Should a house light fuse be a 5amp?

Soldato
Joined
17 Dec 2004
Posts
8,758
The reason I say this is normally when we have a bulb blow it trips the switch, but the last 2 times we've had a bulb blow, the trip and the fuse has gone, so Im thinking is the fuse too weak, cos we had to change it about 2 months ago cos of a bulb blowing, and now the fuse keeps going when a bulb blows. So Im thinking are we using the wrong type of fuse?? Were using 5amp fuses?
 
Last edited:
5A, or preferably 3A will be fine. Wouldn't want a higher rating than that.

Have you considered moving away from filament lamps?
 
think his point was
5Ax230v = 1150w (or 5Ax240=1200w if you think mains is still 240v)
 
5A is normal.
Don't put a biugger one in.

Are they filament bulbs? Its common that these cause a surge when they blow that trips the fuse. You are using a flip-type fuse aren;t you? (Circuit Breaker)
 
I thought his point was that he thinks that each lightbulb is individually fused?

Well, to be fair to him, the OP is a bit ambigious.

OP said:
the trip and the fuse has gone
I didnt think a normal lighting circuit has a trip and a fuse?
So maybe he thot the OP was talking about a free-standing lamp or something?
 
5A is normal.
Don't put a biugger one in.

Are they filament bulbs? Its common that these cause a surge when they blow that trips the fuse. You are using a flip-type fuse aren;t you? (Circuit Breaker)

Yeah Im using 60watt filament bulbs.. thinking of changing to energy saving bulbs, but I doubt you can get a energy bulb as bright as a 60watt filament??
I have no idea if its a flip-type fuse, but the trip switch pings off
 
Last edited:
think his point was
5Ax230v = 1150w (or 5Ax240=1200w if you think mains is still 240v)

Last time I measured ours it was 254V! Quite near the local distribution transformer though and it has been noticably fluctuating recently.
 
Back
Top Bottom