Not in the least.
I said that I popped the 33A breaker on the genset several times, but never the inlet fuses on shore power.
I've pulled all the way to just under 50A before on Gigabite - its not really very hard to do. Get both ACs blasting, have the water heater on (which is a 110V connection) then go cook something on the stove and fire up a couple of the burners, plus warm something in the oven.
Now go look at the ammeter.
Don't try that on generator power.
Fuses are rated at 25 degrees Celsius. Typically they derate 0.2% per degree Celsius over 25C. This is not zero, but its also not huge.
30 amps @ 120V is 3750 running watts, or about 5 gross horsepower. Fuses are specified to open within 10 seconds at 200% of rating for fuses rated over 10 amps.
These are all "fast blow" specifications.
If you have motors on the circuit (and you do in a boat) then slow-blow fuses should be used. Motor starting currents can be up to 700% of their running load, and more importantly, if the voltage is insufficient under starting loads they can stall instead of start, which WILL blow the inlet fuses.
This is a good thing, because the atlernative is the potential for a fire or a destroyed compressor!
Bad connections in dock pedestals and inadequate wiring at marinas are all too common. I've seen LOTS of marinas where my "240V" service is under 200V. This is a major problem with AC compressors in particular as they pull far too many amps and run REAL hot under these circumstances.
ASSUMING THE BOAT IS NOT AT FAULT the reason he's popping inlet fuses is PROBABLY due to inadequate or corroded dockside wiring and/or short-cycling AC compressors. If you have two AC compressors with one running, and the second attempts to start, old-style compressors (that is, piston style - not scroll compressors) "hard start" and can require a surge of 400% or more of their running current. If this draw drops the inlet voltage to 90V, for example, the motor may not start, especially if there is still pressure in the system (e.g. it short-cycles). It will sit there "locked rotor" until the thermal protection in the compressor trips - this typically takes 5 seconds or more.
This is VERY COMMON on mechanical-stat Hatteras boats - there is
NO PROTECTION AGAINST SHORT CYCLING ON AT LEAST ONE OF THOSE COMPRESSORS IN EVERY MECHANICAL STAT BOAT I'VE LOOKED AT.
An attempted short-cycle start with inadequate or marginal dock wiring is very likely to burn the inlet fuses.
This is a feature - not a bug!
The fix is to solve the problem with short-cycling the AC compressors and if your dock wiring sucks either fix it or bitch at the people who need to do so. This requires either putting time delays in the trigger box (Hatteras typicaslly put them only in ONE zone where you have two compressors - usually the salon one) OR replacing the mechanical controls with electronic ones that have integrated short-cycle protection. This will prevent the compressor starting into a load, avoid the locked-rotor situation and stop the fuses from burning.
It will also stop your AC compressor from (eventually) burning up!