.....I wonder if the OP ever got the fuse to fit.......
What about products that are designed to fulfill a task that requires them to be a certain size or they cannot be used?
As above, sometimes it is necessary. It does not result in a flaky or inadequate product when used in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions.
I think you need to read it again.
So, again, this seems to be very important to you.
And are these "requirements" immutable forces of nature, or something which some person has deliberately specified?What about products that are designed to fulfill a task that requires them to be a certain size or they cannot be used?
Give me an example where it is absolutely IMPOSSIBLE to make it big enough to be able to contain its own internal protection. (When doing so, please do remember that the context is electrical appliances large enough to be connected to the wiring of an electrical installation).As above, sometimes it is necessary.
You are wrong. If the instructions say that the product must be used with, and that it will not be safe without, some external circuit-level protective device then it is flaky and inadequate.It does not result in a flaky or inadequate product when used in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions.
I have read it again.I think you need to read it again.
And I give you fusible resistorsI give you the 10.8kW electric shower which has PCBs, electronic components, and very thin wires.
Not correct.Much is even made in other countries. e.g. Valliant boilers are made in Germany.

I still think EFLI had the right idea, way back in the mists of time, I mean page 1.Fascinating, but I'd still like to know why the OP can't fit the replacement fuse.
Don't give them to me, Bernard - give them to stillp (and some SMD fuses, if you have any) - he's the one who thinks that an electrical appliance with connections large enough to allow it to be connected to a LV cable or flex sometimes has to be so unavoidably small that it would be impossible to have internal protection.And I give you fusible resistors
Not correct.
You make so much noise about people getting their posts absolutely correct.
Pity you do not take as much care with yours.
Not correct.
You make so much noise about people getting their posts absolutely correct.
Pity you do not take as much care with yours.
He is picking up on your mis-spelling of the name. Vaillant are the boilers...... the valliant are a brave mispellingAre Valliant boilers not made in Germany
As you are often wont to write BAS, please tell me where I have written that, without filtering my words through your particular interpretation.Don't give them to me, Bernard - give them to stillp (and some SMD fuses, if you have any) - he's the one who thinks that an electrical appliance with connections large enough to allow it to be connected to a LV cable or flex sometimes has to be so unavoidably small that it would be impossible to have internal protection.
I didn't say that you had written that, I said you think it. And you clearly must, because you did write these:As you are often wont to write BAS, please tell me where I have written that, without filtering my words through your particular interpretation.
Some of the small products I was involved with simply didn't have the space inside for a fuse that could break the prospective fault current
No, they were too small to contain a suitable protective device.
What about products that are designed to fulfill a task that requires them to be a certain size or they cannot be used?
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