0501010.WR Datasheet: Complete Electrical Specs & Tests

In modern high-current VRM and power-module designs, compact chip fuses that support 10 A continuous current and sub-5 mΩ cold resistance reduce board area while meeting fast interruption requirements. This guide provides a line-by-line breakdown for production validation.

Part Overview & Key Use Cases

0501010.WR Datasheet: Technical Visualization

Quick Spec Snapshot & Physical Footprint

Rated Current
10 A
Rated DC Voltage
32 VDC
Interrupt Rating
150 A
Parameter Value
Typical DC Cold Resistance ~0.0036–0.0043 Ω
Dimensions 3.20 × 1.63 × 0.84 mm (1206-class)
Operating Temperature -55 °C to +150 °C

Pro Tip: Use this single-row card to quickly match the part to systems that require 10 A continuous handling in a 1206-class footprint while noting the 32 VDC voltage ceiling.

Typical Applications & Constraints

Target applications include power regulator modules, SMD power rails, and high-current distribution on space-constrained PCBs. When designing, follow recommended land patterns and thermal reliefs so the part’s low thermal mass and fast-acting behavior don’t create false opens. Avoid use in systems above 32 VDC or where prospective fault currents exceed the 150 A interrupting band.

Complete Electrical Specs Breakdown

Electrical Ratings Explained

The rated current (10 A) and rated voltage (32 VDC) define continuous operation and the maximum service voltage respectively. Datasheet time-current curves show fast-acting characteristics with distinct hold and melt points and published I²t for surge events. Designers must ensure expected transient inrush does not intersect the melt curve.

Resistance, Power Dissipation, & Thermal Limits

DC cold resistance drives I²R losses and board heating. Using P = I² · R at 10 A:

R = 0.0039 Ω → P = 10² · 0.0039 = 0.39 W

That heat is dissipated into the PCB; designers should calculate PCB temperature rise and apply thermal derating (80–90% of rated current at elevated ambient).

Standard Tests & Validation Procedures

Factory Test Parameters

  • DC interrupting tests at rated voltage.
  • Surge/melting I²t measurements.
  • Temperature/humidity stress cycling.

In-Circuit Validation

  • Thermal imaging at continuous 10A current.
  • Rdc sampling after SMD reflow process.
  • Surge testing with real application transients.

Performance Benchmarks & Comparative Metrics

Parameter 0501010.WR Band Alternative: High-Voltage Alternative: Larger-Case
Footprint 1206 (3.2×1.63 mm) Larger Much Larger
Continuous Current ~10 A Similar or Lower Higher
Interrupting Rating 150 A @ 32 VDC Exceeds this Typically Higher
Cold Resistance (Rdc) Very Low (~0.004 Ω) Often Higher Varies

Common failures include element melt (open), solder joint fatigue, or thermal overstress. Increasing Rdc over baseline suggests solder-aging or partial heating; a sudden open with blistering points to overcurrent melt.

Design & Implementation Checklist

Pre-Selection Checklist

  • [✓] System voltage ≤ 32 VDC and fault energy ≤ 150 A.
  • [✓] PCB thermal path confirmed for ~0.4 W dissipation.
  • [✓] Expected inrush transients simulated against melt curve.

Assembly & Quality

  • [✓] Standard reel handling and reflow profile control.
  • [✓] X-ray or optical inspection of solder fillets.
  • [✓] Failure logging: ID, lot, current, and symptoms.

Summary

The 0501010.WR confirms a compact 10 A, 32 VDC, low-Rdc chip fuse with ~150 A interrupting capability. Validate fit by running thermal and surge bench tests and follow the implementation checklist before committing to production.

Common Questions (FAQ)

What does the 32 VDC rating mean for my circuit? +
The rated voltage specifies the maximum DC voltage the fuse is designed to interrupt safely. If your system voltage exceeds 32 VDC, the fuse may not reliably clear faults or could sustain internal damage.
How do I calculate P = I²R for continuous dissipation? +
Measure or use the datasheet cold resistance value (e.g., 0.0039 Ω) and apply P = I²·R. For 10 A: P = 10² × 0.0039 = 0.39 W. Use this number with PCB thermal impedance to estimate pad temperature rise.
What tests verify the interrupting rating in production? +
Factory replication involves DC interrupt tests at rated voltage and controlled prospective fault currents, time-current capture for I²t, and post-test continuity checks. Sample-based surge tests provide practical assurance.
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