Idont really know its just in my home work and it says u have to suck ur dick and if u dont have one go to the store and buy one
wow do we all get the same science hw?
It will work but will not protect the circuit as it should. By design, the circuit should have a maximum of 13 amps, but with the larger fuse in place, currents of 14 and 15 amps can occur without blowing the fuse, and this flow could damage parts of the circuit. It would be much safer to use a lower value, which would lead to more blowing of the fuse but no damage to the circuit being protected.
No, if it has a fuse then that is the protection for that circuit. If the fuse keeps blowing then you are either using too small a fuse or you have something wrong with that circuit. Short inn the circuit or it is overloaded. Make sure you are using the correct size fuse and do not use a larger fuse than required.
It does not have a circuit breaker. It uses a fuse to protect the circuit. Look for a blown fuse in the fuse panel under the dash on the drivers side.I believe the cigarette lighter circuit is protected with a glass barrel fuse not a circuit breaker. Check the fuse box for a blown fuse.
When there is a fuse, yes it is part of a circuit. The fuse is a cheap, replaceable circuit breaker to avoid damage to the circuit components.
mcb CONTROL FUSE WITH BASEPOWER CONTACTORAUX CONTACTORTIME SWITCHPHOTO SWITCH WITH SENSER this is the list to make circuit,
a fuse is a way to secure a circuit from owerload, so a fuse is in a way a circuit in a circuit that owerload itself and breake the circuit inside itself to not damege the rest of the circuit. OR some thing conected to that sircuit.
A circuit breaker does not have a wire fuse in it.
circuit breaker, or "resettable fuse", which is a reallya small circuit breaker in the housing of a fuse
A circuit breaker/fuse is designed to protect the wiring from getting overloaded.
An example of a circuit protection device is a fuse. Another example is a circuit breaker.
A fuse or circuit breaker used in a circuit is usually inserted in series with the load.
By a fuse or a circuit breaker.