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In Reply to: RE: Certified fuses... posted by Lew on August 12, 2020 at 08:44:34
Lew,I think the difference is that if the fuse is UL approved and your house burns down because the inspectors find your amp caused the house to burn down and a UL fuse was in the amp the insurance company will pay for your house and doctor bills but if it's a CE approved fuse you're fu----. If I were you I'd just stick with the UL approved fuses to improve your sound over an ordinary commercial fuse so you could get the piece of mind and the sonic improvement. A twofer.
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." Alfred E. Neuman
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which is an assumption one makes in buying them at your local hardware store. I just wonder/wondered what "CE" stands for as an acronym. Could it be "Consumer Electronics"? Just guessing. Or could it be an EU stamp of approval and testing?I just looked it up. Yep, it's an EU approved testing regimen, which probably means it's as comforting as a UL approval. It probably also means that if you live in the EU and your house burns down due to fuse failure, you are covered.
Edits: 08/14/20
Just a note about Taiwanese consumer safety guidelines (see link below). They have a comprehensive, mandatory system of compliance that involves conformity to international standards. Folks who think Taiwan might be some sort of Third World backwater nation should think again. I have no problem using a Taiwanese silver alloy wire fuse rather than worrying about choosing a Bussmann or Littelfuse product for peace of mind. That said, freedom of choice tends to be a good thing, with a number of viable options to consider based on personalized criteria of safety and sound quality.
See link:
I for one am fully aware that Taiwan is a remarkable first world nation, even though China doesn't think so. I cannot imagine who in the West would think otherwise.
There is a cultural bias against China, sometimes for good reason, and Taiwan tends to get lumped into that baggage, too.
Taiwan as you know, is very sophisticated, with western values, a strong economy, and plenty of manufacturing experience.
FWIW, Among the Taiwanese I have known and still know, there is a split between those who consider themselves "natives" and those who, or whose families, emigrated from China probably since WW2 with Chiang Kai Shek. The former group consider themselves to be the true Taiwanese and resent the ties with China. Can't have a country without some form of internal discord or other that is absolutely invisible to an outsider.
The UK should never have given Hong Kong back to China, since they are like Taiwan with a separate identity and western values. It's very disturbing to see the Chinese crackdown on Hongkongers who simply wish to be treated like other nations without authoritarian rulership.
Edits: 08/21/20
The UK should never have given Hong Kong back to China . . .
Hong Kong became a colony of the British Empire following the latter's victory in the First Opium War (1842). IOW, Britain won the right to sell opium to the Chinese by force of arms though the mantra was "free trade". Of course, such a thing would never happen today, would it?
The colony expanded to include the Kowloon Peninsula in 1860 after Britain's victory in the Second Opium War. Hong Kong was evolving from a colonial outpost into a major entrepôt and was further extended when it obtained a 99-year lease of the New Territories in 1898. The colony was restored to China in 1997 when the lease expired (150 years after the First Opium War).
As Lew suggests, Britain had no choice in the matter either politically or legally and even less militarily.
Taiwan as you know, is very sophisticated, with western values
As Humpty-Dumpty might have put it, "There's a nice knock-down oxymoron for you!"
There are rumours in the UK press that some of those "sophisticated western values" are being hotly debated in the US amid a frenzy unusual even for a POTUS election.
D
(Dates checked and some syntax plagiarised from Wiki but the history is mainstream.)
I would say the term "western values" is ironic rather than oxymoronic, but I take your point. Western values includes good and evil practices and beliefs.
good post ... China wants all it's territories back under it's thumb
any 'western values' will be eroded or ejected
except behind closed doors at the very top of course
regards,
but I don't think the Brits had much of a choice. One of my friends likes to point out, not necessarily in defense of the Chinese but just for the irony, that in 99 years of British control, there was never a free election in Hong Kong. I haven't checked his facts.
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