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The standard usage of unimould or most tooling gelcoats normally leads to a thickness of about 1mm. You ideally need your plug to be finished with that level of tolerance.
You can cheat and do a second coat of tooling gelcoat if you are worried.
To fix what youve done, you need to fill in with gelcoat again to seal the surface.
Ideally sand down 1mm deeper than you need the surface, lay in a good thick coat of tooling gelcoat then let it fully cure. Remember to properly key the surface to ensure a good bond.
Then you need to sand it smooth again.
Just be careful not to break through the gel around the edges of your repair!!!
As its a prototype it doesnt matter too much, however when making the plug for the finished item, get the tolerance as close as possible to save this issue occuring again.
I really wouldnt go playing with bodyfiller. Not sure how stable it is under vacuum pressure.
You could redo the entire surface with new gelcoat and as it begins to thicken when curing, level it out with a flat edge, but only do this if your part has the tolerance to accept the impact on the mould an extra thick layer of gel would have.
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