Battery relocated to the trunk - fuse amp
my battery has been relocated to the trunk by the previous owner (required for engine bay space)
I want to be on the safe side and put a fuse inline, what amperage is needed? alternator is 90amp anymore info required, let me know thanks |
E\IR... Volts\Amps*Resistance in Ohms. take the voltage of the battery (assuming 12v) and go buy yourself a cheap multimeter at wal-mart and measure the resistance. 12\whatever the resistance is = needed amps. check yourself easily before buying fuses, and take the amps * the resistance and make sure it comes out to 12v or whatever volts you're running.
Hope I could be of some help, Scypher |
Im not sure I understand exactly what you are asking, but I think you want a fuse between the alternator and the battery?
If that is the case, you want a fuse that is rated for at least the output of the alternator, which is 90 amps. |
well i want to put the fuse, about 12" from the battery....it is my understanding that if i were to be hit on the side where the wire is running to the engine bay then it could pinch/cut the wire and short out causing a fire
if that were to happen (accident) a fire is the last thing i want to worry about so hence the desire for an inline fuse scypher23: where would i be checking the resistance across? |
(GrizZz here, wife's PC)
If you're putting the fuse on the line between the battery and everything else, you're going to need a lot more than a 90amp fuse. A starter will draw 100 amps, on a good day. Add cold weather or high compression engines or whatever, and you're gonna need at least a 150amp fuse. I'd stick a 200 in. |
Originally Posted by GrizZzled
(GrizZz here, wife's PC)
If you're putting the fuse on the line between the battery and everything else, you're going to need a lot more than a 90amp fuse. A starter will draw 100 amps, on a good day. Add cold weather or high compression engines or whatever, and you're gonna need at least a 150amp fuse. I'd stick a 200 in. anyone seen any good ones? would a breaker be a good idea? |
Any ANL fuse holder is fine. You could even toss a 300 in it, you're really only fusing the battery from discharging into the frame.
Circuit breakers can fail, fuses don't, so that settles that IMO. |
Originally Posted by Newb
Any ANL fuse holder is fine. You could even toss a 300 in it, you're really only fusing the battery from discharging into the frame.
Circuit breakers can fail, fuses don't, so that settles that IMO. |
and a breaker reacts slower then a fuse will.
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i'm not exactly sure lol i'm still fairly new but i have a little experience. A 200amp fuse would be good enough on a regular car with room to spare. so you could go with that... i know that my way works but i'm still unsure of how to effieciantly measure the resistance. 200amps'll do ya good though. maybe a little over 150 if money becomes an issue
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