The right fuse is the first step in protecting a circuit. All of VEVOR's fuses are precision-rated and designed for a wide range of electrical applications, including cars, boats, industrial equipment, and homes. VEVOR offers a wide selection of glass fuses for garage and workshop use. They also have a fuse tap adapter for a clean car wiring install and bulk glass fuses to keep essential circuits protected. Check out all our fuses to ensure every connection is safe.
Not every fuse is the same, and putting the wrong type or grade of fuse in a circuit can damage equipment, start an electrical fire, or cause the whole system to fail. Every VEVOR fuse is accurately rated, clearly labeled, and made to meet international electrical standards. This ensures each fuse reliably protects its intended circuit. VEVOR offers a wide selection of fuses, from fuse taps for clean wiring in cars to glass fuse assortment kits with dozens of ratings in one box.
To choose the right fuse, ensure that the three key factors, the fuse type, current rating, and voltage rating, match your circuit's needs. A wide range of ratings and formats is available for VEVOR fuses, so every buyer can find the perfect fuse for their electrical safety needs.
The primary specification of a fuse is its amperage rating. It defines the maximum continuous current the fuse can carry before the internal element melts and opens the circuit. To meet almost all usual needs for circuit protection in cars, boats, and homes, VEVOR fuses come in a wide range of amperage ratings, including 1A, 2A, 3A, 5A, 7.5A, 10A, 15A, 20A, 25A, 30A, and higher.
It is essential to choose the correct amperage rating. An undersized fuse may blow under normal load conditions, causing unnecessary interruptions and downtime. An oversized fuse allows excessive current to flow before interrupting the circuit, potentially damaging connected devices or wiring before protection activates. VEVOR glass fuses and blade-style fuses have their amperage value stamped clearly on the end cap or body. The marking makes them easy to find when installing or replacing them.
It is important to match the fuse's current and voltage ratings to the circuit it protects to ensure safety and effectiveness. When a fuse blows, its voltage rating indicates the maximum voltage it can safely interrupt. If the fuse's voltage rating is lower than the circuit voltage, it may arc internally after blowing instead of opening the circuit safely, creating a new hazard rather than clearing the fault.
When adding a new circuit to an existing car fuse box with a fuse tap adapter, it is just as important to ensure that the replacement fuse maintains the correct voltage rating for the vehicle's system as it is to ensure it matches the amperage. VEVOR fuse tap adapter products work with standard-blade fuse boxes and clearly indicate the supported voltage and amperage range. This makes it easy to add an extra powered circuit safely and properly, without damaging the vehicle's existing circuits.
Different types of fuses have different physical formats, placement methods, and best circuit environments. There are three main types of fuses that VEVOR sells: blade fuses, glass fuses, and specialty forms such as midi and ANL fuses for high-current applications. Knowing the differences will help you choose the right fuse type for each circuit's physical needs and working conditions.
Older cars, home tools, audio equipment, and hobby electronics all use glass tube fuses. It is possible to buy VEVOR glass fuses one at a time or in assortment kits that include the most popular ratings. Glass fuses are among the fastest types to assess and replace in the field because the clear glass body of each lets you check it visually right away. For example, you can see right away if an element has blown without using a multimeter. VEVOR glass fuses are manufactured to meet AGC and AGX standards, ensuring compatibility with a wide range of equipment.
In addition to type and rating, the blow characteristic of a fuse, or how quickly it reacts to an overcurrent event, is an important factor that many buyers miss. There are two main response types: fast‑blow and slow‑blow fuses. Each type is best suited to a different circuit and load in real-life electrical applications.
"T"-shaped slow-blow fuses can handle short surges of current above their maximum amperage without blowing, but they will blow when the overcurrent lasts for a long time. Because of this, slow-blow fuses are a common choice for motor and transformer circuits that require a large current surge at startup before settling into regular operating current. If you use a fast‑blow fuse in a motor circuit, it may blow repeatedly when the motor starts up. Slow‑blow fuses are designed to handle these inrush events properly while still protecting the circuit from real fault conditions.
Whether you need a single replacement fuse or a large amount for regular maintenance, VEVOR fuses come in different pack sizes, styles, and assortment kits to meet all of your needs. Choosing the appropriate pack size ensures you always have the right fuse available when needed.
Buying fuses in bulk or an assortment kit is the best way to save money and make things easier on the job for automotive technicians, marine electricians, and workshop users who routinely replace and test fuses in a variety of vehicles and equipment. That's exactly why VEVOR made the glass fuse assortment kit: it contains the most common glass fuses and blade fuses in one neatly organized case, so each grade is easy to find and understand during busy repair sessions.
A VEVOR glass fuse assortment kit usually includes at least 100 fuses with amperage ratings of 8–12. This covers most routine fuse replacement needs in a typical workshop setting for cars, boats, and homes. An organized assortment kit reduces diagnostic time and helps prevent incorrect fuse installation. The organized case layout helps prevent this problem. Fuse taps included with some VEVOR assortment kits make the kits even more useful by enabling new circuits during car electrical upgrades without having to buy extra parts separately.
Fuse taps and fuse tap adapters are very useful additions to any job involving wiring in a car or boat. A VEVOR fuse tap adapter doesn't cut into existing wiring to add a new powered circuit for a dashcam, GPS unit, LED accessory, or other device. Instead, it plugs directly into an existing blade fuse slot in the vehicle's fuse box and provides a second fused output for the new circuit. This is a clean, reversible installation method that doesn’t require cutting or splicing factory wiring.
Assorted VEVOR fuse tap adapter models are available in low-profile and standard-blade styles and are compatible with mini, standard ATO, and maxi fuse box layouts found in a wide range of cars, trucks, and boats. Each fuse tap adapter has a slot for an add‑a‑circuit (piggyback) fuse. This lets the installer choose the exact amperage rating needed for the new device being powered. This is an important safety measure that ensures the added circuit is protected at the correct current level without relying on the original circuit's fuse.
VEVOR fuses protect electrical circuits accurately and reliably in cars, marine, industrial, and home settings. VEVOR offers precision-rated glass fuses, blade fuses, full glass fuse assortment kits, and clean-install fuse tap adapter options to meet all your fuse needs at reasonable prices. There is reliable after-sales support for every product. Choose VEVOR fuses for dependable circuit protection across a wide range of applications.
Avoid matching the fuse amperage to the equipment's maximum or peak draw. Instead, match it to the circuit's maximum normal running current. If you're not sure, check the equipment instructions or the wiring diagram for your car. The VEVOR glass fuse assortment kit has the most popular amperage ratings, so you can quickly find a suitable option.
With a fuse tap adapter, you can add a new powered circuit to a car's fuse box without cutting any wires. Just put the VEVOR fuse tap adapter into a blade fuse slot that's already there, and then connect your new device to the adapter's output with the right-sized fuse in place.
Fast-blow fuses protect electronics by blowing quickly when they sense excessive current above their rating. Slow-blow fuses can withstand short spikes in starting current before blowing, making them ideal for motor and transformer circuits. Both kinds of VEVOR fuses have clear markings that say "F" for fast-blow and "T" for slow-blow.
Yes, VEVOR glass fuses are the same size as normal AGC and AGX fuses, so they can be used in any glass fuse holder found in cars, appliances, audio equipment, and hobby electronics. The glass fuse assortment kit has the most popular ratings for a wide range of applications.
Not at all. A fuse that keeps blowing is usually a sign of an underlying circuit problem or undersized wiring, not a defect in the fuse itself. Installing a higher-rated fuse compromises safety and increases the risk of fire or damage to the wiring. To fix the problem, first identify the cause, then replace the VEVOR fuse with the correct rating.