A great idea for people that are designed challenged for details. Perhaps you could offer full sized profiles of the cookie cutter concept!
grant whipp wrote:The benefits are several:
• weight savings over solid plywood walls
• easy insulation without overly thick walls
• all the strength of a solid sheet of plywood without all of the weight
• ease of construction over stick-framing or built-up walls
Typically, a layer of paneling is glued on the inside of the wall, then the walls & cabinetry & floor are assembled, then a 1/4" layer of luan or plywood is glued over the outside (after the insulation is in place) and the outside aluminum skin is glued to that.
You can start with 1/2" plywood, or 5/8", or 3/4" ... depends on the thickness of your paneling and how you choose to skin the outside. I like 1/2" when I go with 1/4" & 1/4", but will go with 5/8" if I go 1/8" & 1/4" (keeping my walls as close to 1" as possible).
There are other methods, but it's what's been working for me for almost 25 years!
CHEERS!
Grant