Mike - I understand why you want the strength of the SLC for the open bays, but if I may be so bold to offer an alternative way to think about using it.
I too found it hard to keep the bubbles, wrinkles, etc out of the solid surfaces with SLC, especially down in the hot humid tropics.
The only reason to want the "strength" is for puncture resistance, right? Because plastic film really doesn't add any rigidity. So...
My solution is to put the SLC on FIRST and ONLY on the open bays, and only go about 1" over-size to the open bays to give it plenty of grip.
THEN treat the wing as if it's just a normal built up wing, and put on your 1 coat of full strength dope on the wood and film, then a 2nd and 3rd coat of thinned dope on ONLY the wood, (because the SLC doesn't absorb the dope and 1 coat is plenty) THEN put your silkspan/polyspan/doctor paper, whatever over top of that with some very thin dope and finish per usual.
It will easily hide the edge of where the SLC stops, and will give you a wing that will withstand your friends pens falling out of their pockets, etc. and anything probably right up to a combat mid-air. Heh heh.
EricV