I glued cracks with Crazy glue, then used Bondo for plastic fenders on cars. Worked great, and seems to be holding fine. I put some of the fiberglass mesh on the inside to strengthen the area around the tabs that were cracked. Has been painted and ridden for 6 months, no cracks. Mine were fairly rough as well. But they look amazing now. Some people on here who really know bodywork might chime in.
There are some kits that use a sort of powdered plastic that you put in a seam and then immerse it with something real similar to crazy glue.
I sheved a side cover project when my dad went in the hospital, thought maybe pull it down and look. Thanks for the thread, and maybe cc it to the project shop?
I have a tab off a 350f cover, and had a whole corner blown out with cracks in three directions. Each piece warping in a different direction to where it was sprung. My plans for any kind of clamping the thing together changed while the epoxy was setting up without the thing wanting to stay together. Quick thinking I used a short bungee cord to rap around the perimeter and hold the corner together. It wrinkled the poly fabric on the inside a bit, but the crack pulled together pretty good on the painted side for as bad as it really didn't want to.
I'm using regular clear epoxy, duro or whatever that comes in the twin hypodermic tubes. SOHC "Kong" once suggested a second layer of epoxy needs a soap and water wash first, so no problem. I don't recall why, maybe he'll chime in.
I'm using a spare to roughly shape the missing tab, Maybe i'll lay up some epoxy today. The mounting slot needs more work, but it's no longer a missing piece.
I might just touch up the area where the new skewer is going to be when I find one. I like the original paint sparkle and fade and patina as much as is there left, and touch ups add character.
BTW anyone got an orphan skewer for a 350f side cover? I was looking for big screws otherwise.