Fischer Panda ANL Fuse or Circuit Breaker?

Meanwhile

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2014
Messages
563
Reaction score
104
Points
43
Location
Warren, OR
I found the 100Amp ANL fuse at the very edge behind my battery Selector switches. It was hidden from view by the switch case. I moved it to an inside wall that I can easily reach.

So is there a reason I can't replace this fuse with a 100 AMP circuit breaker? Is the ANL fuse special in some way (slow or fast)?
 

grady33

GreatGrady Captain
Joined
Jun 30, 2008
Messages
727
Reaction score
80
Points
28
Location
Ocean Pines, MD
Model
Express 330
i blew a few before realizing the panda starter needed replacing. I would leave it along or perhaps call Fisher Panda customer service and ask them. Not sure if Jim is still there —-


James C Gag on
Service Manager
Fischer Panda Generators USA
service@fischerpanda.com
800-508-6494
954-462-2800
 

wspitler

GreatGrady Captain
Joined
May 16, 2011
Messages
1,365
Reaction score
318
Points
83
Location
Inglis, FL
Model
Express 330
If it was me, I would continue to use a fuse. Fuses are faster acting and a lot less susceptible to corrosion and considerably cheaper. A 100 amp Circuit breaker is considerably larger and more expensive. In addition it does not act quite as quickly as a fuse which either melts or does not. There may also be a slight difference in the internal resistance of the devices.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Meanwhile

seasick

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 19, 2008
Messages
9,531
Reaction score
1,420
Points
113
Location
NYC
Those 100a model fuses are ignition protected which may or not be required for your installation. The key difference is the tripping profile. The fuse can handle very large inrush currents for short times. For example, it can carry 150 amps for just about 10 seconds without blowing. If it blows repeatedly, something else is wrong and replacing it with a breaker is not an appropriate solution.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Meanwhile

everwhom

GreatGrady Captain
Joined
Sep 1, 2015
Messages
445
Reaction score
80
Points
28
Location
Cape Cod and Nantucket
You could compare these two charts:


Looks like in a dead short situation, the ANL fuse would blow in .2 seconds, but the breaker would take 1 second. No idea if that .8 seconds is important... probably not? Beyond that 1 second the graphs look reasonably similar.

FWIW, I have a 200 amp blue sea breaker protecting the power to a 2000w inverter from 2 Group 31 AGM batteries. That unit was recommended by the mfg's local installer.