Well I haven't had much time to work on it due to house projects, but here's some updates. I decided to do the repairs on the splashwell before putting the second stringer in. I have a lot better access to the underside of the well with it out. The glass work on the splashwell wasn't very good. It was cracked on both sides near the bottom, and there was a crack in the exterior portion of the well where it meets the motorboard.
I ground away the bad glass and laminated in 4 layers of 1800 biaxial.
I then built a cross-member out of 2 layers of 3/4" marine fir plywood epoxied together. This then was bonded into the under side of the splashwell, running from one knee to the other. This adds a lot of strength to the transom. There's a notch in the cross-member to later accept another knee down the center of the transom.
The crossmember will then get glassed over as well.
The splashwell had 4 holes that needed patching. The forward side of the well is plywood-cored. One of these holes I hole-sawed out as a gelcoat sample to send to Fiberlay to get some computer-matched gelcoat. The other was an old rigging hole for the old Hynautic steering. Two old rigging holes on the starboard side were glassed up first from the inside, then I'll do the same on the outside.
I hole-sawed new plywood plugs, and epoxied them in place, using little blocks of wood hot-glued in place to hold them. Worked great. They will now be glassed up from both inside and out.
Obviously this thing won't be in the water this season. No problem, I'm more concerned with getting it rebuilt right.