The Amperage ratings [sizing] of fuses [and circuit breakers] is determined by the SIZE of the conductors [wires] in the circuit which they serve.
The size of the wires is determined by the maximum expected current [measured in Amperes (Amps) or Milliamps (mA] needed by the electrical devices "fed" by the circuit.
Therefore, the answer to your question is that there are many different "size" fuses which range in Amperage from thousandths of an Amp to hundreds of Amps.
12 to 13 amps
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.
12
There are two sizes. The white ones are 8 amps, the red are 16 amps.
It is on the fuses. eg: 10 = 10 amp, 7.5= 71/2 amp fuse
Depends, there are fuses ranging from 5 amps up to 50 amps in use on the Neon.
Answer for UK, Europe and countries running a 50 Hz supply service.In the UK the power plugs are the standard 240 v 3-pin 13 amp variety and they can be fitted with 13 amp fuses. Other common fuse ratings that can be put in are 5 amps and 3 amps for low-power equipment, and it is also possible to buy other fuses like 1 amp, 7 amps and 10 amps.
5-10-15-20-25-30
Fuses are generic, you can get them from any auto parts store, their different ratings and sizes( 10, 20, 30 amps-mini, maxi, ato fuses)
chances are it is a blown fuse. Look under the dash, look for the fuses cover and check the park/lamp fuses. Or check one by one and replace the blown one with another OF THE SAME CAPACITY (AMPS) ... there are 10 Amps, 15 Amps, 20 Amps and 30 Amps ... install only the proper AMPS fuse.
owners manual
20hp = 14.92kW 14.92kW / X Voltage= X Amps Rule of thumb for fuses: X Amps x 1.5 = Y Amps Fuse Rule of thumb circuit breakers: X Amps x 1.2 = Y Amps Circuit Breaker