BUT, I would caution against three batteries. That's three times the expense, three times the maintenance, three times the lead sent to the recycling center, etc. Try to figure out how to get the job done with one battery charged from one source. If you are short on capacity with one battery, even two in parallel is better than three scattered about. In any case, make sure that each battery is only charged from one source.
FYI, the killowat is measuring 'AC' current draw.
No.
The system will only run until there's not enough voltage to physically run it, not until the battery is stone dead. You also need to figure off the posted alarm currents of the components and not what they're actually drawing, as that can vary.
Can't remember the exact voltage cutoff, but other panels have a LBC at 10.5 VDC. The M1's data bus starts all sorts of rebooting and havoc when dropped below 12V.
Have you downloaded the spreadsheet that Elk has and plug your values into it?
There's variable formulas for calculating the standby time and alarm time, for example, a fire alarm requires 24H of standby followed 5 minutes of alarm time.
To simplify standby calcs:
(Standby draw * hours standby required) + (Alarm draw of all attached components * .084 hours) = C
C =amp-hours * 1.2 = battery size required.
You can also plug in for the second set of variables a derating factor by multiplying those values by .0012