
, well here is my NEW sail board (fin and bulb), it weighs in the region of about 350g (after a bit of weight reduction to the rear part of the bulb

), tomorrow I will be trying it in the test tank on the boat and see how it fairs, before the reduction, she sat tail heavy but I am hoping that the loss of 22 or so grammes will have a more positive effect, will see.
I did go looking at what others had done, and the method employed was basically a thin brass tube inserted and bent through a brass plate soldered to a brass screw which was cut down to reduce its distance from the hull. Then after fitting the fishing weight into a copper straight fitting epoxy was poured in and left to set, whilst it was setting, pieces of cut lead - thanks to the local fishing tackle shop for that - were pieced in around the tapered weight, then more epoxy added.
The outer plastic tube was fitted and glued together, which left a 3-4mm gap along one seam, this meant that the other end of the brass tube suitably bent slid down the seam into the back of the copper fitting, this was then epoxied in, note the brass tube extended past the fixing screw by about 110mm facing the bow (this may cause issues later - like having to permanently fix the sailboard to prevent it spinning to the rear).
Then backfilled the whole lot with a roll of lead and filled with epoxy, once set, it was weighed - wow 350g +, that is without the fin. Well the fin was made from about 1mm sheet in two parts - plaswelded together at the 'bow' and slid over the brass tube - like a rudder, the thickness was so that I could profile the front and rear, which in hindsight I should have just made it from very thin material and let it naturally form about the tube infilled with epoxy - more of a knife then.
After sealing and checking watertightness, then started to cut away excess to get the weight down as it had gone to just shy of 400g, got it down by angling the rear part of the fin and then having to reseal, about 380's so cut the bulb at a 20° at the rear, down to 370's, tested attached to the boat and was slightly tail heavy, so after another cut off, so it was about 45°, this brought it down to about 350's, but it has not been tested yet - but it has been painted so hopefully it will remain water tight, maybe a couple of more coats of paint.