All the basics are there.
Do remember the Golden Rule of Forms and Molds....time spent creating a really accurate, well finished mold or form pays large dividends later...less sanding, less filler, and less weight. A lumpy form makes a lumpy part.
Using little strips of fiberglass
tape for this layup is not a good idea. Tape has a thick selvage edge, a knit ridge sometimes twice as thick as the base tape. The selvage tends to form voids in stacked layers, not a problem if epoxy filled, but heavy. The selvage also locks the warp and fill fibers, so tape doesn't conform to compound curves very well....which is why it's being used in short bits in this example. Last, short tape lengths usually result in a layup with uneven thickness.
Much better to do the layup with a stack of pre-wetted cloth. Cut one ply as a pattern while taped to the airplane, then two or three more using the developed pattern.. Stack 'em, wet 'em out between 4 mil plastic, squeegee out the excess resin, peel one side, and wrap the form, using gloved hands to smooth it into place. 9oz plain weave is surprisingly conformable, and 8-harness satin is even more so.
BTW, the time to do an upper intersection fairing on a Grove gear is when the fuselage is upside down for gear alignment and mounting.
Here's an oil cooler duct. Not an intersection fairing, but illustrates the principles.
Pattern development, single ply of 8.9 oz 8-harness satin. The 8-harness weave allows the warp and fill fibers to slide around in relation to each other.
The wrap will conform better and better as the excess fabric is cut away:
One ply, dry wrapped, cut to pattern shape. The single overlap seam is under the neck:
Three plies, cut using the pattern, stacked and wetted, about to get a top plastic sheet followed by a roller to push all the excess epoxy to the perimeter:
All three plies wrapped and smoothed on the form. A strip of polyester peel ply keeps the wet glass from unwrapping at the neck. See the glass tape added to form a mounting flange?
That's a good use for tape.
Finished parts. Note how little fill (zero) is needed for shape. Any filler will be weave filling only. That's the beauty of a good form, and a one piece wrap.