Thanks Tony,
I was not clear in my post - I have the MOV part number & it is ordered. What I need is the info on the fuse, viz, fast-acting, super-fast acting as, for example, a semiconductor fuse, or slow-acting. I did suspect that the 5A was amps, but this circuit ONLY supplies the ICs (discrete logic chips & likely a uP), all of the motors(agitator & water pump) and mode-shifter are directly AC(2-spd agitator) powered and controlled via lo-voltage relays. 5A seems like overkill for the current draw(excluding the motors) of the logic board & relays alone, but I do not have experience with these crowbar configs. Does a crowbar front end have an unusually large fuse? There is another fuse immediately after the MOV, also protecting the PCB. Could the 1st fuse be used exclusively for the crowbar action via the MOV & the 2nd fuse for protection of downstream current draw from the lo-amp PCB? If the 1st fuse is exclusively for the MOV are these typically very fast or slow acting?
Would a schematic of the front end of the supply help? I did reverse-engineer (from the PCB traces) the initial section of the power supply.
BTW, a lost leg of the 120v-AC supply to the house destroyed the components. The service tech repaired the line break and informed that they have a +/-5% tolerance on the AC voltage. What likely burned the parts was quasi-continual intermittent make-break connections as the wire failed to the house. The machine was not operating at the time, but obviously, the control board is continuously powered.
Again, many thanks for your rapid reply