Dings happen. Even the most careful surfer gets a rock nick, a fin box crack, or a pressure dent from stacking boards on a roof rack. At El Paredón, where boards get transported in tuk-tuks and stacked against wooden walls, small dings are routine maintenance. A UV-cure resin ding repair kit lets you fix most damage in 10 minutes with no mixing, no mess, and no waiting overnight for epoxy to cure.
The key to a good ding repair kit is UV-cure technology: you apply the resin, shape it, and hold it in the Guatemalan sun for 3–5 minutes — done. No chemical hardeners required. For deeper structural damage (large breaks, fin box separations), a full epoxy kit is needed, but UV kits handle 90% of real-world ding repairs perfectly. Here are the best options in 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I repair a surfboard ding myself?
Yes — UV-cure resin kits require no special skills. Clean the ding, let it dry completely, apply resin, shape with a spatula, and hold in direct sunlight for 3–5 minutes. Sand smooth when cured. Most repairs take under 15 minutes.
Should I use UV-cure or two-part epoxy for ding repair?
UV-cure for most repairs: faster, simpler, no mixing errors. Two-part epoxy for major structural damage (broken rails, large delaminations, or fin box removal). In Guatemala's intense sun, UV cure is ideal.
What if my board takes on water from an unsealed ding?
A waterlogged board is heavy and won't respond well. After surfing with an open ding, stand the board nose-down in the sun for a day or two to let moisture evaporate before sealing it. Don't skip this step or you'll trap moisture inside.
Can I repair a board in the sun at El Paredón?
El Paredón is ideal for UV ding repair — intense tropical sun cures UV resin in 2–4 minutes. Avoid direct contact with sand in the resin before curing, and keep the repair area shade-free during cure time.
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