Another week of digging through the large amount of fake news on Google on our subject and here's my findings
Some salutary vids to reset your ground zero here
Why you cant weld with a 12v battery
You can weld with a 2 x 12V batteries
See how this totally rank amateur is meddling with his solar power system on his boat - if he had been on a 24Vdc system, the mistakes might have been so much worse - keep a fire axe handy to cut through cables.
24v
I think its important to note that an arc cant be struck at 12Vdc. At 24 Vdc it can be struck and sustained quite easily as shown by the experience welder.
So If your ATO wafer type car fuse fails by gross fault current it can develop a sustained arc flash at 24Vdc and burn out until the gap gets too big ca 20mm. At 48Vdc its much more likely to become a problem with a fault condition.
Once an arc flash develops it enters the negative resistance zone so that the current will increase under near zero ohms across the gap and is only limited by the source/wiring resistance. So this can escalate in milli secs - hence it can become an explosion - like a fire cracker. I think amateur dabblers are misled by the benign behaviour of a typical car battery and its electrics.
It has been said that a short circuit of a Lifepo battery bank is like trying to contain the approx explosive power of a hand grenade 50g TNT 200 MJ - just to put it into context here - naysayers go pooh pooh

Here IMHO is a very fair vid on the range of fuse link types available for RV, Boaty, solar, off gridder - doesnt look too biased re sponsorship BUT totally deprecates the EU knife Blade NF Fuse with a very long trusted history - since 1949 (Siemens original design) and an obvious equivalent to the much vaunted Class T fuse states side.
BTW the down side is that makers keep the fuse carrier system under closely guarded supply BUT the basic open ceramic has been around for a long time and can be obtained on Ali for $10 (with fuse) - cartel busting. BTW dont ever trust unbranded fuse links from Ali, buy from a reputable source.
And just when you though this must be a massive hoax (its your call and your funeral) there has been a long standing workaround in the automotive industry called the fusible link
present on most vintage cars (14AWG x 6" insulated single core wire)
https://m.roadkillcustoms.com/understanding-fusible-links/Most people dont know about this
Of course it breaks the current BUT doesnt contain the explosive force or potential fire and personal safety risk (see how many vids show amateurs messing with Lifepo banks and NOT wearing googles. Would you weld without them? Think of a stick weld x 1000 for arc flash.
This is open for discussion in the hope of bringing some professionalism to the subject of my OP
