Thanks!Good luck
Ok this is weird. I seem to have found the problem

Now back to the beers
Thanks!Good luck
Circuit breakers are usually slow acting. Some are thermally triggered. Fuses are mostly fast acting.Thanks!
Ok this is weird. I seem to have found the problem. My Anderson on the A frame (former fridge feed) had fallen down and the road destroyed it. This Anderson goes through it's own breaker but is also behind that master 50A breaker. It appears the wire shorted, the master 50A tripped, the sudden surge blew the two 20A fuses on both solar controllers, and the breaker on the A frame did nothing. The assumption that the problem was between the fuses and the solar controllers was a red herring...
Now back to the beers
but I repurposed it after fitting the compressor fridge.
A couple of updates seeing it's raining againWho made the cheeky comment about complexity...
View attachment 68936 This is my test setup before it goes in the ute tray. The box holds two batteries (now lithium), various tools, and two water jerries. I decided to add a few 'improvements' aka complexities before putting it back. A juntek shunt and coulomb counter , a tidier (ok it will be) junction box for minor 12v things (ute tray lights etc), and my favorite ltc3780 dc dc module which will trickle charge the cranking battery when the lithiums are full. Out of shot is the anderson cable which is plugged into the caravan so I can test the effect of running all batteries in parallel when required
And I'm still messing around with my camping shower, currently a 5l spray bottle painted black. Printed a holder for the shower head off a submersible pump to see how that works
View attachment 68937 I may not need it at all now my gas consumption is (hopefully) much reduced with the new fridge
@jazzeddie1234 , power from the LOAD terminals from MPPT solar controller is available AT ALL TIMES. So you must have something wrong. I have all the 12 volt loads for my van connected through the load terminals of my MPPT controller (not directly from battery terminals!) and provides power 24 hours a day.....at least while the battery has power!!!And another crazy idea to keep my Tow Secure battery charged and prevent more early failures.
View attachment 69884 Obviously the wall plug charger only works when plugged in to 240v and I considered the idea of simply hooking up to the main van battery. But why go simple when I have spare 12v dc dc modules to play with? It's currently hooked up to the solar mppt controller load terminals but I can't figure out (yet) what setting to use so it only comes on when the sun is out...
Anyway it all seems to work ok so I just need to tidy up the cables
Correct @Drover about the brake safe now connected to van battery and not to an independent separate 12 volt battery.You certainly like complicated, I just connected the cable orange/purple ?? thats supposed yo go to the 7/12 pin into the van circuit, luckily it runs right next to breaksafe, fitted a switch so I can turn it on/off, no stuffing around with tug wiring.... The new units now don't even have a battery, it's now legal to use the van battery...
Yes, correct. Most if not all MPPT controllers switch the negative line on the load terminals which is pretty useless on a common earth system. So mine is wired to switch a relay (the load out negative is only connected to the relay coil) which then switches the power.@jazzeddie1234 , power from the LOAD terminals from MPPT solar controller is available AT ALL TIMES. So you must have something wrong. I have all the 12 volt loads for my van connected through the load terminals of my MPPT controller (not directly from battery terminals!) and provides power 24 hours a day.....at least while the battery has power!!!