Many of you may have read about the problems I had with Varthane spar urethane over RAKA epoxy on my hatch (see post on "varnish epoxy compatibility problem")... It did not cure properly and had to be scrubbed and sanded off. What a Mess!! Well I have two new coats of epoxy on the hatch and by weeks end the entire camper should receive the last epoxy cote. This time I am in no hurry to get the topcoat on. In fact I might wait until next summer unless I can score time in a heated shop this winter.
After my experience with the Spar Urethane I did some more research and I really don't know where to go from here. Despite using UV stable epoxy I want to topcoat it with another clear finish for increased UV protection. Here are the options as I see it:
Spar Urethane (oil or water based) --- These are relatively inexpensive ($30 - $50 per gallon). As I understand it these are basically a UV stable polyurethane and don't share much in common with the traditional spar varnish. The problem with poly is that it is not very repairable. Also, my first experience with the stuff was less than satisfactory

Hardware store spar varnish --- relatively inexpensive at $40 or $50 per gallon. From what I have read on the wooden boat sites they are absolute garbage or only slightly less durable than the stuff that costs twice as much. As I looked into it many brands are dropping like flies. Sherwin Williams-gone, Benjamin Moore-gone. Every time I read about one that performed well I find it's no longer in production. Apparently they are being dropped in favor of the aforementioned Spar Urethanes.
Specialty Marine Spar Varnish --- Again going to the wooden boat sites these are either the best thing since sliced bread or a complete waste of money. And at $120 to $150 per gallon you gotta think twice! Now I assume they are the best you can get but I'm not building a salt-water sailing rig that has to withstand the Caribbean sun 365 days a year... we are talking a camper that will be out two or three weeks a year and garaged in the interim. The benefit of real spar varnish (cheap or expensive) seems to be that it is forgiving and repairable.
Automotive clear coat --- This was suggested by one of the paint store franchises that no longer makes a spar varnish. I know nothing of automotive finishes and have no way of applying them.
My camper has about 610 square feet of surface to cover. Most of the brushable finishes say they will cover approximately 400 square feet per gallon. That's 4.5 gallons for three cotes. I don't know if my budget can handle the high end marine varnish, Is there a good inexpensive varnish out there? If appropriate, what would an automotive finish cost?
Your experiences and advise would be greatly appreciated
