Hercmech:
I have tried (bought two bottles after reading it was the best thing since sliced bread) it but find it takes a long time to set up and does not hold all that well. I went back to superglue
What are you trying to glue with it?
I've found CA and GG have very different uses due to their properties.
I'd been using CA for a lot of uses where GG was really more appropriate, hence it's more-or-less replacement on my bench.
CA - generally excellent adhesive (sticks to other things) and cohesive (holds together) strength. Fast-curing. Excellent tensile (pulling) resilience. But because CA cures so hard, it's also exceptionally brittle. Not a huge problem if you've got a gear strut glued into a locating hole, or an entire wing glued to a fuselage. But for small bits - pitot tubes and grab rails and such - a very small glue area can be exceptionally vulnerable to shearing forces.
GG - Not as strong an adhesive as CA. It maintains a slight elasticity after curing, making it terrible for tensile applications (I tried to use it on some tension rigging on a biplane and it failed spectacularly) or for holding parts where there are opposing forces acting (I wouldn't use it to hold fuselage halves together, hold a stabilizer up, etc). But that elasticity also gives GG outstanding shear resilience, so for small fiddly bits that often get knocked off if stared at the wrong way, instead of flying off into nowhere due to a failed CA bond, they'll be laid flat, and can easily be stood back up.
GG is also an excellent replacement for white glue in general.
It's NOT a wonder glue. But for small parts that need to be placed, I find it far preferable to CA.