I had to add material also, it's pretty typical. Working with fiberglass turned out to be a very simple process and now I find myself using it in various applications above and beyond the 33.

On the 33 I was about 1-1/2" shy to the grill on the longest part so I took aluminum sheeting, and mocked in the shape I needed, riveted that to the actual nose, then removed the nose cone, put mold release on the aluminum, and did the fiberglass work (Think I did 4 layers of glass), let it cure, removed the aluminum from the nose, and put the nose back on the 33 to finalize the gaps and did the final prep. You'll also notice I fiberglassed both nose pieces together so I have one unit, much easier to work with.

Jim

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