I have an Omega C760 which I'm using as an extra enlarger for flashing. It's not linked through a timer, but plugged in directly to the wall.
Switched it on and the bulb exploded...I had been using it all morning and don't know why this happened...would it have been the fuse?
Unusual. Of course when switched on the stresses on the filament are at their highest (which is why they usually blow then) but to explode (actually, implode, but the effect is the same so far be it for me to be pedantic...

) seems unusual. Perhaps in melting, a piece of the red-hot filament dropped onto the glass and that was enough to set if off? 'Tis a mystery.
Did the fuse blow at the same time? If so, it may have been the lamp blowing that blew the fuse (it may have melted in a way that put a short across the terminals) or possibly a short somewhere blew both (the lamp filament would be expected to blow first as it is less robust). A ring-main fuse in the consumer unit is usually 30A and the plug fuse 13A, which are rather a lot. Either way, it would be very unusual to blow both lamp filament and fuse at the same time.
A residual current device is inclined to trip over something as simple as a blown lamp as they are very sensitive but not a fuse (the previous owner of my house specified RCDs in the lighting circuits so every time a lamp blows it takes out the whole floor's lighting until I reset the breaker...).
Bob.