Alloy
Well-known member
I'm essentially working out of my garage that's been converted into a woodworking shop, so true open floor space is basically 0. If I frame this thing up it can be done outside, in the driveway, or on the truck itself and not take up any valuable garage space. I live in San Diego so weather is not much of an issue.
I have a great table saw station and the plan would be to run everything through that - Just get a dado stack, hook up the vacuum to the saw and run a lot of foam through it. Admittedly I've never cut XPS like this so if it is a nightmare I'd look into other options. I was dissuaded from the PVC foam by the cost but if it make my life easier I'm not opposed to it.. When I start diving into this I'll likely make a lot of prototypes, if anything just to nail down the process before I try it on the actual rig.
Corner framing is flexible, I'd probably use something more like a typical CA corner used in home framing. I think the point I wanted to get across was using the pw studs. It is similar to what TC does, and it gives you the option to glue interior parts on while using screws to hold them in place while the glue dries. Or in the case of small things, ie coat hooks, paper towel holders, etc, you could simply screw them on and know they've got more than 1/8" of purchase in wood.
Also, This build will likely be years in the making, and I want to be able to use it in the meantime. It likely won't be as nice and integrated as a lot of campers you'd see here because I want it to be usable once the shell is complete. The plywood studs provide some flexibility with tweaks to interior layout.
Static electricity makes the foam stick to everything so cleaning the dust collection takes forever. After the dust collector is empty then you spend 1/2 an hour cleaning the foam that spread everywhere else.