Alright guys, a quick update. I've finished up trimming down the spray insulation and begun to work on the wall panels. Trimming the spray foam was nearly as unfun as fiberglass work, at least the way I did it. I used an angle grinder with a wire wheel to shave down the large chunks, then I used a combination of a palm sander and a handheld belt sander to fine tune it down to exactly where I wanted it. I left a fair bit of it a fraction of an inch above the level of the studs to help reduce vibrations.
This was super unfun; the small particles and dust I created was statically charged and stuck to absolutely everything. I also had to wear full protective gear. 100% would not recommend doing it this way; it took a several days and made a giant mess. I didn't use more traditional methods because I was being cheap and didn't want to buy one-use tools and because my studs aren't nice and perfectly aligned with each other. I'm still on the fence as to whether I would do this again... It may be best to pay an extra couple hundred bucks and have a company do it. Some photos below:
Also pictured above is my poor framing work to insulate the wheel wells. These are super out of whack and nowhere near flat or square. Since it's not gonna serve any purpose other than to hold the foam board in place, I just glassed in some 1"x2"s and then tied them all together with wood screws. The wood frame will also be used to sandwich the bottom of the wall tight against the studs in the wall. Once the walls are in place, I'll screw everything together and it should be just fine. I'm interested in working with Formica for parts of this build and I'm thinking about ordering some up to cover up the foam board, and possibly my walls, as you'll see below. Here's some photos of the roof and cab over, featuring my roommate's Ranger that I taught him how to do the rear main, starter, valve cover gaskets, engine and tranny oil pan gaskets. Glad to have that out of my drive way; that stupid thing was an infuriating mix of standard, metric and Torx hardware for no meaningful reason...
Next is the cab over portion. I've been neglecting the cab over windows because of rust issues. All screws along the bottom of the frame were rusted in place and when I first bought the rig, I didn't have the ability to remove those, due to the cramped space. I gave it another go a couple days ago and ground the heads off with my die grinder and a carbide bit. Worked like a charm. The plan to to sandwich some fabric behind the inside of the frame and tie it into the edges of the walls in various points.
And finally, I began working on cutting a template for the walls. I got lucky and snagged 4 sheets of damaged 4'x8' whiteboard material from the 70% off bin at my Home Depot. Took me 3 iterations on each wall to finally dial it in to where I was happy with the fit.
I'm trying to avoid the 'log cabin' look at a lot of the van builds seem to have. My walls are going to be almost entirely hidden behind cabinets and the bed and such, so I'm toying around with using Formica to add a little color and break up the wood-on-wood-on-wood look. Specifically, I'm thinking about a dark forest green color. I grabbed some paint from Home Depot and slapped it on there to see how I like it. In the photos, it shows up as super vivid, 'putting-green' green, but it's a few shades darker than that, in person. Either way, it's still too vivid in person, so I'll keep working on getting a color that I like. This color is coming out either way, since the paint looks cheap and not all that great up close. It's a work in progress.