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  #1  
Old 04-14-2006, 08:29 AM
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Anybody know the answer to.....

My in car dvd player uses 12v and has a rating of .65A when switched on.

If I wanted to put an addition safety fuse in line would I simply put a 5 amp for example?

How do you calculate the size of fuse required on any given electrical appliance?

Thanks

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  #2  
Old 04-14-2006, 11:23 AM
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Fuses have two purposes:

1) To protect the device at the end of the wire. This is sometimes impossible, since if the thing starts pulling more juice it might mean it's already gone, but with amplifiers it's often beneficial. It also protects the device from catching on fire hopefully if it develops a bad internal short.

2) To protect the wire and by extension the car. If the thing does short out, we don't want it pulling so much current that the wire catches on fire. Also, when we add wiring to a car, we know that it's not always in as protected a routing location as a factory wire, so we want to be sure that if the wire gets pinched to ground or gets a screw through it or something violent like that, the fuse pops, instead of the wire going smokee-smokee.

Your DVD player might have an inrush of current when loading or ejecting. 5A is probably not a bad call, but make sure that it's enough for those current-peak conditions.

Remember that for a fuse to blow it's usually not instant. Read this for more info on a graph:
http://www.bussauto.com/pdf/atc.pdf
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Old 04-14-2006, 11:34 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by el_duderino
Fuses have two purposes:

1) To protect the device at the end of the wire. This is sometimes impossible, since if the thing starts pulling more juice it might mean it's already gone, but with amplifiers it's often beneficial. It also protects the device from catching on fire hopefully if it develops a bad internal short.

2) To protect the wire and by extension the car. If the thing does short out, we don't want it pulling so much current that the wire catches on fire. Also, when we add wiring to a car, we know that it's not always in as protected a routing location as a factory wire, so we want to be sure that if the wire gets pinched to ground or gets a screw through it or something violent like that, the fuse pops, instead of the wire going smokee-smokee.

Your DVD player might have an inrush of current when loading or ejecting. 5A is probably not a bad call, but make sure that it's enough for those current-peak conditions.

Remember that for a fuse to blow it's usually not instant. Read this for more info on a graph:
http://www.bussauto.com/pdf/atc.pdf
Thanks for the reply and an interesting web link.

Is there a mathmatical calculation to confirm the best fuse size?
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