So my house batteries bought the farm recently - 5+ years old so it was time for new ones.
Originally, my 1990 Winnebago Warrior came with one single house battery, stowed under the hood in the engine compartment. Space was limited so it is a smaller batter. I had an 83 amp-hour AGM battery there.
About 5+ years ago I added a second Group 29 size Deep Cycle battery, in a battery box, in one of the underneath storage compartments. I hooked it up in parallel with the existing battery under the hood, to give us extended power when boondocking.
Now that I am replacing both batteries, I am putting two Group 29 Deep Cycle batteries in battery boxes in the underneath storage compartment where the single one was before.
I have wired the two batteries together in parallel, and have my two main terminals leaving the battery bank attached to one battery's positive terminal and the other battery's negative terminal. I understand this is the preferred way to wire battery banks in parallel.
So the question is how to manage the connections under the hood where a battery used to be. I used to use the under-hood battery posts as the termination point, but since it is now gone, there is nothing to terminate at.
I was going to make a home-made simple L bracket out of some sheet metal, and mount these junction blocks to it:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LLZF7DW
And use these as the termination point for the output from the battery bank and for the connection to the house system. I have a battery cut-off switch on the negative post here also. Anyone have some better ideas other than home-made panel?
Second question:
I feel like I should have a fuse at the battery bank in case the main line running from the storage compartment to the engine compartment somehow develops a short (say, from wear).
The battery bank can be used as emergency start for the engine. What size fuse should I use on the battery bank? Or should I use a fuseable link?
Right now I have no fusing/overload protection from the battery bank to the engine compartment.
Steve
1990 Winnebago Warrior. "She may not look like much but she's got it where it counts!"