In both cases the properly sized  fuses protect the circuit wiring in the
event of short circuit and protecting the attached component.

 

In your first example a small amperage inline fuse is protecting the
smaller/finer electronic wiring and the monitor component. Your breaker is
likely a 15A one which could easily risk overheating or fire on a small
gauge wire. 

 

In the second example, similar discussion but here there is no breaker in
the picture and ABYC requires fusing of all circuits connected to the
batteries. Again this protects the wiring assuming the wiring is sized to
handle up to the 30A limit - check various sites to ensure your wiring is
sized correctly based on the length of the run ... One could debate whether
another fuse is required closer to the solar panel side also .  

 

I think getting some in-line fuses/holders is the easiest for both of these
projects.

 

 

 

ed

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of David
Knecht
Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2014 8:41 AM
To: CnC CnC discussion list
Subject: Stus-List wiring projects

 

I have two wiring projects to complete this weekend and I have questions
about fuses:

1.  The holding tank monitor I bought from Fred shows a fuse being wired
between the power source and the monitor gauge.  Since the power is coming
from a breaker on the main panel, is there any reason to add this fuse as
well?

 

2.  I am also wiring my new solar panel to a Sunsaver Duo controller and
then to the two batteries.  Their diagram shows a 30A fuse wired between the
Duo and each battery.  They did not supply these fuses with the kit.  Is
there a rationale for those fuses?  

Thanks- Dave

 

David Knecht

Aries

1990 C&C 34+

New London, CT




 

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