Due to my build speed I've had the luxury of looking for deals and slowly adding to my parts pile. I guess that is a silver lining.
We just had another member of the family arrive last week so I'm doing what I can when I can but I'm trying to make a solid push to get the top ready for painting in a couple weeks when family is visiting so I can get a hand coating that part. Then I'll finish the door and coat the bottom and do the flip walls. I've got gallons of paint in route, some more aluminum to work on the jack attachments and actuator mounting, etc.
I flipped the top back onto the bottom to double check the fit (and I want to do a trial run with actuators before coating in case a problem needs a structural modification). I pulled all the peel ply as well so I can start the rough fairing. I found a couple areas where the heat blankets bubbled up things on me which was concerning, so I ran a little test to see what kind of heat I was dealing with. I put a sample piece in a moving blanket with a temperature probe on the surface and put a doubled up heat blanket over it. Turns out it could heat the glass surface up to 170F! So at high temps there is concern over a bubble forming under the glass and a pocket of delamination but hopefully its not a realistic issue under normal conditions (esp. with light paint colors). Westss had a delam in his rig due to the high heat thrown off by his catalytic heater but hasn't had issue with normal environmental stuff (though I would guess his rig is likely a polyurethane core so not quite apples to apples). Anyways not sure if I'll try injecting epoxy into the bubbles and push them down or sand out and re glass those areas. Injection would be easier, I think, but I'd be pissed later if those areas lifted again down the line...
Anyways some pics w/ some repair areas to correct circled (hard to see with some of the other marks I had to help orientate the fabric):