Yes, swamp kauri is something special and having spent 100's of years underground there is no doubting it hardness and rot resistance. Swamp kauri is still dug up now and again and invariably ends up at auction where artists and craftsmen bid truly eye-watering amounts of money to aquire it. I envy you your bowl.
Kauri is an enigmatic timber in that you can never be sure what to expect from it - probably why I don't like it.
Concerning the models you may have noticed that in the pic of the two aeroplanes together the kauri one is to the rear and all the close ups are of the Rimu one. That's because I'm a bit ashamed of it. So here's a closeup of the kauri one.
View attachment 113997
The fuselage and engines are made of sap wood - that's the stuff that's so soft it takes offence just from you looking at it. The wings and tail plane are made of mottled kauri and I don't know exactly what that is. I think its the interface between the sap and the heart. Its the stuff that splits and chips. The propeller blades are from Rimu because try as I might I couldn't do them in kauri.
In the pioneer days NZ had only three exports - gold, kauri timber and kauri gum. The timber gave rise to the story that Nelson's Victory had kauri topmasts and the kauri gum was in high demand for many reasons but the only one I know was that it was used in the manufacture of high grade varnishes. Gum digging was the province of the Dalmation immigrants of which there were many thousands. Tools of the trade were a spade and a long metal rod with which they probed the ground where ancient forests once stood and then dug when the rod hit something. The transient gum diggers were so synonymous with NZ's early colonial history that the word has entered into the vernacular. Got a bad tooth? You don't make an appointment with the dentist - you go to see the gum digger.
In the early 70's the child bride and I bought an acre of rural land and it had a very dilapidated tiny gum diggers cottage on it, built of kauri. I got a building inspector to give an opinion as to whether or not it could be saved. And his opinion was it was only all the woodworm holding hands that was preventing it from falling down. So the timber is prone to infestation.
Concerning rot I have no first hand experience but as a boy I used to haunt all the local boat builders and I can still smell the kerosene. It was mixed with copper naphtenate and lathered all over the kauri boats under construction. This was a rot preventative and the smell lasted on board for years so I suppose sap kauri was prone to rot if untreated. Heart, though was durable and there is a small fleet of 'A' class yachts still racing today, well over a hundred and twenty years after their launch date. Heart and sap, good and bad,
Sorry, I've rambled on again - never ask and old man a question...