It was a pretty straight forward build. A couple of notes...
-used a small chisel to break the tabs securing the top to the front
-did not reuse the housing for the temperature gauge / door light
-soldered the connection closed for the door switch light and filled the hole with GreatStuff foam
-used the wires for the light, to power a fan box that cools the tower
-picked up a project box, 120VAC 4" fan, fuse assembly and 0.5Amp fuse from RadioShack
-cut off one side of the 3/4" coupler and epoxied it to the inside of the project box.
-used a whole saw for the fan cut out, but ran the drill backwards so that it would not bite into the plastic project box.
-I'm using pin lock kegs. It's a tight fit, but 2 will fit... you need to cut out some of the trim where the freezer shelf was to get it to fit.
-2x 12" long 3/4" copper tubing and 3/4" vinyl tubing sandwiched between the copper runs up into the tower.
-tied them together with tie wraps and yet loose enough, so that it was snug against the hole I drilled. This prevent it from slipping while I was filling in the gaps with GreatStuff Foam
-used 3/4" copper tubing b/c I could feed the brew lines down it without removing the fittings
-wrapped the copper tubing in the tower with pipe wrap
-used a 3/4" piece of plywood with pronged Tee-Nut to secure the tower to the lid
-used a Rotozip to make a 3/4" deep hole the same size as my piece of plywood
-secured the plywood with Foam glue
-used white duct tape to make the tubing coming down from the tower look neater and also cover any place I sprayed in Great Stuff foam.
-Cut out the door insert, but left the groove for the weather stripping.
-completely removed all of the closed foam insulation in the door and replaced it with vinyl-one-side fiberglass insulation (had some laying around from the garage door insulation kit)
-had the glass cutter at Lowe's cut the Lexan to size, to cover the hole in the door.
-painted the Lexan white on one side and siliconed the Lexan to the door with the painted side towards the insulation
-secured the air value header with doublesided High Bond tape to the wall first and then followed up with some sheet metal screws.
-the rails (sold as drawer handles) are secured to the lid with some washers and the screws that came in the package.
-secured the lid down with foam glue and construction adhesive around the outer edge.
Please excuse the grammar, spelling and typos... I'm on my 3rd pint of the Moose Drool clone.
Oh and it lives in my home office.