Bdp24, Still waiting for ONE example ...
If not ONE example 20+ years in market, the only logical conclusion is the ONE TRICK PONY is all BS. Amp blew and push blame on the fuses. The "best" blow hard in the industry! Case close!!!
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Audiophile fuses have been in the market for YEARS and if they are not
designed for ,capable of, or suitable for, use in a DC circuit---the
very kind of circuit in which a tube operates ... why is the market
growing and these voodoo companies are not out of business? Give me
ANOTHER LEGITIMATE case, except for the ONE pony, where it damaged a
component? You're actually not addressing the right argument here. No-one is disputing that the audiophile fuses work. They work fine in our gear. The issue bdp24 is addressing in his post is the directionality issue, which when purported, is a form of fraud as there simply can be no such thing. |
bdp24 1,036 posts 04-04-2016 11:35pm At the risk of getting flamed by one particular fellow whose panties get quite wadded at the mention of Roger Modjeski’s name (apparently for not believing in the audible superiority of all audiophile boutique parts.), here’s what Roger found when he opened one of the eight Hi-Fi Tuning Fuses that were in one of his RM9 amplifiers returned to him for repair after the fuses had not done what a fuse is supposed to do when presented with a short: blow.
Roger discovered that the fuse was not designed for, capable of, or suitable for, use in a DC circuit---the very kind of circuit in which a tube operates. The customer’s RM9 had a tube fail, and the Littlefuse Roger installs in his amps would have done what a fuse is supposed to do when faced with a short in the DC circuit of a tube amp---blow. The Hi-Fi Tuning fuse did not, and the amplifier was then of course damaged. Not as a result of a fault in the design of the amp (unless you don’t want your tubes fused---Audio Research amps aren’t, ARC instead letting a resistor blow when a tube goes bad, thus requiring the resistor and any related parts to be replaced, rather than a fuse. At far higher cost, of course.), but because those fuses do not possess "high breaking capacity".
Surprised, Roger called first the U.S. distributor of the Hi-Fi Tuning Fuses, then the German designer/manufacturer. To his astonishment, neither knew what the term "high breaking capacity" means. That’s right---a fuse "designer" who knows less about fuses and their construction than an amplifier designer/manufacturer! The moral of this story is, if you are going to spend more on a fuse than a tube (if that doesn’t give you pause, spend on ;-), you might want to make sure the fuse is up to the task it is asked to perform in whatever application it is employed. atmasphere, Re-read bdp24 initial post above. |
What makes fuses directional? |
"What makes fuses directional"
The Vivid imagination of AudioPhiles 😄
Good Listening
Peter |