No. The fuse is to limit the amount of current to whatever is safe for the
wire gauge used. Too much current draw will burn up the wiring. If the
resistance of the circuit is increased, it'll just lower the voltage and the
horn won't work well, or at all. If you use a relay, the wire won't get hot,
the horn will get full voltage, and the arcing won't burn the horn button
contact and make it quit working.
BZ
> Derf,
> If the resistance INcreases current will DEcrease. I think the real
> explanation is that the fuse is not an instantaneous type and takes a few
> seconds to heat up sufficiently to melt the element.
> Hal
>
> On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 7:26 AM, derf <derf247@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> Normally wire has very low resistance. As wire is overloaded it gets
>> hot and the resistance increases. If your wire increases in
>> resistance enough to draw that extra 2 Amps then it will blow the
>> fuse.
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