P
Phil Allison
Guest
Hi to all,
common glass tube fuses like 3AG and 20x5mm types are made with a variety of
wires inside - mostly it is tin plated copper for fast acting " F " types
and either pure tin or thickly plated tin over copper for the slow or "T"
types.
Tin has a much lower melting temp than copper, so the wire can be thicker
for a given rating and this gives it more thermal inertia needed for
"slo-blo" action.
But what sort of wire is used in low current fuses with ratings under 1 amp
??
Some 3AG, 250mA "F" fuses I have here use a single strand of silvery
coloured wire with the following characteristics:
Cold resistance = 2.9 ohms
Resistance at 250mA = 5.8 ohms
Resistance when red hot = 10 ohms
Wire diameter = 0.04 mm ( 1.6 thou )
Resistance computes as 7.7 times that of pure copper.
Wire is non magnetic plus it flames at the point of opening.
Wire is soldered to the end caps.
...... Phil
common glass tube fuses like 3AG and 20x5mm types are made with a variety of
wires inside - mostly it is tin plated copper for fast acting " F " types
and either pure tin or thickly plated tin over copper for the slow or "T"
types.
Tin has a much lower melting temp than copper, so the wire can be thicker
for a given rating and this gives it more thermal inertia needed for
"slo-blo" action.
But what sort of wire is used in low current fuses with ratings under 1 amp
??
Some 3AG, 250mA "F" fuses I have here use a single strand of silvery
coloured wire with the following characteristics:
Cold resistance = 2.9 ohms
Resistance at 250mA = 5.8 ohms
Resistance when red hot = 10 ohms
Wire diameter = 0.04 mm ( 1.6 thou )
Resistance computes as 7.7 times that of pure copper.
Wire is non magnetic plus it flames at the point of opening.
Wire is soldered to the end caps.
...... Phil