Lots to unpack here.
The most essential feature of an electrical system on a boat is the monitoring system, i.e., what the chargers are doing, what the draw on the batteries, and battery State of Charge (SOC). Staying with one company's ecosystem for the major components, inverter/chargers, solar controllers, and battery monitors makes life much easier when installing and using. It also insures that the devices will work together as planned. Mixing and matching from different companies can have unintended consequences and make the system more difficult to manage and trouble shoot. How important is this? In the USCG's regulations for electrical installations there are numerous safety requirements and required testing of the system, unless they are all from the same manufacturer and then the USCG will take the company's word.
Victron's system is becoming the default standard. So you would be wise to future proof your installation by picking and using only Victron equipment.
On to the schematic.
Each battery bank, start and house, needs to have its own switch so the bank can be isolated. This is especially important with a LiFePO4 system as LFP and LA batteries should not be mixed. A simple On/Off battery switch will work. Blue Sea makes them and BEP makes them as well as others. I like the BEP switches because they can be easily surface mounted which makes installation much easier and neater (btw, Blue Sea and BEP are both owned by Brunswick Corp).
A better choice for the selector switch is the Blue Sea CP+ (p/n 6011). This switch will connect both the start and house banks and allow for emergency paralleling. What it prevents is accidentally leaving the wrong battery connected to the system which can easily happen with a 1-2-Both switch. This
article on MarineHowTo.com discusses the issues with the 1-2-Both switch. While you're on the website, take a look at
@Maine Sail's other articles, some of the best on the web.
There are articles on
@Maine Sail's site about a
simple LFP installation. Earlier this year Victron introduced a new DC-DC charger that is heads and tails above the Orion series. It is more efficient, runs cooler, and outputs a higher current. Depending on how you wire the alternator to battery banks, it may be a better choice than an Orion charger.
Your choice of charger should have ample power (amps) and appropriate charging profiles for the batteries you intend to use now and in the future. A Victron charger or inverter/charger is probably a better choice than a NOCO charger, especially if upgrading to LFP.
I'm not going near your engine panel/ wiring harness schematic. I have enough trouble with my own.
Keep in touch with your project, I'm sure you'll have many more questions. Oh, and be careful on the web, there is lots of very good and reliable information and then there is the rest, sounds great, but isn't.