DECODER · TOOL

Fuse Code Reference

Cross-reference blade fuse color ↔ current + the meaning of fast/slow-blow letters.

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What it does: Cross-reference blade fuses by color or current, and look up fuse speed letters like F/T.

When to use it: When replacing an automotive fuse, identifying an unmarked fuse, or reading a fuse spec.

Disclaimer: This result is a reference estimate. For actual production, refer to the device datasheet / local regulations as authoritative.

Blade fuses identify their current by a color code? — pick one side to look up the other.

→ Blue

Blow speed letters (IEC 60127, common on glass/ceramic tubes)

LetterNameNotes
FFVery fast-actingFastest blow time; protects highly sensitive devices such as semiconductors.
FFast-actingQuick-blow; common in general-purpose electronic circuits.
MMedium time-lagBetween fast-acting and time-lag.
TTime-lagSlow-blow; tolerates start-up inrush, used for motors / transformers / power supplies.
TTVery long time-lagLongest delay; withstands very large surge currents.
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How to

How to use the fuse code reference

Cross-reference by color/current → look up the speed letter → replace with the original rating.

  1. 01

    Recognize blade fuse colors

    Automotive blade fuses have standard colors by current rating (e.g. 10A red, 15A blue). Select a color or an amperage to look up the other.

  2. 02

    Read the fast/slow-blow letters

    Glass-tube/ceramic-tube fuses are printed with letters like F (fast-blow) / T (time-delay) — the table below explains each letter's blow speed.

  3. 03

    Replace with the original rating

    Always replace with a fuse of the same current and speed characteristic; the color only helps with quick identification.

Reference

Blade fuse color ↔ current (standard)

ATO/ATC regular, mini, and low-profile mini share the same color code.

CurrentColorEnglish
1 ABlackblack
2 AGreygrey
3 AVioletviolet
4 APinkpink
5 ATantan
7.5 ABrownbrown
10 ARedred
15 ABlueblue
20 AYellowyellow
25 AClear/Whiteclear
30 AGreengreen
40 AOrangeorange

SAE J1888 / ISO 8820 / DIN 72581.

FAQ

Common questions, answered in 3 minutes

Can F and T fuses be interchanged?

Not arbitrarily. F (fast-blow) protects sensitive electronics; T (time-delay) tolerates the startup inrush of motors/power supplies. Using fast-blow in place of time-delay causes frequent nuisance trips, while using time-delay in place of fast-blow protects too slowly.

Which do I trust if the color and printed current disagree?

Go by the marking printed on the fuse body. Color is an industry convention, and a few manufacturers or special types may differ.

Why is 25A clear/white?

This is the standard color-code convention (25A=Clear/Natural). It indeed has no vivid color and is distinguished by being clear.

Do large Maxi fuses use this same color set?

No. This table is for standard blade fuses (regular/mini/low-profile); Maxi and high-current fuses ≥50A use a different color code, so check the corresponding spec.

Can I substitute a higher-current fuse?

Absolutely not. The fuse current must match the circuit design; increasing it only lets the wiring overheat and catch fire during a fault, defeating the protection.

Data Provenance

Standards and sources referenced by this tool

Item Value / Formula Source
Blade color code SAE J1888 / ISO 8820 Automotive blade fuse
Blow characteristic letters FF/F/M/T/TT IEC 60127

Color is for reference identification; when replacing, always go by the marking on the fuse / the equipment manual.

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