Woke up last night at 3:30 and made it down to the shop to trim the cowl, was just about the perfect time, maybe another 1/2 hour would have been better. Decided to put a little heat on the mold to speed the cure. Inverted the cowl on the 12" disc sander and placed a 1500 watt oil filled radiator under it about a foot away. Heat will rise into the inverted cowl and gently heat the lay up. Back to bed. Woke up at seven and made the coffee, wanted to sit down and surf the web but I was like a kid in the candy store, took my pills with a little tomato juice and went to shop, started the air compressor on the way down, still had about 60 psi from the previous use on the plug. The mold was about 100 degrees and the layup felt cured, no tack. Blow some air around the back side joint and could see the cowl seperate form the mold, did all four sides flip it over and hit the middle valve stem, pop! Flipped the mold over and what do I see, the front side of cowl puckered in!!!! Got the cowl out and pushed it back into shape really didn't want to lay it up again. I can fix this.
Washed the mold and put another coat of wax on, then PVA. Sanded the exterior and interior where the creases were, when the PVA was dry painted the exterior areas with epoxy and pushed it back into the mold then put another layer of 4 ounce cloth on the creased areas inside the cowl. I didn't account for the epoxy not being fully cured and warmed up which soften the epoxy. Lesson learned, when using air eject leave it in the mold for 2 days. After cowl had cooled it was stiff so I'm sure the repair will work out.