Next up was the roof. First thing was to assemble the frame - this one with reinforcing braces for the windows and solar:
This frame will then have foam glued into each aperture (leaving voids for roof windows) and skinned inside and out with carbon fibre. I don't have photos of the frame in construction but you can see it in the next photo when glued together. This photo shows the approach I started using for the foam panels in the roof. I initially thought I would wrap each foam panel in carbon before gluing it into the frame. Here you can see the first panel vacuum bagged to create a carbon/foam/carbon sandwich sitting on top of the frame (together with helpful Godson once again!):
This worked pretty well, but I realised when I then fitted it into the frame, that pre-making all these panels before laminating into the frame was going to be inefficient and the benefit over just gluing the foam directly into the frame and laminating the whole thing as a single roof panel would be quicker and sufficiently strong to mean I could save a load of vacuum processing of individual panels. As a result we then glued in the remaining foam:
You will notice that the foam only half fills the voids. I wanted 60mm foam, but couldn't source it without a ridiculous delay, so decided to use twin 30mm panels with a 200g/m2 carbon layer inbetween to help bond the two together. This led to a sandwich of (from inside to outside) 400g/m2 carbon, 30mm Airex C70/55, 200g/m2 carbon, 30mm Airex, 600g/m2 carbon. You can see the layup and the bagged component:
I was really pleased by how this turned out - we got great vacuum despite the large size of the roof and an acceptable surface finish given that this isn't going to be a panel that's highly visible. However, when we had done these we finalised the call that we would buy in the wall panels rather than building them ourselves. I realised that I wasn't going to be able to get a fantastic surface finish that we would want on the walls (both inside and outside) on panels of this size and for the price of buying in panels from a supplier in Manchester who builds refrigerated truck bodies it just wasn't worth me trying. We looked to source panels from the European expedition truck folks but they weren't interested in supplying panels to self builders, which led us into the truck body builder space - in the end I think we got an equivalent product and probably without a price premium for "Expo" kit.