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Evan,
The capacity of the wire has little to do with the maximum current it can carry. A #18 wire can carry several thousand amps for a second or two. You have to consider the maximum possible amps that could be dumped through the device and a 4 battery house bank can dump a bunch of amps. Lalizas makes sub-panels so I would assume the panel would be fed through a heavier capacity breaker at the main. Kit planes have a single battery and maybe a 35 amp alternator. Evan Gatehouse wrote: 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 -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
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