dawson444
1/2 ton status
The pictures below are of the fuse holder for my rock lights. They are 6 -55 watt lights. I had them wired to 2 relays, however I was using one power supply wire.
When I re do them I plan to install a separate power supply for each relay. My question is though, why did the fuse melt like it did? It would seem like the fuses's job to blow before enough amps allows that to happen. The same sort of thing happened to one of the relays (but it still works).
According to some calculations the 6 55 watt lights should have drawn around 27.5 amps. So theoretically the 30 amp fuse should have been ok. I know nothing is perfect and that over time they may have ended up drawing more than 30 amps. But why then didn't the fuse just blow? Thanks!



When I re do them I plan to install a separate power supply for each relay. My question is though, why did the fuse melt like it did? It would seem like the fuses's job to blow before enough amps allows that to happen. The same sort of thing happened to one of the relays (but it still works).
According to some calculations the 6 55 watt lights should have drawn around 27.5 amps. So theoretically the 30 amp fuse should have been ok. I know nothing is perfect and that over time they may have ended up drawing more than 30 amps. But why then didn't the fuse just blow? Thanks!
He's shown running 27.5A through it caused a failure. So you wouldn't run more than 5A through a new one of the same manufacturer? I stand with my previous statement. That's way overkill.