Quick Answer
Silicone rubber usually feels like it cures too fast when the working time is too short for the mold size, detail level, or production workflow. The most common causes are choosing a grade with unsuitable pot life, working in warm conditions, poor preparation before mixing, and using a cure speed that does not match the actual mold process. In most cases, the fix is not simply “slower silicone,” but better grade matching and better process control.
In This Guide
- The Real Problem: Working Time
- Quick Troubleshooting Guide
- The Grade May Not Fit the Mold
- Warm Conditions
- Poor Preparation
- How to Fix It
- FAQ
- Get Working-Time Recommendation
The Real Problem Is Usually Not Cure — It Is Working Time

When buyers say:
“My silicone cures too fast.”
What they often really mean is:
- The silicone thickens before the pour is finished
- Bubbles cannot be removed properly
- Detailed areas are not filled
- The job becomes rushed and stressful
- The mold result becomes inconsistent
That is not just a complaint about curse-speed. It is usually a working-time mismatch.
This distinction matters because many users try to solve the problem by only looking at final cure time, when the real problem is that the material is not giving them enough usable process time.
Quick Troubleshooting Guide

The grade is probably the problem when:
- The mold is large or highly detailed
- You always feel rushed before the pouring is complete
- The same operator has the same problem repeatedly
- The silicone works for small molds, but not larger ones
The process is probably the problem when:
- Preparation starts after mixing
- degassing setup is slow
- tools and master are not ready in advance
- The environment is too warm
- The job flow is inconsistent from batch to batch
Both may be the problem when:
- The chosen grade is fast, and the workflow is inefficient
- The mold is too complex for the available working time
- The operator wants fast demolding without enough open time
The Most Common Wrong Assumption
The most common wrong assumption is:
Fast cure means better productivity.
That sounds reasonable, but in real mold making, it is often false.
If the silicone cures fast, but:
- traps bubbles,
- causes rushed pouring,
- reduces detail quality,
- or creates inconsistent molds,
Then it is not improving efficiency.
It is increasing defects.
A good production rhythm is usually built on:
enough working time + acceptable demold time
not simply the fastest chemistry available.
1. The Grade May Not Fit the Mold
This is the first thing to check.
A silicone that works well for:
- a simple, small mold may not work at all for:
- a large textured mold
- a multi-part mold
- a mold that requires careful pouring
- a mold that needs longer degassing or setup time
Many buyers assume:
“If the silicone works once, it should work everywhere.”
That is not true.
The correct grade depends on how long the process actually takes, not just how quickly you want the mold to be ready.
2. Warm Conditions Make Fast Silicone Feel Even Faster
This is one of the most common real-world factors.
If the workshop, materials, or operating conditions are warm, many silicone systems feel much harder to control. Buyers often interpret this as a product defect when it is really a process environment issue.
If your silicone behaves normally in one season or room but feels impossible in another, temperature or operating environment may be part of the problem.
That does not mean the grade is wrong in every case.
It may mean the grade has too little working-time margin for your real conditions.
3. Poor Preparation Wastes the Most Valuable Minutes
This is where many avoidable problems begin.
If you mix first and then start:
- arranging tools
- checking the master
- finding containers
- setting up degassing
- adjusting the workspace
You are already losing the most valuable part of the process window.
This is why two users can work with the same silicone and get different results.
One has the master, tools, containers, and pouring plan ready before mixing.
The other starts organizing after mixing.
That is not a silicone problem.
That is a process discipline problem.
Not Sure Whether the Problem Is the Grade or the Workflow?
Some fast-cure complaints are really process issues. Others are a real grade mismatch. Send us your mold size, room conditions, and production steps, and we can help you think through the next move.
4. Large or Detailed Molds Need More Than “Fast Demold” Thinking
Many buyers ask for a fast cure because they want faster output.
That is understandable.
But if the mold is:
- large,
- highly detailed,
- slow to pour,
- or complex to degas,
then fast cure may become the wrong priority.
In those cases, a slightly slower but more usable working window often produces:
- better detail
- fewer bubbles
- less stress
- and more consistent results
That is usually better production, even if the final cure is not the fastest on paper.
5. What This Problem Usually Causes Downstream
When silicone cures too fast for the job, the visible result is not just speed pressure. It usually shows up as:
- trapped air
- rushed pouring
- incomplete wetting
- poor detail capture
- inconsistent mold surface
- unstable repeatability between batches
That is why this issue should be treated as a quality problem, not just a timing problem.
6. How to Fix It in the Right Order

A lot of buyers try random fixes.
A better order is this:
Step 1: Check whether the mold size and complexity match the grade
If not, review working time first.
Step 2: Check whether the process is prepared before mixing
If not, fix the workflow before blaming the material.
Step 3: Check environmental conditions
If heat is making the process tighter, the real usable window may be smaller than expected.
Step 4: Check whether you are over-prioritizing fast demolding
A slightly slower cure may give a much better overall result.
Step 5: Change grade only after the process logic is clear
Switching grades without understanding the real cause often creates a different problem instead of solving the first one.
7. What Buyers Misdiagnose Most Often
“The silicone is bad.”
Sometimes. But more often, the grade simply does not fit the workflow.
“I need the fastest cure possible.”
Usually not. You need the right balance between working time and demold time.
“We can just pour faster.”
Maybe for a simple mold. Not for every detailed or larger job.
“If it cured fast once, it should be fine every time.”
Not if the room, mold size, or preparation process changed.
8. When You Should Reconsider the Grade
You should seriously review the grade if:
- The same problem repeats across multiple jobs
- Larger molds always feel rushed
- Defect rate rises when job complexity increases
- Operators regularly struggle to finish pouring calmly
- Good results depend too much on ideal conditions
That usually means the current silicone is too narrow a fit for your actual production reality.
Final Answer
When silicone rubber cures too fast, the real problem is usually that the working time does not fit the mold and the workflow.
In most cases, the solution is:
- Choose a grade with a more suitable working time
- Prepare everything before mixing
- Reduce avoidable process delay
- and stop chasing a fast cure when what you really need is controlled molding
Better mold making usually comes from a calmer usable window, not just a faster chemical reaction.
FAQ
Why does RTV-2 silicone feel like it cures too fast?
Usually, because the working time is too short for the mold size, detail level, or actual workflow.
Is a fast cure always better for production?
No. If a fast cure shortens the usable pouring window too much, it often creates more defects and lower efficiency.
Can warm conditions make silicone cure feel faster?
Yes. Heat and working conditions can make many silicone systems harder to control.
Should I change grade if my silicone always feels rushed?
If the same issue keeps happening across similar jobs, yes, the grade may not fit your real process needs.
Need a More Usable Working-Time Window?
Tell us your mold type, process time, and target demold timing. We can help you compare a more practical RTV-2 silicone direction.