FUSES can be funny things!, and parallel Circuits in 'general' equally so...
There are numerous designs/types of fuses, that blow very quickly, through to very slowly! Slow blowing types for example,
are used for say Motor-Starting, as start-up current is momentarily high. Even a 'typical' fuse, say rated at 1-Amp, will NOT
blow if the current is say 1.2-Amps, for quite some time, if at all. It is usually as a result of the ratio of current against time.
For example, in the above case, 2-amps may take 2 or 3 seconds. And say 10-amps, may take 1/2 a second!! etc.
Parallel circuits have an additional factor though... and that's the relative resistance of the parallel paths!! Ohms Law is
Ohms Law, and even if the resistance of ONE path is say only .001 Ohms, and the OTHER path is say only .002 Ohms, that
is twice the resistance, so only has HALF the current!! ONE 'fuse' MAY have a current of say 800-mA through it, and the other
fuse has say 1,600-mA through it! (etc etc). So that one will blow first, with the other fuse following quite rapidly.
