Eaton 10A T Melamine Cartridge Fuse, 10 x 38mm

Bulk discount available

Subtotal (1 unit)*

£55.37

(exc. VAT)

£66.44

(inc. VAT)

Add to Basket
Select or type quantity
In Stock
  • Plus 62 unit(s) shipping from 01 October 2025
  • Plus 41 unit(s) shipping from 01 October 2025
  • Plus 50 unit(s) shipping from 10 October 2025
Need more? Click ‘Check delivery dates’ to find extra stock and lead times.
Units
Per unit
1 - 4£55.37
5 - 24£51.49
25 - 49£48.12
50 - 99£45.18
100 +£42.58

*price indicative

RS Stock No.:
848-4386
Distrelec Article No.:
304-02-386
Mfr. Part No.:
LP-CC-10
Brand:
Eaton
Find similar products by selecting one or more attributes.
Select all

Brand

Eaton

Current Rating

10A

Fuse Size

10 x 38mm

Fuse Speed

T

Voltage Rating

150 V dc, 600V ac

Body Material

Melamine

UL Class

CC

Non Compliant

COO (Country of Origin):
MX

Eaton Cartridge Fuse, CC Class, 12 Second Time Delay - LP-CC-10


Need to protect your circuits from current overloads? Trust this 10A cartridge fuse from Eaton to do the trick. The dual-element fuse is time delayed to allow harmless temporary surges to pass, so you won't have to deal with nuisance tripping and unnecessary replacement. After 12 seconds at 200kA, the unit's internal wire melts to break the circuit and prevent damage to your appliances. This is a suitable option for use in electrical engineering, automation and process control applications.

Features & Benefits


• 10 (W) x 38mm (H) dimensions for wide compatibility
• Rejection feature ensures the fuse can only be used for the correct current rating
• Melamine body has high arc resistance, ensuring the circuit breaks effectively

Can I reuse this fuse?


No, you can't reuse this fuse after it has blown. It's a sacrificial, one-time-use device that breaks irreparably when a faulty current occurs. Once blown, it must be replaced.

What class is this fuse?


It's a CC class fuse, so is suitable for protecting components sensitive to short-time overloads. It can also provide short-circuit protection for motor circuits.

Note

Eaton formerly known as Bussmann

Related links