I bet some of you have asked yourself before... Obviously, because a fuse with too high a rating was used. But why's that?
Well, the answer is inrush current. A SMPS charges one or several capacitors directly from rectified mains. As you know, a discharged capacitor appears as a dead short. So they are in effect shorting the mains for a brief period of time.
Now, there are those things called inrush limiters, basically large NTC thermistors. Whose job is to limit the current that the caps can draw when the power supply is plugged in, because they have a high resistance when cold, which then becomes negligible when they heat up. But, on cheap supplies they are either skimped on or not fitted at all, so that means that for a few fractions of a second, you have several dozen amps flowing thru the poor fuse! For the unit to not blow fuses on a cold start, a higher rated fuse than otherwise necessary must be fitted. And the higher rated fuse allows the unit to go out with a bang before it finally opens.
That's another mistery cleared for ya.
Well, the answer is inrush current. A SMPS charges one or several capacitors directly from rectified mains. As you know, a discharged capacitor appears as a dead short. So they are in effect shorting the mains for a brief period of time.
Now, there are those things called inrush limiters, basically large NTC thermistors. Whose job is to limit the current that the caps can draw when the power supply is plugged in, because they have a high resistance when cold, which then becomes negligible when they heat up. But, on cheap supplies they are either skimped on or not fitted at all, so that means that for a few fractions of a second, you have several dozen amps flowing thru the poor fuse! For the unit to not blow fuses on a cold start, a higher rated fuse than otherwise necessary must be fitted. And the higher rated fuse allows the unit to go out with a bang before it finally opens.
That's another mistery cleared for ya.

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