FYI on progress.
Finished the repair on the fiberglass and texture and thought I would throw out how it went.
repaired the fiberglass mainly from the back side using and aircraft epoxy. There are two brands Hysol from Locktite and Aeropoxy (
http://www.bvmjets.com/Pages/Tips/comparison.htm ) which is a supplier for model aircraft, but the same as Hysol. It comes in twin cartridge that auto mixes in a nozzle and can be applied right where you want, or without nozzle squirt on cardboard and hand mix for small application. I found the fiberglass was weak in original design and shearing from the seat ledge to side. I filled this with epoxy and a layer of heavy weave fiberglass. This created a fillet that spanned and spread the load. Also wrapped up above the ledge to reinforce thickness. If this thickness was not reinforced I am sure it would break once again ( flip down seat gets slammed down on ledger) or pull apart as normal epoxy softens in the heat which is why I used aircraft epoxy.
Then proceeded to use same epoxy as fill on the outside. This epoxy is more firm and not gummy so it sands well. Previous repairs by others filled in the texture on the ledge and below so no texture visible. Did all my repairs and decided to replicate the texture. here is video of process
I used the SEM XXX adhesion promoter and their Texture Paint 39853. Practiced on back of panel. Best technique is not to spray a wet coat. Short sprits from varying heights worked best. Never let it look like a paint coat. About 4-5 coats covered the repair area and blended into the existing. Found height of 24"-30" gave the best texture build. Larger droplets occur with spray closer as it spreads as it dries. Further away made smaller drops and finer texture that as it built was closer to original and covered all the surfaces that had been repaired. `Really pleased with the texture and can't tell old from new. Tomorrow on to spray entire surface with finish paint and reinstall.