I should also mention that Alternators were not designed for this setup, keep in mind that an alternators rating is for when the unit is at ambient air temp and as the alternator is pumping out juice it's getting hotter, and real fast when it's cranking out the max current. And the max current, say it's rated for 135 amps is going to drop rapidly as it gets hot, I believe many drop as much as 20%, bringing max down to say roughly 105 amps and maybe less, plus some of that current is going into keeping your vehicle running, I have done several test and with lights on, wipers on, blower on etc, see upwards of 60 amps going to just running the vehicle, and the standing voltage at that time may drop to as little as 13 volts or less. So your definitely not going to be charging the house batteries very well under those conditions.
A lot of folks don't realize that the starting battery is basically just that, it's to start the engine, once running the alternator is providing the current to run everything on the vehicle.
Ahh and one last thought, with a solenoid if your starting battery for some reason won't start the engine you can engage the solenoid and start the vehicle off the house batteries. This is a emergency option and of course you need to resolve the reason the starting battery failed.