Resin Mixing Calculator
Calculate resin-to-hardener ratio by weight or volume for any project
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About Resin Mixing Calculator
Nail Your Resin Ratios for Crystal-Clear Results
Epoxy resin is beautifully unforgiving. Mix it at the correct ratio and you get a glass-like, rock-hard finish. Mix it wrong - even slightly - and you end up with a sticky, bendy, or cloudy mess that never fully cures. The Resin Mixing Calculator ensures you measure the exact amounts of resin and hardener every single time, whether you are casting jewelry, coating a table, or embedding objects in clear blocks.
Most two-part epoxy systems use a 1:1 or 2:1 ratio by volume, but some specialty resins use ratios like 100:45 by weight. This calculator handles any ratio in any unit - volume or weight - so you are never guessing regardless of which brand you are working with.
How to Use the Resin Mixing Calculator
Select whether your resin system measures by volume or weight. Enter the manufacturer-specified ratio (check the technical data sheet if you are unsure). Then enter either the total amount you want to mix or the volume of the mold you need to fill. The tool breaks down exactly how much Part A (resin) and Part B (hardener) to measure.
For mold filling, enter the mold dimensions and the calculator computes the volume automatically, then converts to the weight or volume of each part. No more pouring into the mold to see how much it holds and then trying to back-calculate the components.
Who Relies on This Tool
Resin artists creating jewelry, coasters, trays, and decorative pieces. Even a small ratio error in a jewelry mold means a ruined piece and wasted pigments, glitter, and dried flowers that you embedded. The calculator protects your materials and your time.
Woodworkers doing river tables and epoxy inlays. These projects consume large quantities of resin - sometimes gallons - and the cost of getting the ratio wrong at that scale is substantial. Accurate mixing also prevents soft spots that ruin the sanding and finishing process.
Industrial and marine users applying fiberglass layups, gelcoats, or structural adhesives. These applications have safety implications - an improperly cured epoxy joint on a boat hull is not just ugly, it is dangerous. Precise ratios are non-negotiable.
Practical Mixing Scenarios
You are casting a 12-inch by 8-inch by 2-inch river table channel. The resin mixing calculator computes the cavity volume at approximately 192 cubic inches, converts to fluid ounces, and splits it according to your resin brand ratio of 1:1 by volume. You know before you start that you need about 42 ounces of each part - and that the single 64-ounce kit you bought will not be enough.
Or you are filling 30 small pendant molds for a craft fair. Each mold is tiny, but the accumulated volume adds up. The calculator gives you a single combined measurement so you can mix one batch efficiently rather than mixing individually for each mold.
Tips for Perfect Resin Every Time
Mix thoroughly for at least three minutes, scraping the sides and bottom of the cup. Under-mixing is the most common cause of sticky spots, not ratio errors. But ratio errors make under-mixing even more damaging, so get both right.
For weight-based ratios, use a digital scale with 0.1-gram precision. Kitchen scales that round to the nearest gram are not accurate enough for small batches. The calculator gives you precise numbers - your measuring equipment should match that precision.
Temperature matters enormously. Cold resin is thick and hard to mix evenly. Warm both parts to about 75-80 degrees Fahrenheit before mixing for the best flow and self-leveling. The calculator handles the math; temperature management is on you.
Always do a small test pour with a new resin brand before committing to a large project. Cure times, viscosity, and yellowing behavior vary between manufacturers even at the same ratio. Let the test piece cure fully before judging the result.
Everything is calculated privately in your browser. No data leaves your device. Measure with confidence and pour with precision.