If it fits you are fine. You are at the same current and the voltage rating is higher.
No, you should not use a 32V 15A fuse in an appliance that requires a 125V 15A fuse. The voltage rating of the fuse is important for safety, and using a lower voltage fuse can result in the fuse not providing adequate protection and potentially causing a safety hazard. Always use the recommended fuse rating for your appliance.
No. If the voltage rating of a fuse is too low for the circuit in which it is fitted then, when the fuse operates (i.e. its link melts), the circuit voltage might maintain the resulting arc within the fuse, and it will fail to protect that circuit.
<p>A fuse made by Bussmann of the AGX series. Form factor is 8AG (round, 1/4"x1" / 6x25 mm). It features a breaking capacity of 30 Ampere and a max. voltage of 32V<p>
i was able to do this by going to the fuse box under the bonnet and removing the power windows fuse, 25A 32v
It is located in the glove box. Turn the two white fasteners. It is located in slot 7. 30a/32v.
The main fuse in engine bay blows mine keeps doing it little black box near brake guild res it's a yellow big fuse 20amp 32v
A = ceramic, rated at 250V (all values) L = glass, rated at 250V up to 8 amperes(?), but 32V for 9 amperes and above. NOTE: The voltage rating is important! http://www.cooperbussmann.com/pdf/2bd5c594-ca46-48ff-8b97-ab4af4af0569.pdf
Depends on the voltage across the fuse. For fuses rated below 9 amps, the two types are almost identical (MDL has slightly lower AC Interrupting amperages), and both are rated for use up to 250V. For fuses rated above 9 amps, the MDL fuses are rated for use up to 32V, while the MDA fuses are rated for use up to 250V. More info on Cooper Bussmann (link below).
32v
It depends on the turns ratio of the transformer.
dont waste your money the northstar motors are crappy
Divide all terms by 4 and it then factors as: (v+4)(v-12)