When joining two conductive media, connection pressure and or connection area is essential, in order for the electrons to easily jump from one bit to the other.
A fuse clip must not only be clean of impediments, but also grab very tightly in order to lower the resistance of the connection. The lower the resistance, the lower the heating when current passes through the connection point.
Understand how a fuse performs it's function. It melts when a certain volume of amps passes through it. The passage of power through it's link resistance, heats the metal link to its melting point. Slightly lower power transfer still heats the link, just not to the point of melting.
If you apply enough external heat, even with no current passing through it, the link will still melt. If you heat the end cap, the heat will conduct into the link and effectively lower it current carrying melting point. A 15 amp fuse can have an effective "blow point" of 10 Amps if it placed in an environment with external heat sources applied to it. This is why the clips that grab the fuse must be clean, tight, and well fitting, so as not to lower the capacity of the fuse.