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I flipped the 2" foam upside down on the table and glued on progressively larger foam blocks. Luckily, I have a low temperature hot-glue gun that works great on foam. Starting at 0" and increasing in 1/8" increments, the incline rises two full inches in approximately 75" of run. The siding halfway up the hill is at 1-1/4" and will be level.Then, I flipped the foam back over, and the result made it go from this . . .to this!Perfect! The foam has just enough flex that this worked beautifully.
Thanks Ed. The crux of my question is - how close together should I put the cross pieces? I was thinking every 18" or less. I just drill 1/2" holes through the cross pieces to run wires, on the theory that it's stronger than notching the edge, but I suspect that given the the likely stresses the layout should encounter it doesn't actually matter .George
Can they be cut down without compromising their strength? 80" and 96" are common heights. I don't think anyone makes a 75" door...