Get the two pieces of wood so that the edges match. Best is if you can make them dead straight. I use my longest sanding board to get part way there, then hand-tune by holding the joint up to the light and sanding down the high spots. Note that you can't trust them to be straight from the box: it's balsa
wood, and wood changes shape over time.
If I had a joiner I'd use that, but I have a typical model shop.
Glue it up on your flattest surface (I scored some 1/2" thick glass, but whatever you use for a building board will do). I typically use Titebond for this, but you have lots of options.
If you really want to do a good job, use four pieces of 1/4" wood (assuming a 1/2" thick fuselage) and laminate them, with the fore-aft parting lines in different spots between the top and the bottom. You'll spend more time joining, but you'll get a stronger, stiffer fuselage. Again, I'd use Titebond (in a really thin layer between the laminations), but if you do you want to give the fuselage a lot of time to dry -- I give it at least a week before paint, and I'm happier if it takes two or three. If you build the fuselage first then set it aside that would be good.
Or if it fits the competition category you're building for, and you don't mind spending an inordinate amount of time building a flat slab of fuselage, build it up and make it thicker than 1/2, like I did in
this thread.
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