dkenny wrote:
I would suggest against upping the fuse size..why? so the intermittent shorts draw 22 amps on the 20amp fuse
yes this will pop a 20amp fuse but not a 25amp..so where is the extra heat going..the worst place..melting the
insulation on the wire..making to thinner..leading to more hard to find shorts..or fires..
-dkenny
Fuses are not some sacrosanct holy interrupters that trip instantaneously. In fact, they will probably run indefinitely at 110% of current rating. At 135% of current, they might last close to a second or as long as 10 seconds. At 200% of current rating, less than a quarter second to perhaps 5 seconds.
So if the "short" (i.e., --the problem--) draws 22 amps (i.e., 110% of rated current), a 20 amp fuse will not trip for a really long time, possibly not at all; probably longer than you would want to wait.
Now, if it really is a "short" where the +12v is connected to ground, there will always be the battery's internal resistance in series with the circuit. The internal resistance for car batteries is measured in milliohms, often in the low single digits. Even assuming a ridiculously high internal resistance of 0.1 ohms to model a possible maximum current (i.e., 100 milliohms), the current in the short would instantaneously draw over 100 amps (138 amps for a fully charged battery). That would be at least 400% of current rating of a 25 amp fuse, which would not be tolerated more than a half a second. So for a true "short" to ground, there really isn't much difference between a 20 amp and a 25 amp fuse!
See
http://www.littelfuse.com/~/media/automotive/datasheets/fuses/passenger-car-and-commercial-vehicle/blade-fuses/littelfuse_mini_58v_datasheet.pdf.
Of course, this shows that fuses are relatively poor tools to measure current. A better way to measure the current in a circuit would be to use an ammeter as suggested by Billwill, but an even much better idea would be to put a really low resistance, high power (say 0.001 ohm) shunt resistor in series and use your voltmeter to measure the voltage drop and calculate the actual current, like the cheap car starter current meters do, or use a clamp on meter like the pros have.
See
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=393591.