QUALITY AND SECURITY OF "LITTELFUSE" PRODUCTS


I find the tech specs of  LITTELFUSE very informative,enlightening and reassuring.
I am considering using them on my treasured reference level SPECTRAL electronics.
Anyone with experience using or EE level comments? Many thanks. Music lover and long time
audiophile, Peter.
ptss
What makes fuses directional?
Nothing.

@joecasey, I had read that, but that does not seem what your prior post was addressing. Am I incorrect in this?
There must be thousands of advanced audiophiles, you know, the ones who actually care about fuses and sound quality who, unlike manufacturers, DID get the memo regarding fuse directionality. What we have here ladies and germs is The Backfire Effect in full bloom. High entertainment for sure. Ones things for sure, pseudo skeptics like to rant and carry on but you will never see them actually get down to brass tacks and investigate these claims of directionality.  They'd rather fight than switch.

Sheesh! There are only two issues I myself addressed:

1- The claim of fuse directionality in an AC circuit is, as Ralph Karsten keeps saying, simply impossible. Of that there can be no dispute. None.

2- In the case of, yes Joe, one amplifier being damaged by the Hi-Fi Tuning Fuse being used in a DC application, the great electronics designer (there, I said it) Roger Modjeski of Music Reference received a returned-for-repair RM9 power amplifier. Upon inspection, Roger discovered that all eight HFTF that had been installed in the amp had failed to blow when presented with a short from a bad power tube---the very job they are intended to perform. Further, Roger, upon inspecting the fuses, found them to not be of high breaking capacity design, a necessity in the application in which they were employed. In conversing with the designer of the fuse and it’s American distributor, he learned that neither was aware of that term. Therefore, Roger warned the owners of his amplifiers (which have fused power tubes) against installing the Hi-Fi Tuning Fuse in his amps. That’s all. What’s the f’in problem, Joe? I had no idea letting people know about a potential risk in installing that particular fuse in a DC application would so upset you. I’ll never mention it again.

Roger does, however, approve of the Littlefuse brand of fuses, and infact installs them in his amps. They DO possess high breaking capacity, and were designed by an engineer who DOES know what the term means, and it’s significance, importance, and necessity in a fuse.

I said nothing about the sonic benefits of audiophile fuses, nor would I. That’s a separate discussion of which I have no interest in joining.

The following was composed prior to seeing Bdp24’s post just above:

Regarding Bdp24’s statement which Joecasey quoted above, according to Stereophile’s review of the RM9 the amplifier’s main B+ supply is 450 volts. That would be DC of course. Although Bdp24’s reference to the HFT fuses not being "suitable for use in a DC circuit" was perhaps worded a bit ambiguously, I suspect that what he was alluding to is that the HFT fuses didn’t blow when they should have because they did not have sufficient "breaking capacity" for a 450 volt application. NOT that those or other audiophile-oriented fuses are unsuitable for use in **any** DC application (which appears to be what Joe interpreted the statement to mean).

If that same fuse (or a similar fuse differing only in its current rating) had been used in an AC mains application, it would only have had to deal with 120 volts (in the USA and other 120 volt countries), rather than 450 volts, which it presumably/hopefully would have been able to "break" reliably.

See the Littelfuse link in one of my earlier posts in this thread for the definition of "breaking capacity."

Regards,
-- Al