I wanted to know more about that topic and called our plastics engineer in Germany. He told me that they do very expensive tests in a lab to simulate years of usage on the road. Standard hardware store foams failed! They simply fractured or turned into dust. After all they are designed to be used in buildings that don't move.
Availability is a big problem for most components in North America. You need panels bigger than 8.2' tall and 38' long?
The XPS foam used for panel manufacturing appears to be the same as the hardware store material, only with an added planing process to acheive better tolerance (I can attest to the thicknesses of hardware foam being approximate and variable) and a better gluing surface since the cells on the outer surface are cut. If the thickness variability doesn't bother you, you can acheive a similar gluing surface by sanding. IMO the dog brush is much better than sanding as a surface prep, but you could do both easily enough.
OC panel foam: http://commercial.owenscorning.com/assets/0/144/172/174/3ebc8d51-67ac-4c49-a251-7db4d8f20fc9.pdf
OC hardware foam: http://www.foamular.com/assets/0/144/172/174/98cf58e1-c3d2-4b6c-beb5-2063215bea18.pdf
Boat builders don't use XPS because it is too weak for optimized strength/weight hulls. They use foams >5 lb/ft^3, while XPS ranges from 1.15 lb/ft^3 for 15 psi and 2.2 lb/ft^3 for 60 psi. But panels made for vehicles do not need to withstand repeated pounding of waves.
In my testing the foam core is definitely the weak link in flexural failure, but I don't see that as an issue. Skins need to be "overbuilt" (much stronger than needed for optimal flexural strength/weight) to resist impacts and denting, and panel thickness is primarily determined by the degree of insulation desired. I can jump up and down (hard) on a 6"x36" 2" thick wall sample (supported at the ends) without it breaking.
Looks good. 2 part and moisture cured poly are the easiest for a small production environment. Lots of options between those.
I used OC 1" plus Filon on either side with 2 part polyurethane adhesive, no sanding/scratching and my panels were very stiff and took quite a bit of abuse during destructive testing. I'll be using DOW when I do my panels though.
I used OC 1" plus Filon on either side
How much does that adhesive cost? Does it work better than epoxy? For adhesion tests I'd suggest making narrow samples and peeling them apart. I'm pretty sure a properly prepped foam surface will stick a lot better than "raw".
Polyurethane adhesives have their place, but for the DIYer, the epoxy will be much more forgiving.
When using poly, you need considerably better/more clamp load to keep things in check, as it expands. Epoxy does not.
You are using a potting urethane?
The shore hardness is pretty low compared to an actual bonding adhesive or epoxy.
Have you done any actual bonding/adhesion tests yet?