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Overheating is a common concern when working with epoxy resins like ‘Trasparente’, especially when pouring significant quantities such as 160g in a single cup. Understanding the causes and how to prevent excessive heat build-up can help ensure a smooth, safe curing process.
Why Epoxy Resin Overheats During Mixing and Pouring
Epoxy resin curing is an exothermic process, meaning it generates heat as it hardens. When pouring ‘Trasparente’ resin, especially in volumes like 160g within a cup, heat can accumulate rapidly if certain guidelines aren’t followed. The main causes of overheating include:
- Exceeding recommended pour thickness: ‘Trasparente’ epoxy is designed for pours up to 2cm thick. Thicker pours trap heat, causing faster and hotter curing.
- High ambient temperature: Working in warm conditions will accelerate curing and raise internal temperatures in the resin.
- Use of external heat sources: Applying heat guns, hot water baths or placing the cup near radiators will intensify the exothermic reaction.
Best Practices to Prevent Overheating
If you’re working with 160g of resin, check the size and shape of your container to stay within the safe 2cm thickness. Always mix and pour resin at the manufacturer’s recommended temperature, ideally room temperature. Avoid using any unnecessary heat sources when curing.
If your project involves thicker pours or larger volumes, you may want to consider a specialist product such as EpoxyTable 5-Five, which is blended for deeper casting without excessive exotherm.
When This Matters Most
Monitoring resin temperature becomes crucial for detailed castings, jewellery, or projects where clarity and surface quality are important. Overheated resin can yellow, crack, or produce bubbles, so extra care is worthwhile for artistic or high-value pieces.
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Understanding why overheating occurs with ‘Trasparente’ epoxy will help you achieve better results and keep your resin projects safe. For more guidance on choosing and distinguishing epoxy types, explore our guides on resin distinction.
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