Ceramic fuses


Gday, Im looking at purchasing some ceramic fuses for my Primaluna gear. 
The question I have, would  a gold plated or rhodium plated fuse be the way to go? If so, which would be the better choice? 
Any information or help, would be appreciated. 
Cheers Ricey

Merry Christmas, everyone
ricey
Your barking up the wrong fuser tree sunshine. (starting to get a whiff of fish??)

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Lost me on that one.. My name is Scotty.. not sunshine, and I don't bark, But thanks for the bright outlook...

Fish? Fish oil, OK I got you.. No just asking what you would do if a customer came in and asked if you would upgrade a system, that's all.

Don't sell many SR fuses, I take it.. Do customers ASK? What do you say, NO.. if they ask for them? All the repair guys around here, have SR in stock, Bees wax, a few... Or they will get them for you.. Even Mac repair shops... Daily City, Sacramento, a few.

Regards
Don't sell many SR fuses, I take it.. Do customers ASK? What do you say, NO.. if they ask for them?
I'd give them the same spiel that I gave you, and tell them to save their money, and spend it elsewhere where it will do good for the sound, instead of the voodoo that a few fuser generals preach (shill) here.

Cheers George   
And Ricevs, BS to you and most of your tweaks. Your just a self promoter for your own        .
George, I feel your frustration when dealing with these absurd claims. No amount of logic will persuade their thinking and than they turn to personal attacks if you keep presenting them with hard data. Seems there are certain rules of physics and science that just don't pertain to audio electronics.
Even NASA hasn't yet made these discovery's! But just wait till they do George, rockets will go faster and farther than ever before!
I hear a major audio manufacture just hired a few of Santa's laid off elves to work on fuses and cable risers. Seems snowballs make the ultimate cable risers, now they are working on snow that doesn't melt at room temperature.

BillWojo
Personally I think ricevs and George both make claim to more knowledge than they possess.

Steel is a very common component lead material. For rectifier diodes copper clad steel with nickel plate is common.  Even if the lead is plated copper (never bare), the contact is almost always steel or nickel due to bonding issues with glass passivated contacts.   Steel is also predominant for through hole small resistors. Copper is never bare and the solder is now pretty much all tin so the signal passes through a lot of copper nickel and tin interfaces.

Oh there are steels that are not magnetic by the way.