Well, I missed the 20:37 response, must have been posted while I was typing. I'm having a hard time picturing your one-line in my mind, but am I correct that you have breakers controlled by relays and you have fuses? What kind of gear is there that mixes both fuses and breakers, and why would you want fuses anyhow? That question comes from a relay guy, so I may be a bit biased, but seems to me that either all fuses or all breakers would be better than mixing the two together. The mix seems like asking for trouble.
That aside, I'm curious about that fuse, which I can't find at
Do you have a link within the Ferraz Shawmut site to that particular fuse?
I did find that 900E fuse of the other day, which I see only goes up to 5.5kV, but even at 4160V, a line to ground fault with enough resistance to limit the fault current to a mere 2200 amps would take at least 1000 seconds to get to the minimum melt curve. Lets say 1 ohm fault resistance, 2400V and 1000 seconds and say enough voltage drop to limit the current to 2000A; you would dissipate 4MW in the fault resistance and at 1000 seconds, provided it hasn't all burnt down yet, you would be at 4 gigajoules of energy dissipated. Ouch. On the other hand, a relay could detect that ground fault at 10s or 100s of Amps and have it cleared in a few cycles. But to each their own.
Don't get me wrong, fuses have their uses, but not nearly as many uses as the fuse manufacturers would like everybody to believe.