B,
The firewall, and the rest of the airframe frankly, is a great ground buss (low resistance, huge cross section for carrying DC current...) With that in mind, put the "forest of tabs" where it's the most convenient for serviceability, installation, repair, access -- think 3 years from now when you want to redo all your avionics

And while were talking about it, don't make the ground wire(s) much longer than the corresponding supply (red) wires.
Good point about ring terminals vs. Fast-Ons Brian. I tried to find a grounding block that would accommodate ring terminals (dozens of them) but struck out. I am using TE-AMP Fast-Ons from Stein so at least I have that going for me...
I did find this style but the pins they use look like Molex pins and there is no way I'm using them. D-Sub or Deutsch pins? Yeah. Molex style? No way.
View attachment 115922 View attachment 115923
I made my own bar -- drilled, tapped, ring terminals, yadda yadda. Located it under and behind the radio rack ( this is where 95% of the grounds are) and then jumpered over to the firewall with a piece of 6ga wire. (same as the Alternator/Battery to primary buss feed)
The RV-7 is different as the firewall has a couple of "factory" locations for primary grounding -- center - high, right side of the recess, left ride low of the recess. The former is for the battery braid, the later is for the engine ground, or for the ginourmous concorde battery option.
And, see earlier comment(s) - there isn't much FWF that needs a ground -- unless you have SDS or other stuff. But even then, a ground wire connected to any point on the firewall is going to work very well. e.g. the Monkworkz MZ30L ground runs to the AN5 lug where the battery braid connects, Starter Relay suppression diode runs from the "S" terminal to the mounting lug for the relay, and the Car Horn relay connects to another lug used for the E-CAP ground on the firewall.
-- Break --
This got me thinking about the engine case ground; I recently fixed a friends RV-8 who had starting problems because the builder ran a dissimilar gauge wire from the sump case bolt to the right bottom motor bolt (bad...just bad...).
The fix was to run a 2GA M22759/16 wire from the
LEFT case lug (above the bottom left motor mount boss), over to a point on the firewall, where one of the AA6-.063-3/4-3/4 stiffeners was located and then attached with AN4 hardware. The Left case lug is the same piece of aluminum that the starter motor and solenoid is mechanically and electrically attached to, and is the lowest resistance path to ground.