| Product Dimensions | 3.94 x 3.94 x 3.94 inches |
|---|---|
| Item Weight | 27 pounds |
| Manufacturer | FGCI |
| ASIN | B07PXFDBVR |
| Item model number | DeepPour-Parent |
| Date First Available | March 20, 2019 |
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Superclear Liquid Glass Deep Pour Epoxy Resin 3 Gallons Kit, 2-4 Inch Clear Casting Resin for River Tables, Live Edge Wood, Large Molds, Food Safe, Zero VOC, Bubble Free
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Purchase options and add-ons
- DEEP 2-4 INCH POURS: Pour up to 2-4 inches in a single lift for river tables, live edge wood, and large molds. No stacked pours, no layer lines, no waiting between coats.
- CRYSTAL-CLEAR CASTING RESIN: Low-viscosity Liquid Glass formula releases trapped air during cure for a smooth, bubble-free, glass-like finish with minimal torching needed.
- DURABLE ROCK-HARD CURE: Engineered for functional surfaces, Liquid Glass cures to a hard, scratch-resistant finish built for tabletops, bar tops, and display pieces that see daily use.
- FOOD SAFE AND ZERO VOC: Safe for contact with food after full cure, with a low-odor, zero-VOC formula that makes indoor pours comfortable for you and your workspace.
- MADE IN THE USA: Formulated and manufactured by Fiberglass Coatings, LLC in Saint Petersburg, Florida, with over 60 years of resin manufacturing expertise backing every batch.
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Super Epoxy Resin Systems
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We’ve been manufacturing resins for over 60 years because of the values we hold and quality we produce! At Superclear we value our people, and most of all we value you, the customer.
We are dedicated to providing you the most premium, thoroughly tested and state-of-the-art formulated resin products. Your project matters to us, and that’s why we create and provide the best epoxy resins and epoxy based products.
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Liquid Glass Deep Pour Epoxy
Our Superclear 2.0 Liquid Glass casting epoxy is absolutely unmatched with a deep pour capability of 2-4 inches*!
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Superclear Designer Art Resin
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Deep Pour24 Hour Epoxy
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Product description
Super Epoxy Resin Systems Overview
Liquid Glass Deep Pour
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Customer Reviews
|
4.7 out of 5 stars 6,368
|
4.5 out of 5 stars 15,601
|
4.5 out of 5 stars 353
|
4.3 out of 5 stars 119
|
|
Price
| $224.00$224.00 | $97.74$97.74 | $224.99$224.99 | $118.99$118.99 |
|
Kit Sizes
| .75, 1.5 & 3 Gallon Kit | 2 Quart, 1 & 2 Gallon Kit | .75, 1.5 & 3 Gallon Kit | 2 Quart, 1 & 2 Gallon Kit |
|
Cure Time
| 48-72 Hours | 24 Hours | 24-36 Hours | 24 Hours |
|
Mix Ratio
| 2:1 By Volume | 1:1 By Volume | 2:1 By Volume | 1:1 By Volume |
|
Primary Application
| River Tables & Thick Castings | Sealant, Coating, & Bar Tops | Charcuterie Boards & Trays | Wall Art, Coasters, & Jewelry |
|
Food Safe Approved?
| ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Product information
Technical Details
Additional Information
| Best Sellers Rank |
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Great product, a lot to learn about how to use it.
Top reviews from the United States
- 5 out of 5 stars
Dried clear as glass, love the finish, and easy to use.
Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2026Very good product, and I experienced few air bubbles during the setup and drying process.
Very clear glass like surface upon drying.
Instructions were easy to follow and were very easy to understand every step of this product.
Sending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Great product, a lot to learn about how to use it.
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020Let me start off by saying this was to make an XMAS present for the wife. To say the least I didn't leave myself enough time and had to rush things. But I bought this product specifically due to its claim that it handles 2-4" pours. As you can see by the image, this was a tricky pour. I was trying to encapsulate a 3-dimensional object, that to say the least had mass and buoyancy which made it tricky. It wasn't wasn't something I could really do in multiple pours very well because of it's shape. Technically I think I probably could have done it in two pours, but I didn't have time.
So I watched tons if videos, read the directions dozens of times, and tried to do my best. I've never done an epoxy mold, let alone one that had all the tricks this one had. it's not visible in the picture but there's actually a piece of all thread going through the bottom of the mold to secure the project to the walnut base. That alone was difficult.
I started by creating a mold, I used melamine laminated particle board, partially because it's easy to cut, secure, and provides a pretty consistent surface when done properly. I had also hoped that because melamine is fairly non-porous, that it would help prevent the epoxy from sticking. I silicon caulked all seams and the all thread that was drilled through the side, into the base. The lit tree inside was zip tied to the all thread, and there was a piece of wood across the open top of the mold that I fed the wiring through, to hold it in place and securely. I also bought a pretty expensive epoxy release spray on Amazon that I covered the inside of the mold with, hoping it would help remove the wood when the product was cured.
Most of this prep work was worth it, but I will say I don't think the release agent did any good. Based on the directions, I spent a lot of time creating the right environment for the cure. I hung plastic in my utility room and worked hard to effectively create a "paint booth" in an effort to be able to control the ambient temps. Where I am, the combustion air coming into my utility room was between 20F and 45F during the cure, so I put a space heater in the paint booth. There's no where else in the house I could have done this (especially since it was a gift and wife couldn't see it), and my garage often dips below freezing every night in the winter.
On pour day, I heated the bottles using a heating pad and electric blanket, I mixed no more than 1G at a time, and followed the directions for length of mix, moving between buckets, etc. In general, the pour went pretty well. But almost immediately, some started leaking out of the hole for the all thread, even with caulk, so I'm guess it moved enough that it cracked the caulk. I scrambled to fix that with more caulk and even some good ol flex seal.
This is where things went haywire for me. I paid so much attention to keeping the space between 72F and 75F, that I didn't pay attention to really the most critical thing, which wasn't really heating the product, but dissipating the heat from the reaction. I should have known, and I think the directions lacked some emphasis on heat during a deep pour. My pour was 3.5" deep. The heat it generated overnight was so much, that it cracked, created several crevices. So the next morning, when I found these, of course I kind of panicked, but I decided to work with it. I cleaned all of the surfaces as much as possible, did some light sanding, and used alcohol to clean it. I also vacuumed the cracks. I then mixed more epoxy, and started to fill the cracks and crevices. And boom, more issues. It turned out the expansion/contraction broke the caulk seals in the mold. So now it started leaking out a bunch. So I scrambled with more flex seal and caulk, trying to seal it up enough to contain the second pour.
Surprisingly the second and third pours turned out fine. the product matched fine, of course you can still see them but they actually add a lot of character to the finished product. Structurally I think it's fine as well. I gave it 72hours before touching the mold, and then started to break it apart. This is where I don't think the mold release stuff did anything, the melamine was stuck to he epoxy like mad. I basically had to chisel, scrap, and sand the heck out of thing to get that off. Which basically meant I had to resurface the whole thing. That process was miserable, I used everything from a 40grit floor sander, to an orbital sander, to a dremel, and oscillating tool, with sand papers from 40 grit to 1000 grit. I used automotive rubbing compound and polish, as well as a buffing wheel. The surface still isn't very "polished" but it looks pretty good.
In summary, my lessons learned were:
- this can definitely be done by a novice. But it's not "easy"
- for deep pours, heat control is in my opinion more important than keeping it warm
- don't trust the "release agents"
- when doing a mold that has an open top, remember to plan for that to be the finished side, it was much more polished and natural than the sides that were enclosed in the mold
- Not really sure what else to have used for a mold, I though the melamine laminated wood was a great idea. I couldn't very well have used a silicon mold or something for a project this custom
- polishing is hard work. I even tried to use diamond abrasives I use on tile and glass, didn't really work
- the product worked well, it was only my misguided use that didn't make it perfect
- finally, double and triple seal seams.
5 out of 5 starsGreat product, a lot to learn about how to use it.
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020Let me start off by saying this was to make an XMAS present for the wife. To say the least I didn't leave myself enough time and had to rush things. But I bought this product specifically due to its claim that it handles 2-4" pours. As you can see by the image, this was a tricky pour. I was trying to encapsulate a 3-dimensional object, that to say the least had mass and buoyancy which made it tricky. It wasn't wasn't something I could really do in multiple pours very well because of it's shape. Technically I think I probably could have done it in two pours, but I didn't have time.
So I watched tons if videos, read the directions dozens of times, and tried to do my best. I've never done an epoxy mold, let alone one that had all the tricks this one had. it's not visible in the picture but there's actually a piece of all thread going through the bottom of the mold to secure the project to the walnut base. That alone was difficult.
I started by creating a mold, I used melamine laminated particle board, partially because it's easy to cut, secure, and provides a pretty consistent surface when done properly. I had also hoped that because melamine is fairly non-porous, that it would help prevent the epoxy from sticking. I silicon caulked all seams and the all thread that was drilled through the side, into the base. The lit tree inside was zip tied to the all thread, and there was a piece of wood across the open top of the mold that I fed the wiring through, to hold it in place and securely. I also bought a pretty expensive epoxy release spray on Amazon that I covered the inside of the mold with, hoping it would help remove the wood when the product was cured.
Most of this prep work was worth it, but I will say I don't think the release agent did any good. Based on the directions, I spent a lot of time creating the right environment for the cure. I hung plastic in my utility room and worked hard to effectively create a "paint booth" in an effort to be able to control the ambient temps. Where I am, the combustion air coming into my utility room was between 20F and 45F during the cure, so I put a space heater in the paint booth. There's no where else in the house I could have done this (especially since it was a gift and wife couldn't see it), and my garage often dips below freezing every night in the winter.
On pour day, I heated the bottles using a heating pad and electric blanket, I mixed no more than 1G at a time, and followed the directions for length of mix, moving between buckets, etc. In general, the pour went pretty well. But almost immediately, some started leaking out of the hole for the all thread, even with caulk, so I'm guess it moved enough that it cracked the caulk. I scrambled to fix that with more caulk and even some good ol flex seal.
This is where things went haywire for me. I paid so much attention to keeping the space between 72F and 75F, that I didn't pay attention to really the most critical thing, which wasn't really heating the product, but dissipating the heat from the reaction. I should have known, and I think the directions lacked some emphasis on heat during a deep pour. My pour was 3.5" deep. The heat it generated overnight was so much, that it cracked, created several crevices. So the next morning, when I found these, of course I kind of panicked, but I decided to work with it. I cleaned all of the surfaces as much as possible, did some light sanding, and used alcohol to clean it. I also vacuumed the cracks. I then mixed more epoxy, and started to fill the cracks and crevices. And boom, more issues. It turned out the expansion/contraction broke the caulk seals in the mold. So now it started leaking out a bunch. So I scrambled with more flex seal and caulk, trying to seal it up enough to contain the second pour.
Surprisingly the second and third pours turned out fine. the product matched fine, of course you can still see them but they actually add a lot of character to the finished product. Structurally I think it's fine as well. I gave it 72hours before touching the mold, and then started to break it apart. This is where I don't think the mold release stuff did anything, the melamine was stuck to he epoxy like mad. I basically had to chisel, scrap, and sand the heck out of thing to get that off. Which basically meant I had to resurface the whole thing. That process was miserable, I used everything from a 40grit floor sander, to an orbital sander, to a dremel, and oscillating tool, with sand papers from 40 grit to 1000 grit. I used automotive rubbing compound and polish, as well as a buffing wheel. The surface still isn't very "polished" but it looks pretty good.
In summary, my lessons learned were:
- this can definitely be done by a novice. But it's not "easy"
- for deep pours, heat control is in my opinion more important than keeping it warm
- don't trust the "release agents"
- when doing a mold that has an open top, remember to plan for that to be the finished side, it was much more polished and natural than the sides that were enclosed in the mold
- Not really sure what else to have used for a mold, I though the melamine laminated wood was a great idea. I couldn't very well have used a silicon mold or something for a project this custom
- polishing is hard work. I even tried to use diamond abrasives I use on tile and glass, didn't really work
- the product worked well, it was only my misguided use that didn't make it perfect
- finally, double and triple seal seams.
84 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
My go to epoxy resin for casting!
Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 20265 stars coming from someone who buys cheaper epoxy resin on Amazon. This is my go-to epoxy for the actual production. All clear resin eventually yellows, but this one doesn't for a long time—even after being exposed to the sun for a year (personal test; take it with a grain of salt).
Durability = Oh it's hard alright. With proper cure, the surface is really durable and resists dents. BUT please wait 7-14 days after cure before putting your epoxy surface to the test.
Drying time = Exactly what the manufacturer says. Yep.
Consistency = Pretty forgiving with the A:B ratio BUT PLEASE, don't blame the manufacturer for your user errors.
Leakage = Don't blame the manufacturer for your user error.
Bubble-Free = Good'ol torch/IPA alcohol spray does the trick for a tabletop pour. I do casting, so I vacuum + pressure pot cure to prevent any bubbles.
If you're just getting into epoxy resin craft things, test and play around with cheaper resins on Amazon. The processes are all the same anyway. If you're looking for better quality, crystal-clear for A LOOOONG TIME resin, then you found it.
One person found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Its all about the BASE. The epoxy is remarable.
Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2025Do you know how to pour epoxy deep?. Then you will be entirely satisfied with this product. I built a live edge vanity top with tile inlay didn't even need the full capabilities of the epoxy. What a pleasure to work with. IF you are new to epoxy. This is a great starting point product. word of advice to all you who are epoxy pouring your ideas. FOLLOW THE DIRECTION with relaxed intensity; it is a must to be successful. Dust free and temperature controlled environment is also must for open surface pours. Its is also great for bowl mold forming for you turners out their looking to improve your game. you'll never need to pour beyond it maximum with a bowl form mold, and its great in incorporating pigment and mica powder. The products of your pours will be/are going to be stunning and out standing in appearance. YOU will be satisfied with this purchase. the clarity of glass when curing is compete. 72hrous is minimum time to perfection. DON'T rush. Mix twice and mix twice as long as the manufactures recommendations. two measuring cups/buckets for A & B separately, then 5 min each in two diff buckets when mixing, add pig and mica to first mixing bucket, pour to 2nd bucket and mix again, pour, and monitor for bubbles for at least the first 8 - 10 hrs on open surface pours or not using a pressure pot. Did I mention DO NOT RUSH!. Enjoy your pours and limitless possibilities. And about the BASE. make sure your forms will hold water. Pointless if epoxy can not be entirely contained within a form or mold - hint: 3M plastic masking film will sorta peal off once epoxy is cured but with difficult places in folds or creases. so you can line your forms with it to make waterproofing…. Smooth side of FRP board makes a great bottom to build your forms from.
Addendum: The shipping is as quit as the system can move. I ordered at 5:30 their time so the business was closed. I checked next morning and product was already in shipping and on the way. The company cares about their products and provides the services and turn around you’d expect from a great company. Beyond all those great things to get you a great product total satisfaction is their goals.
5 out of 5 starsIts all about the BASE. The epoxy is remarable.
Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2025Do you know how to pour epoxy deep?. Then you will be entirely satisfied with this product. I built a live edge vanity top with tile inlay didn't even need the full capabilities of the epoxy. What a pleasure to work with. IF you are new to epoxy. This is a great starting point product. word of advice to all you who are epoxy pouring your ideas. FOLLOW THE DIRECTION with relaxed intensity; it is a must to be successful. Dust free and temperature controlled environment is also must for open surface pours. Its is also great for bowl mold forming for you turners out their looking to improve your game. you'll never need to pour beyond it maximum with a bowl form mold, and its great in incorporating pigment and mica powder. The products of your pours will be/are going to be stunning and out standing in appearance. YOU will be satisfied with this purchase. the clarity of glass when curing is compete. 72hrous is minimum time to perfection. DON'T rush. Mix twice and mix twice as long as the manufactures recommendations. two measuring cups/buckets for A & B separately, then 5 min each in two diff buckets when mixing, add pig and mica to first mixing bucket, pour to 2nd bucket and mix again, pour, and monitor for bubbles for at least the first 8 - 10 hrs on open surface pours or not using a pressure pot. Did I mention DO NOT RUSH!. Enjoy your pours and limitless possibilities. And about the BASE. make sure your forms will hold water. Pointless if epoxy can not be entirely contained within a form or mold - hint: 3M plastic masking film will sorta peal off once epoxy is cured but with difficult places in folds or creases. so you can line your forms with it to make waterproofing…. Smooth side of FRP board makes a great bottom to build your forms from.
Addendum: The shipping is as quit as the system can move. I ordered at 5:30 their time so the business was closed. I checked next morning and product was already in shipping and on the way. The company cares about their products and provides the services and turn around you’d expect from a great company. Beyond all those great things to get you a great product total satisfaction is their goals.
15 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 4 out of 5 stars
Get it polished in the first 72 hours after it seems dry
Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2021I was gifted a rare piece of Canadian Redwood that had floated in the Gulf of Mexico for years, and pulled from the Gulf back in 1970. It was full of sea slug holes, and looked beautiful, but was very fragile, in some places most of the wood was missing due to the slug holes. After consideration, a guitar was the only way to go, since the gifting person's dad was there with him in 1970, and was an accomplished guitar player.
Acrylic was the only way to go, since I decided to build a Telecaster electric guitar, and needed to encase the wood so it would be stable. In some places the holes go right through, and you can see clearly through them, this stuff is so crystal.
This was about a 1 3/4" thick pour, and with all the holes, I knew I needed to put in a thin layer on the bottom of the mold I built, then lay the wood in, and pour the rest. Worked well.
The product performed exactly as advertised. Set up nice, crystal clear, some bubbles got caught due to all the hundreds of holes in the wood, but that was to be expected. I just left them, since they were down a ways, and didn't hurt the structural integrity.
Actually, it worked a bit faster than I thought, and in about 72 hours it was totally firm, and I peeled off the mold and began finishing the edges and polishing it.
What I DIDN'T expect, was after about three additional days, with just the edges of the guitar to polish off and a few light scratches on the back from the mold, was that the product got SO HARD, I found I didn't have a polish or compound in my shop that would touch it. Now let it be said, I do a lot of golf club restoration, woodworking, file, planer blade and knife sharpening in my shop and I have compounds that will move stainless steel. Not this stuff. Once it fully cured, I could router it,(slowly), to make my neck pocket, control area and pickup holes, but polish it? Forget about it. I worked on it for days, and moved maybe .001 of the stuff.
So although a great product, you had better get it polished within the first three days of hardening.
For the record, I used a digital scale, calibrated, that measures out to a tenth of an ounce. I made sure the product was measured correctly. Been down that "it didn't cure right" road before. Mixing is everything also, and I used a wooden mixer I made on my lathe that matched the taper of the bottom of my containers that would also go into a drill, so I could mix it completely.
Curing not a problem - hardening, Whoh...
33 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Really excellent epoxy
Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2022I'm building a 43" x 114" cedar slab table for our back porch, that has two rivers running through it...hence the need for epoxy. Cedar is a soft wood, so I will have a clear epoxy coat over the entire top (along with a very shallow epoxy coat on the sides and bottom of the table, benches and supports). Yeah, so when you do the math, prepare to be surprised at just how much epoxy you need!
The epoxy is much less viscous than what I have used before for various hobby needs (Total Boat 1:1 ratio)--in the most obvious way, the difference is that the Deep Pour epoxy will leak out of every microscopic-sized hole that you leave. This is not an epoxy fail, this is just the reason you've to to be really, really careful in your setup, but my experience says that you will not believe how many tapes don't work (at least I'm still surprised). Would strongly suggest having a 3mil plastic sheet under your complete setup, so that you can bring the plastic (which the epoxy won't stick to) up over the edges of your workpiece. Then...you have nothing to worry about re: leaks. The YouTubes I watched from people who have done this before recommended putting the workpiece on melamine-coated sheets, inside a melamine-coated box. I had a number of problems with this (no melamine sheets, so I had to use shelf pieces and join them; my project has live edges, so a "melamine box" doesn't really work). In hindsight I would have had far fewer issues if my table top was lying on a sheet of plastic.
The epoxy takes color tinting terrifically. You may be well surprised at how LITTLE color material you need---I would strongly recommend 1/4 tsp for 60oz epoxy as a start, it's amazing how well the color dispurses.
This stuff takes about 18 hours to get tacky, which gives you time. This is NOTHING like the 1:1 ratio epoxy I've previously used, that was tacky in 30 mins and cured in ~8 hours. The Deep Pour epoxy needs 72 hours for full cure, though it's hard and no longer tacky in roughly 48 hours.
My table is not finished, but I've included a current photo. I need one more pour on the top and then I won't touch it for three days. In fact, I won't be anywhere near it for three days, so I can avoid stirring up dust in my shop that lands on my table. For all you folks who do this all the time and feel compelled to point out all my mistakes...please try and restrain yourself, it's my first one. And possibly my last one, as this will go on my back porch here in hill country Texas, and there's no place in my house where I could put something of this size.
Now, re: the company--I can only comment on their curiously fast shipping times. Much appreciated! Recalling the comment about doing the math in advance to figure how just how much you need...prepared to need more. Given the price of the epoxy, I did not order it all at once, I ordered batch...after batch...after batch, thinking that maybe/possibly/hopefully I did the math wrong. I didn't. So it looks like I'll need a total of 15 gallons for the entire project. The good news is, the table will last WAY longer than I will, so my kids can fight over it one day.

I'm building a 43" x 114" cedar slab table for our back porch, that has two rivers running through it...hence the need for epoxy. Cedar is a soft wood, so I will have a clear epoxy coat over the entire top (along with a very shallow epoxy coat on the sides and bottom of the table, benches and supports). Yeah, so when you do the math, prepare to be surprised at just how much epoxy you need!
The epoxy is much less viscous than what I have used before for various hobby needs (Total Boat 1:1 ratio)--in the most obvious way, the difference is that the Deep Pour epoxy will leak out of every microscopic-sized hole that you leave. This is not an epoxy fail, this is just the reason you've to to be really, really careful in your setup, but my experience says that you will not believe how many tapes don't work (at least I'm still surprised). Would strongly suggest having a 3mil plastic sheet under your complete setup, so that you can bring the plastic (which the epoxy won't stick to) up over the edges of your workpiece. Then...you have nothing to worry about re: leaks. The YouTubes I watched from people who have done this before recommended putting the workpiece on melamine-coated sheets, inside a melamine-coated box. I had a number of problems with this (no melamine sheets, so I had to use shelf pieces and join them; my project has live edges, so a "melamine box" doesn't really work). In hindsight I would have had far fewer issues if my table top was lying on a sheet of plastic.
The epoxy takes color tinting terrifically. You may be well surprised at how LITTLE color material you need---I would strongly recommend 1/4 tsp for 60oz epoxy as a start, it's amazing how well the color dispurses.
This stuff takes about 18 hours to get tacky, which gives you time. This is NOTHING like the 1:1 ratio epoxy I've previously used, that was tacky in 30 mins and cured in ~8 hours. The Deep Pour epoxy needs 72 hours for full cure, though it's hard and no longer tacky in roughly 48 hours.
My table is not finished, but I've included a current photo. I need one more pour on the top and then I won't touch it for three days. In fact, I won't be anywhere near it for three days, so I can avoid stirring up dust in my shop that lands on my table. For all you folks who do this all the time and feel compelled to point out all my mistakes...please try and restrain yourself, it's my first one. And possibly my last one, as this will go on my back porch here in hill country Texas, and there's no place in my house where I could put something of this size.
Now, re: the company--I can only comment on their curiously fast shipping times. Much appreciated! Recalling the comment about doing the math in advance to figure how just how much you need...prepared to need more. Given the price of the epoxy, I did not order it all at once, I ordered batch...after batch...after batch, thinking that maybe/possibly/hopefully I did the math wrong. I didn't. So it looks like I'll need a total of 15 gallons for the entire project. The good news is, the table will last WAY longer than I will, so my kids can fight over it one day.
65 people found this helpfulSending feedback...Sending feedback...HelpfulThank you for your feedback.Sorry, we failed to record your vote. Please try againThanks, we'll investigate in the next few days.Sorry, We failed to report this review. Please try again - 5 out of 5 stars
Great product
Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2026Fast delivery. Clear and easy to work with. Fine quality and easy to finish.
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Clear
Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2026Worked great so for it does take o wile to cure but it is very clear and seams durable.

Worked great so for it does take o wile to cure but it is very clear and seams durable.
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Top reviews from other countries
Roy 20211 out of 5 starsI am disappointed by this product
Reviewed in Egypt on October 19, 2023Yes it’s clear but it looks so dull and foggy after it’s done .You can definitely see the imperfections and cracking.I’m disappointed in this product.In addition, the price was reduced after I purchased the product
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Product summary presents key product information
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Product Summary: Superclear Liquid Glass Deep Pour Epoxy Resin 3 Gallons Kit, 2-4 Inch Clear Casting Resin for River Tables, Live Edge Wood, Large Molds, Food Safe, Zero VOC, Bubble Free
From Superclear
Price
One-time purchase: $224.00 ( $0.58 / fluid ounce) 25% Savings
List Price: $299.99
About this Item
- DEEP 2-4 INCH POURS: Pour up to 2-4 inches in a single lift for river tables, live edge wood, and large molds. No stacked pours, no layer lines, no waiting between coats.
- CRYSTAL-CLEAR CASTING RESIN: Low-viscosity Liquid Glass formula releases trapped air during cure for a smooth, bubble-free, glass-like finish with minimal torching needed.
- DURABLE ROCK-HARD CURE: Engineered for functional surfaces, Liquid Glass cures to a hard, scratch-resistant finish built for tabletops, bar tops, and display pieces that see daily use.
- FOOD SAFE AND ZERO VOC: Safe for contact with food after full cure, with a low-odor, zero-VOC formula that makes indoor pours comfortable for you and your workspace.
- MADE IN THE USA: Formulated and manufactured by Fiberglass Coatings, LLC in Saint Petersburg, Florida, with over 60 years of resin manufacturing expertise backing every batch.
Product Description
Superclear Liquid Glass Deep Pour Epoxy Resin 3 Gallons Kit is engineered for pours up to 2-4 inches in a single lift, giving woodworkers and artists exceptional depth without stacked pours. The crystal-clear finish is ideal for river tables, live edge wood slabs, molds, and artistic castings.
The low-viscosity formula lets air escape easily during cure for a smooth, bubble-free result. Rock-hard cure delivers the durability needed for functional tabletops, bar tops, and display pieces, and the surface stays clear under everyday use.
Made in the USA by Fiberglass Coatings, LLC in Saint Petersburg, Florida. Food-safe, zero-VOC, and backed by over 60 years of resin manufacturing expertise.
"Options Available
Size
- 0.75 Gallons Kit Without Pigment Pack
- 1.5 Gallon Kit, Without Pigment Pack
- 3 Gallon Resin Kit
- 15 Gallon
- 48 OZ Resin Kit
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