Bruce, thanks for chiming in to try to help me understand this stuff. I don't need to become a certified electrician, but I do need to learn enough to get it right before these wires get buried beneath glued down insulation and ply. I want to get it right before I get it wrong.
bdosborn wrote: the only load on the wire from the tow vehicle battery to the trailer battery is the battery charging current. I've never seen the charge current seen go over 10 amps on my trailer so I use 10 amps as the load current for the charge wire.
Ahhh... so that's the load. I'll use 10 amps as the load.(How did you measure the battery charging current? Is that something you can do with a little hand held voltage meter?). I'll run a #8 if I can run it through my 7 pin plug, otherwise I'll run a # 10 cause I'm sure it will fit the plug okay.
to size the wire from the battery to your distribution fuse block. That wire is usually so short you don't need to worry about voltage drop. I would use a #10 AWG wire
Yeah, that is about 3' in my setup and I'm running #10.
Are you going to use an inverter? They draw bucket loads of currents and usually have big, fat. dedicated wires and fuses. The #10 wont work for the inverter but I can size that wire if you need that info.
Yes. I'm installing a Xantrex Freedom HF 1000. I've got #10 AC feed from Shore Power to the HF with a 30Amp AC inline fuse, then #10 to AC breaker box, #2 cables to battery with a 150 Hi-Amp DC CB. #8 Equipment Ground ties to DC Grounding Block.
http://xantrex.com/documents/Inverter-Chargers/Freedom-HW/Freedom_HF_Install_Guide%28975-0395-01-01_Rev-C%29.pdfThanks again.