The Waring 18BL93 blender typically uses a 5 amp fuse. It is recommended to replace the fuse with the same amp rating to prevent any electrical issues.
The standard color coding for fuses in American wire is as follows: 15-amp fuse: blue 20-amp fuse: yellow 30-amp fuse: green
Yes, a relay with a 40 amp rating can be used in a circuit with a 30 amp fuse. The fuse is designed to protect the circuit from overcurrent, while the relay's rating indicates the maximum load it can handle. As long as the total current drawn by the circuit does not exceed the fuse rating, the relay should function properly.
No, it is not safe to replace a 20 amp fuse with a 25 amp fuse. The fuse is designed to protect the circuit from overloading, and using a higher amp fuse can lead to overheating and potential fire hazards. It is important to troubleshoot and address the underlying issue that is causing the fuse to blow rather than increasing the fuse rating.
It is not recommended to replace a 30 amp fuse with a 25 amp fuse in a central AC unit. The fuse should match the specified amperage requirements to prevent damage or overheating of the unit. Using a lower amp fuse could potentially lead to electrical issues or failure of the AC unit.
absolutely not
In the UK, you cannot put a 5 amp fuse in a 3 amp plug. The general rule of thumb is that you should use like for like.
The Horn uses the same fuse as the Cig lighter plug. It is a 15 amp fuse.
Number 13 uses 10 AMP fuse
A 1997 Cavalier uses a 15 amp fuse for the cigarette lighter / horn. The fuse box door has a diagram that will show you where the fuse belongs and the proper amperage.
The Waring 18BL93 blender typically uses a 5 amp fuse. It is recommended to replace the fuse with the same amp rating to prevent any electrical issues.
The difference between fuses is the current that they are designed to support. A fuse is intended as a safety measure to protect against overload. A 3 amp fuse should burn out if more than 3 amps is run through it, with some allowance for standard variance. A 13 amp fuse would burn out with greater than 13 amps. It is always a bad idea to use a fuse bigger than you need, because if your component is designed for a 3 amp fuse and you use a 13 amp fuse, there is a good chance you could damage your component with too much amperage because the fuse would not burn out at 3 amps, as was intended.
Yes. You put a bigger fuse and you will melt the wire and cause a fire hazard.
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
Fuse # 3 - 25 amp - interior fuse panel
13 Amp My Iron uses this and I learnt this from AS physics on a task sheet
If you do that the likelihood is that you will blow the 3A fuse quickly. There is a reason why the current fuse is what it is, because it is expecting currents around 80% of 13 A or around 10 A.