Hi Warren, many thanks for the quick response mate.
Interesting that you should mention 'polish', small bubbles being filled with polish!
Could well be mate.
I found it rather strange that during the entire process of making resin tooling plugs, you must first make your positive plug ( PU foam and Pattern-Coat Primer ), then buff to a very high polish, glass like finish. You then make your negative silicone mould, then cast your Epoxy Tooling Resin into that silicone mould.
PU foam and Pattern-Coat Primer >>

Unfortunately EC's Ease Release isn't compatible with the CS25 Silicone, so you have to use the MANN 200 release agent, but as it's states on the aerosol can "Will give a satin finish", and it does, a nice matt finish that needs an awful lot of polishing! In fact, just polishing doesn't actually give you your high gloss finish back. In my case I had to use Farecla cutting compound!
I begin with Farecla G10 and then move onto Farecla G3 which is much finer, then I can move onto the polishing stage ................ works quite well actually

I didn't degas the Vac-Cast Epoxy resin as it says it's not necessary, now having seen the results I would say that it does need degassing! Right from the get go I knew I was going to vacuum form transparent plastics like PETG and Polycarbonate ( automotive headlight covers ), so I really should of degassed the resin. I won't be making that mistake again!
It makes great sense in what you're saying about tiny bubbles being filled with polish ( or Farecla in my case ), you certainly can't feel the tiny whites specks, that's probably because they're filled with hardened rubbing compound!
What other methods do people use to 'polish' to a very high gloss resin tooling plugs?
Just to add to that ..................... I've just ordered from eBay ( ebay France ), some 'Micro-Mesh' abrasive pads, fine grits from 1500 to 12000 grit.
Anybody here used them before?
Thanks for your time guys

TURK
T4 Concepts