Answer
Apr 22, 2026 - 10:59 AM
Fuses often spark when they blow so its safe to assume that a fuse is NOT ignition protected unless it says it is.
We do have some ignition protected fuse holders which allow you to use a regular fues in an ignition protected environment because the fuse holder contains the spark. Some (but not the largest sizes) of the ANL fuses we sell are ignition protected. Our Terminal Fuses are also ignition protected. Otherwise we have ignition protected fuse holders for the following fuses that are not otherwise protected including one for Mega Fuses, Midi Fuses, and Class-T fuses.
We do have some ignition protected fuse holders which allow you to use a regular fues in an ignition protected environment because the fuse holder contains the spark. Some (but not the largest sizes) of the ANL fuses we sell are ignition protected. Our Terminal Fuses are also ignition protected. Otherwise we have ignition protected fuse holders for the following fuses that are not otherwise protected including one for Mega Fuses, Midi Fuses, and Class-T fuses.
