I think I've gotten the boat faired as least well enough that I'm OK with it. I'll work on it a little more once I get a couple coats of primer on it, but for now I'm working on the strakes.
Tried making my first one last night and it did not end well for some reason.
I poured some thick milled fiber/epoxy dams on both ends and then filled the bottom of the angle with the graphite powder/epoxy mix. I'd say it was pourable but not brushable as far as thickness went. You can see the strands of fiberglass that I pulled out of scrap pieces of fabric to lay in as well. I let it gel in this setup for a couple hours.
I came back and laid in the fiberglass. Not super packed, but 3-4 strands on top of the graphite/epoxy mix with generous overlap, most of the time about half the length of the next strands. After that I poured a fairly runny mix of milled fiber/epoxy over it all until I got it to a level I was happy with. Photo was a few hours after pouring and I noticed a lot of bubbles.
This morning it was solid, but tacky, like I could impress fingerprints in it still. And the bubbles were still there. I left it to sit all day. The lows last night were in the 50s and high today was 70. This afternoon, about 24 hours after I started it was still solid, but rubbery. I was able to peel it out, quite literally. It basically double backed on itself to peel out of the angle. I'll leave it to sit on the boat another day to see if it'll kick, but I think something was up with my mixture. Even the cups I mixed from were still kinda jelly. This hasn't happened to me before. I know I used the correct mixture because I have the pump heads for the jugs of epoxy. Temps weren't the most ideal for slow hardener, but I thought it would still cure at these temps and duration. Maybe not? It's been a while since I've used the epoxy for anything since I've been fairing since October/November with Quikfair.
Aside from that, I mocked up the console that I designed out of cardboard. I think it will work out pretty well.