Andrew is right again, of course and one should never easily dismiss his advice (there will be repercussions). In fact I’ve recently got some great ideas from his Piccolo tear! Still, it has been done and if it’s your hobby and you get pleasure out of doing it that way, then great and you should do it. Some people enjoy the build way more than others, so in the end, it really depends on you. It does, or can, allow for greater artistic expression (all artistic expressions come at a price though!).
I’m planning on building this way as well because I’m after the weight-savings – it’s potentially MUCH lighter to build this way! You can get a nice finish on the sides by laying the sandwich up on a flat surface covered with shinny plastic (make the inside your ‘bag’ side), but the top is more problematic.
For the curved top I’m thinking of laying a ply of fiberglass down on the plastic again followed by the foam, but then leaving the top layer off. The foam could then be slit across (slit ¾ deep with a 1 inch thick core). Then using the sides as a form, the panel could then be laid up around the tear with the foam side out and glued at the sides. 1/8 ply could then be glued down as the outer facesheets (what we call the structural plies). I’m even thinking that the gaps made by the core as it wraps around the curvature won’t even need to be filled in (though they could be) – any thoughts on that Andrew?
It adds a little weight (12 Lb/sheet of 1/8 inch plywood), but would likely speed the build.
Alternately, rather than use the plywood, one could just fill in the gaps in the foam and come back over it with fiberglass. The outer surface might not be quite as nice, but this is probably the lightest way to build – it will take a lot of surface prep if you don’t want it to look like a sack of walnuts going down the road. The corners could be finished off with 2-3 inch fiberglass tape (inside and out) I’d ¼ inch radius the outside and ¼ fillet the inside before taping. Anyway, those are just some thoughts and ideas how you might do it and still get a decent surface to finish.
T%his stuff in fact says it for bending and only bends at 16 inch radius -- it's only 1/8 inch think -- just imagine bending something 16 times stiffer -- it ain't going to happen -- you'd have to cut some slots in is to get it to bend. Anyway -- I recommend the thin stuff especially if you have any smaller radii.
http://www.plywoodcompany.com/application/home/itemdetails.aspx?categoryid=197&itemid=163