bud37 wrote:Source of the postViper wrote:Source of the post If the shunt is in the circuit that requires two pos and two neg cables to carry the max load, then it must be wired that way through the shunt as well.
The victron shunts that I have installed are always in the black ground cable between the battery bank and the engine block / ground point......I don't understand why you would need two cables on each end of the shunt itself as it is only in the ground cable.
Depends on what you're monitoring. If it is to be IN the inverter DC load circuit, then you can't be required to use 4/0 cable for the circuit for example, but go with say 2 AWG cable through the shunt that is monitoring that particular circuit, that section of the circuit would have insufficient wire size to handle full load. That's why the shunt must be rated for the load as well, it's part of the circuit. If an engine block negative is part of the circuit's return path, then the cable to the engine and back to the source must also be 4/0 in this example. Unless I'm missing something, I don't know how you can get around that unless something other than the inverter DC load is being monitored here. I see it all the time though, the most common is heavy cable to the battery bank speced for a high load but forgetting to replace the smaller cables connecting the batteries together in that bank, they will all be expected to carry the same load.
If the shunts you've installed are simply to monitor the ship's banks, then that's different and the current cable size to the block in your cases is probably fine but unless I'm mistaken the OP in this case is monitoring his inverter load through it, maybe he can clarify this point.
BTW, if you're using an engine block for a high load/amperage connection point, never connect to one side of the block then take the return off the other side of the block. Both connections should be at the same terminal.






