Want this question answered?
1000w/230v= aprox 5A
NO! The circuit wiring is protected by that 3.15 amp fuse. Put a 5 amp fuse in the circuit and the wiring may overheat and cause a fire. Never over-fuse any circuit even in an emergency.
It depends on what you are powering with the circuit, but probably not. The 1.5 amp fuse would blow in normal operation of the device.
F = Fast 5A = 5 amp L=Low Break Capacity
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.
The device will work, but the 3A fuse will blow quicker than the 5A would have.
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.
F1 is a 25A fuse and it is listed as audio F8 is a 5A fuse listed for the Radio F20 is a 5A Fuse listed as audio
For a circuit that is operating normally, it will continue to operate normally. However, by replacing the correct fuse with one of a higher rating, you are removing the circuit's overcurrent protection and, in the event of a fault, the conductors and load may become damaged. Incidentally, the symbol for ampere is 'A', not 'a'.
A DC ammeter will read zero
5A
it will be the polarized sum of the two quantity