Golly blakmax...I do agree and that is where our product differ to the world...we have a bit more tolerance of damaged bondline in most of our application. I gotta tell ya, if I saw the technician walking down the wing bouncing a golfball, I would probably get off the plane.
The flip side is, my internal view anyway, is that ultrasonic is nothing more thn a more accurate better monitored tap test...using computers to read high energy "tapping". This is ultimately the third can...Even the best we have, though good, cannot detect everything AND certainly cannot tell a tech on the ground that "well, yes it has a spot here see, but it is not that bad and the structure is fine"...Even Rutan uses a safety factor...albeit small.
It ultimately is that hard part of anisotropic materials...I have had the situation where a detected minor defect was OK as long as it was in the right orientation and location. Don't even start with process induced microcracking at the interphase. I had a lay up once where we had the wrong fiber sizing, everything looked right, just didn't work right when loaded.
I guess the end is that each test is good for certain things, but none will cover all and not everything can be detected.

The CCM at University of Delaware has done a lot with embedding strain grids (Smart Composites)in civil structures to detect when things are moving and failing. In the long run I think that self monitoring systems will be key. Consider that a series of embedded strain gauges in a wing could be monitored in the beginning of service to create a "normal" and over time a sudden change would indicate pending failure.
Don't know, but I agree that there is much to learn yet.
Take Care
PanelGuy