@GENX Thanks. To clarify your question for others... We're talking about the truck batteries, not the lithium house batteries.
Yes, the military originally had 4 12v batteries for the truck.
Essentially 2 groups of 2 with a 12v center tap:
Each group is 2 12v-batteries in parallel for 12v, 2 of these groups wired in series for the 24v.
The setup here is one 12v-battery in each group (flooded commercial grade 8D size). 2 batteries in series for the 24v.
When you center tap a series pack you must somehow maintain cell balancing for the entire series. The military (and most anyone else who deals with these trucks) doesn't really address the cell balancing. The military puts in a diode polarity protector to prevent damage when the inevitable happens: when the 12v tap draws down one half of the series pack there can be a polarity swap on the 12v side when there's a high current demand on the 24v pack (ie cranking the engine). This can severely damage any electronics on the 12v system.
Acela didn't address the issue either, they tell owners to disconnect the truck batteries if the truck is not running to prevent parasitic draw.
Okay that's the why, here's how we addressed the problem to have a reliable and redundant solution.
There are 12v draws on the battery that we want to maintain while parked: mainly the security system and dash cameras, and occasionally radio coms and lights. Solution 1: There is a solar system dedicated to the truck batteries that charges the series pack at 24v and uses excess solar on sunny days to perform a full cell balancing. Solution 2: The noco charger can be plugged in to the camper and utilize the inverter output to maintain the truck batteries. Because this is a 12v x2 charger it keeps the series pack balanced. We do this if we're stationary for several days without sun or in the shade.
When on shore power we let the noco do it's thing.
When storing the rig, the noco can be plugged in separately to maintain the truck batteries and keep the alarm and cameras on. (For extended storage you don't want to keep the lithium system on shore power charge, so it is important these are independent systems).
Woah, that was a long answer! Sorry about that. Hope I got the answer to your question in there