As mentioned in the other thread, I had to cut up my airplane and repair it. For some reason, people always ask about how to repair epoxy (SuperPoxy or Klass-Kote). It's really simple - you sand it down to primer, fill it, prime it, sand the primer, paint it, color-sand, and clear. You don't have to worry about material incompatibility, everything sticks to everything else very well.
The only problem I have ever had with repair is matching the color, particularly white, which turns gray and then yellows due to sun exposure. I have been able to replicate the color pretty well by using the color straight out of the can, and then mixing Klass-Kote and Superpoxy hardeners. The Klass-Kote is pretty fresh and will only turn a medium brown/dark amber after it is opened. The SuperPoxy is at least 30 years old and nearly very dark amber bordering on opaque brown, partly from oxidation and the can rusting.
On this one the filler is mostly Bondo which cures in 15 minutes instead of SuperFil which takes overnight - because I didn't have time to wait! Note also that I was not concerned about the weight, because I had nearly an ounce of weight on there before. But, used properly (to fill in very shallow discontinuities and cracks as a "skim", it's not any worse than anything else. Sandpaper reduced the need for thick coats of any filler.
This time the paint was under the stab, and only two years old, so it hasn't yellowed too much. I used about 85% Klass-Kote and 15% SuperPoxy, and the match was very good, the biggest tip-off being that the repair is much more opaque than the rest of the paint and has no pinholes.
Point being, it really could not have been simpler, you can be pretty cavalier about it, its dead easy.
I didn't take too many pictures since I was in a big hurry, but below -
cut off and reassembled
primed
painted with color match
clear and about half rubbed out
Brett