If people half the current rating when "upgrading" to blade fuses, then there is also no reason why you wouldn't be able to lower the glass fuse rating in the same fuse box.
No. This is the problem, and it's boring having to keep re-explaining it but it is important people get this right. A fuse rated to fail at a certain current will fail at that current as said. The labelling is very different between glass and blade fuses though as also said above. Glass fuses are labelled with their instant blow current (failure will occur within 5s at this current). Blade fuses are labelled with their continuous safe carrying capacity (failure will occur after an impractially large number of hours at this current), which as also said is more or less exactly half the instant fail rating for almost every type of fuse. There is a make of glass fuse out there which is labelled in the same manner as blade fuses, which is not to the BS rules and is causing confusion. It is essential to use the right fuse for each circuit.
The suggestion above to use a low rating and keep increasing until it appears to hold is also dangerous. Between the instant fail and continuous current ratings for any fuse there is a scale of increasing fail time, this is the slow-blow region for that fuse. It's a curve. Along that curve are ratings that will cause a fuse to fail after months of use, which to all intents and purposes would look like the fuse was holding in this sort of testing. This is dangerous, in this region the fuse itself can generate considerable heat. These low fault currents often cause fires in under specified wiring and I have seen this happen because someone thought a slightly lower rated fuse would be fine in a given circuit. It didn't fail so it seemed to have worked, later that day the car was on fire. This is why the proper fuse must be selected by design not by near random experimentation. Once when someone suggested I was just making this up, I found and posted the curves for various blade and glass cartridge fuses, so they will be here somewhere if you poke around. All manufacturers have the charts for their fuses available if you look. This is not guesswork, it's published and easily researched fact. You can't just select a fuse because it's a 10A fuse or whatever, you have to know and consider what that means. There are other things to consider too, like the fact that blades are open air fuses while glass fuses are sealed. That makes a difference to their response times and ratings too if the strictest rules are applied.
I personally don't know how ceramic type fuses are rated but their charts will also be available from the manufacturer.
Incidentally, Bungle is an electrician.
Edited by Dan, 04 May 2012 - 09:21 PM.