I've recently installed a CTEK charging system (which I wrote about here), and one of the things I like about it is there's now only a single cable to the leisure battery - all my 'consumers' are connected via one of the posts on the CTEK 'Smartpass'.
In the photo below, the thick green wire is the feed to/from my leisure battery, and the consumers are all connected to the post directly below that post.

I've also now ordered a solar panel. The CTEK system has a built-in MPPT controller, but it has no way to view the current flow.
So I thought I'd add an ammeter. But if I try to monitor the current from the solar panel directly, then 1) that will be at the panel's voltage, so I'd need to measure that too if I want to know the power output, and 2) I'm concerned in case adding an external ammeter might affect the accuracy of the MPPT tracking, which I believe measures the current at a range of voltages. I'm probably worrying needlessly, but I don't know enough about measuring current to be confident that an external meter won't interfere.
But then I realised that what I really want to know is how much current is going into my leisure battery. So I figured that if I insert an ammeter into the leisure battery feed then I'll be able to measure the net current - if it's negative it means I'm using more current than I'm putting in, or if I turn off all the consumers I'll be able to see how much current is going in, from the solar panel, or my charger, or even the alternator.
So I think I'll need an ammeter that will cope with around 50A (I've started with a 40A fuse in the leisure battery circuit, but the wiring will cope with 70A). And from what I've read ammeters that work at this sort of current use a shunt resistor. I've also read that ammeters like that tend to be placed in the earth side of the circuit, which I guess would mean mounting it in the battery box between the -ve terminal and the earth strap.
Am I on the right lines? If so, I can obviously trawl ebay for something suitable, but can anyone recommend one?