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Evan Gatehouse
 
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Default Polyfuse vs. circuit breakers

Hi,

I've been considering the use of Polyfuses (made by Raychem among others)
instead of circuit breakers in an electric panel on my boat. They are a lot
cheaper (like $0.50 each) and smaller than a breaker. The specs say "100A
maximum current" for a typical 5-10A fuse. This is the maximum fault
current that can be used to trip such a device.

The typical C series Carling hyd./magnetic circuit breaker has a
interrupting capacity of 7500A @ 80VDC. This is the toggle type circuit
breaker that you see on most new boats.

My question: is 100A interrupting enough? If there is a short in a typical
wire, will fault currents exceed that? I don't know enough electrical
engineering to determine if this would be a safe application for these
fuses. I do know of one kit plane builder (who is an EE) who thinks they
are o.k. And one maker of boat parts who is offering them:
http://www.lalizas.com/products.asp?S0=5&S1=13&S2=37

This is a kit plane builder who uses them:

http://www.expbus.com/pages/avionics_expbus.htm


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Evan Gatehouse

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