Depends on the design of the wind generator. Most run at 5-10 mph windspeeds.
Any piece of machinery that is designed to use a fast blow fuse should only use a fast blow fuse. For safety reasons this could save your life instead of taking it.
56 mph
If the fuse is labelled F it is fast-blow or T OR S it is slow-blow, the letter should be on the metal cap on the ends of the fuse.
no A FRN fuse is a slow blow fuse where an non is a fast blow fuse. In a pinch a slow blow fuse can be use in a fast blow circuit but not the other way around.
The fast blow fuse will generally only have a straight wire between the terminals, while the slow blow version will have part of that wire coiled up as a spring.
The time it takes for a fuse to blow, either "fast blow" or "slow blow" is determined by the design of the fuse and is described in a table or graph provided by the manufacturer. In general, the higher the applied overload current, the faster the fuse will blow. Fast blow fuses can open in milliseconds, slow blow fuses can open in several seconds. The fuse used depends entirely on the application and what kind of circuit it is protecting.
Typically the "F" stands for "Fast Blow" or "Fast Acting". A "T", as in T6A, would mean "Time Delay" or Slow-Blow. So, an F6A 250 is a Fast Acting (Fast Blow) 6 Amp 250 Volt Fuse.
2100km
There are several relationships between electricity and magnetism; one of them is that a wire (or any conductor, for that matter) moving in a magnetic field will have an electric potential (voltage).
Depends on how you blow it up...... Wow yeah you would ask that..
Capabilities vary by different brands and models of dryer.
It must fly faster than the speed of sound