BS1362 includes 1A fuses.So, you cannot afford protection below a 3A fuse - plus its fusing factor?.
Surely you think that is not good enough.
BS1362 includes 1A fuses.So, you cannot afford protection below a 3A fuse - plus its fusing factor?.
Surely you think that is not good enough.
I don't think anyone is suggesting that the flexible cord of an appliance is not fully protected by the preferred value BS1362 fuses, so I don't see the relevance of that quote from the BEAMA paper.From BEAMA.
No mention of any appliance.
http://www.beama.org.uk/asset/A3738A16-B693-4354-9BA38AB49204773F/
View attachment 126520
Of course, my mistake.
So, you cannot afford protection below a 1A fuse - plus its fusing factor?.
Because currents that can blow a fuse below 1A don't need sand-filled ceramic fuses to achieve the rupturing capacity?
I don't see how the type of fuse has any relevance.Because currents that can blow a fuse below 1A don't need sand-filled ceramic fuses to achieve the rupturing capacity?
I doubt it, for a number of reasons, one of which is that you'd have nowhere to fit it! At that price, it presumably contains only a heater so would be unlikely to benefit from a lower value fuse than is necessary to protect the flex.As neither of you has given an example of an item where this would be beneficial, might a 3A or 1A fuse save me having to spend another 8 euros on a new glue gun?
I find that very surprising.I don't see how the type of fuse has any relevance.
I would have thought that the possibility, even if only small, of reducing damage (including fire) would count as 'beneficial', wouldn't it.Not in any way which would be beneficial.
Oh, it's an example of an 'item' you're after is it, rather than an example of when a low-rating fuse has done good?As neither of you has given an example of an item where this would be beneficial ....
Indeed - that why I have recently been writing "adequate (ideally optimal) internal protection".A further consideration is what is meant by 'adequate' internal protection. Is protection sufficient for 100% of cases, or 99%, or 90%? What if the appliance is such that any overcurrent sufficient to blow a fuse will have caused irreparable damage to the appliance?
I doubt it, for a number of reasons, one of which is that you'd have nowhere to fit it! At that price, it presumably contains only a heater so would be unlikely to benefit from a lower value fuse than is necessary to protect the flex.
I find that very surprising.
Well, neither you nor BAS has given an example of an instance where it would be harmful to fit a lower value plug fuse...As neither of you has given an example of an item where this would be beneficial
What do you consider to be adequate or optimal?Indeed - that why I have recently been writing "adequate (ideally optimal) internal protection".
Ah.I doubt it, for a number of reasons, one of which is that you'd have nowhere to fit it! At that price, it presumably contains only a heater so would be unlikely to benefit from a lower value fuse than is necessary to protect the flex.
It would - but you are continuing to believe that that is not already the case.I would have thought that the possibility, even if only small, of reducing damage (including fire) would count as 'beneficial', wouldn't it.
Yes, why wrongly?Let's try a different approach ...
... I think (maybe wrongly!) that we are all agreed that appliances/equipment should have adequate (ideally 'optimal') internal protection against over-current.
Why what?If that is agreed, then the question that you perhaps should be asking yourself is "Why?".
My, this getting convoluted.If you, and the manufacturers don't believe that limiting the let-through current can/might reduce damage (and fire risk) why on earth would they/you bother about installing any internal protection?
Then why wouldn't they have installed it.If it can be agreed that there is a 'good reason' for manufacturers to install adequate (or 'optimal') internal protection in their products, then all I'm saying is that if a load does not have such internal protection, or if it may not (i.e. one does not know for sure), then it seems to make sense to provide that protection externally - for the same 'good reasons' that manufacturers would/should install it internally (if they did).
So, you think that despite it being needed some items do not have it and these things catch fire in the rest of the world but they just don't mind.As I've said, if one is sure that adequate internal protection is in place (as is probably the case with, say, a TV), then it doesn't matter what external protection, if any, is provided
Therefore the fact that you would not need any fuse in that situation must mean that it is irrelevant.- were it not for the fact that, in the UK, we have to put some sort of fuse in a BS1363 plug, we would not need any fuse in that situation (assuming that the circuit as a whole provided adequate fault protection).
Don't be silly, neither of us has said it would be harmful.Well, neither you nor BAS has given an example of an instance where it would be harmful to fit a lower value plug fuse...
I'm saying that if one does not know for sure that there is 'optimal' internal protection, the conservative approach is to assume that it may not have such protection.Why do you assume the ones that can (if there are any) don't have adequate protection?
Indeed - IF there is internal protection .... and the answer is that installing a lower rated fuse will be potentially 'beneficial' IF the internal protection is 'sub-optimal' (i.e. higher-rated fuse than would allow functioning of the equipment), or non-existant.The question is - does installing a lower rated fuse do anything beneficial on top of the internal protection?
Indeed, as I keep saying (initially on page 1), and as I said again in my last post (part of which you quoted), IF there is optimal internal protection then, as you say, external protection is irrelevant.Therefore the fact that you would not need any fuse in that situation must mean that it is irrelevant.
'Adequate' is a matter of opinion, since it is 'sub-optimal'.What do you consider to be adequate or optimal?
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