Yes, it's looking much better Mango!
As Scotty and Little were mentioning for a 350W inverter all you need is a 30A breaker.
At 350W your batteries will last about just about an hour at 30A if you drain them clear down to
50% which is about where you should stop.
At 30A you CAN still use 10AWG to the inverter, if the distance is a few feet between the
batteries and the inverter. If it's much farther you should use 8AWG as the inverter is
simply multiplying the voltage given it, so as Scotty is saying, much drop makes a larger
difference in the inverter's output. In fact it's about a 10 times difference. For every
volt missing at the inverter's input the output will be 10 volts lower.
The breaker between the batteries is to prevent a shorted battery from involving both in
the event. An alternative that might be better would be two 30A breakers, one in each +
lead so you could isolate individual batteries in case one chokes. This would also allow
you to check the individual battery's health by turning each off individually and checking
the voltage on the meter. If for instance one battery reads 10.5V then you have a shorted
cell in it and it should not be hooked up or included in the pair and should be removed
from service immediately.
Keith Cress
kcress -