There is absolutely no overcurrent protection on the secondary of any PoCo transformer, the cutouts are on the primary side, the wiring on the secondary will have burned off long before those cutout fuses will even think about clearing. This is why anyone not having the faintest idea what they are doing should not screw with any hot SE conductors.
Pretty much correct. Though the transformer on my block has a circuit breaker (not sure if it is on the primary or secondary) as well as a fuse. We have open wire distribution (not triplex), and when a tree branch in the wind caused the phases to make contact it would trip that breaker (in the top of the can). In a few instances resetting the breaker would get the power back. In another instance, the short caused one of the live wires to break.
Still, when a neighbor had something fail in his service entrance, and the wire on his mast down to his meter started a fire (melting his neighbor's vinyl siding), the power was not disconnected until the fire department arrived and turned it off with a hot stick.
Shhhhsssstt.....you weren't supposed to tell him....I as trying to give him some 'comfort'.
Well, actually, the wires from the pole to the house are kind of like fuses....those will burn open.......eventually.....
Yeah, I guess.
I've had breakers go bad, but generally they constantly trip, if bad. And that *****, because you go through all the other checks first, usually.
That depends a lot on who makes the breaker. Generally this is true, but when it comes to Federal Pacific breakers, this is known to be not the case.
If you have quality breakers (Square D, GE, Murray, Westinghouse, Siemens, Eaton, Cutler Hammer etc, off the top of my head), you have nothing to worry about.