A current greater than 5 amps; check for short circuits.
You cannot because a five amp fuse would blow because the original fuse was seven point five. and a ten amp fuse would not blow quick enough to save or even be safe to use it in whatever you are using it for.
A T5AL is a tubular 5 amp 20mm x 5mm Slow Blow Anti Surge glass fuse.
fuse number 1 is 10 amp fuse 2 is 25 amp fuse 3is 25 amp fuse 4 is a spare fuse 5 is 10 amp fuse 6 is a spare fuse 7 is 20 amp fuse 8 is 25 amp fuse 9 is 20 amp fuse 10 is 5 amp fuse 11 is 5 amp fuse 12 is a spare fuse 13 is 5 amp fuse 14 is 15 amp
1 amp
no you can't
A 5-amp fuse is designed to fail if more than 5 amps goes through it. A 6-amp fuse does likewise with more than 6 amps. Therefore, if you replace a 5-amp fuse with a 6-amp, you might be leaving components vulnerable to damage and wiring vulnerable to overheating, which could start a fire. If you replace a 6-amp with a 5-amp, the fuse will burn out if the circuit is drawing between 5 and 6 amps.
No.
The 5 amp fuse has many wattages that it can protect. It depends on the voltage of the circuit that the fuse is protecting. Use the following formula, Watts = Volts x Amps. For example 120 volts x 5 amps = 600 watts, 240 volts x 5 amps = 1200 watts, 480 volts x 5 amps = 2400 watts and 600 volts x 5 amps = 3000 watts.
You can replace it with a 100amp fuse if you want, but you have to remember why the fuse is there. It acts as protection in the event of a fault. Instead of the equipment being damaged by overcurrent, the fuse blows. If you put a higher rated fuse in, then in the event of a fault the chances are the equipment may be damaged (and possibly start a fire) before the fuse has a chance to blow.
well it might give you a clue, i would suggest a 5 ampere fuse for that 5 amp plug
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.
Use a mini 30 amp fuse. If it blows then check for grounds with a test light. If know ground is present, then you can step up the amps in intervals of 5 amps until the fuse doesnt blow.