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capacitor wiring
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<blockquote data-quote="evo2k3" data-source="post: 144818" data-attributes="member: 546246"><p>yes your placing in a limit.....the fuse ratings for amps are above the maxium power they need, but below the point where damage occurs. With your logic, the only reason to fuse the line at the battery is to protect your wiring? Then why are there fused distrobution blocks? your fusing the power source to matter what, yes you want that power flow from the caps, but protecting the circutry should always be the primary objective. For example, if my amp can effectivley use a maxium of 60 amps....and damage to circuts occurs at 85 amps, the fuse rating might be somewhere around 70-75 amps, i dont EVER want more than that 75 or so amps running through that amp. But the cap can still send all the power the amp needs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="evo2k3, post: 144818, member: 546246"] yes your placing in a limit.....the fuse ratings for amps are above the maxium power they need, but below the point where damage occurs. With your logic, the only reason to fuse the line at the battery is to protect your wiring? Then why are there fused distrobution blocks? your fusing the power source to matter what, yes you want that power flow from the caps, but protecting the circutry should always be the primary objective. For example, if my amp can effectivley use a maxium of 60 amps....and damage to circuts occurs at 85 amps, the fuse rating might be somewhere around 70-75 amps, i dont EVER want more than that 75 or so amps running through that amp. But the cap can still send all the power the amp needs. [/QUOTE]
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