Fuses are generally not very interesting unless they are either clean or reburnable.
Clean means that the fuse leaves nothing behind it. An example is the blinker fuse, which was among the ones you posted. Here is its (kind of) canonical form:
Code: Select all
x = 137, y = 5, rule = B3/S23
2o2bob2o$5obobo$8bob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3o
b3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3ob3o$5obobo$2o2bob2o!
While the blinker fuse is interesting, it has been known for a very long time and even used in many patterns, so there was little reason to post it here as if it was a new discovery.
Reburnable means that the fuse leaves the track unchanged, although possibly offsets it by some amount. An example is the 17c/45 reaction that drives Caterpillar:
Code: Select all
x = 272, y = 5, rule = B3/S23
o$2o13bo33bo33bo33bo33bo33bo33bo33bo$b2o12bo15b3o15bo15b3o15bo15b3o15b
o15b3o15bo15b3o15bo15b3o15bo15b3o15bo15b3o$2o13bo33bo33bo33bo33bo33bo
33bo33bo$o!
None of the fuses you posted exhibit this property.
As for your blocks-and-gliders thing, it looks pretty cool, but I don't see a possible use for it and, by the way, it isn't even a fuse.
In general, since Life has been developed for almost half a century, it is highly unlikely that you can discover a new interesting pattern in a few minutes. Please get used to the fact that research takes time and effort.