TexMedium
Well-known member
Anyone Know anything on the subject? Specifically, the main panel in my house is a Federal Pacific Electric 200 amp, split buss panel. All fuses, NO circuit breakers, original to the house construction circa 1959. There are five two-pole breakers on the upper buss, all supplying 240volt loads. One of the blocks is big, holds 100amp fuses that feeds the lower buss, which holds 20 "Edison Base" single pole fuses. All of the upper buss fuses are old, again possibly original. There WAS an electric water heater fed by a pair of NON-30 Buss fuses. A couple of nights ago, the wife smelled what she has been calling "blue smoke", and went downstairs to find smoke and flame coming off the upper buss. She controlled it and stopped it, but it scared her spit-less. Anyway, the investigation into the cause showed that one, or both, of the elements in the water heater bridged and shorted, but only one of the fuses actually "blew". I could read zero ohms continuity on what was left of the melted down fuse block. These fuses, all of them, are either the one's that were in place when i bought the joint, or in a cigar box that was on a shelf next to the panel.
I've lived here sixteen years and have never bought any of these "cartridge type" fuses, so they are all at least that old. My best guess is that they might be much older. So, do these fuses "age out"? Should i be afraid of the one's still in place? Or, should i just replace them all with new? Replacing the panel right now isn't in the budget, time, or money.
I've lived here sixteen years and have never bought any of these "cartridge type" fuses, so they are all at least that old. My best guess is that they might be much older. So, do these fuses "age out"? Should i be afraid of the one's still in place? Or, should i just replace them all with new? Replacing the panel right now isn't in the budget, time, or money.