My 2 bits.. We run Cats and Komatsus and Cases and other heavy equipment. All, with the exception of a couple of screens are 24 Volt. My deuce and my 5 ton are 24 volt. My duramax is 12 V... but 2 batteries in parallel. What I have found is that the higher the amp you draw, the thicker the wire you need. (for the same force or torque) Thus as someone earlier stated... Watts translates to HP, Watts also translates to Volts times amps... thus if you double your voltage your amperage need is halved and your wire diameter is reduced accordingly.
My biggest hurdle I have yet to overcome is... in a mixed 24V and 12V job site, most of the heavy equipment "mechanics" do the "plug and pray" method of jumping equipment. If you are not careful, diode bridges in alternators blow, batteries get cooked and worse yet... in this day and age of computerized engine and cab controls... your ace mechanic cooks your computer. In a John Deere excavator, the price can be upwards of $7500.00. for a momentary screwup.
We have actually retrofitted most of our equipment with large golf cart sized battery connectors and gotten away from the alligator clips. The jumper box for the equipment will only plug in one way and if it plugs , its corre4ct, if it doesnt... you can't make it go. Also I made some jumper wires for equjipment-equipment jumping that takes away the head scratching... you just plug it in and go... You would be surprised at the "inventive" ways that people try to jump a piece of equipment... even mechanics with dozens of years in the field!
I also built a battery tester-that allows you to test the 2 batteries simultaneously and indipendently while cranking... basically 2 12 volt volteters and a 30 volt voltmeter. Sometimes one battery goes bad while the other is OK. If anybody wants my schematic for this, I would be glad to post or send, just pm me. You cannot imagine how much money, time and aggravation this little gizmo saved me. It also helps diagnose faulty wiring or corroded wire issues.
My other 2 bits are... if a battery fails to start your truck once, and it was not because you left your lights on or your wiring was bad or your alternator is not working... replace it... don't screw with it, don't hope for a miracle. I cannot count how many alternators and starters have been ruined at my site simply because the batteries were bad.