Posted by not done it yet on 19/02/2022 13:39:00:
Surely this hinges on the reliability of the product? Can’t imagine NASA using a cheaply specified adhesives, sealants etc..
Cheap may be good enough for most, but not for the most highly stressed items which simply must have a very low failure rate over an extended period – sometimes approaching zero and years of continuous operation – such as space-bound items, or perhaps F1 power-plants, for instance.
Hard to tell what makes one product better than another these days. Cyanoacrylate was first marketed as a super glue seventy years ago. The chemical is well outside the patent protection period and even if what it was and how it was made were kept private there are no Trade Secrets that can't be penetrated by scientific method.
Cyanoacrylate isn't difficult to synthesise and globalisation means that the owner of a clever western process might choose to have it applied abroad where costs are lower. And many countries classified as "Developing" in my youth are now more-or-less fully "Developed", and inventive in their own right.
Super-glue might be costly because chaps believe in brand-names and like things to be reassuring expensive, not realising pound-shop glue might be identical. Or it might be costly because it's been made to extra-high purity with property improving additives, tested, has been carefully stored and transported, and is traceable. Cheap glue might be proper glue nearing best before date, or it might be fake. The retail buying public rarely gets to know exactly what we're receiving. Industry are more informed and careful and absorb the extra cost of certification by bulk buying.
All the super-glue I use goes off quickly once the container is opened. Doesn't matter if the glue was cheap or expensive. All glues dislike dirt equally too. That said, although I use cheapest possible super-glue when longevity doesn't matter, I buy new reputable brand glue when it does. Just in case…
Where stuff was made, brand-names, hearsay reputation and cost do not guarantee 'quality'. Life is more complicated than that.
Dave