The WFCO 9835 has only a positive and negative terminal, and a chassis ground point.
Conceptually I can see that distribution bars form a more elegant and reliable connection for all of *that* without using wirenuts, but I'm sure I'd rather have it all installed inside the trailer mounted against the front wall under the counter, than try to install blocks on the trailer frame or underneath the trailer/exposed to the elements. Which means I need to bring the wires inside the trailer.
Anybody know a good electrician?
EDIT to add this: The trailer has a 12V roof fan, two overhead dome lights and two 12V power points -- the circuits all run back to this box, and then the battery and the hitch plug... There's the three white wires nutted together, and the thick red wire and two black wires nutted together. There's a red and yellow wires nutted together, and green and brown wires connected. Then there's one red wire connected to a light-blue crimp connector by itself, and another yellow wire on its own crimp connector by itself. I'm guessing these are to prevent short circuits?
I just can't imagine how to bring this mess back inside, connected to barrier strips, and adding the WFCO to it. Maybe I really do need an electrician.
Another EDIT: OK -- looking at a trailer wiring diagram and my actual trailer wiring --
RED -- left/stop/turn signal (connects to trailer yellow)
YELLOW -- (open)
WHITE -- ground
LT. BLUE -- (open, electric brake signal)
BLACK -- positive 12V
GREEN -- right/stop/turn signal (connects to trailer grey)
BROWN -- tail/license/side marker lights (connects to trailer green)
I can see that, whatever the method of connection (bigger wirenut or barrier block), the red positive connection on the WFCO should go to the red/black/black wirenut, and the negative pole on the WFCO should go to the cluster of three white wires -- and I should run a wire from the WFCO chassis ground to a screw on the frame?
With the converter, battery and TV power all hooked together, am I going to start a fire, or does it all just work?