Many moons ago, I paid for a fabricator to modify the battery box. He cut out the rounded profile on the door side of the battery box and welded in a squared off section of panel. The battery box can hold 2 x N70 sized batteries in an East/West orientation with both batteries sitting on the box floor. The negative terminals are under the lip on the door side, but gives more head room to get to those terminals. Becuse my battery box is less pretty than Tombie's but just as busy, getting a battery out is precise and systematic process that works only if you follow the steps from A to Z in sequence. I recently was introduced to the world of MIL spec wiring and now am all inspired to pull what i have apart and design it again with a degree of structure and consolidation. I mention the last comment as a word of wisdom to design your system with expansion in mind. The other thing in Tombie's box that i did at the beginning but abandoned with time was labelling wires. it makes such a difference 5 years down the track to read a label than crawl around the car tracing a wire.
As for battery selection, while i don't intend to traverse the wisdom of Tim as it is his product, i've always had great results using the Varda OEM spec battery as my cranking battery and a generic marine battery as my aux. The marine battery has thicker plates, extra M8 posts, +80Ah, is cheaper than a branded battery and available at every Supercheap, Repco, BCF or any other like store. With heavy camping use i get 3 to 4 years from a generic marine battery and 5+ from the Varda. I'm sure an Optima or other fancy battery will give more life, but i'm prone to running the aux battery low so paying for a fancy battery to break it doesn't make economic sense for me.
It's been a long time since i fitted the Traxide isolator, but memory serves me that there are labels on the isolator for which lead to goes to which battery and then an earth wire. It's as simple as they come to wire in. I mount my isolator under the back lip of the battery box out of the way.
Pic of the underside of the battery box.
Battery box underside.jpg
MLD
Current: (Diggy) MY10 D130 ute, locked F&R, air suspension and rolling on 35's.
Current: (but in need of TLC) 200tdi 110 ute & a 300tdi 110 ute.
Current: (Steed) MY11 Audi RS5 phantom black (the daily driver)
Gone: (Dorothy) MY99 TD5 D110
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