BillE,
Everyone was once a newbie, and they learned from others.
A PO may have already installed a VSR since they are cheap, easy to put in, simplify ‘switchcraft’ and mitigate against the most common switchcraft errors that lead to dead batteries on the water.
A few additional comments I hope may be helpful:
The 110v battery charger outputs will be wired directly to the positive studs of the batteries. (Neg goes to a common ground bus bar). When the shorepower and charger are ON, both batteries will be getting charged regardless of the Perko switch position. As above, think of the Perko as selecting the SOURCE of 12v power on the boat.
There are likely fuses on those outputs at the charger. There should also be fuses within 7 inches of the battery. Mine didn’t have those, perhaps the standards changed. If you need those, Blue Sea MRBF are simplest to wire.
https://www.westmarine.com/buy/blue-sea ... cordNum=33
An additional change to standards is that now yellow wire is used for 12V Negative (will be black wire on older boats).
The ‘BOTH’ position on the Perko switch is equivalent to what Blue Sea and some other switches label as ‘COMBINED’ you may have read about. You’d think there would be a standard, but no.
Items which SHOULD be direct wired to a battery (these are not affected by the Perko switch position) include any bilge pumps, CO detectors, and (often) stereo memory. A PO may have also installed a N2k network with sensors with parasitic loads and goodness knows what else.
Get a mulimeter (I like Fluke) and test around the boat.
Have fun learning how things work! Happily, it’s a never-ending quest.
John