auldblue said:Well , I was kind off thinking along those lines but I bought them in an auto parts store and the pack just said 35amp glass car fuse .
Jg Cheers guys , I think I will just treat the fuses I have as continuous rating till I get my new ones in , thank you.
Bit of a giveaway here- I think the BLUE paper means 35 amp continuous which is a big NO NO.
FYI the horn does not go through the fuse box on most British bikes so the horn is irreverent.Deets55 said:It has always been my understanding that wire size dictates fuse size. The fuse is only there to protect the wire. When a circuit is designed, load is calculated, which determines the wire size, then the fuse matches the wire. Case in point, your (USA) house may have 220 volt and 200 amp service. The main breakers protect the panel box, each sub circuit has a calculated load with wires to match and then a breaker to protect the wire. i.e. 15 amp circuit gets a 14 gauge wire, etc. I am guessing Norton (and probably other companies) went with the slow blow fuse to compensate for surges. With only one main fuse it probably would not take much to pop a fuse when riding with lights on and then hitting the brake and horn at the same time, or something similar. Pete
The fuse should by rights be of a amp rating of the highest rating of the respective load- the manufactures got lazy and started to put 35 Amp fuses (Not continuous) in nearly all the fuses on some models both bikes and cars.
I strip them out and change them for one more suitable to the load.
On one bike i had, the regulator went and the alternator pumped out 36 volts ….. it cooked the battery, fried the light switches and didn’t even blow the main fuse, so that was expensive.