Nick5272
Senior Member
Hello everyone! I’m currently doing the subfloor in my skoolie (40ft flat nose blue bird) and I want a floating subfloor to avoid the thermal bridging. However, there are gaps and whatnot along the walls and where the pink foam sheets meet up with each other (I’m using 2” thick polystyrene). I’m planning on using the big gap filler spray foam to hit all those patches. HOWEVER, that got me thinking- what if I laid out the floor like people do who are framing it with wood, and instead of using wood, just used spray foam in those areas so it would be a grid of spray foam and foam board. Has anyone done this? What are y’all’s thoughts? The idea would be to have complete coverage and zero thermal bridging from the floor.
Additionally I will be using tongue in groove plywood on top of the foam board. It has been stored on its side for quite a while now and I’m afraid it may have warped. To avoid any additional warping I’m contemplating using C channels on each piece. Especially perpendicular across the tongue and groove connections. I’ve seen table makers use this on slabs of wood to guarantee they don’t warp. Has anyone does this? My hesitation would be either the c channel rusting or it just being a waste of time and money. I want the floor as flat as it can be though. Thanks for your time!
Additionally I will be using tongue in groove plywood on top of the foam board. It has been stored on its side for quite a while now and I’m afraid it may have warped. To avoid any additional warping I’m contemplating using C channels on each piece. Especially perpendicular across the tongue and groove connections. I’ve seen table makers use this on slabs of wood to guarantee they don’t warp. Has anyone does this? My hesitation would be either the c channel rusting or it just being a waste of time and money. I want the floor as flat as it can be though. Thanks for your time!

