Your fault??

I don't see how anyone trusting & buying commercial products etc is their fault. However I consider the bullsh that accompanies some products to be criminal - as do our Consumer Affairs agencies.
I presume your speakers are cutting out because of a flattening secondary battery?
If so, have you got the 2nd battery (S) connected to the main (P) battery? If it's not being charged, it will obviously flatten. And the less it is recharged (to replace lost charge) the quicker it will fail lifespan-wise.
If you are using a diode isolator like the Princess, you may be experiencing the common problem with diode isolators (MOSFET types aren't as bad) - namely:
- if you have a single-wire (D+) alternator, then your batteries will probably be undercharging by up to 1.0 to 1.5V depending on the load. At minimal load, they are probably ~0.6V less than the alternator output.
- even if you have a 2-wire alternator with its sense wire direct to the main battery, the other battery will charge at a different voltage if their loads are not the same.
If your system is 2200W RMS, then at full blast its demanding over 200A which would blow a 90A Princess. Hence I assume the amps are not RMS rated, or you aren't exceeding ~1/4 volume.
Nevertheless, the amps may be using 50A-90A which is probably far more than your the normal current thru your main battery diode. Hence even if your main battery is at (say) 14.2V, the secondary battery will receive a lower voltage from the alternator.
The UIBI is not a commercial package, it is merely a DIY solution that uses the existing charge-light circuit to energise an isolating relay.
The relay is selected to suit the application (30A, 120A, 400A etc).
The one proviso is that the alternator's charge light circuit (D+ or L) has the capability of supplying the +12V current to the relay coil. Hence a small relay (eg, 30A; usually up to 250mA coil current) might be used to energise a large relay with 1A or higher coil current. Or a buffer circuit added to drive the relay(s).
The alternative is any voltage sensing type isolator whether a cheap MW728 "battery protector" (~$20, but with some provisos) or the more expensive battery and "smart battery" isolators. In general you can use them to drive bigger relay of your choice if their current rating isn't high enough. (Or, like the UIBI, have them drive multiple relays for multi-battery installations.)
But diode isolators - no way! And though newer MOSFET types overcome part of the diode voltage drop problem, relay types are generally the better and more versatile, and often cheaper.
FYI:-
On the commercial side, I was intending to build a UIBI-2 which is a simple solid-state (transistorised) buffer circuit to drive any relay from any alternator - ie, those that can't even power a 100mA-250mA relay coil, and newer CPU controlled alternator systems (DP etc types).
There was also a UIBI-3 to supersede the UIBI-2 which was to be a programmable UIBI - including the option to use it as a typical "smart" or voltage controlled isolator but where the user can adjust the voltage switching levels and delays etc. The programming would be via a serial link from the user's PC or tablet etc.
But the UIBI 2 & 3 are yet another of my "one day" projects though I might build a simple UIBI-2 (MOSFET buffer) today for a trip tomorrow.