I can't fully answer the OPs question without seeing how everything is fed from the battery. I will say, you could go directly to the terminals that have the 6 gauge wire with your inline fuse. If you do, put the radar's terminals on top of the 6 gauge, not under it.
I looked at the 2022 OM for a 235. It has a typical Helm "accessory switch panel" with breakers and switches for the typical things (Nav lights, horn, wiper, FW, Livewell, Washdown, manual Fwd & Aft bilge, etc.)
It also has a "fuse block" which the OP has pictured. This would have things like VHF, Sonar, Chartplotter/MFD, NMEA2k power, radar, Accy12v/USB, stereo, cabin lights (and other lights that have their own built in switches), trim tab power, possibly Head pump/control/macerator, and a feed to the upper e-box fuse panel if it has one.
Unfortunately, the new Grady manual does not show any kind of wiring layout. It states there is 6 gauge feed to the Accessory Panel(helm switch panel) comes from a 40A or 50A red button breaker near the battery.
It does not describe the feed to the fuse block. The OPs picture looks like 6 gauge to the fuse block. Where does it come from? Also, is the Accessory switch panel (the power to all of the breakers) truly fed with 6 gauge wire?
It appears that there are no longer terminal blocks as we are used to seeing in older Gradys. My older Grady used 6 gauge to terminal blocks.
From there, a single 10 gauge feeds all breakers of the switch panel and 10 gauge to feed the under-dash fuse block and 10 gauge up to the e-box. Heavy current draws like refridge, and Groco Head control had inline fuse/breaker fed from the terminal block(which had the 6 gauge main feed). IMO, the short 10 gauge feeds to panels weren't ideal and the long one to the upper e-box was always problematic. That 10 gauge wire is responsible for the bulk of voltage drop because all of the current draw of the panel goes thru that wire. The more you turn on, the higher the drop.