Malcolm
Not wishing to piddle on your fire, but I'd strongly advise AGAINST using the West 105 resin for skinning, especially if the pack you have has the # 205 fast catalyst
West resin produces quite a lot of wax when it cures.....this is a REAL problem. Once the resin is cured, both the 1st coat that's used to apply the cloth & the 2nd that's used to fill the weave......you will notice a waxy residue on the surface. Not only does this make rubbing down more difficult as it clogs the paper, but if you don't remove the wax from the 1st coat prior to applying the 2nd, the 2nd coat is unlikely to get a good bond + if you don't remove every last trace of this on the 2nd coat prior to primer, you'll get all sorts of orange peel/fish eye problems with your primer as it reacts with the contamination of the wax on the surface.
Some resins produce this wax, others don't......West in my experience is one of the worst.
The 2nd issue is with the # 205 Fast catalyst......it gives a pretty short working pot life.....no more than 15-20 mins which isn't long when you're glassing large areas such as the Beverley. The slow catalyst is a lot better giving more working time, but it still doesn't get away from the wax problem.
3rd issue I have found with the West is it's consistency....it's very thick to work with, doesn't flow well and is difficult to apply to 48g cloth 'lightly' so as not to add excess weight. Warming the resin slightly improves this, but reduces working pot life as adding heat speeds up the cure. Adding an epoxy thinner can also work, but I've always found adding a thinner destroys the properties of the resin & it never dries quite as hard as it does if un-thinned. Soft, slightly rubbery resin is a pain to rub down smooth as it clogs & balls on the surface......rock hard resin is easy as it forms a nice fine dust & doesn't clog. Simple facts are, there are 'thinner' resins about that are far easier to work with that require no thinning.
I also note to have a stash of large graduated mixing pots there.......use these ONLY to mix the resin, do not leave the resin in them whilst working. To improve pot life, you need to decant the resin out into a large flat vessel with maximum surface area and minimum resin depth. If you leave it in a small vessel with limited area and more depth, the catalysed resin will start to produce it's own heat speeding the cure time and reducing pot life.........in a large shallow vessel, this problem is reduced.
You may find this 'How To' tutorial helpful if you've never glassed a model before......
http://www.fighteraces.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/glassing_article.pdfHope some of this is of use...............
Phil