charge through nonmetal electrical conductor , whereas electrical refers to the flow of charge through metal electrical conductor....
 and electrical engineering
Electrical engineering

Electrical engineering, sometimes referred to as electrical and electronic engineering, is a field of engineering that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism....
 a fuse (short for fusible link) is a type of overcurrent
Overcurrent

In electricity supply, overcurrent or excess current is a situation where a larger than intended electric current exists through a conductor, leading to excessive generation of heat and the risk of damaging infrastructure and equipment and causing fires....
 protection device. Its essential component is a metal wire or strip that melts when too much current flows, which breaks the circuit
Electrical network

An electrical network is an interconnection of electrical elements such as resistors, inductors, capacitors, transmission lines, voltage sources, current sources, and switches....
 in which it is connected, thus protecting the circuit's other components from damage due to excessive current.

A practical fuse was one of the essential features of Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison

Thomas Alva Edison was an American inventor and businessman who developed many devices that greatly influenced life around the world, including the phonograph and the long-lasting, practical electric light bulb....
's electrical power distribution system.

Fuses (and other overcurrent devices) are an essential part of a power distribution system to prevent fire
Fire

Fire is the oxidation of a combustion material releasing heat, light, and various Chemical reaction products such as carbon dioxide and water....
 or damage. When too much current flows through a wire, it may overheat and be damaged, or even start a fire. Wiring regulations give the maximum rating of a fuse for protection of a particular circuit. Local authorities will incorporate national wiring regulations as part of law. Fuses are selected to allow passage of normal currents, but to quickly interrupt a short circuit
Short circuit

A short circuit in an electrical circuit that allows a Electric current along a different path from the one intended.The electrical opposite of a short circuit is an "open circuit", which is an infinite resistance between two nodes....
 or overload condition.

Characteristic parameters


Rated current IN This is the maximum current that the fuse can continuously pass without interruption to the circuit, or harmful effects on its surroundings.

Speed The speed at which a fuse operates depends on how much current flows through it and the material of which the fuse is made. In addition, temperature influences the resistance of the fuse. Manufacturers of fuses plot a time-current characteristic curve, which shows the time required to melt the fuse and the time required to clear the circuit for any given level of overload current.

Fuses are often characterized as "fast-blow", "slow-blow" or "time-delay", according to the time they take to respond to an overcurrent condition. The selection of the characteristic depends on what equipment is being protected. Semiconductor devices may need a fast or ultrafast fuse for protection since semiconductors may have little capacity to withstand even a momentary overload. Fuses applied on motor circuits may have a time-delay characteristic, since the surge of current required at motor start soon decreases and is harmless to wiring and the motor.

The I2t value This is a measure of the energy required to blow the fuse element and is an important characteristic of the fuse. It is an indication of the "let-through" energy passed by the fuse which downstream circuit elements must withstand before the fuse opens the circuit.

Voltage drop The values of the voltage drop across a fuse are usually given by the manufacturer. A fuse may become hot due to the energy dissipation in the fuse element at rated current conditions. The voltage drop should be taken into account particularly when using a fuse in low-voltage applications.

Breaking capacity The breaking capacity
Breaking capacity

The breaking capacity gives the current that an electrical apparatus is able to interrupt without being destroyed or causing an electric arc with unacceptable duration....
 is the maximum current that can safely be interrupted by the fuse. Generally this should be higher than the maximum prospective short circuit current
Maximum prospective short circuit current

The prospective short circuit current is the highest Electric current which can exist in a particular electrical system under short circuit conditions....
. Miniature fuses may have an interrupting rating only 10 times their rated current. Some fuses are designated High Rupture Capacity (HRC) and are usually filled with sand or a similar material. Fuses for small low-voltage wiring systems are commonly rated to interrupt 10,000 amperes. Fuses for larger power systems must have higher interrupting ratings, with some low-voltage current-limiting HRC fuses rated for 300,000 amperes. Fuses for high-voltage equipment, up to 115,000 volts, are rated by the total apparent power (megavolt-amperes, MVA) of the fault level on the circuit.

Rated voltage The voltage rating of a fuse should always be greater than or equal to the circuit voltage. For example, glass tube fuses rated 32 volts should never be used in line-operated (mains-operated) equipment even if the fuse physically can fit the fuseholder. Fuses carrying a 250 V rating may be safely used in a 125 V circuit, but the reverse is not true as the fuse may not be capable of safely interrupting the arc
Electric arc

An electric arc is an electrical breakdown of a gas which produces an ongoing Plasma Electrostatic discharge, resulting from a current flowing through normally Electrical conductance media such as air....
 in a circuit of a higher voltage. Low-voltage fuses can generally be used at any voltage up to their rating.

Medium-voltage fuses rated for a few thousand volts are never used on low voltage circuits, due to their expense and because they cannot properly clear the circuit when operating at very low voltages.

Markings


Most fuses are marked
Conformance mark

Much equipment and tools have conformance marks stamped, inscribed, moulded, or printed on them to indicate that the tool or equipment in question meets the standards set by the body indicated by the mark or marks in question....
 on the body, or end caps to markings show their ratings. Surface mount technology "chip type" fuses feature little or no markings making identification very difficult.

When replacing a fuse, it is important to interpret these markings correctly as fuses that may look the same, could be designed for very different applications. Fuse markings will generally convey the following information;
  • Ampere rating of the fuse
  • Voltage rating of the fuse
  • Time-current characteristic ie. element speed
  • Approvals
  • Manufacturer / Part Number / Series
  • Breaking capacity
    Breaking capacity

    The breaking capacity gives the current that an electrical apparatus is able to interrupt without being destroyed or causing an electric arc with unacceptable duration....


Approvals

The majority of fuse manufacturers build products that comply with a set of guidelines and standards, based upon the application of the fuse. These requirements are devised by many different Government agencies and certification authorities. Once a fuse has been tested and proven to meet the required standard, it may then carry the approval marking of the certifying agency.

UK domestic fuses and their markings


There are generally two sizes of modern domestic fuse found in the UK. The first is the standard plug top fuse which measures 1 inch (25mm) long by 1/4 inch (6.3mm) in diameter. The second is a smaller fuse which is generally found inside modern electrical equipment, and measures 20mm long by 5mm in diameter.

The performance of both types of fuse is governed by the characteristic parameters (mentioned above), which can be identified from the markings on the side of the fuse.

Speed The first marked parameter is the speed with which the fuse blows. The fastest blowing fuses are designated "FF" (or flipping fast!), these are designed for the most sensitive electrical equipment where even a short exposure to an overload current could be very damaging. Next on the scale are normal fast blow fuses designated simply "F", these are the most general purpose fuses and are very widely used in applications where the ultra fast blow speed of "FF" fuses is not required. The next type of blow speed is the time delay fuse (also known as anti-surge, or slow-blow), designated "T". Time delay fuses are designed to allow a current which is above the rated value of the fuse to flow for a short period of time without the fuse blowing. These types of fuse are used on equipment which draw a large initial current for a few milliseconds after they have been switched on.

Rated current The second marked parameter is the rated current of the fuse. This is simply the maximum current that will be allowed to flow through the fuse before it blows. This will be written in either Amps (A) or milliamps (mA) on the side of the fuse.

Breaking capacity The third marked parameter is the breaking capacity, or the potential maximum current the fuse can withstand without shattering. There are two types of fuse in this case, High Blow Current (HBC) and Low Blow Current (LBC). HBC fuses (sometimes known as HRC or High Rupture Current) are generally defined as being able to withstand more than 10 times their rated current without shattering. They typically have a ceramic body and are filled with sand. UK plug fuses are HBC fuses. HBC fuses are designated "H". LBC fuses on the other hand are designed for situations where the maximum fault current is likely to be less than 10 times the rated fuse current. They typically have a glass body in which the fuse wire can clearly be seen, making it very easy to see if the fuse has blown. LBC fuses are designated "L".

Rated voltage The fourth marked parameter is the rated voltage of the fuse. In the UK domestic fuse, this will generally be 240/250V.

These attributes are marked on the side of the fuse, in the order presented here. So for example a fuse which has "F500mAL250V" written on the side is a fast blow fuse rated to 500 milliamps and is an LBC fuse designed for circuits with a smaller maximum fault current and running at 250 Volts, and a fuse with "T5AH250V" written on the side is a time delay fuse rated to 5 Amps and is HBC and rated to 250 Volts.

Packages

Fuses come in a vast array of sizes & styles to cater for the immense number of applications in which they are used. While many are manufactured in standardised package layouts to make them easily interchangeable, a large number of new styles are released into the marketplace every year. Fuse bodies may be made of ceramic
Ceramic

File:Bridge from dental porcelain.jpgFile:Qing vase p1070256.jpgA ceramic is an inorganic, nonmetal solid prepared by the action of heat and subsequent cooling....
, glass
Glass

Glass generally refers to a Hardness, brittle, transparency amorphous solid, such as that used for windows, many Glass Bottles, or eyewear, including, but not limited to, soda-lime glass, borosilicate glass, acrylic glass, sugar glass, Muscovite , or aluminium oxynitride....
, plastic
Plastic

Plastic is the general common term for a wide range of synthetic or semisynthetic organic chemistry solid materials suitable for the manufacture of industrial products....
, fiberglass
Fiberglass

Fiberglass, , is material made from extremely fine fibers of glass. It is used as a reinforcing agent for many polymer products; the resulting composite material, properly known as fiber-reinforced polymer or glass-reinforced plastic , is called "fiberglass" in popular usage....
, Molded Mica Laminates, or molded compressed fibre depending on application and voltage class. Cartridge (ferrule
Ferrule

A ferrule is a name for types of metal objects, generally used for fastening, joining, or reinforcement. They are often narrow circular rings of metal, or less commonly, plastic....
) fuses have a cylindrical body terminated with metal end caps. Some cartridge fuses are manufactured with end caps of different sizes to prevent accidental insertion of the wrong fuse rating in a holder. An example of such a fuse range is the 'bottle fuse', which in appearance resembles the shape of a bottle.

Fuses designed for soldering
Soldering

Soldering is a process in which two or more metal items are joined together by melting and flowing a filler metal into the joint, the filler metal having a relatively low melting point....
 to a printed circuit board
Printed circuit board

A printed circuit board, or PCB, is used to mechanically support and electrically connect electronic components using Conductor pathways, or signal traces, industrial etchinged from copper sheets laminated onto a non-conductive substrate....
 have radial or axial wire leads. Surface mount fuses
Surface-mount technology

Surface-mount technology is a method for constructing Electronics circuits in which the components are mounted directly onto the surface of printed circuit boards ....
 have solder pads instead of leads.

Fuses used in circuits rated 200-600 volts and between about 10 and several thousand amperes, as used for industrial applications such as protection of electric motors, commonly have metal blades located on each end of the fuse. Fuses may be held by a spring loaded clip or the blades may be held by screws. Blade type fuses often require the use of a special purpose extractor tool to remove them from the fuse holder.

Semi-enclosed fuses are fuse wire carriers in which the fusible wire itself can be replaced. These are used in consumer units
Consumer unit

A consumer unit is a box of fuse or circuit breaker, usually arranged in a single row. This is unlike a distribution board which has multiple rows of fuses or breakers and usually serves two or more locations, which may be split phase, two phase, two phases taken from three phase, or three phases....
 in some parts of the world, but are becoming less common.

Materials

While glass fuses have the advantage of a fuse element visible for inspection purposes, they have a low breaking capacity
Breaking capacity

The breaking capacity gives the current that an electrical apparatus is able to interrupt without being destroyed or causing an electric arc with unacceptable duration....
 which generally restricts them to applications of 15 A or less at 250 VAC. Ceramic fuses have the advantage of a higher breaking capacity facilitating their use in higher voltage/ampere circuits. Filling a fuse body with sand
Sand

Sand is a naturally occurring granular material composed of finely divided rock and mineral particles.As the term is used by geologists, sand particles range in diameter from 0.0625 to 2 millimeters....
 provides additional protection against arcing in an overcurrent situation.

Dimensions

Cartridge fuses are generally measured as the overall length and diameter of the fuse. Due to the large variety of cartridge fuses available, fuse identification relies on accurate measurements as fuses can differ by only a few millimeters between types. 'Bottle style' cartridge fuses also require the measurement of the cap diameter as this varies between ampere ratings.

Other fuse packages can require a variety of measurements such as;
  • body (width x height x depth)
  • blade or tag (width x height x depth)
  • overall length of the fuse (when the fuse features blades or tags)
  • overall width of the fuse (when the fuse features 2 bodies)
  • width of the mounting holes (when the fuse features tags)
  • distance between blades (when radially configured)
  • fixing centre (when the fuse features tags - see below)


Fuses fitted with tags require the fixing centre measurement. This measurement is the distance between the tag mounting holes on either end of the fuse as measured from the centre of each mounting hole.

Special features

Glass cartridge and plug fuses allow direct inspection of the fusible element. Other fuses have other indication methods including:
  • Indicating pin or striker pin: extends out of the fuse cap when the element is blown.
  • Indicating disc: a coloured disc (flush mounted in the end cap of the fuse) falls out when the element is blown.
  • Element window: a small window built into the fuse body to provide visual indication of a blown element.
  • Flag: an external sprung arm that is released to an extended position once the element is blown.
  • External trip indicator: similar function to striker pin, but can be externally attached (using clips) to a compatible fuse.
  • Some fuses allow a special purpose microswitch or relay unit to be fixed to the fuse body. When the fuse element blows, the indicating pin extends to activate the micro switch
    Micro switch

    A micro switch is a generic term used to refer to an electric switch that is able to be actuated by very little physical force. They are very common due to their low cost and extreme durability, typically greater than 1 million cycles and up to 10 million cycles for heavy duty models....
     or relay which in turn triggers an event.


Automotive fuses

Automotive fuses protect the wiring and electrical equipment for vehicles. They are generally rated for circuits no higher than 24 volts direct current, but there exists brands of mini and maxi fuses that are modifed to be able to work in the 42 volt environment.

Blade type

Plug-in fuses (also called blade or spade fuses), with a plastic body and two prongs that fit into sockets, are mostly used in automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
s. These types of fuses come in four different physical dimensions: mini (or minifuse or ATM), low-profile mini, ATO (or ATC) and maxi (or maxifuse).
The physical dimensions, including the connector, of the fuses are as follows (LxWxH) (ampere ratings in the parenthesis):
  • mini: 10.9x3.6x16.3 mm (2A, 3A, 4A, 5A, 7.5A, 10A, 15A, 20A, 25A, 30A)
  • low-profile mini: 10.9x3.81x8.73 mm (2A, 3A, 4A, 5A, 7.5A, 10A, 15A, 20A, 25A, 30A)
  • ATO (Automotive Technology Organization): 19.1x5.1x18.5 mm (1A, 2A, 3A, 4A, 5A, 7.5A, 10A, 15A, 20A, 25A, 30A, 40A)
  • maxi: 29.2x8.5x34.3 mm (20A, 30A, 40A, 50A, 60A, 70A, 80A)


It is possible to replace an ATO-type plug-in fuse with a circuit breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
 that has been designed to fit in the socket of an ATO-sized fuse holder. These circuit protectors are more expensive than a regular fuse.

Color-coding
Blade fuses use a color-coding standard. The Mini (ATM) and ATO style fuses use the same color-coding system, while the larger maxi fuses use a different system, with only some colors representing the same current ratings.

Mini, Low-Profile Mini, and ATO Color-coding:

Color Current (A)
black* 1
grey 2
violet 3
pink 4
orange/tan 5
brown 7.5
red 10
aqua/blue 15
yellow 20
clear/natural 25
green 30
blue green* 35
amber* 40
* = available in ATO fuses only

Maxi Color-coding:

Color Current (A)
yellow 20
grey 25
green 30
brown 35
orange 40
red 50
blue/aqua 60
tan 70
clear/natural 80


Bosch type

Electrical Fuse, Bosch Type
Bosch type fuses (also known as torpedo type fuses) are used in old (often European) automobiles. The physical dimension of this type of fuse is 6x25 mm with conical ends. Bosch type fuses usually use the same color coding for the rated current. The DIN
Deutsches Institut für Normung

Deutsches Institut f?r Normung e.V. is the Germany national organization for standardization and is that country's International Organization for Standardization member body....
 standard is 72581/1. The size of the fuse is: 6x25 mm.
Color Ampere
yellow 5A
white 8A
red 16A
blue 25A
grey 40A


Lucas type

Lucas type fuses are used in old British made or assembled automobiles. The physical length of this type of fuse is either 1" or 1.25" with conical ends. Lucas type fuses usually use the same color coding for the rated current. Lucas fuses have three ratings; the continuous current they are designed to carry, the instantaneous current at which they will fuse, and the continuous current at which they will also fuse. The figure found on Lucas fuses is the continuous fusing current which is twice the continuous amp rating that the system should be using; this can be a source of confusion when replacing Lucas fuses with non Lucas fuses.
Color Continuous amps Instantaneous fusing amps Continuous fusing amps
Blue 1.5A 3.5A 3A
Yellow 2.25A 5A 4.5A
Red on Yellow 2.5A 6A 5A
Green 3A 7A 6A
Nut Brown 4A 10A 8A
Red on Green 5A 12A 10A
Green on Black 5A 12A 10A
Red on Brown 6A 14A 12A
Light Brown 7.5A 18A 15A
Pink 12.5A 30A 25A
White 17.5A 40A 35A
Purple on Yellow 25A 60A 50A
Yellow on Red 30A 75A 60A
80A

High voltage fuses

Fuses are used on power systems up to 115,000 volts AC. High-voltage fuses
Cutout (electric power distribution)

In the electrical distribution utility industry a cutout is a combination Fuse and switch used in primary overhead feeder lines and taps to protect stepdown transformers from Electric current surges and overloads....
 are used to protect instrument transformer
Transformer

A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one electrical network to another through inductive coupling conductors — the transformer's coils or "windings"....
s used for electricity metering, or for small power transformer
Transformer

A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one electrical network to another through inductive coupling conductors — the transformer's coils or "windings"....
s where the expense of a circuit breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
 is not warranted. For example, in distribution systems, a power fuse may be used to protect a transformer serving 1-3 houses. A circuit breaker at 115 kV may cost up to five times as much as a set of power fuses, so the resulting saving can be tens of thousands of dollars. Pole-mounted distribution transformers are nearly always protected by a fusible cutout
Cutout (electric power distribution)

In the electrical distribution utility industry a cutout is a combination Fuse and switch used in primary overhead feeder lines and taps to protect stepdown transformers from Electric current surges and overloads....
, which can have the fuse element replaced using live-line maintenance tools.

Large power fuses use fusible elements made of silver
Silver

Silver is a chemical element with the chemical symbol Ag and atomic number 47. A soft, white, lustrous transition metal, it has the highest electrical conductivity of any element and the highest thermal conductivity of any metal....
, copper
Copper

Copper is a chemical element with the symbol Cu and atomic number 29.It is a ductile metal with very high thermal and electrical conductivity....
 or tin
Tin

Tin is a chemical element with the symbol Sn and atomic number 50. Tin is obtained chiefly from the mineral cassiterite, where it occurs as an oxide, SnO2....
 to provide stable and predictable performance. High voltage expulsion fuses surround the fusible link with gas-evolving substances, such as boric acid
Boric acid

Boric acid, also called boracic acid or orthoboric acid or Acidum Boricum, is a weak acid often used as an antiseptic, insecticide, flame retardant, in nuclear power plants to control the fission rate of uranium, and as a precursor of other chemical compounds....
. When the fuse blows, heat from the arc causes the boric acid to evolve large volumes of gases. The associated high pressure (often greater than 100 atmospheres) and cooling gases rapidly extinguish (quench
Quench

A quench refers to a rapid cooling. In polymer chemistry and materials science, quenching is used to prevent low-temperature processes such as phase transformations from occurring by only providing a narrow window of time in which the reaction is both thermodynamically favorable and kinetically accessible....
) the resulting arc. The hot gases are then explosively expelled out of the end(s) of the fuse. Other special High Rupturing Capacity (HRC) fuses surround one or more parallel connected fusible links with an energy absorbing material, typically silicon dioxide
Silicon dioxide

The chemical compound 'silicon dioxide', also known as 'silica' , is an oxide of silicon with a chemical formula of and has been known for its hardness since antiquity....
 sand. When the fusible link blows, the sand absorbs energy from the arc, rapidly quenching it, creating an artificial fulgurite
Fulgurite

Fulgurites are natural hollow carrot-shaped glass tubes formed in quartz sand or soil by lightning strikes. Fulgurites can also be produced when a high voltage electrical distribution network breaks and the lines fall onto a conductive surface with sand beneath....
 in the process. power plant ]]

Fuses compared with circuit breakers

Fuses have the advantages of often being less costly and simpler than a circuit breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
 for similar ratings. The blown fuse must be replaced with a new device which is less convenient than simply resetting a breaker and therefore likely to discourage people from ignoring faults. On the other hand, replacing a fuse without isolating the circuit first (most building wiring designs do not provide individual isolation switches for each fuse) can be dangerous in itself, particularly if the fault is a short circuit.

High rupturing capacity fuses can be rated to safely interrupt up to 300,000 amperes at 600 V AC. Special current-limiting fuses are applied ahead of some molded-case breakers to protect the breakers in low-voltage power circuits with high short-circuit levels.

"Current-limiting" fuses operate so quickly that they limit the total "let-through" energy that passes into the circuit, helping to protect downstream equipment from damage. These fuses clear the fault in less than one cycle of the AC power frequency. Circuit breakers cannot offer similar rapid protection.

Circuit breakers which have interrupted a severe fault should be removed from service and inspected and replaced if damaged.

Circuit breakers must be maintained on a regular basis to ensure their mechanical operation during an interruption. This is not the case with fuses, in which no mechanical operation is required for the fuse to operate under fault conditions.

In a multi-phase power circuit, if only one fuse opens, the remaining phases will have higher than normal currents, and unbalanced voltages, with possible damage to motors. Fuses only sense overcurrent, or to a degree, over-temperature, and cannot usually be used independently with protective relaying
Relay

A relay is an electrical switch that opens and closes under the control of another electrical circuit. In the original form, the switch is operated by an magnet to open or close one or many sets of contacts....
 to provide more advanced protective functions, for example, ground fault detection.

Some manufacturers of medium-voltage distribution fuses combine the overcurrent protection characteristics of the fusible element with the flexibility of relay protection by adding a pyrotechnic device to the fuse operated by external protection relays
Relay

A relay is an electrical switch that opens and closes under the control of another electrical circuit. In the original form, the switch is operated by an magnet to open or close one or many sets of contacts....
.

Fuse Boxes

Image:MEM_1957_cu_open.jpg|MEM rewirable fuse box Image:MEM_1957_fuseholders.jpg|MEM rewirable fuse holders (30A & 15A) Image:FuseBoxforWikipedia.jpg|Wylex fuse box Image:Fuse wire.jpg|fuse wire as sold to UK consumers

In the UK, older electrical consumer unit
Consumer unit

A consumer unit is a box of fuse or circuit breaker, usually arranged in a single row. This is unlike a distribution board which has multiple rows of fuses or breakers and usually serves two or more locations, which may be split phase, two phase, two phases taken from three phase, or three phases....
s (also called fuse boxes) are fitted either with semi-enclosed (rewirable) fuses (BS 3036) or cartridge fuses (BS 1361). (Fuse wire is commonly supplied to consumers as short lengths of 5A-, 15A- and 30A-rated wire wound on a piece of cardboard.) Modern consumer units usually contain miniature circuit breakers (MCBs) instead of fuses, though cartridge fuses are sometimes still used, as MCBs are rather prone to nuisance tripping.

Renewable fuses (rewirable or cartridge) allow user replacement, but this can be hazardous as it is easy to put a higher-rated or double fuse element (link or wire) into the holder (“overfusing”), or simply fitting it with copper wire or even a totally different type of conducting object (hairpins, paper clips, nails etc.) to the existing carrier. Such tampering will not be visible without full inspection of the fuse. Fuse wire was never used in North America for this reason, although renewable fuses continue to be made for distribution boards.

The fuse boxes pictured in this section are (right) a MEM consumer unit with four rewirable fuse holders (two 30A & two 15A) installed c.1957 (cover removed); a “Wylex standard” unit with eight rewirable fuse holders.

The “Wylex standard” consumer unit was very popular in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 until the wiring regulations started demanding Residual-Current Device
Residual-current device

A residual current device , similar to that of a residual current circuit breaker , is an electrical wiring device that disconnects a circuit whenever it detects that the electric current is not balanced between the energized conductor and the return Ground and neutral conductor....
s (RCD
Residual-current device

A residual current device , similar to that of a residual current circuit breaker , is an electrical wiring device that disconnects a circuit whenever it detects that the electric current is not balanced between the energized conductor and the return Ground and neutral conductor....
s) for sockets that could feasibly supply equipment outside the equipotential zone. The design does not allow for fitting of RCDs or RCBOs
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
. Some Wylex standard models were made with an RCD instead of the main switch, but (for consumer units supplying the entire installation) this is no longer compliant with the wiring regulations
BS 7671

British Standard BS 7671 "Requirements for electrical installations" is the national standard in the United Kingdom for low voltage electrical installations....
 as alarm systems should not be RCD-protected. There are two styles of fuse base that can be screwed into these units — one designed for rewirable fusewire carriers and one designed for cartridge fuse carriers. Over the years MCBs have been made for both styles of base. In both cases, higher rated carriers had wider pins, so a carrier couldn't be changed for a higher rated one without also changing the base. Cartridge fuse carriers are also now available for DIN-rail enclosures.

In North America, fuse boxes were formerly used in buildings wired before about 1950. These used screw-in "plug" type (not to be confused with what the British call plug fuses), in screw-thread holders similar to Edison-base incandescent lamps, with ratings of 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 amperes. To prevent installation of fuses with too high a current rating for the circuit, later fuse boxes included rejection features in the fuseholder socket. Some installations have resettable miniature thermal circuit breaker
Circuit breaker

A circuit breaker is an automatically-operated Electricity switch designed to protect an Electrical network from damage caused by Overcurrent or short circuit....
s which screw into the fuse socket. One form of abuse of the fuse box was to put a penny
Penny

A penny is a coin or a unit of currency used in several English-speaking countries....
 in the socket, which defeated the overcurrent protection function and resulted in a dangerous condition. Plug fuses are no longer used for branch circuit protection in new residential or industrial construction.

British plug fuse

Fuses
The BS 1363
BS 1363

British Standard BS 1363 specifies the most common type of domestic AC power plugs and sockets that are used in the United Kingdom, Cyprus, Republic of Ireland, Malta, Malaysia, Singapore and many former British overseas territory....
 13 A plug has a BS 1362 cartridge fuse inside. This allows the use of 30 A/32 A (30 A was the original size; 32 A is the closest European harmonised size) socket circuits safely. In order to keep cable sizes manageable these are usually wired in ring mains
Ring circuit

In electricity supply, a ring final circuit or ring circuit is an electrical wiring technique developed and primarily used in the United Kingdom that provides two independent conductors for live, neutral and protective earth within a building for each connected load or socket....
. It also provides better protection for small appliances with thin flex as a variety of fuse ratings (1 A, 2 A, 3 A, 5 A, 7 A, 10 A 13 A with 3, 5 and 13 being the most common) are available and a suitable fuse should be fitted to allow the normal operating current while protecting the appliance and its cord as well as possible. With some loads it is normal to use a slightly higher rated fuse than the normal operating current. For example on 500 W halogen floodlights it is normal to use a 5 A fuse even though a 3 A would carry the normal operating current. This is because halogen lights draw a significant surge of current at switch on as their cold resistance is far lower than their resistance at operating temperature.

In most other wiring practices the wires in a flexible cord are considered to be protected by the branch circuit overcurrent device, usually rated at around 15 amperes, so a plug-mounted fuse is not used. Small electronic apparatus often includes a fuseholder on or in the equipment, to protect internal components only.

The rating on a BS1362 fuse specifies the maximum current the fuse can pass 'indefinitely' under standard conditions. The fuse will pass higher currents than the rated value for significant periods, depending on how high the overload is. Fuse manufacturers publish tables or graphs of fuse characteristics to allow electrical system designers to specify the correct fuse for the conditions under which it will be expected to operate. One example is the table published by Cooper-Bussmann for their BS1362 fuses. In this table it can be seen that the fuse is specified to be able to carry its rated current for a minimum of 1,000 hours; 1.6 times its rated current for a minimum of 30 minutes; and 1.9 times its rated current for a maximum of 30 minutes. Thus, this BS1362 13A fuse is only rated to break its circuit after carrying 24.7 Amps for 30 minutes.

Coordination of fuses in series

Where several fuses are connected in series at the various levels of a power distribution system, it is very desirable to clear only the fuse (or other overcurrent devices) electrically closest to the fault. This process is called "coordination" and may require the time-current characteristics of two fuses to be plotted on a common current basis. Fuses are then selected so that the minor, branch, fuse clears its circuit well before the supplying, major, fuse starts to melt. In this way only the faulty circuits are interrupted and minimal disturbance occurs to other circuits fed by the supplying fuse.

Where the fuses in a system are of similar types, simple rule-of-thumb ratios between ratings of the fuse closest to the load and the next fuse towards the source can be used.

Other fuse types


Resettable fuses

main article:Resettable fuse
Resettable fuse

A polymeric positive temperature coefficient device is a passive electronic component used to protect against overelectric current faults in electronic circuits....
So-called "self-resetting
Resettable fuse

A polymeric positive temperature coefficient device is a passive electronic component used to protect against overelectric current faults in electronic circuits....
" fuses use a thermoplastic conductive element known as a Polymeric Positive Temperature Coefficient (or PPTC) thermistor
Thermistor

A thermistor is a type of resistor with electrical resistance proportional to its temperature. The word is a portmanteau of Thermal and resistor....
 that impedes the circuit during an overcurrent condition (through increasing the device resistance). The PPTC thermistor is self-resetting in that when the overcurrent condition is removed, the device will revert back to low resistance, allowing the circuit to operate normally again. These devices are often used in aerospace/nuclear applications where replacement is difficult.

Thermal fuses

A "thermal fuse" is often found in consumer equipment such as coffee makers or hair dryers or transformer
Transformer

A transformer is a device that transfers electrical energy from one electrical network to another through inductive coupling conductors — the transformer's coils or "windings"....
s powering small consumer electronics devices. They contain a fusible, temperature-sensitive alloy which holds a spring contact mechanism normally closed. When the surrounding temperature gets too high, the alloy melts and allows the spring contact mechanism to break the circuit. The device can be used to prevent a fire in a hair dryer for example, by cutting off the power supply to the heater elements when the air flow is interrupted (e.g. the blower motor stops or the air intake becomes accidentally blocked). Thermal fuses are a 'one shot', non-resettable device which must be replaced once they have been activated.

See also


  • Antifuse
    Antifuse

    An antifuse is an electrical device that performs the opposite function to a Fuse . Whereas a fuse starts with a low resistance and is designed to permanently break an Electrical conduction path , an antifuse starts with a high resistance and is designed to permanently create an electrically conductive path ....
  • Autorecloser
    Autorecloser

    In electric power distribution, an autorecloser is a circuit breaker equipped with a mechanism that can automatically close the breaker after it has been opened due to a fault ....
  • Electronic Components
  • Semiconductor fuse
    Semiconductor fuse

    Semiconductor fuses are used to protect against over-Current conditions in semiconductors devices. Because of their fast action, semiconductor Fuse s help to limit the short circuit current significantly....
  • Protective Device Coordination
    Protective Device Coordination

    Electrical Protective Device for distributed power systems consist of fuse , circuit breakers, relays and other types of devices typically designed to interrupt the current flow in an electrical power system....


External links


  • Information on circuit protection, surface mount fuses, axial lead & cartridge fuses, blade terminal & special mount fuses, fuseholders, fuse blocks & clips and military fuses and fuseholders
  • for the Bussmann manual of fuse selection
  • Technical information on circuit protection, fuses, fuse holders, clips, blocks & accessories