Yes, 711 cement should do it.
Unless you have a lab you cannot make PVC glue. Also, it is so cheap to buy at any plumbing store, why bother.
There is not much difference, however, plumbing PVC has a thicker wall, for obvious reasons, namely, water pressure.
Best selection is in a large plumbing supplier, or Home Depot.
electrical PVC is not bar pressure tested and is therefore quite thin and does not contain certain chemicles in the pipe to stop water corrosion where as plumbing PVC pipes are tested and generally thicker and must be in order to prevent burst pipes and pressure spikes
PVC stands for Poly Vinyl Chloride. It is the chemical compounds that make up plastic. In short PVC conduit is plastic pipe that is used in the electrical trade. The lengths are glued together with PVC glue and usually used for underground electrical systems. It comes Schedule 40 and Schedule 80 (thicker) and comes in the same sizes as metal conduit Electrical PVC conduit is usually grey; plumbing PVC pipe is usually white
No you shouldn't. It will fail inspection. Use electrical (grey) conduit. It is about the same price and has the proper electrical insulating properties required. The thicker PVC(schedule 40) is best, although schedule 80 is acceptable. (Schedule 40 is required for underground service feeders.)
PVC is commonly used in plumbing
If it's a PVC conduit, yes it will work. I would test on a sample first, to be certain.
its glue spicily for pvc pipe only
Yes, you can. If possible, first prime the PVC with 'purple primer' ( from plumbing supply store) then use PL200 to join the pieces. Clamp them for 3-4 hours for a strong joint.
Pvc glue cost about $6.49 a can about 8 ounces.
There is no PCV plumbing there is how ever PVC piping and fittings