
For reasons which I can't really understand, most caravan and motorhome manufacturers still choose to use fuses over circuit breakers, despite AC installers choosing to make the switch more than three decades ago. If you could still buy them, I have no doubt that caravan manufacturers would still use Bakelite switches and rubber wiring. Nevertheless, there are a fair range of circuit breaker panels to chose from, mostly from the world of marine electricals where their use is more common.
I chose to use two 11-way breaker panels from Victron's ESP panel range. I could have used less than 22 circuits, but I would have had to start aggregating various electrical items together in non-intuitive ways. Do the toilet flush, and kitchen extractor fan belong on the same circuit? The Victron panels seem to be less popular than the BEP Marine or Blue Sea Systems panels, despite costing about half that of the BEP Marine panels and about the same as the Blue Sea Systems ones. In my opinion the Victron panels are better looking aesthetically, and I cannot see the alternatives offering anything over the Victron Panels.
When I installed the switch panels, I just wired in the small number of circuits I retained from Jim's orginal electrical installation, and the remaining breakers were left unusused. Below is how the electrical cabinet looked when largely empty; the bus bars for the newly installed panels are on the top right.
Given that I am now begining to install some electrical appliances, I thought it was about time I labelled up each circuit on the panels, and worked out what breaker rating each circuit would require.