Hi there Daz
I hope I have caught you before you have disappeared into your workshop with Marigold Gloves on hands :) ready for the attack.
You are doing it the best way; you are going to have a bit of an experiment; and, if it all goes wrong we are only left with a large lump of fibre glassed wood ::) I think it is better than having to chisel the plug out of the mould; leaving traces of cardboard shell plating in the mould :-\
then only to spend another 2-3 days correcting your mould.
....
here then - a few thoughts for you:
fibre glass matting; generally speaking it does not like to be worked into tight radius' and corners - the larger the radius the easier it is to lay the matting into the corner - and remember the finer the matting (in other words one ounce matting - in weight - will break down and work into corners a lot easier than one and a half - two ounces in weight) so, in other words the radius where your keel joins the bottom of your hull on the flat section, the corner try and keep this radius as large as possible:
edge where the bottom meets the side of the hulls; keep this radius as large as possible, what tends to happen here, if it is a tight radius, you get air trapped underneath the matting on the corner and no matter how hard you work it, it tends to try and lift the matting so you have a bubble:
If you cannot avoid having tight radius' for your first layer of matting, try and arrange it so it butt joints on the corner - in other words you have one flat piece of matting to cover the bottom of the hull, but it does not overlap onto the side - and the same for the side -one flat piece that butts up to the corner.
Consequently the next layer of matting you put on, overlaps, because this radius is increased with having the first layer of mattng on it. It will ,you will find, be a lot easier to work out any trapped air.
Apply your resin first: then apply your matting over the top of the resin and work your resin through the matting preferablt with a 'fluted or an open wire' roller.
When you first have rolled the resin through the matting, leave it for 2-3 minutes to allow the bonding that holds the fibre glass matting together to dissolve. This allows you to work the matting a lot easier but, be careful, if you work it too much you will begin to introduce air into the matting which you want to avoid.
Whilst on resin; try and use an 'unpigmented / or clear resin' for the majority of your build up. The reason being - it is a lot easier to see trapped air in clear resin than it is pigmented resin.
Not wanting to overload too much - but last & not least - although fibre glass is supposed to be a wonderful material, one of its major downfalls is it does not like large flat panels. I know this wont really affect us in the model boat industry but, there are things that we can taken from the full-size industry and use to our advantage.
When you have completed this hull, and you are quite happy with it and have done what you want with it and now you are thinking about extending the hull, if it has any large flat areas on the sides or on the bottom; we must begin to think about introducting 'knuckles' on the outside of the hull shape; doing this will build in strength without increasing the thickness. If you go further into building we can explain further what we mean about this.
The other thing, whilst we are talking about adding strength to a hull, do not always be fooled with the idea that adding extra layers of matting & resin to a hull doubles and trebles the strength of the hull and in some cases it can work against us when we have built a hull too thick.
Just as a guide you should be looking at 2 layers of one ounce matting and 1 layer of one and a half ounce matting. Then, over the top of this, a layer of tissue matt. Over the top of the tissue matt when it has dried, 2 coats of resin.
Any strengthening can be done on the inside of the hull when you remove the plug and sand the inside of the hull; the simplest method is to superglue a run of string down the keel (the type of string I am thinking of is parcel string) and over the top of this 2 layers of one ounce matting. This will produce a ridge down the bottom and if you put 2 down the sides from bow to stern the same way, you will see how it increases the strength of the side of the hull and the bottom; without adding all of those extra layers.
If you wish; & you think you need to add ballast, instead of using string down the centre of your hull on the keel line; you could actually use the electrician electrical conduit pipe - the plastic variety which is about 3/4 inch diameter. Glass over the top of this, and, then drill a hole in the centre and you can insert lead shot - the full length of the hull. When you have sufficient lead shot in the pipe to ballast the model; you could then mix up some resin, pour it through the hole to stop the lead shot moving about.
Hope this has not given ya a head-ache :-\ food for thought my friend.
Do not let anyone put you off - nobody learns if they do not try.
Only worry if your mould has cost you 100,000 quid and you then have to chisel the plug out of the mould - then a lot of questions to be answered

aye
john e
bluebird