Fuses,fuseholders And How To Make Them Sound Better...

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Re: electronic fuse

PMiczek said:


Do you mean something like a Polyswitch, or something else by electronic fuse?

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Don't know the name, bought from Farnell and found to have quite low impedance when compared to fast blo types. Tried these where there was no room for fuse holder and found to be acceptable sonically.
 
Re: Improbable history and other lies

At the risk of great embarassment 😱 , I will confess one of about 4 key things that got me interested in science (which eventually led me to electronics) was my intent as a kid that I would build a working time machine.

I probably scared my sisters,my mom, and the cats with some of the high voltage pyrotechnics resulting from some of the prototypes.

I'll post a scan of one of my "mad scientist" pics from many years ago one of these days.

Aaaa-Hah Hah hah hah haaaaaaah! :devilr:

Peabody and Sherman rule!

Thanks for the picks Fred. I love 'em.

Oh, and for my obligatory actual related content:
I used the "speaker fuse in the feedback loop" approach for all of my early amps that used global feedback (when I used to use fuses). A weird thing I remember experiencing during some prototype evaluations years ago was hearing a shrinkage in the left-to-right sound field dimension during loud passages. When I enclosed the fuses in the overall loop, this phenomenon seemed to disappear!

And yes, I wasn't using fuses in the DC rails; I lived danegrously back then. Ah, the brashness of youth ...

mlloyd1

Originally posted by Fred Dieckmann ...
mlloyd1 shares one of my most cherished cultural icons! The DIYAUDIO wayback search engine yeilded the following:
 
From what I remember they looked a little like a largish ceramic disc cap...but I could be wrong.

Yes, the leaded version of the part looks like a ceramic disc cap. The SMT version looks like a sandwich with a metal strip on top. If you don't like fuses, I doubt if you would like this.

Sometimes used in power supplies to protect parts which take some time to heat up and fail. Trip time is a function of the overload (Operates quickly in a short situation, or can take a second or more to go to hi-res at 2-3x rated load). Resets on power down. Made by Raychem, Bourns, maybe others. Formal name is "resettable overcurrent protector".
 
If I am not mistaken this is what Hafler did in their earlier amplifiers. There was also a resistor across the fuseholder, so that if the fuse blew you would maintain some feedback for stability.

Regards,
Jam
 
If I am not mistaken this is what Hafler did in their earlier amplifiers. There was also a resistor across the fuseholder, so that if the fuse blew you wolud maintain some feedback for stability.

Regards,
Jam
 
Frank,

I am getting old......

Regards,
Jam
 

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