Fused Distribution Block
that's because they're not really common. The 0 awg to 0awg doesn't make sense in general since the fuse at the battery protects the wire, and a block just joins 2 pieces of 0awg which have the same current capacity. Normally, a fused distro block is used to protect the smaller wires leading from the block against over current should they short...a 4, 6, 8, 10, or 12 awg wire would burn before the 0 awg fuse blew(depending on the fuse used). I'm sure I've seen 0 to 4 though, just not as common.
Nope, no soup for you. It was a dual 0 guage in and 4 fused 4 gauge out, 1 4 gauge pass through (but a 0-4 adaptor would solve that issue). It is a power and ground distro block. You would still need a separate fuse for the 0 gauge somewhere.
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