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Contrary to popular belief, fuses and circuit breakers ("overcurrent
devices") are not designed to protect equipment (machines, radios, TVs, final glide calculators, nor other electric or electronic devices) from damage caused by overcurrent or short-circuit conditions. These are safety devices which protect the wire and the power source--and thus personnel--from damage. Fuses in commercial applications are often sized at 300% of the load, but usually 125% (depending upon the type of fuse). Circuit breakers are usually sized 125% but can also be 300% larger than the load. This allows the momentary overcurrent situation which occurs at start-up in all electrical and electronic devices. A properly sized fuse or circuit breaker should prevent your battery from exploding and/or your glider from catching fire if there is a short in your radio (for example), but they WILL NOT protect your radio itself from damage caused by the battery (or lightning, etc.). With either fuses or circuit breakers, the electrical/electronic device could be fried before the overcurrent device "blows." As to whether fuses or circuit breakers are faster, there again it depends on the type of fuse and circuit breaker. A "slow-blow" or a "dual element" fuse will not blow as fast as a "one time" fuse, but the one time fuse will not carry the momentary overcurrent and must be sized considerably larger (300% of the load) to compensate. The same are true of circuit breakers, there are fast acting and slower acting circuit breakers and they are sized accordingly. I have spent the last 30 years as an electrician and I have never seen a fuse or circuit breaker save a machine. This is because if they blow, 90% of the time the problem is with the machine. The other 10% are things like wire or a connection that has gone bad, or operator/ service man (or pilot) error. On extremely rare occasions, the overcurrent device blows because of an over-voltage event ("spike") which causes the machine to short out. But even then, it is a problem with the machine that blows the fuse or CB. This over-voltage condition is rarely a problem in a glider with a 12 or 14 volt battery. So don't worry about fuses versus circuit breakers. Neither one will save your instruments, but both will save your glider equally well. |
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