Don't forget the 2-pot polyurethane (PU) paint.
I’ve found 2-pot polyurethane paint or varnish to be very good. It appears to stick to anything from old topcoat, bare grp, glass-in-epoxy, and bare wood, and even bare aluminium.
I painted the deck and topsides on Malena (1990-91) and the hull stayed clean and shiny without the normal need for scrubbing and polishing. The paint crept into any crack or void - I actually painted the deck of Malena watertight.
The second (wooden) mast of Malena was first covered in West epoxy and then given 6--7(?) coats of West’s own polyurethane, clear varnish. After about 13-14 years, one could see that the sunny side of the mast was starting to delaminate. I think the varnish was still ok, but it had let through enough UV rays to kill the epoxy.
Therefore, when finishing Johanna’s mast after the same glass-epoxy sheathing, I used a white paint version of 2-pot PU-paint (not from West).
Broremann’s wooden mast and the wooden top mast sections of Frøken Sørensen and Ingeborg were painted in either clear or white 2-pot PU, with no glass or epoxy involved (except in the metal-wood joints). Ingeborg first got five coats of clear varnish and then three coats of white. Upon inspection of the top mast this summer, I found this coating (5 years old) to be like new.
An experiment: We found a piece of plywood and glassed half of a strip of glass tape to it, using PU paint as resin. The paint sucked in and bonded perfectly well to the plywood.
Conclusion: If I ever am to do a small glass sheathing job, I will use PU as resin. It sticks like glue (it is glue), it is tough without getting brittle, and it resists UV very well.
Arne