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Well, it seems my little experiment failed. The Pico II fuses are simply too fast. So, while I'm certain they afford the ribbons greater protection, they have a tendency to blow – about once every six weeks for me. I guess a full order of magnitude decrease in the melting time is a bit much, so I've decided to try some LittelFuse 874 Series pigtail fuses, which essentially split the difference.In the meanwhile, however, I decided to walk the tightrope without a safety net: No guts, no glory – no fuses, no kidding. Before making any comments about sound quality sans fuses, I want to put some fuses back to hear if my initial opinion is correct. More to follow...---Anyone seriously considering HifI Tuning fuses should read the interesting thread a tech (Roger A. Modjeski) started in the Music Reference Circle.http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=105425.0 Apparently, they fail in the opposite manner in which my Pico II experiment failed – they don't open when they should. Based upon the information Roger provided, I'm tentatively willing to accept that they could improve sound quality because they avoid the non-linear behavior of a typical fuse by behaving more like a piece of wire. That's fine until the thing should open, but it doesn't. It seems the same benefit could be attained by simply bypassing the fuses. Roger's account indicates that the two activities are practically equivalent. Caveat emptor!
Kevin & Josh:The Fuse in many X/O's are integral to the circuit and may affect the tone to a very slight degree, but is it worth the chances of damage? With the amplifiers, there to the best of my knowledge is no direct link in the circuit other than to protect. I'm going to still argue that if there was any improvement in the sound, that it would behoove any high-end builder to utilize the tuning fuses in their product, but they don't. This would infer that said tuning fuses are no more than pet rocks. Jim