No, the voltage rating should not be exceeded. However, you could use a 250v 10a fuse for a 125v 10a fuse.
You could on a temporary basis, but it would blow as soon as the aggregate current on the circuit reached 5A instead of 10A. Replacing a higher value fuse with a lower fuse is not a safety hazard, but the other way around would be a hazard if you replaced a 5A with a 10 A.
You could on a temporary basis, but it would blow as soon as the aggregate current on the circuit reached 5A instead of 10A. Replacing a higher value fuse with a lower fuse is not a safety hazard, but the other way around would be a hazard if you replaced a 5A with a 10 A.
(5a)^2 or a^2+10a+25
5a(a+2) = 5a^2 + 10a
2a + 5a + 3a = 10a
15
5a = -5a + 5Add 5a to each side:10a = 5Divide each side by 10:a = 5/10 = 1/2
depends on your car look at the fuse box cover. locate the blown fuse on the diagram and there should be some numbers e.g. 5A, 10A, 15A, or 20A. once you have this go to your local car store and by a 5A or whatever fuse. even better... take the blown one out and take it in to the store...
It is not an equation but an algebraic expression that can be simplified to: 12b-5a
If you mean: (2a+9)(5a-6) then it is 10a^2+33a-54
10a You can multiply the constants(numbers) if they have the same variable(letters.)