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🖌️ Elevate your resin game with molds that mean business!
The ModWgGuo 2-piece epoxy resin table mold set features two large, rectangular, heavy-duty molds made from durable polypropylene. Sized at 15.7x9.8x3 inches and 11.4x7.5x2 inches, these reusable molds require no silicone sealing and offer smooth, easy demolding with a 2-degree outward tilt and included rubber mallet. Ideal for crafting river tables, cutting boards, and art panels, they combine professional-grade sturdiness with lightweight convenience for versatile creative projects.








| ASIN | B0CWQ3C8SP |
| Brand Name | ModWgGuo |
| Color | white |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (271) |
| Item Dimensions | 27.9 x 12.7 x 2.5 centimeters |
| Item Type Name | 114mold |
| Manufacturer | ModWgGuo |
| Material Type | Resin |
| Shape | Rectangular |
B**K
Works great
J**S
Los moldes funcionan bien para lo que se diseñaron, son robustos y evitan que la placa de resina se ondule por el peso.
C**A
Use mold release and you’re good to go! Very impressed with these. FYI this was with Alumilite Deep Pour and left alone for 7 days to cure.
R**B
Worked extremely well the mallet that comes with it not so well. But that may be user error. I forgot to put enough release on it. And was hitting hard and the top of it came off. Over great product worth the money
R**N
This is pretty easy to use and reuse. I'm up to at least 6 cycles so far and I'm sure I'll get much more out of it, maybe a lifetime. I use the form for live edge joining, so the majority of the form is filled with wood and the minority with epoxy in my applications. There are a couple of things to ensure the form works great: First, always spray one some mold release. I've never forgotten yet, and have had zero issues getting it out after curing. Most of the time, I don't even need the rubber mallet. Second, you'll need a good solution to hold down your wood so it doesn't float when you pour the epoxy. If you just try to clamp the wood down in a couple places, the base of the form will warp a bit leaving you a lot of effort to get your product flat after the epoxy cures. This is the reason I subtracted one star in the rating. I overcame the issue by cutting a 3/4" thick piece of MDF to the same size of the form, placing the MDF under the form, and clamping the wood down using the MDF as a flat reference. This is easy to do if I raise the MDF up under a couple of short 4x4's. I also level the whole thing with small shims or popsicle sticks so the epoxy levels out. If the form was thicker in the base, I might not have needed the MDF. But then the price might have been much more and MDF isn't very expensive. You can use anything that is stout and flat, but unless you like a lot of sanding or own a big planer, you'll want to put something under it! One other annoyance others have noted: The base and the walls of the mold are slightly curved where they meet. So if you are trying to get a 90 degree joined piece of wood flush to a wall, you can't. I found I can easily overcome this issue by using a 1/8" roundover bit on a router on any edge of wood I want flush to a wall of the mold. I have a router table so it really doesn't take much time and saves epoxy.
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