Zachanadandy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Zach
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2023
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 3,023
- Reaction score
- 4,785
- Location
- Patterson, ca
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 gladiator Mojave
- Occupation
- Electrical foreman
If the short circuit current is high enough. The problem is your jeep is powered by a relatively weak battery somewhere between 600-700 amps. That's all the available fault current. In a dead short you might see 800A and it won't be for very long. Even an ANL fuse is slow blow. If it's big enough to flow full current on a long pull, it's 200% 10 second rating is too big to actually protect anything. A 400A fuse which is required for most winches is too big to trip under a dead short situation, again which is why NO winch manufacturers recommend fusing. How would recommending fusing raise cost? The theory that it's cost savings doesn't pass the sniff test.There's a different between a short circuit and an overcurrent protection. The blow time rating chart above is meant for overcurrent protection for slow-blow type fuses. Electric motors are usually protected by slow-blow fuse type due to various loads. Example is an ARB compressor didn't used standard type A fuse for that reason as it's considered as fast-acting. A short circuit will blow any fuse instantly, like in a case of a front end accident.
Sponsored
Last edited: