FAQ Help Center
Categories
< All Topics
Print

Calculating Fuse Sizes

Calculating Fuse Sizes for DC and Lithium Battery Systems

This article explains how to calculate the correct fuse size for 12 V, 24 V, and 48 V lithium battery systems. It covers continuous current, cable ratings, voltage requirements, and derating for temperature and installation environment.

Purpose of a Fuse

A fuse protects the cable, not the battery or inverter. The fuse must blow before the cable overheats during a short-circuit or overload.

1. Determine the Maximum Continuous Current

Identify the highest continuous current the circuit will draw. Examples:

• A 2000 W inverter on 12 V can draw about 200 A
• A DC-DC charger may draw 40 A on the input side
• A 48 V solar controller may output 30 – 100 A

Use the system’s worst-case continuous load.

2. Identify the Cable’s Current Rating

Every cable has a safe continuous amp rating. Typical values:

• 16 mm²: about 110–120 A
• 25 mm²: about 150–170 A
• 35 mm²: about 200–240 A
• 50 mm²: about 260–300 A

The fuse must always be less than or equal to the cable rating.

3. Apply Derating

Real installations operate above 25°C. Heat reduces the capacity of both fuses and cables.

Temperature derating for cables

Multiply the cable rating by a derating factor:

• Warm cabinet or van: around 0.9
• Bundled cables: 0.7–0.8
• Engine bay or enclosed conduit: 0.5–0.6

Example:
A 150 A cable in a hot cabinet with a factor of 0.85 becomes 127 A usable.

Temperature derating for fuses

Fuses also lose rating as temperature rises:

• At 50°C: reduce rating by around 10–15%
• At 70°C: reduce by around 20–25%

Example:
A 150 A fuse at 60°C may behave like a 120–135 A fuse.

4. Select a Fuse Above Load but Below Cable Limit

A correct fuse must:

  1. Be higher than the system’s maximum continuous current

  2. Be lower than or equal to the cable’s derated ampacity

Example:
• Load: 80 A
• Cable: 25 mm² rated at 160 A
• Derating factor: 0.85
• Derated cable rating: 160 × 0.85 = 136 A
Recommended fuse: 100 or 125 A

5. Consider Surge Loads

Some devices draw short surge currents. Inverters, pumps, fridges and chargers may have startup spikes. Fuses allow short surges based on their time-delay curve.

For inverters, choose a fuse around 125–150% of continuous current, provided it stays below the cable limit.

6. Check Voltage Rating

The fuse’s voltage rating must exceed the system’s maximum voltage.

• For 48 V LiFePO₄ batteries (which reach 57–59 V), use 58 V or 80 V rated fuses
• Do not use 32 V fuses in 48 V systems

Common types include MIDI, MEGA, ANL, and Class T.

7. Examples

12 V inverter

• 2000 W inverter = 166 A
• 50 mm² cable derated to 240 A
• Fuse above 166 A and below 240 A
Recommended: 200–225 A fuse

48 V solar controller

• Controller output: 75 A
• 16 mm² cable derated to 95 A
Recommended: 80–90 A fuse

Summary

Fuse sizing is based on cable protection:

• Calculate continuous load
• Check cable rating
• Apply temperature and bundling derating
• Choose a fuse above the load but below the derated cable rating
• Ensure the fuse’s voltage rating matches the system

Correct fuse sizing increases safety, reduces the risk of overheating, and prevents nuisance trips.

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *