The fuse is present to protect the flex and potentially the connectd load.
It fulfills two functions in doing this.
1. Protection against overload, i.e. limiting the current flowing in the cable due to an overload fault in the appliance or connected load, or a short circuit between live conductors, to the overload rating of the nominal capacity of the fuse (which is a funciton of current vs time).
2. Fault protection, by automatic disconnection of supply in the event of a fault of negligible impedance within the appliance, or, within the cable. A fault would be an "inadvertent" connection between line and protective conductors. This will disconnect the supply via the fuse in accordance with the short circuit disconnection time of the fuse, (again a function of current and time).
The main question is why are the PA testing personnel asking this in the first place?
Are the 3A fuses blowing on power on of the equipment? Are they blowing in normal use? OR, are they just wanting to reduce the possibility of the fuse blowing?
If the latter, then tell them simply, no.
If the fuses are blowing on power up or in use, and these are IEC leads, are they the correct leads for the appliance. Not all IEC leads are the same. It needs to be established if the leads are correct for the loads, and thus what the correct fusing is for the load. Consult the OEM instructions, or contact the OEM.
Lastly, an RCD is NOT the panacea of all evils, they do not protect against overload or short circuit, only live to earth faults.
The for example 25, 40, 60, 80, 100A rating you see on an RCD, is simply the maximum current that must be allowed to flow through the device under normal conditions, ergo, it needs to be protected by ana upstream protective device of that size. Unless it is an RCBO, a "normal" RCD to IEC 61008 (which is what most people are familiar with) will not detect overcurrent. Hence the requirement for an overcurrent protective device of the saame current rating as the thermal rating of the RCD.
The 10, 30, 100, 300mA residual rating is the residual rating. This is the live to earth fault current that the device will detect.
Edited by user 19 June 2019 13:33:57(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified