That switch was designed
for large house banks and separate start banks. Sometimes, Scott, I'm forced to laugh over the "marketing" hype. Analyze the switch. What does it do that an old 1-2-B switch did NOT do, assuming the 1-2-B switch was wired properly?If your house bank is #1 and start is #2:1-2-B switch - #2 starts the engine, #1 runs the house. BOTH is where it gets "funny" because as I've presented previously, so many people have their alternator output run TO the C post of the 1-2-B switch, thus literally forcing them to start on B to get both banks charged.If, however, your alternator output goes directly to the house bank, and you've found a way to charge your start bank with a combiner, echo charger or another manual switch, then the 1-2-B switch is only doing two important thing: taking power OUT of your chosen bank to start the engine and run the distribution panel.In your case, with two equal house banks, the new switch makes even less sense, because that's not what it was designed to do.So, in answer to your question, hang onto it, but don't rush to install it, figure out how your alternator output is wired, and then decide what you want to do depending on how you use your boat.If there's nothing wrong with your existing switch you can keep it. If your existign switch has problems, then compare the cost between this newfangled thingy and a basic 1-2-B switch and whatever wiring changes you may or may not have to make.Hope your review of your "flash" is OK.