Oh what a wonderful day I've had today...
I'll spare you all the boring details and just get to the nitty gritty of my problem. I left my lights on, battery was dead. Asked for a jump from a friend but we looked at the colour of the battery cables, not the actual polarity signs on the battery and accidentally reversed the polarity, promptly frying the main fusible link of my car. I called a local auto supply store who said they didn't happen to have a fusible link in stock, but that I could get a wire with a spot for a fuse in the middle of it and a 30 amp fuse. I had never heard of a fusible link before and so I didn't know the difference really. I bought it, put it in and jumped the car again. It ran for a while, but on my way home the fuse fried (on a hill, in rush hour, of course =D) I had another fuse and a woman stopped to give me another jump, I checked the fuse after the jump to ensure it was intact, as I assumed we blew the fuse with the previous jump. Well, I got on the highway (gotta charge the battery, ya know!) and promptly blew the other fuse. Called a tow truck, towed it home and here I am.
So, after that novels worth of explanation, my questions:
1. I looked up what a fusible link is vs a fuse and they seem almost the same only a fusible link can handle amperage spikes without breaking, whereas a fuse cannot. I also read here that the FL amperages should be 30/40/30, so my 30 amp main fuse would be insufficient for the application regardless. Would I do okay to pick up a 40 amp fuse and put that in or should I scrap the whole idea and try to track down some 30/40/30am fusible links?
2. I hooked the freaking jumper cables up backwards! What sort of horrible irreversible damage could I have done to my poor car!?!?!
Thanks in advance for the help!
I'll spare you all the boring details and just get to the nitty gritty of my problem. I left my lights on, battery was dead. Asked for a jump from a friend but we looked at the colour of the battery cables, not the actual polarity signs on the battery and accidentally reversed the polarity, promptly frying the main fusible link of my car. I called a local auto supply store who said they didn't happen to have a fusible link in stock, but that I could get a wire with a spot for a fuse in the middle of it and a 30 amp fuse. I had never heard of a fusible link before and so I didn't know the difference really. I bought it, put it in and jumped the car again. It ran for a while, but on my way home the fuse fried (on a hill, in rush hour, of course =D) I had another fuse and a woman stopped to give me another jump, I checked the fuse after the jump to ensure it was intact, as I assumed we blew the fuse with the previous jump. Well, I got on the highway (gotta charge the battery, ya know!) and promptly blew the other fuse. Called a tow truck, towed it home and here I am.
So, after that novels worth of explanation, my questions:
1. I looked up what a fusible link is vs a fuse and they seem almost the same only a fusible link can handle amperage spikes without breaking, whereas a fuse cannot. I also read here that the FL amperages should be 30/40/30, so my 30 amp main fuse would be insufficient for the application regardless. Would I do okay to pick up a 40 amp fuse and put that in or should I scrap the whole idea and try to track down some 30/40/30am fusible links?
2. I hooked the freaking jumper cables up backwards! What sort of horrible irreversible damage could I have done to my poor car!?!?!
Thanks in advance for the help!
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