Earlier this week I fitted a new Exrider 105AH battery into the Mazda Kitchen Unit. The battery terminals were on the opposite sides to the original, so I extended the +ve lead to let it reach. Today I used the Bongo for the first time since fitting & drove the 4 miles into work - everything seemed ok. Driving back this evening, prior to heading off to Galloway for the weekend, I was almost home when I noticed the Leisure Battery cut-out switch LED (Still Desperate modification) on the dash flickering. At the same time I got a smell of burning plastic & saw smoke in the back of the van. I hit the hazards, leapt out of the front & back in the side door, grabbing the extinguisher en route. Opening the battery compartment door on the cube, there were flames licking up from the battery leads

The extinguisher did it's job. I disconnected the -ve lead & drove home - to spend the next 2 hours cleaning extinguisher powder out of the kitchen unit. They don't half make a mess, but I hate to think what would have happened if I hadn't had one
The circuit has obviously shorted out somewhere, but where & how
On the Mazda Cube, the +ve & -ve battery leads are seperate only for a few inches before they are wrapped together into the loom. The -ve lead has broken about 2" beyond this point, inside the loom. The ends look almost as if they had been cut, and I doubt that the heat of the fire would have been enough to melt the copper, or that the break would look so clean. So the question is, could a break in the -ve cable which was making & breaking contact cause heat which would break down the insulation on both leads, resulting in a short across them?