Zandcwhite
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Zach
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2019
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 8,284
- Reaction score
- 14,178
- Location
- Patterson, ca
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 jlur
But in your first scenario you got struck by the train trying to rewire your winch or change the fuse. I'll take full power whenever I need it over a fuse personally, but you do you. What size fuse do you run? What winch? How has it worked under hard use?Fair questions.
Reason #1 to recommend a fuse is to protect the circuit. Actually, that’s the only reason to fuse a circuit. If anything experiences amperage flow that exceeds the circuit’s capacity, it’s better to pop a fuse, not a part or worse, light a fire.
Similar to how you use a mechanical disconnect, I use a main power relay for power isolation. My winch receives no power unless I close the relay.
Like you said, absent power in those cables, there's nothing for that fuse to protect. That said, if damage occurs between uses and we energize the circuit, it’s far better to have the fuse blow than hope we can isolate the circuit before we need the fire extinguisher and that’s why I recommend the Class T fuse.
If we can agree to that, here’s what I’ve been told why OEM’s (including Ram) don’t fuse the circuit - The perception of prioritizing circuit protection over operator protection is a litigious risk.
Which sounds better in court if you’re Warn?
A) Zach’s PowerWagon got destroyed by a train because the blown factory fuse prevented recovery from the railroad tracks.
B) Zach’s PowerWagon was so stuck on the tracks, he burned up his winch, cables and battery trying to get unstuck when the train hit his truck.
Let’s tweak the story because we’re not Warn or Ram but ordinary working folk just like OP:
A) Zach got towed out of the bog because he was stuck so deep, it exceeded the amp rating of his circuit and the damn fuse blew.
B) Zach got towed out of the bog because he was stuck so deep, he burned up his gear, broke his rope and had to use up a fire extinguisher.
Regardless of what part smokes doesn’t change the depth of the bog. It only changes the extent and cost of damage.
The cool part? If you’re stuck and the fuse blows, you can now decide if you want to bypass the fuse, press your luck and risk smoking more parts or replace the fuse, break out your sheave block to double the force and halve the amp load and try again….
All the same, thanks for the conversation, stay safe out there!
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