John,
Thinking about it,
As a Brit, you can probably duplicate the work of BW Staynes because you can get peculiarly British materials. Staynes used 10-12 mm Diabase Hornfels from Penlee. It looks like a googling shows that the Penlee quary has closed however. He also used No. 50-100 silica sand, pulverized fuel ash (fly ash here in the states) and Huntsman GY250 epoxy with HY830 and HY850 hardeners which are still in the Huntsman catalog and formulary.
BW Staynes got his PhD at Brighton Polytecnic. I have no idea if this is close to you as I am embarassed to admit my geography isn't good for the UK and I don't know where you are specifically, but I bet you have a much better chance of getting a hold of his thesis than us Americans do.
The info on the thesis in the paper I was reading is: STAYNES, B.W. Epoxide resin concrete as a structural material with special reference to the limit state design philosophy. Ph.D. thesis- National Council of Academic Awards, May 1972.
The only copy I can find of this thesis using the worldcat online search tool is in the University of Hong Kong. . . so It's probably the type of thing that's not exactly popular.
I am with you on the may have missed something part on the original Gamski and Gupta comment about the Specific Surface Area Based epoxy estimation. I cried BS myself after bruno first posted the paper from Gupta but after reading more, I think they may have something. Neither Gupta who cited it and led me to the idea nor Gamski who postulated it gave didly squat worth of useful explanation of the concept in either of their papers other than the equation which is shall we say a bit tricky to interpret. . .
Cheers and thanks for reading through my torturous post,
Cameron