HawkinsHollow
Veteran Member
I inherited these old fuses when I cleaned out my dad’s shop. Are they worth anything to anyone? I hate to throw them out, but I will if they’re worthless.
Those aren't worthless in my opinion. I have them (hidden) in a fair number of electronics, doing duty to protect power supplies, e.g UPS units and power supplies.I inherited these old fuses when I cleaned out my dad’s shop. Are they worth anything to anyone? I hate to throw them out, but I will if they’re worthless. View attachment 4655508
What kind of equipment do they go in? I thought they were for old cars. What do you have around your house today that would sue these types of fuses? Maybe I will make a small collection for myself and ship you the rest. They are pretty old and definitely made in America like 90% of the stuff I got out of my dads shop.Those aren't worthless in my opinion. I have them (hidden) in a fair number of electronics, doing duty to protect power supplies, e.g UPS units and power supplies.
If you don't want them, DM me, but I'd keep the collection because when you need one, you need one.
All the best, Peter
What kind of equipment do they go in? I thought they were for old cars. What do you have around your house today that would sue these types of fuses? Maybe I will make a small collection for myself and ship you the rest. They are pretty old and definitely made in America like 90% of the stuff I got out of my dads shop.
Aside from older electronics, and vehicles, I usually find them on PCB for power supplies, either standalone, or within something else, like a PC. I have some random machine controls (e.g. well pump) that take them as well. I don't begrudge them space at the back of my box for odd fuses. I've got a couple in various DVMs, and some generators. More than a few of them do not have an easy access to the fuse, and require disassembly to get to the fuse. (Planned obsolescence, as most owners won't recognize that there is a fuse inside?)
If you do keep them, which I'd recommend, I would take a moment to make sure that the voltage and amperage match the outside of the box. BTDT with acquired fuses. It will save time when you need a particular one. Nothing like the wrong voltage or slo-blow vs fast blow fuse mix up to cause extra aggravation.
I have seen some newer Chinese power supplies using 12V automotive fuses for 120VAC.
All the best,
Peter