When in a commercial situation we took delivery of a new machine, the manufacturers would stipulate protection required, in some cases it required semi-conductor fuses, the fuse was often not inside the equipment as it would be difficult to access, and often the equipment would be commissioned by the manufacturer or their agent who would ensure any fuses or trips were actually installed.
It is no different with domestic, to have a control, fuse, or other device external to the appliance is acceptable. However there is one big difference with domestic, the appliance is in control of an ordinary person, this means any distribution board needs type testing i.e. we have to use a consumer unit. And we also have laws which for example require that portable appliances must be supplied with a 13A plug attached in the UK, and since at moment still in the EU the same item must be suitable for rest of EU so a plug used in other EU countries can be fitted with causing danger, so if the appliance needs a fuse, this fuse must be in the appliance and you can't rely on the one in the plug. But this only applies to a portable appliance, it does not apply to boilers, water pumps, motorised valves, and thermostats used in central heating.
There is no reason why the fuse fitted in a FCU can't be relied on to afford protection. There may well be extra fuses in the boiler, but that does not remove the need for external fuses.
I have as an electrician made errors, I fitted a type B MCB instead of a fuse to a machine, so one the fuses were expensive, and two easy for wrong fuse size to be fitted, however it transpired the semi-conductor fuse acts faster than a type B MCB so when the heating element when short circuit it took out the solid state relay as well, returning to fuses the relay was protected. I had thought I knew better than the manufacturer, but in that case I was wrong.
Many other cases I did improve on what manufacturers requested, but if one gets it wrong, one has to face the music. So if the manufacturer in their spec as
@stem pointed out on another thread says the appliance required a type A RCD (Bosch Worcester) can we really say come on that's OTT I am fitted a type AC as that is what comes in the consumer unit, or does it actually need a second type A RCD fitting?
I will admit I don't even know what type is fitted to this house, I will guess type AC, they are 30 mA at 40 mS that is all I looked at when fitting, but I don't have a modern gas boiler so not an issue. But be it a 3 A fuse or a type A RCD manufacturers do say what should be fitted, and to ignore what they say could result in problems for the installer.