keep in mind before you get excited about epoxy degas its only useful for epoxies that are like corn syrup or thinner
If you have thick epoxies you need to mix them under vacuum (or use a mix nozzle, they are pretty good). You also need to pour them under vacuum for anything but the most liquidy ones. You need to be able to control pressure finely too because it will boil the epoxy.
If you don't follow these guidelines the effects are kind of dubious. Maybe its good for varnish but I would not get too excited about epoxy.
Have you ever put it under a vacuum in like a food sealer to see what it does?
my suggestion : get a EPX glue gun and a bunch of nozzles and forget about degas as much as you can. Sometimes stuff like JB weld you can spread it out over a wide surface and degas it I guess but its not recommended by epoxy pros to do so with such viscous fluids. I have a post about it somewhere in specifics. So basically if its too thin the benefits of degas are non, if its too thick it does not work, so it only is useful with a narrow epoxy range.
For casting something really thin, with weird geometry, a degas could help if the stuff is fluid enough, but if you want to cast with thicker stuff, you need to pour or possibly even mix both under vacuum, a rupe goldberg affair to the nth degree.
Make sure its useful to you before you invest in it, I was pretty frustrated. A ghetto apparatus can be made by gluing rubber to an acrylic sheet and putting it on top of a cooking pot without seams after smearing some grease on the lip.