The idea is to mix up the epoxy, use the unthickened to wet the area a bit, then add your thickeners until you get a creamy peanut butter consistency, apply that and work in with a putty knife. If you can add sawdust to glue and get it thicker, then epoxy is no different ... just add a little at a time, then mix, until you get the consistency you want. You are looking for it to stay in the crack/hole ... so it doesn't need to be too thick.
You are only using the fillers as a colouring agent basically, if you think of then the same as the wood flour/dust ... it might seem easier. So the wood dust gets you the wood colour, the silica lets you lighten the mix a bit, so it's colour as well ... there are no real tricks to using it.
As an alternative, you could just thicken some glue, I personally don't like doing that as it never seems to wet out right (colour wise) but that could be me.
One other method I have been using with thickened epoxy, is to do all the finish sanding and cleanup ready to epoxy. Then tape around the cracks (idea is to leave just the area to be filled) the day before you plan to do the FG/epoxy ... wet out and fill the cracks as mentioned above, do a careful wipe with a cloth soaked on mineral spirits to remove any epoxy that gets on the strips.
Then lay out the glass and do the layup. The filled areas will just bound to the new epoxy glass the layup itself will make the filled area level and you don't need to do any sanding or treatment of the filled area.
Brian
You are only using the fillers as a colouring agent basically, if you think of then the same as the wood flour/dust ... it might seem easier. So the wood dust gets you the wood colour, the silica lets you lighten the mix a bit, so it's colour as well ... there are no real tricks to using it.
As an alternative, you could just thicken some glue, I personally don't like doing that as it never seems to wet out right (colour wise) but that could be me.
One other method I have been using with thickened epoxy, is to do all the finish sanding and cleanup ready to epoxy. Then tape around the cracks (idea is to leave just the area to be filled) the day before you plan to do the FG/epoxy ... wet out and fill the cracks as mentioned above, do a careful wipe with a cloth soaked on mineral spirits to remove any epoxy that gets on the strips.
Then lay out the glass and do the layup. The filled areas will just bound to the new epoxy glass the layup itself will make the filled area level and you don't need to do any sanding or treatment of the filled area.
Brian