I've done 2 boats and 2 tears using epoxy...you can finish off wood just like a car hood...I apply it with a roller and tip it off with a roller cut in half held in a spring clamp...just remember, what ever you do underneath, will show through when you paint it...bad job on the bondo/sand scratches, etc, will result in a bad job in the paint...you can shoot paint directly on top of epoxy also, no primer needed, I've done it a bunch and it's according to the tech support guys at West Systems, any bondo work however will need to be sealed off prior to any automotive type paint applied over it...If you want a "bright" finish, meaning clear on top of the wood, again, any left over sand scratches, pencil line etc, bad stain or dye is going to show.. If you want to seal the luan for paint application and aren't worried about the grain, a reduced coat of lacquer sprayed will seal it off and you can shoot paint or build up layers of varnish directly over that...can't put a water, or thinner based varathane down and then shoot automotive paint over that...the reducers in the paint are too hot for the first coat and it will craze/ bubble/ and lift...and that's my experience...PS Cracker...it does have enough body to do what you want...but it ain't going to happen in 1 or 2 coats...on boats, I do about 6 coats of rolled/sanded epoxy and then 2 coats of clear...on the tear sides 4 coats epoxy and 2 clear...the more time you put into it, the better it'll look, you just decide when enough is enough...no real short cuts on this sort of thing... and after all...you put all the time and effort into it, do you really want to cut a corner and end up with something that you aren't happy with? It looks great!!! give it the finish it deserves!!!

Doug