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I have always been curious about fuses altogether. We have power cables up to 6 awg going into our amps only to have the voltage go through a fuse with as small as 25 awg. "wire". I am sure fuses can vibrate just as all the components, including circuit boards, within a tube amp will. BUT, most of this vibration is being caused by whatever the fuse is mounted to. In regard to a main fuse built into the chassis, I am not sure much can be done about this vibration except for damping the chassis in that area or maybe damp the cheap plastic fuse holder. For those fuses that might be mounted on a circuit board within the chassis, I would think damping the circuit board would be a primary focus. I like th eidea of circuit breakers if the proper ratings can be met. I have found isolating internal circuit boards can cut down on mechanical vibration which can effect the sound. Same goes for transformer covers (throw them away if you can live without 'em). Just my 2 cents.
Actually, the way I see it is that fuses are not subjected to high voltage. The fuse has no voltage drop across it at all. The input voltage (125 or 250 VAC) is exactly the same as the output voltage. Hence, no voltage drop. I would not call anything with no voltage drop across it "subjected to voltage". When a fuse blows, and it has line voltage on one side and 0 voltage on the other - that's when dielectric behavior comes to bear.