@Mattax and
@crackedback are right on.
What model SPAL fans are you running?
Assuming that those fans are powerful enough to handle the cooling duties of your engine, they could easily be pulling 30 amps between them even after the initial big amperage hit to start them. Your 70A alternator might not even be putting out 20A at idle- you see the problem.
A second battery is just a band aid, it won't solve the issue. What you need is an alternator that puts out more amps at idle than what your fans AND other accessories put out.
If you have a brand new American Autowire wire harness, you're probably already running a single wire alternator (standard config for AA) and your system can handle a lot more amperage. I have a full AA harness, run a dual electric fan set up (Ford Contour) and use a 180 amp alternator. Like crackedback said, I don't need 180 amps, probably ever. But at idle that alternator is putting out enough amps to run my fans without discharging the battery.
And if your battery is in the trunk (mine is too), if you're pulling from the battery to keep the car running when the fans are on you have to pull a significant amperage from the battery though all the wire to the front of the car, which loses a ton of efficiency. Charging the battery is a low amp draw, so that's not a big deal with the battery in the trunk. Cranking the starter pulls a ton, but, that's a short period of time. The fans running is a large draw for a long time, and that trunk mounted battery, even with large cable, is going to take some work to pull amperage from.