I replaced mine. Rudy has exact same as original and I'd suggest you use that. 'kinking' at corners is an issue. I built wood forms to duplicate the hull deck joint corners - 3 forms (stern P and S, bow). The base rail comes in 25' sections - 3 needed. (The insert comes in a continuous length.) I bent the 3 pieces 'on the bench' using my wood forms with one bend in each and located so that the 3 pieces fit on the boat with an overlap at the joints. Then as the last step after the rail is almost completely installed, cut the joints to length. (Like fitting wallpaper joints that doesn't have pretrimmed edges.) Space it so the joint at the stern is NOT at the center but is offset. The insert will join at the stern center and you don't want the base and the insert joint at the same place.
Use some pieces of the old rail to practice bends. I heated with a heat gun. Using the wood templates, you can put screws into the center (under the insert) of the rail to hold it in place as you bend it. Practice also allows you to experiment with just the right pie shaped cutouts to get it to fit around the corner without gaps or bulges. Mine finished up fitting better than the original.
The insert will shrink over time. I warmed it with a heat gun as I installed it (you definitely need a heat gun at the corners) and kept pushing it back towards the installed end (compressing it sort of) as I went. Even after several years I only have about a 1/2" gap at the insert joint.
Use a square and put a pencil mark on the hull as an alignment mark for the screws and you can reuse the same holes without any problem. I drilled oversize holes in the rail to aid in alignment and give some allowance for thermal length changes in the rail. I used truss head screws without washers. (McMaster Carr has them.)
The rail is not cheap and a fair amount of work but will come out looking better than new.