Just some more thinking on this ...

With my present foam block situation , and having to slice sheets from the blocks , I seem rather forced to overlay the foam sheets (24” X 3” X 10’ ) onto the skeleton in a Horizontal manner ... 4 sheets to a side ... this would initially seem to be favorable , but now i have to make the kerf cuts 10 feet long ...

Using the store bought 4’X 8’ X 2” foam sheets , the foam can be applied Vertically , only requiring four foot long kerf cuts .... much easier ... Viz. the ‘original plan” ... sometimes being Thrifty requires some drastic changes that complicate the labor , to save a few pennies ... A decision to make ... So should I :
1. Slice the sheets 3” thick (still 1” thicker than the sheets, and the same density) and pre kerf all the sheets when 2' wide , then glue them all edgewise, assemble the 5 panels vertically (4 vertical center seams) ... Much like making up 4X8 commercial size sheets ... (2 vertical inside seams )
2.. Apply the 24” wide sliced sheets horizontally , lengthwise , giving 3 horizontal seams , but the length is uninterrupted , and seemingly stronger ... the first two courses of foam from the bottom should be easy , but the top two require the 10’ loooooong kerfs ...

Have to figure out an extremely long kerf jig ... shouldn’t be to difficult , just long way to go with each pass ... Might be better in the long run , I dunno ... one thing for sure , all the kerfs will line up ... , not a consideration if you’re going to cover them with something ... fabric wallpaper, brown paper painted ... whatever..
I have to consult Vincent on the kerfing , the math , see what’s required to have all the kerfs close at the specified radius (36” R ) being 3” thick ( 3 sheets and a 1” sheet out of a block ) I’ll have to kerf pretty deep into the foam , maybe leaving < 1” of un-kerfed foam at the outside ... making the closed /glued kerfing a little more important from a structural point of view ...

So many things to consider to keep it Simple .. the devil is in the details , and the “changes”
