Regarding directionality, I would remind everyone that in past fuse-related threads there are two members who have cited actual experience rotating the position of a fuse in its holder without changing its direction. Namely Atmasphere and SGordon1. Both gentlemen reported that doing so resulted in audibly significant sonic consequences. Based on his experiments Ralph (Atmasphere) also stated that ...
In any event, it seems to me that dismissing the findings of these two gentlemen and/or Atmasphere's explanation of those findings on the basis of conjecture, rather than actual experience, is no less objectionable than dismissing reported findings of directionality on the basis of conjecture rather than actual experience.
Regards,
-- Al
Reversal is improving the contact area because fuse and holder are not dimensionally perfect and the fuse might sit better in the holder in one direction. By rotating the fuse in the holder without reversing it gets the same effect only more profoundly.If so, it would seem to say that many and probably most of the reports of sonic differences occurring as a result of changing the direction of a fuse are accurate, while assertions that it is impossible for a fuse to be intrinsically directional in an AC circuit (which I believe to be true) are also accurate.
In any event, it seems to me that dismissing the findings of these two gentlemen and/or Atmasphere's explanation of those findings on the basis of conjecture, rather than actual experience, is no less objectionable than dismissing reported findings of directionality on the basis of conjecture rather than actual experience.
Regards,
-- Al