McFish1951 wrote: Do I need to paint it?
A lot of people here would say yes. At my job, I work in a basement of an old building. We get floods more often than I care to think. Water tends to flow down. Your floor is no different. Since water + wood == rot, Paint it and then think about painting again.
Also many people here think gluing canvas to the foam before assembling is a good idea. Not sure what the consensus is for fiberglass?
Here is the way I attached the foam wall to the floor on my build. Notably, I glued a strip of fabric to the bottom of the floor (see panel B). Then when I glued the bottom of the foam to the floor I could wrap it up onto the bottom of the foam wall. I then glued the loose flap of canvas on the bottom of the wall over that. The advantage to me was that I did not have bend over to glue that flap on the underside of the floor. I could then glue a hem on the free canvas edge that constituted a "drip edge" (panel D) to help direct water away from the wood floor.


.
The wood strip on the inner side on the floor provides additional anchoring of the wall when wrapped with glued canvas.
The strength probably all comes from the canvas wrapping. I don't really think the glue between the foam edge and the floor contributes much.
This floor is securely attached. I have driven many hours at 70+ mph with no problems.
See:
viewtopic.php?f=55&t=75248Tom