Hi,
I had decent results with this method:
01).
Lightly working the crack and direct surrounding with a dremel tool, literally digging the mold. Your mold is made of mat, so its not like you were gonna break cloth fibers, which are supposed to be structural. Deepness would depend on ur mold thickness and / or how extended is the crack.
02). Fill the "hole" with resin or gelcoat. When i used this method, it was on the gelcoat side, so I filled it with gelcoat. if you have to work on reinforcment side, i would suggest using filler powder added to your resin or even finely cut glass mat.
03). Put a non stick film over it, taking great care not to push thru, so you would have an "indent". As the "non stick film", I used aluminium tape that I waxed, turn it upside down so the alu would touch the gelcoat and not stick to the mold. The tacky side of the aluminium tape would stick to another aluminium tape that this time would be applied on the mold. Dunno if it make sense, english is not my main language.... Maybe there's an easier way to explain it

04). When cured, release the aluminium tape. You should see a recess of gelcoat / resin. Goal is to have it above mold surface, but as low as possible to minimize sanding work.
05). Sand and buff if necessary.
I put a wonderful and artistic Paint drawing to this post. One day it might be worth $ 10 Millions.... Or not.
i used this method on a mold to produce parts that would use sandable gelcoat (parts produced are supposed to be painted), and I could achieve decent results for that specific application. i bet a very good result can be achieved by just spending more time on finishing.
one thing i did try too is to bond steel extrusion structure to a larger mold to rigifify it. It never disappointed me so far. Dunno if it helps get rid of cracks but I never saw one appearing once structure was bonded to mold.
Did u try to use compressed air to give a little demolding persuasion? Sometimes it helps. Also, if you use pva, it can be dissolved with resonably hot water, which could help release the part or mold-from-the-plug a little bit easier.
All this is given regarding my humble experience, so a good idea would be to wait for more inputs, but i hope it helped.
 
 
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