Was talking with a local shop which specializes in marine fiberglass repair/renovation here in the southeast MA area...while busy (obviously...getting the yachts and cabin boats ready at the marinas around here...has no openings until July), he is willing to take a look at what it would take if he's in the area. He mentions that after soda blasting, it's important to neutralize, with vinegar, the remnants of the soda that remain on the surface (which makes sense...sodium bicarbonate is highly basic, and vinegar acidic...so one would cancel out the other (with a little foaming) followed by a strong soap and water rinse, then let the surface thoroughly air dry in the sun.
Also mentioned that he's had good luck with micro glass beads (not the type that are usually used in blast cabinets, but down at the micron level...) and turning the pressure way down on stubborn top coats such as urethanes and catalyzed enamels. One of the caveats is that any glass that remains in the car has to be covered with aluminum foil, then two layers of masking paper (shiny side out), and any trim masked with duck tape (not paper painter tape) and ALL chrome removed, since the micro glass bead WILL etch the windows. And, it can leave a slightly 'toothed' surface, which would probably require a high-build primer to properly smooth before standard primer, sealer, and top coat.
I mentioned that the body thickness is NOT the 1/2" or more that a boat hull is constructed from; it's a polyester resin chopped strand slurry shot-gunned into a female mold, not hand-laid epoxy or injection-molded (IIRC, some builders licensed Lotus' VARI system to build their hulls...I may be wrong), so that has to be taken into account.
Figure, if he stops by the house (the soda method is environmentally friendly....wash down the drive with water), he's willing to test on the boot and bonnet lids, which would be the easiest to rectify if it all goes sideways. If it comes out ok...will schedule for after when I can get the doors dismounted and the shiny bits off the car.
Oh, BTW, he also uses this method at a couple airports near me for folks that want to strip their airframes without having to use the aggressive chemicals that are usually employed to get back to shiny aluminum (aluminium) in preparation for their refinishing. So, he seems to Get It, when it comes to helping in the renovation of high-dollar conveyances. We'll see.
But, first...just have to get the beast to the Brits at Bristol (RI) show on 6/10 at Colt State Park. Entered in the "Diamond in the Rough" class.