Replacement transformer fuses for industrial trash-compactor control panels — the small fuses that protect the 120V/240V step-down control transformer inside the compactor's electrical enclosure.
Replacement transformer fuses for industrial trash-compactor control panels. These are the small fuses that protect the control transformer (typically a 120V or 240V step-down) inside the compactor's electrical enclosure. When they blow, the compactor has main power at the disconnect but the control panel goes dark.
This is not the page for household electrical fuses or for compactor power-circuit fuses — those are different components. If you're not sure which fuse you need, contact PRT with the compactor model and we'll identify the right one.
Open the compactor's electrical enclosure and locate the control transformer (usually a small box near the top of the panel, often mounted on a DIN rail). The fuse holder is connected to the secondary side and the fuse itself has its amperage and voltage rating printed on it (commonly 1A, 2A, 3A, or 5A at 250V or 600V).
If the fuse rating is illegible, the compactor's electrical schematic (usually inside the panel door) will list the fuse spec. With the amperage, voltage, and physical size (most are 1/4" × 1-1/4" or 13/32" × 1-1/2"), PRT can ship the correct replacement.
If the control panel is completely dead but the main disconnect has power, the transformer fuse is the single most likely failure. Test the fuse with a multimeter set to continuity — a blown fuse reads open. If the fuse is good, the next check is the transformer itself (primary and secondary voltages).
PRT also stocks contactors, relays, PLCs, photo eyes, limit switches, emergency stop buttons, and control modules. See the Compactor Electrical Parts category for the full range.
Transformer fuse amperage is specified on the compactor's electrical schematic, typically inside the control panel door. Common ratings range from 1A to 5A on the secondary side. Contact PRT with your compactor model and we will confirm.
If the compactor has power at the main disconnect but the control panel is dead, the control transformer fuse is the first thing to check. A multimeter set to continuity will confirm in seconds.
No. These are industrial-rated fuses designed for control transformer protection in commercial compactor circuits. They have higher interrupt ratings than residential fuses.
Yes. See our Compactor Electrical Parts category for contactors, relays, PLCs, emergency stops, and control modules.