Russ
No its a direct bond to the film. I have noticed that all the planes that this is recommended with are covered in Ultracote. I do not think that means anything regarding the material per se. I think its just that most of the top arf manufacturers are using it now. I think only Tower's companies (Great Planes, Top Flite, etc use monocote any more. Anyway, Tower's companies are not on the leading edge of much of anything and I am not sure what their recommendations are on their stuff since I do not fly any of their models. But Top RC companies like Extreme Flight, Sebart, and 3D Hobby Shop recommend this method on their planes. Andy Jesky, Multi time US NATS Pattern champ tells me he has been doing it for years.
I was however, assembling a BiSlob arf this weekend and noted that the CA did not bond to the film as quickly as it does with utracote. I do not know if the slob is ultracote yet or not. The new Advanced level planes like T-Rex and SV-11 are. The stuff on the slob acted more like Brodak's own stuff which I do not care for. I was very suprised when I started in RC about 10 years ago that a very common structural failure in RC was horizontal stab failure. Usually it takes the form of a fracture of the wood right at the fuse.... right where the film would get cut. Companies blaimed it on an occasional piece of softer wood than specified and I used to strut all my tailplanes back when I started because of it. Some of the manufacturers felt it was from a stress riser from the cut thru the film and into the wood when the covering was removed. Thus the current recommendations. I have not struted a tailplane for several years now, since I started gluing to the film. But I don't stress a plane heavily. I mostly fly extreme 3D with low speeds and a lot of throttle management. Even pattern now is flown at slow speeds. Its the sportfliers who only know one throttle setting, wide open and zoom from one end of the field cranking in tight radius knife edge turns at each end with no throttle change that stress them.