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My guess its the foam roller hooking the slivers of ply,when you wiped it with a wet cloth this raised the grain and the roller is catching it.
Stand back 4 feet it will go away:).If its that bad then the only way is to sand it as its under the goo,watch out you may just do more harm then good.If your planning on glassing over it don't worry about it.
Water and epoxy get along worse than cats and dogs! If you didn't get white blushing yours probably was sufficiently dried and will be OK structurally.
I like to flow coat my panels that are to remain bright finish and not get fiberglass cloth. This is done by laying the panel dead flat, pouring the epoxy out onto the surface and spreading it out evenly with a finely notched plastic spreader, then judiciously and slowly rolling it with a thin foam roller. Roll it too fast and you will get bubbles. Do it right and you will get a mirror finish after it flows out level.
Epoxy resin on plywood isn't worth much without glass fabric to go with. I costs a lot. Adds weight and accomplishes little. It will still crack eventually. Water will soak into the wood in the immediate area of the crack, which will turn the wood black and make the crack bigger. It's best to use just oil. Or to use resin and glass fabric together. Epoxy resin without fabric does more harm than good.
Randy,
In the future when cleaning a large surface (plywood) to be epoxy coated or a joint surface when joining two or more pieces. Use alcohol (rubbing) and a white paper towel to remove the remaining wood dust. West System has an article in a previous edition of their EpoxyWorks Magazine showing the results of a study they did. The result is a stronger joint.
Hope this helps,
Dorf
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