And today, thru the modern miracle of the InterTubes, we get to zoom ahead in time to see the completion of Rick's Operation Locker on 
s/v Cay of Sea.  I encourage you to use 
this link to follow the entire project from start to finish.  Meanwhile, here are the final steps:
This is always the exciting part for me.  How does it look, fit,  work with the rest of the interior?  Did I calculate right?  Did I blend  the stain correctly to match the other woodwork.  Will it solve  problems or create them?  Does it do what I hoped it would?  The only  way to know is to install and use it.  But sometimes the installation  can be a challenge.
I visited my local hardware store for fasteners of sufficient size.   Then offering up the cabinet to the designated space, I marked,  drilled, straightened – all those things we need to do for installation.   I was a little concerned that the cabinet squared up to the space  correctly, and looked visually straight and level.  Then after  installing the fasteners, I was satisfied with the all of that.  In  fact, I was elated.  Until I took a closer look, and discovered that  somehow, the doors had managed to get uneven in the way they meet  together.
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| How did that happen? I know I built it square, and went to pains to get the details correct. | 
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| Shouldn’t be too surprised that the doors don’t meet at the bottom if they don’t meet at the top. | 
Where did I go wrong?  Well, as I thought about it, I realized that  the right-hand side of the cabinet (port side of the boat, actually) is  hindered from lying flat and true to the bulkhead by the curvature of  the overhead.  I had trimmed that corner of the locker, but not nearly  enough.  As I backed out a few mounting screws from the port side, I  discovered that I could put the locker back into square by pulling out  the bottom corner on the port side.  What I needed then, was a shim  behind that corner.  I rummaged through my scrap box for a couple of  appropriately dimensioned scraps, and made the adjustment with them.   After that, longer fasteners were required (I moved that corner away  from the bulkhead more than half an inch) so after another trip to the  hardware store, I secured the locker permanently to the bulkhead, and  now it looks like this:
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| Doors  meet square again. See the overhead curvature on the right of the  photo? It keeps that corner of the locker from laying flat against the  bulkhead. | 
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| . . . and the doors meet squarely at the bottom too. | 
So the next step is to install the radios.  Straightforward with the  VHF.  I ran the wires and antenna cable into the cabinet.  No problems.   The AM/FM/CD player was another story.  Nothing difficult about the  mechanical or electrical connections – I just didn’t understand  how to  connect it all.  It’s been 20 years since I installed a radio like this,  and I didn’t realize that the memory wire must be wired. Not  wanting to have a constant draw of millivolts to the radio, I didn’t  connect it directly to the battery. In fact, I didn’t connect it to  anything.  I didn’t realize that the radio wouldn’t power up without  having it connected.  I thought it was faulty.  My slip neighbor plugged  it into his wire harness (he has a similar radio) and of course it  fired right up.  As we talked about it, he mentioned that he wires the  direct battery wire (memory wire) with the regular power wire.  Ah, now I  get it.  So I’ll try again tomorrow.  Anyway, final photos of the  locker installed follow:
I’ll post Interior photos of the shelves with gear stowed after radio installation is successful.
Short post on this, just a photo really.  I wanted to show you the  “populated” inside of the locker.  It’s already messy!  Not really, but  it could benefit from a couple of hooks for keys and a pencil/pen rack,  which is just a block of wood drilled with 5-6 holes to hold writing  tools, screwed to one of the doors on the inside. 
And here’s the photo:
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| Inside view | 
Next little project is to mount my multimeter/volt meter bracket and wire it into the electrical system.  This link will take you to the previous post that relates to it.
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