Re: Any draw backs to moving batteries from the stern to the midberth?
With 25 years of electronics engineering experience, a lot of it building hardware for extreme and dangerous locales, I will only field lugs that are BOTH crimped and soldered.
The crimping provides significantly more mechanical strength than solder, but only contacts a small surface area of the copper wire, both increasing the joint's resistance and leaving it open to corrosion. By soldering after crimping, you get the mechanical strength of the crimp and significantly more contact area between the conductor and the lug minimizing resistance and the possibility of corrosion. It is the best of both worlds, and I've seen VERY few failures over the years, compared to either method alone.
For this method, it's better to crimp stranded wire without tinning. The stranded wire conforms to the crimp better than a pre-tinned end, which has then become 'solid'. Then solder with enough heat to heat up the lug and wire quickly to minimize insulation melting. I've used anything from large soldering irons and guns to oxy-acetelyne with a spreader, process determined by the lug size.
Cover the whole joint with hot-melt glue encapsulating heat shrink tubing and you've got a joint that will last, virtually, forever.
A little more work, a LOT more reliability!