Fuse Types and Ratings

Fuse package sizes, speed classes, and how to pick current and voltage ratings.

Reference Reference Updated Apr 19, 2026
Reference

Common fuse formats

Format Size Typical use
Glass 5×20 mm 5 × 20 mm Electronics, appliances
Ceramic 5×20 mm 5 × 20 mm Higher breaking current
3AG (glass) 6.35 × 32 mm Older US equipment
Automotive blade (ATO) ~19 mm 12/24 V vehicles
Mini blade (ATM) ~11 mm Modern cars
MAXI blade ~34 mm High-amp automotive
MIDI / AMG bolt-down Battery mains, 30–200 A
Panel/plug fuse (NH) various Industrial AC distribution
SMD fuse 1206 / 2410 PCB-mount
Resettable (PTC) through-hole/SMD Self-resets when cool

Speed classes (IEC)

Class Behavior Use
FF — super fast-acting Blows < 100 ms at 10× rated Semiconductor protection
F — fast-acting Blows < 1 s at 10× rated Electronics
M — medium Blows at 2× rated after a few seconds General
T — time-delay (slow) Tolerates inrush; blows at 2× eventually Motors, transformers
TT — super time-delay Very high inrush tolerance Large motors, inrush-heavy loads

Selection checklist

  • Current rating: ~125–150% of steady load, well below wire ampacity.
  • Voltage rating: must be ≥ circuit voltage. Fuses rated for DC are often lower than AC due to arc extinction.
  • Breaking capacity (interrupting rating): ability to safely interrupt the maximum prospective fault current. Important on mains and batteries.
  • Speed: slow-blow for motor/transformer inrush, fast for semiconductor protection.
  • I²t rating: match to downstream device energy tolerance.

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