hard to get right now but you can see that it's rated for 240 amps, and then it has a large area that can be heat sinked which crucially is isolated from the terminals, I bolted it to some beefy structure in the plane and there have been no issues in 1500+ hrs.
Anything over an amp or so requires a heat sink. That can be something as simple as a screw through the case to a bulkhead or such (if you have a diode with an insulated case).
If you only want one line in and one line out, then put the two in terminals in parallel.
I found crimping a wire to a D connector pin, tinning the diode pins, then lightly soldering the D connector pin to the diode package is a great way to wire these up. I put a piece of shrink tubing over the pins.
Don’t forget to use heat sink grease between the package and whatever you are using for a heat sink.
hard to get right now but you can see that it's rated for 240 amps, and then it has a large area that can be heat sinked which crucially is isolated from the terminals, I bolted it to some beefy structure in the plane and there have been no issues in 1500+ hrs.