You risk too much current flow in the circuit. Overloading the wiring can cause a fire.
no you can't
No.
NO! Using a larger amp fuse defeats the purpose of the fuse to protect the wiring in the circuit. This can cause a fire. Always use the correct amp fuse for that circuit.
NO! Using a larger amp fuse defeats the purpose of the fuse to protect the wiring in the circuit. This can cause a fire. Always use the correct amp fuse for that circuit.
I believe that it's either a 10 amp fuse or 20 amp. Check your fuses out. It should tell you.
No, you cannot replace a 10-amp fuse with a 20-amp fuse. Fuses are meant to guard your wiring and equipment by melting or 'blowing' before the wiring, itself, melts and causes a fire. It is safe to use a smaller fuse than called for, but never, ever is it safe to use a larger fuse than called for.
No, you should not replace a 5 amp fuse with a 10 amp fuse in your heating and AC unit. The fuse is designed to protect the system from overcurrent; using a higher-rated fuse can allow excessive current to flow, potentially damaging the unit or causing a fire hazard. Always replace fuses with the correct amperage as specified by the manufacturer.
Yes, but it may blow if the load draws more than 10 amps.
not smart to do it cant carry the load of the circuit it will blow. in emergency maybe but never go with a higher rating
You can and it will work as long as the circuits load remains below 10 amps. Any load amperage over 10 amps will continue to blow the smaller size 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
( # 4 ) is a 10 amp fuse for the left headlamp , ( # 8 ) is a 10 amp fuse for the right headlamp and ( # 33 ) is a 15 amp fuse for the high beam headlamps