In case you haven't guessed from my first post, I know next to nothing about electronics, so please forgive my ignorance.<br /><br />I recently replaced one starting battery with a deep cycle and cleaned the terminals on the remaining starting battery. I marked the wires so I'd remeber on which battery they go (the batteries are hooked up to an isolator switch). But when I finished putting the wires back on, I noticed that the number of negative wires greatly outnumbers the number of positives. I'd think they'd be even. <br /><br />My starting battery has one thick red wire (outboard motor)and two thick black wires (one outboard motor, one connected to second battery). It also has one thin black wire, which I assume is for the other electronics, but no other red/white wires are connected to the starting battery. Yet, when I'm switched to only the starting battery, the bilge pump, electric trim tabs, lights and all cockpit electronics work.<br /><br />The deep cycle batery has one thick red wire (outboard motor), one thin white wire hooked to the positive terminal, and on the negative terminal it has the one thick wire comming from the starting battery, two thin black wires and one green wire. Again, everything on the boat seems to work when this battery is isolated.<br /><br />But this wiring scheme makes no sense to me. I'd think that, aside from the green ground wire, the negatives and positives would need to even-out on each battery. <br /><br />I probably need to have an electrician come out, but am curious if (1) my threshold presumption about positives equalling negatives is correct and (2) if anything about my description raises alram bells for those of you who are wiring experts.<br /><br />Thanks.