@Siwastaja : I tried to calculate such resistance but I might be doing it wrong because I can't get it to work. Limiting the current to 67A during a 150V surge requires minimum 2.5 Ohm resistance, but limiting the voltage drop to 2V at 12V and 10A requires maximum 0.2 Ohm. And anyway, those 67A would blow up the 20A fuse.
Oh, then you need 0.2 ohm and need to make sure the TVS is rated to survive until the fuse blows. Self-resetting polyfuse would be a good choice because replacing fuses sucks. That fuse should provide the 0.2 ohm already so no need for a separate resistor.
Maybe the shunt type protector (TVS crowbar + resistance + fuse) is not the right choice for this job, since you have high power requirements, and maybe you should look into series protection.
I'm wondering (and this is for David's answer as well) if the car doesn't already provide such surge clamping protection inside the electrical box or even before that?
Usually not. Each module is protected separately, typically, unless you know better for some specific case.
Power electronics is not my area of expertise (as you probably have gathered by now) but it surprises me that such surges could happen on the +12V rail anywhere in the car, when there are dozens of ICUs, sensors, and the accessory socket connected to it without apparent protection of this scale.
It's just quite an arbitrary design choice that each module includes its own protection. Granted, it could be centralized, but it would require a separate protection module, whereas when each module protects itself, it can be often integrated simply on the same PCB.
Furthermore, if I understand correctly those surges mainly happen when the battery is disconnected from the alternator so that should happen fairly often, and it shouldn't blow the fuses every time (be it because of thr TVS or the crowbar circuit).
Load dump happens when the alternator disconnects from the battery, and this is not very usual, definitely not normal "everyday" operation, but it
can happen. Yeah, I think it's OK if your device resets during this, but it's annoying if you need to manually replace fuses.
By the way, again if I understand correctly, those load dump surges happen at the alternator sides when the load (battery) is disconnected (because of the high charging current and the large alternator inductance). But when this happens, my circuit is connected on the battery side, not the alternator side, so it shouldn't see the surges?
Yeah, if you somehow really physically install battery posts electrically and mechanically separated from the normal battery posts, this could be the case, but I highly doubt so.
For example, if an oxidized battery terminal connection lifts during a bump, then you have the whole electrical system connected directly to the alternator - even though the current goes through the battery connectors, but they are not connected to the battery. Hence the load dump.