which audiophile fuse for the audiolab 6000 cdt ????


i've read of people changing their fuse on their audiolab 6000 cdt transport.

but audiolab, mentions using a T1AL 250V fuse for those of us in the 120v regions.

 

 well, when i look at audiophile fuses. i never see a fuse in this value.

and i always see the mention of the fuse change with no mention of the fuse value.

just mentions of the brand of fuse. ;)

 

so are their audiophile fuses that are T1AL 250V or are people substituting  different fuses ? sorry i don't know anything about fuses.

 

so if any one can help. :)

 

 

deluxe

@deluxe 

Here ya go:

Breakdown of the Fuse Code:

  • T = Time-delay (slow blow)

    • This means it's designed to tolerate temporary current surges (like those at power-on), and only blow if the overcurrent persists.

  • 1A = Rated current of 1 ampere

  • L = Low breaking capacity (also known as low interrupting rating)

    • Suitable for circuits where a high fault current is not expected.

  • 250V = Maximum voltage rating is 250 volts

Regards,

barts

thank you barts, i’m going to have to try to absorb this info.

 

*gulp* ;)

 

but i don't think i've seen audiophile fuses for the size i need in either a T1L 250v nor the "infamous" T1AL 250V.

 

oh well being an audiophile is never easy. again barts, thanks for the wave of knowledge.

So

what do you hear with an audiophile fuse in the 6000cdt? When are we going to get the updates. 

BlueJeans but it sucks. I tried Wireworld mid tier and DH Labs. Both were better than BkueJeans. I also tried Audience FrontRow Reserve and it was incredible but I can’t justify it for CD playback. 
I’m planning to try Kimber D60 next. I’m currently debating if I should keep or sell the 6000cdt. My primary source is streaming Tidal and Qobuz thru my Meitner MA3i. CDs played thru 6000 unfortunately don’t sound as good as streaming so I very rarely spin discs.