Resin Calculator

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Fiberglass Hand Layup Wet-layup cloth on hulls, decks, and repairs
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Tabletop / Bar Top Self-leveling flood coat for tables
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Fillet Thickened resin for joints and seams
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Vacuum Bagging Vacuum-compressed layup for optimal resin ratio
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Fabric Type
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Fiberglass Hand Layup

Tabletop / Bar Top

Epoxy Fillet

Vacuum Bagging

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Resin Reference Guide

Everything you need to estimate resin for your project — fabric consumption rates, coating coverage, fillet volumes, and resin properties. Use these tables alongside the calculator or on their own to plan materials.

Fabric Resin Consumption Rates

Resin consumption per square foot per layer. Vacuum bagging uses 25–35% less resin than hand layup due to vacuum compression at 20–25 inHg.

Fabric Weight Hand Layup
oz/sqft/layer
Vacuum Bag
oz/sqft/layer
Waste
Hand / Vac
Best For
Fiberglass Cloth4 oz4.02.815% / 10%Kayaks, canoes, light repairs
Fiberglass Cloth6 oz6.04.215% / 10%Hulls, decks, general marine work
Fiberglass Cloth10 oz10.07.015% / 10%Keels, skegs, high-impact areas
1708 Biaxial17 oz14.09.820% / 10%Stringers, transoms, major structural
Chopped Strand Mat3/4 oz5.03.515% / 10%Tabbing, filler layers
Chopped Strand Mat1.5 oz8.05.615% / 10%Joints, tabbing, secondary bonding
Carbon Fiber5.7 oz5.03.520% / 10%Lightweight high-strength panels
Kevlar (Aramid)5 oz6.04.220% / 10%Impact resistance, abrasion protection

Waste factor covers mixing waste, drips, and pot-life losses. Biaxial, carbon, and Kevlar use a higher waste factor due to more complex wet-out.

Tabletop Flood Coat Coverage

How much surface area one gallon of resin covers at each flood coat thickness. Coverage shown before and after accounting for 15% waste (edge drips and mixing losses).

Thickness Description Coverage
sqft / gallon (neat)
Coverage
sqft / gallon (w/ waste)
Gallons per 10 sqft
1/16"Thin coat — primer or light seal25.722.30.45
1/8"Standard flood coat — most projects12.811.20.90
1/4"Thick flood coat — deep-pour look6.45.61.79
Formula Gallons = (Area in sqft × 144 × Thickness in inches) ÷ 231 × 1.15 231 cubic inches per gallon · 144 square inches per square foot

Most tabletop projects use a thin seal coat first (0.32 oz/sqft), then one or two flood coats. The seal coat prevents air bubbles from wood outgassing into the flood coat.

Fillet Joint Volume by Radius

Fillet cross-section is a quarter-circle. Larger radius fillets use significantly more resin per foot of joint. All values include 15% waste factor.

Radius Description Cross-Section
sq inches
Volume per Foot
cubic inches
Gallons per 10 ft
3/8"Small fillet — light joints0.111.330.07
1/2"Medium fillet0.202.360.12
3/4"Standard fillet — most boat joints0.445.300.26
1"Large fillet — heavy structural joints0.799.420.47
Formula Gallons = (π × r² ÷ 4 × Length in ft × 12) ÷ 231 × 1.15 Quarter-circle cross-section · converted to linear inches · 231 cubic inches per gallon

Fillets use thickened resin (mixed with colloidal silica or wood flour). The thickener itself adds negligible volume — estimate based on liquid resin volume.

Seal Coat Coverage

A seal coat is a thin brush-on layer of un-thickened resin applied to raw wood before layup or flood coating. It penetrates the grain, prevents air bubbles from outgassing, and improves adhesion.

PropertyValue
Application rate0.32 oz per square foot
Waste factor10% (less waste than layup — thin brush application)
Coverage per gallon~364 sqft (neat) · ~331 sqft (with 10% waste)
Coverage per quart~91 sqft (neat) · ~83 sqft (with waste)
When to useBare wood before fiberglass layup, before tabletop flood coats, optionally before fillets
Formula Gallons = (Area in sqft × 0.32 oz) ÷ 128 × 1.10 128 oz per gallon · 10% waste factor for brush application
Resin Types Compared — Epoxy vs Polyester vs Vinyl Ester

Properties vary by manufacturer and formulation. Values below are typical ranges for marine-grade resins at 77°F (25°C).

PropertyEpoxyPolyesterVinyl Ester
Viscosity (mixed)900–1,100 cP500–800 cP400–600 cP
Mix ratio2:1 to 4:1 by volume (resin : hardener)1–2% MEKP catalyst by weight1–2% MEKP catalyst by weight
Pot life (77°F)15–45 min (varies by hardener speed)10–20 min15–25 min
Cure to handling6–24 hours2–4 hours3–6 hours
Full cure7–14 days (or post-cure with heat)24–48 hours24–48 hours
ShrinkageLess than 1%6–8%3–5%
Adhesion to woodExcellentFairGood
Water resistanceExcellentFair to GoodExcellent
Chemical resistanceGoodFairExcellent
UV resistanceFair (needs topcoat or UV additive)FairFair
Compatible fabricsAll (use stitched mat, not CSM)All (CSM preferred for bonding layers)All
Odor / VOCsLowHigh (styrene)Moderate (styrene)
Relative cost$$$$$$

Viscosity and Working Characteristics

Viscosity determines how easily resin wets out fabric. Lower viscosity resins flow into weave more readily, while higher viscosity resins stay put on vertical surfaces. Epoxy is the thickest of the three but offers the best mechanical properties and near-zero shrinkage — critical for marine applications where watertight integrity matters.

Temperature effects: Viscosity drops as temperature rises. Working at 75–85°F gives optimal flow. Below 60°F, epoxy becomes sluggish and may not cure properly. Above 90°F, pot life shortens dramatically — mix smaller batches.

Epoxy Cure Speed and Mix Ratios

Epoxy hardeners come in different speeds. The mix ratio changes with the hardener — this is not interchangeable. Using the wrong ratio will result in a soft, under-cured layup.

Hardener SpeedMix Ratio (by volume)Pot Life (77°F)Cure to HandleBest For
Slow2 : 1 (resin : hardener)30–45 min18–24 hrsLarge layups, warm weather, tabletops
Medium3 : 1 (resin : hardener)20–30 min10–16 hrsGeneral-purpose, moderate temp
Fast4 : 1 (resin : hardener)12–18 min6–9 hrsSmall repairs, cold weather, fillets
All Calculation Formulas

The exact formulas this calculator uses. All results are rounded to two decimal places.

Fiberglass / Vacuum Bagging

Resin (gallons) = Area (sqft) × Layers × Resin Rate (oz/sqft) ÷ 128 × (1 + Waste Factor) 128 oz per gallon · Resin rate and waste factor depend on fabric type and method (see table above)

Example: 50 sqft of 6 oz cloth, 2 layers, hand layup → 50 × 2 × 6 ÷ 128 × 1.15 = 5.39 gallons

Tabletop Flood Coat

Resin (gallons) = (Area (sqft) × 144 × Thickness (inches)) ÷ 231 × (1 + Waste Factor) Converts sqft to sqin, then multiplies by thickness for cubic inches · 231 cubic inches per gallon

Example: 12 sqft at 1/8" thick → (12 × 144 × 0.125) ÷ 231 × 1.15 = 1.08 gallons

Fillet Joint

Resin (gallons) = (π × r² ÷ 4 × Length (ft) × 12) ÷ 231 × (1 + Waste Factor) Quarter-circle cross-section · length converted to inches · 231 cubic inches per gallon

Example: 30 linear feet at 3/4" radius → (π × 0.75² ÷ 4 × 30 × 12) ÷ 231 × 1.15 = 0.79 gallons

Seal Coat

Resin (gallons) = (Area (sqft) × 0.32 oz) ÷ 128 × 1.10 0.32 oz per sqft application rate · 10% waste factor for thin brush-on coats

Example: 50 sqft seal coat → (50 × 0.32) ÷ 128 × 1.10 = 0.14 gallons

Constants Used

Ounces per gallon128
Cubic inches per gallon231
Square inches per square foot144
Inches per foot12
Seal coat rate0.32 oz/sqft

Calculadora de epoxi

Calcule la cantidad correcta de epoxi con nuestra calculadora de resina epoxi. Obtenga presupuestos precisos para proyectos de construcción, reparación y recubrimiento de embarcaciones y garantice una aplicación sin problemas.