Andy in West Oz wrote:
I was under the impression the fuselages being built in NZ were using modern glue/s while staying faithful with everything else.
From Glyn Powell's
http://www.mosquitorestoration.com/Quote:
Unlike an all metal aircraft, with wooden construction one is not able to reuse parts of the wooden structure in the
restoration. The only option is to build the whole wooden airframe anew.
I am building absolutely faithfully to the original drawings and specifications. All original materials are used except
for the glue. I am using Epoxy which is a far superior glue and makes a beautiful job of it. As well as being stronger
it has excellent waterproofing qualities which overcomes one of the problems the Mosquito gave in service,
moisture ingress.
No idea if Resorcinol is an epoxy of course so "Epoxy" could be a bit of a generic term?
Somewhere in Mr. Powell's site he intimates he used the West System epoxy product, at least early in the project. Dunno if he still uses that particular product Dave. It's a common product here in the states to 'boat people' marketed by West Marine store chain. Epoxy and resorcinol are not related chemically, the latter is derived from formaldehyde and the former a man made copolymer.
EDIT for error.