Fuses are sized based on the max load they are intended to operate at.
because of fuses are good
Fuses are rated in Amps. Although the physical size of a fuse is to do with volts; the further the terminals are apart the less likelihood there is of 'sparkover' between them.
Getting shocked! or equipment damage.. It protects wires and equipment when sized properly.
Depends on what fuses you're looking for. The electrical and various small fuses are located on a fuse panel underneath the drivers side dashboard (around the brake pedal area). The main engine fuses (bigger and more important fuses) are located under the hood, usually on the right side in a medium sized plastic box with a fuse diagram. Hope this helps :)
All of the fuses are labeled on the fuse housing, they are listed as what number and what it goes to. as for the actual size of the fuses they are the ones that are slightly wider than a half an inch...not the little ones, the medium sized ones.
Fuses are based upon the size of the wire of the circuit that it is to protect. The wire is sized by the amperage of the connected amperage load of the circuit.
The fuses restrict the amperage (electrical current/flow) of the circuit. The fuse is size according to wire size and load requirements. NEVER put in an over-sized fuse as it will allow to much amperage for the circuit which will cause overheating of the circuit and possible fire.
not sure what electrical system we are talking about. In-line, regular sized two bladed, mini two bladed type, and a 50AMP sheet of metal type I have seen on a Rabbit diesel
The difference between MDL fuses and ADL fuses are that MDL fuses are a slow blow fuse with a long time lag. ADL fuses on the other hand, are normal blow fuses with a medium time lag.
The STX38 fuses are easy to find on a tractor. The fuses are located under the hood.
regular blade fuses
Power supplies have fuses. The motherboards do not.