Electrical isn't one of my better skills. I'm patient enough to get it done but it's still pretty much a mystery to me how it all works. What I'm doing is replacing the simple wiring in my 16' Angler. Not much to it but I'm already stuck. When I tore the old wires out it looked awful and was a real patch job. One thing that confused me was that all of the negative wires terminated on a fused bus. The positive wires went directly to switches in the dash with no fuses. Is this typical for a marine installation? What confused me even more was that the new bank of fused switches had a common wire that went across all the switches that terminated at one of the mounting screws on the face plate. Why would a positive wire be terminated to a screw that is exposed on the dash where it could be accidentally grounded? Also all of the wires on the switch panel were red going into the fuses and black coming out where they would connect to incoming devices. I'm thinking marine wiring must be reverse of automotive? Black is negative and white is power right? That would explain the main wire on the switch assembly being attached to one of its mounting screws. I bought a simple negative bus with six posts. Should I just reverse everything and use the negative bus as a positive bus and run the negative wires through the fused switches? I'm lost.