I forgot I had posted a diagram of the "quick fix" CB fairing I did two years ago. (The leading edge part of the diagram doesn't show the lower surface - it should obviously be symmetric. The blue stuff is added filler, except the blue circle at the leading edge is just intended to show curvature, I dd not replace that much material. The wedge at the end is unsupported high-strength filler, extending beyond the CB outline by about 1/2", actual size. Again, the diagram makes it look like I removed the existing trailing edge - instead I just added stuff around and behind it).

I did that with the boat on its side. I have since removed the CB and found massive gelcoat cracking around the head. I've ground those out, filled with the same high-strength filler I mentioned in this thread. There were also some dings on the tip of the board ("I perfectly remember there are no rocks on this beach - crack!") and other surface issues on the foil part of the blade, but the basic additions had held.
While I was at it to fix the blemishes, I decided I would try to improve a bit on the "quick fix". This mainly involved adding more fairing compound (SystemThree QuickFair) on the leading half of the CB to put the maximum thickness at about 1/3, give the whole surface a fair curve (to hide the two "corners"). I did grind away some of the gelcoat on the rear corner, but this is just a quick fix: it's still far too thick at that point compared to a real foil section.
I did add about 1/8" thickness (on each side) in the middle - I used a quick template to make sure I didn't exceed the width of the CB trunk.
It's sealed with a coat of epoxy and awaits paint. I've just repainted the hull using SystemThree's Water-based WR-LPU paint and I have some left over for this job. Otherwise, spray paint (as in the video) would look really attractive.