Omega Owners Forum

Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: davethediver on 13 March 2011, 16:03:48

Title: T2 Fuse
Post by: davethediver on 13 March 2011, 16:03:48
Is it safe to replace a T2 glass fuse with a standard 1 amp fuse till i can get to a merchants or maplins tomorow?

TIA Dave :)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 16:04:51
All depends on what it is for ;)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: davethediver on 13 March 2011, 16:06:00
Its the internal fuse on my CH boiler seems to be working fine just the Mrs wanted me to check  :y
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 16:08:25
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Its the internal fuse on my CH boiler seems to be working fine just the Mrs wanted me to check  :y


Right ;)

Well if the boiler usually works on a 1 amp fuse, albeit of a glass type, (I do not know the wattage of it) then it should be fine ;)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Taxi_Driver on 13 March 2011, 16:52:54
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Its the internal fuse on my CH boiler seems to be working fine just the Mrs wanted me to check  :y


Right ;)

Well if the boiler usually works on a 1 amp fuse, albeit of a glass type, (I do not know the wattage of it) then it should be fine ;)

T2 printed on the fuse, suggests its a 2amp to me
Glass fuses are usually fast blow fuses....
Standard ceramic fuses are slower blowing.....a 1amp ceramic may take upto 2amps before it blows .

As long as the voltage ratings of the fuses are the same or the ceramic one higher, then as Lizzie says it should be ok until it can be replaced with the correct type  :y
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Mysteryman on 13 March 2011, 17:20:43
Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: davethediver on 13 March 2011, 17:22:38
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 18:34:26
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Shackeng on 13 March 2011, 18:48:17
I find when a fuse blows it's much better to fit a much bigger one. They don't usually blow then. ::)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Entwood on 13 March 2011, 18:53:20
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: davethediver on 13 March 2011, 18:54:36
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)

That was my thinking lizzie will replace it tomorrow with a proper glass fuse of the correct rating/ Fuse blew because i'm a knob and turned the wrong fuse spare off :-[ Was just rerouting an external time clock :-[
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 18:56:16
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)

My God Entwood, you are back in porcelain and wire fuses territory!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

With modern fuses I find them very reliable, and only one has blown for me over the last 10 years.  That was on a steam iron that was faulty with an element blown! ::) ::) ;)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Entwood on 13 March 2011, 19:00:46
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)

My God Entwood, you are back in porcelain and wire fuses territory!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D




nope .. all capsule fuses ... but 90% of circuits were circuit breaker proteceted. Fuses only used where faster response needed, mainly low power instrumentation and electronic "boxes" .. :)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 19:11:51
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)

My God Entwood, you are back in porcelain and wire fuses territory!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D




nope .. all capsule fuses ... but 90% of circuits were circuit breaker proteceted. Fuses only used where faster response needed, mainly low power instrumentation and electronic "boxes" .. :)

 :y :y :y :y
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Mysteryman on 13 March 2011, 19:28:35
The silver foil from cigarette boxes no longer works. Cheapskates have stopped using metal in it. So...it's a 2" nail for me. ;D
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Taxi_Driver on 13 March 2011, 19:39:57
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)

My God Entwood, you are back in porcelain and wire fuses territory!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

With modern fuses I find them very reliable, and only one has blown for me over the last 10 years.  That was on a steam iron that was faulty with an element blown! ::) ::) ;)

Very similar to a glass fuse  :y
Its the material that surrounds the fuse wire that will determines how quickly it will blow
Incidently, the rating of the fuse, is the max current that can pass through it ie.. a 1amp fuse will not blow if 1amp passes through it.  ;) :)
Title: Re: T2 Fuse
Post by: Lizzie_Zoom on 13 March 2011, 20:04:22
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Shouldn't you be wondering why the fuse blew in the first place? Power surge or something that's going to cook you all in the middle of the night? :)

Its OK steve i know why the fuse blew in the first place :-[ but thanks for your heartfelt concern :y


In anycase a fault would blow a 1 amp fuse very quickly, and if you have a fully RCCB / MCB protected consumer unit that will cut power as well.

If you know what blew the fuse to start with that is ok, but I am fed up of telling my friends that they must never just replace a fuse without knowing why it was knocked out!  There is always a reason. ;) ;)


I spent 37 years working a different philosophy ...  :)  We ALWAYS changed a blown fuse ONCE. If it blew again then full fault finding commenced. If it carried on working it was accepted.

Fuses "tire" as they heat and cool every power cycle, plus the environment was fairly harsh ... high cycle times, high vibration, fairly extreme temperature ranges....

:)

My God Entwood, you are back in porcelain and wire fuses territory!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

With modern fuses I find them very reliable, and only one has blown for me over the last 10 years.  That was on a steam iron that was faulty with an element blown! ::) ::) ;)

Very similar to a glass fuse  :y
Its the material that surrounds the fuse wire that will determines how quickly it will blow
Incidently, the rating of the fuse, is the max current that can pass through it ie.. a 1amp fuse will not blow if 1amp passes through it.  ;) :)


.................or a fault develops in the appliance and shorts the circuits. ;) ;)


In both cases the fuse protects the cable, not the appliance :D :D ;)