This guy had one: 
http://web.archive.org/web/20060102224155/http://home.socal.rr.com/midijab/
Over here, another guy mentioned he found around 11 or so: 
http://68kmla.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=6122

I haven't done any fuse replacements myself. When my 2400c died, I didn't know 
it would have been something as simple as fuses, so I sent it off to 
www.dttservice.com to get repaired.
If mine died again, I'd certainly do it myself. Though, I don't really have a 
use for my 2400c, its got more sentimental value than utility at the moment :)

-Hansel

On Jan 15, 2011, at 4:29 AM, Stefan Kiltz wrote:

> Cheers man,
> will try that, which of them fuses are likely candidates? I guess a schematic 
> (nah, probably not available for us merely mortals) or a picture with 
> locations of the fuses would support my venture greatly - any hints as to 
> where to look for them?
> Ta
> 
> Stefan
> On 15 Jan 2011, at 02:39, Hansel Chung wrote:
> 
>> That's possible. Usually when electrolytic capacitors are dying, they have 
>> some physical signs of stress or leakage.
>> Take it out and take a look.
>> 
>> Since you have multiple CPU cards, might want to fix the GLOD first? 
>> (typically fuses)
>> 
>> As for the heat, it's not likely a fuse would be involved in determining if 
>> it runs too hot or not.
>> 
>> -Hansel
>> 
>> On Nov 24, 2010, at 9:53 AM, Stefan Kiltz wrote:
>> 
>>> Hiya people at the duolist,
>>> long time lurker here with a question to all techies out there. I have two 
>>> Comets (bog-standard PPC603e 180MHz) not working anymore. Thought I fried 
>>> the CPU card with the first one. The second one worked fine all the way to 
>>> me putting it on a shelf for a year. After re-plugging the power, all I get 
>>> is the dreaded GLOD, followed by a faint (sort of rattling) noise 
>>> originating vom the power supply daughterboard.  Thanks to Ralph Mawyer, 
>>> who sold me one of his 603e CPU cards, I can rule out a CPU failure.
>>> Since working with electronics for quite some time (not professionally 
>>> though), I know that capacitors, in particular the electrolyte capacitors, 
>>> have a tendency to dry out and losing their capacity. Could it be, that the 
>>> big capacitors on the power supply daughter card may have gone faulty?
>>> Second question would be if any of you people sees a chance to bring my 
>>> NewerTech G3 upgrades back to life - back in the olden day, the first 2400 
>>> was my mainstay and I paid a lot of money for that NewerTech 240MHz G3. I 
>>> believe it ran too hot, though not seeing any signs of excessive heat on 
>>> the dye/heatsink plate. Maybe some sort of SMD fuse or resistore acting as 
>>> one needs to be replaced?
>>> I'd really love to put them Comets back into action again, ideally with the 
>>> G3 upgrade, which seems to be resembling gold dust these days.
>>> I'd really appreciate any tips or directions where to dig deeper.
>>> TaRa
>>> 
>>> Stefan
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> DuoList mailing list
>>> [email protected]
>>> http://listserver.themacintoshguy.com/mailman/listinfo/duolist
>> 
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