In a nutshell, yes. It's necessary for the protection of any equipment you plan to plug in to that battery. And it's cheap insurance against something going wrong.- Is it correct to believe a crucial element missing are fuses/circuit breakers?
Entirely up to you. Breakers are more expensive but resettable, fuse boxes are cheaper and standard fare for all vehicles. My own personal choice is for fuses - they're idiot proof, and they come in a larger range of values than breakers. Choice is yours.- Should I get a fuse block or individual circuit breakers?
If it's going to be out in the canopy, I recommend a marine fuse box to seal against dust and water. Something like this one is compact, and easily wired to.- Which fuse block would you recommend?
It's not necessary to wire each light to a fuse, but perhaps cluster the lights into groups and connect each group to it's own fuse. That way, when you lose one fuse, you don't lose all lights. Don't know how many lights you are running, but two banks of lights would be fine, I think. Use a multimeter to measure the current draw across the fuse terminals, and rate your fuse higher.- Should I connect each light to a separate fuse, or just all into the 1 fuse?
No, because you'll want the sockets on the Baintech to be fuse protected too. Voltmeter will still work fine, ammeter will tell you what current the sockets on the Baintech are pulling.- Should I connect the fuse block to the output of the Baintech, to make use of the isolator and volt/amp meter?
You mention earlier that your Defender aux battery is already connected to the Ritar battery? Is it just a direct connection? If I were to replace anything, it would be to update your existing dual battery setup to charge a third battery, a-la Traxide unit, and run power up to the battery through an anderson plug for ease of disconnecting the canopy. Leave the D250S where it is, connected to the solar panel.- Should I swap the D250S to the D250S Dual and connect the vehicle power to it? (again opening the debate about the need for a DC-DC charger)
A 50 breaker near the batter at each end of the cable certainly wouldn't hurt. Both ends, considering that your camper is a slide on, and cable damage is a possibility.- Should I have a circuit breaker on each end of the connection from the vehicle, and if so, which ones?
Not familiar with the D250S, but if it's doing the job, why bother changing it???- Should I swap the D250S for a better solar regulator?
I'd recommed connecting it through an anderson plug - you never know when you might need to disconnect it.- Should I keep the inverter connected directly to the battery, albeit with a circuit breaker?
Use good quality cable, and terminals... and probably a hundred other things. If in doubt, ask someone....- Anything else that needs to be mentioned?


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