I've read that's it hard to do but who knows
one thing that I thinks helps with the system three I use to prevent starved joints, ( I use a thinner product than most with no fillers) is to get the pieces good and warm, almost hot, like 150 F. before mixing up the pot. with the freshly mixed epoxy, I "prime" the hot pieces to get good as good a penetrationas possible and maybe prime again as the pieces cool. I set the pot itself and the remaining glue aside someplace cool. It helps if you pour, (not scrape) the mixing cup contents into a pan of some sort so that it can cool faster in your cooler location. the aversion I have to scraping the mixing cup is that the resin along the sides and bottom may not always be fully mixed at the proper ratios. same for the mixing stick.
when the pieces cool and the prime coat becomes tacky, maybe an hour interval depending, I get the resin in the pan (which hopefully has thickened some), and do the clamp up.
For general information:
the rubbery thing Hamish mentioned is often a mix with improper ratios between part A and the hardener. it's easy to do with small quantities. To Prevent this, it helps to mix by weight with a gram scale. (most products will give a spec for this, as it is not the same as by volume)