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Sometimes once in a year, either one of main fuses or a fuse in room blow up due to something. What is the cause of this? Why do we even use fuses? Is it because the voltage doesn't stay at 220V all the time?

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    \$\begingroup\$ Does a light bulb happen to blow at exactly that time? \$\endgroup\$
    – sharptooth
    Jan 23, 2012 at 12:58
  • \$\begingroup\$ Yes, sometimes I noticed the light bulb get fused too and people goes like "fuse blowed up the light bulb" but from last few years I have tube lights in every room apart from bathroom which has a 100watt light bulb. \$\endgroup\$
    – Ron
    Jan 23, 2012 at 13:49
  • \$\begingroup\$ Do the fuses blow as frequent as before you installed the tube lights? \$\endgroup\$
    – sharptooth
    Jan 23, 2012 at 13:52
  • \$\begingroup\$ Now its fine but its usually one of the main fuse that blows up. Last time, It blew up when I turned on the microwave oven. \$\endgroup\$
    – Ron
    Jan 23, 2012 at 14:07
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    \$\begingroup\$ A fuse "blowing up" and "blowing" are two quite different things. \$\endgroup\$ Jan 23, 2012 at 14:25

5 Answers 5

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IMPORTANT:

  • It is far far better that a fuse sometimes blows when there was no need for it to, than for it to sometimes fail to blow when a fault condition exists.

Blowing a fuse. The term "blow" will be used here for the fusing of a fuse - the act of melting the fuse wire and breaking the electrical circuit. Terms such as "it blew a fuse" and "why did the fuse blow?" are common here. The term "blow" in this context may be less common in some countries. Using "fuse" which is correct, as in "the fuse fused", is liable to be too confusing :-).

Why do they blow?
Should they?
The purpose of a fuse is to protect equipment and wiring against the damaging effects of electrical faults which cause excess currents, and to disable equipment which is faulty. The fuse "blows" when the current carried exceeds the rated value for an excessive time. The higher the overload the shorter the period before the fuse blows. So, equipment which is meant to "draw" 10 amps but which has a short from phase to ground, so it draws, say, 100 amps, will blow its fuse in milliseconds. But, a piece of equipment which draws say double the fuse's rated value, may take many seconds to melt the fusewire and to blow the fuse. The ratio between trip times(time to blow) and "overload to rated current ratio" vary with fuse design and can to some extent be controlled by the manufacturer. This is a complete subject in its own right, but assume that a fuse will blow "after a while" at 2 x + overload and will blow almost immediately with say 10 x + overload.

A piece of wire can only be so smart ...
Because a somewhat complex task is being carried out by a deceptively simple piece of equipment (ie a piece of wire) and because the fuse is not always optimally dimensioned for the equipment used, the fuse sometimes "blows" when there is no significant or long term fault condition present.

To blow or not to blow ? - that is the question.
Dimensioning & surges.
Assume that a fuse will blow "after a while" at 2 x its rated value then we can expect it to run indefinitely at its rated value.

If we have a household circuit rate at 20 amps and a number of outlets rated at say 10A then it is possible to connect more load that the rated fuse value. If we connect say a 10A fan heater, a 5 amp one bar radiator (maybe in the next room), a 400 Watt plasma TV (about 2A), and some plug in mood lighting at say 1 A or less then all SHOULD be well. 10+5+2+1 = 18A. If somebody then turns on an electric jug rated at say 8A current rises to 26A. More than the 20A nominal value but less than the 2 x 20A = 40A we have said it will blow at. But if the plasma TV is off and is turned on suddenly the power supply input filters amy present a nearly pure capacitive load to the mains. The mains will be at random phase at TV turnon and usually a current spike will cause no problems. But on some random lucky (or unlucky) day the mains may be at the very peak of the mains cycle at turn on. The capacitor may have stored charge of opposite polarity from last turnoff leading to an even greater current spike. Add a possibly high mains voltage (as happens) and some heavy switching spikes from a nearby factory, or even domestic equipment (treadmill, welder, drill, sander, router, planer ...) Then load + capacitor spike + high mains + switching transient may lead to a very high short term load. And the fuse may decide enough is enough and melt. Or may not.

*Unlikely?*Is all the above likely to happen at once?
No. But as reported, the nuisance blowing happens only a few times a year. Ij the order of what is expected.

We could make the fuse rating higher (more amps)!
Yes. That is one solution. But the ability to react to moderate overloads is lost. Along with lack of protection may go loss of insurance, if the insurance loss assessors find a still intact 2 x 20A wire fuse in the smouldering ruins of your workshop.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Let's also be clear on one thing: the fuse is less about protecting the devices plugged into outlets, and more about the wires that carry the power to those outlets. Wiring is rated for carrying a certain amount of current, which by most building codes must be greater than or equal to the rating of the fuse/breaker protecting it. \$\endgroup\$
    – MBraedley
    Jan 25, 2012 at 13:49
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    \$\begingroup\$ @MBraedley - protection of life and property / termination of hazard is a major factor. \$\endgroup\$
    – Russell McMahon
    Jan 25, 2012 at 14:09
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    \$\begingroup\$ As if that's not confusing enough, fuse can also mean "install a fuse", as well as "join together", which is the exact opposite of what happens inside the fuse at that magic moment. \$\endgroup\$
    – gbarry
    Feb 19, 2015 at 7:13
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Might want to see what the rating is, and check what you have connected. High current draw devices (like your microwave as you say above) can and will blow fuses/trip the breaker regularly. Try to put it on an alternate circuit if possible.

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Every fuse has a number of important ratings:

  1. The amount of current which a fuse is guaranteed to let flow indefinitely without any possibility of it blowing.
  2. The amount of current which is guaranteed to cause the fuse to blow within a certain period of time.
  3. The amount of current and voltage which the fuse is guaranteed to safely prevent from flowing once it blows (in some cases, the fuse's resistance once it blows will be sufficient to limit current to a safe limit provided its voltage rating is not exceeded; that is not always true, however, in the absence of external resistance).

If the amount of current that flows through a fuse is slightly more than the fuse can handle, the fusing material will slowly heat up to the point that it melts away, whereupon no more current will flow. If, however, the current that flows through it is much higher, some of the metal fusing material may vaporize. The metal vapor will itself be somewhat conductive, and the current flowing through that metal vapor may generate enough heat to vaporize more metal, increasing the current flow further. Given time, the metal vapor would dissipate and the circuit would open. The more current is driven through the fuse, however, the more heat will be generated before this occurs. If enough heat is generated, the pressure of the gas inside the fuse may increase sufficiently to cause failure of the containing material, sending pieces of it flying.

If the resistance of the circuit in which the fuse is placed exceeds the resistance of the vaporized metal, then an increase in the concentration of vaporized metal in the fuse will temporarily increase the amount of power dissipated in places other than the fuse (which might not be a good thing) but decrease the amount of power dissipated within the fuse itself. The fact that the fuse would be continuing to conduct might be a bad thing for the circuitry the fuse is supposed to be protecting, but reduction in power dissipation within the fuse would decrease the rate at which metal vaporized, reducing the likelihood of the fuse exploding. On the other hand, if most of the effective resistance in the circuit is within the fuse itself, the decrease in resistance caused by the metal vapor will increase the power dissipation within the fuse, thus causing more metal to be vaporized and reducing the resistance further.

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It depends on the type of fuse.

In all cases the fuse is to weak.

A "cut out" or "savety fuse" gets older of time and the wire gets weaker and weaker. It heats up and shrinks. So after a while the wire is to thin to stand the current.

A "automatic circuit breaker" has to parts an short term magnetic trigger and a long term thermal break. If the load is always on the limit the thermal break will break the circuit.

Thats what I guess in your case.

Sorry for my bad english.

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As stated by @RussellMcMahon, the fuse, although extremely simple in construction, is very useful and can prevent a lot damage and a false positive is preferrable to a false negative. Beside the protection for the equipment you have in your house, it can also protect you from electric shock in the case of ungrounded devices.

The reason why a fuse blows can be really manifold. Here are just a few, off the top of the hat:

  1. The fuse is designed for too small a current and does blow as it actually should at the given current.
  2. You have a device in your household that introduces extra spikes that make the fuse give up. (Check for large consumers, e.g. air conditioning, washing mashine, very old fridge or boiler, power tools, etc. If the fuses blow when these are turned on, then they are very likely to be the culprits.)
  3. Faulty wiring. This can be especially the case if your wiring is very old. In case it's older than 30 years, it might make sense to rip everything out of the walls and have the cables installed again.
  4. Simply a faulty household appliance. Happened to me before. One of my lamps had the insulation gone off on a tiny section of the cable, right where it entered the lamp, under the gasket, so I couldn't see it. It produced a spectacular short which blew the fuse on that outlet and the fuse for the whole appartment...
  5. Bad quality fuses... (not impossible)
  6. Spike propagating to your fuse box from the outside (e.g. from neighbours... in such cases there isn't much you can do about it...)
  7. Other :)

IMPORTANT: In any case DO NOT try to circumvent the fuse box! This can be extremely dangerous! I also discourage you from using fuses with larger current rating, unless you know for sure you have a load inside your house that draws that kind of current. Make sure the reason is not an undetected fault! If it happens frequently without any apparent reason and an electrician can't find anything, maybe you should replace the fuses with appropriately rated circuit breakers. Then all you have to do is flip a switch when the lights go out again.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Uhhh. Higher current rating fuses shouldn't be used unless the wiring it protects can handle it. The load attached is irrelevant. If the load wants more current than the wiring can handle, putting in a larger fuse is just asking for trouble. The load should be put on wiring that can handle it. \$\endgroup\$ Feb 4, 2012 at 17:29

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