Simple wood glue is Polyvinyl acetate which is basically white 'school ' glue. There are many better wood adhesives.
White glue will soak into the pores of wood and bond well with it.
Only if the medium to be glued is wood or paper.
Depends on whether salt is soluble in the glue or not. Salt would be soluble in Ordinary white wood glue, for instance. But not in epoxy glue. In epoxy, it'd simply turn the glue gritty. In wood glue it'd dissolve.
Yes, most wood glues will dissolve in water.
I would try a wood chisel. Try to get the point under an edge of the glue and pry it up.
- All white or yellow wood and paper glues are PVA based.
Any white glue.
White glue, yellow glue and fish glue.
White glue will soak into the pores of wood and bond well with it.
Elmer's glue or any other good white glue.
Carpenter's Yellow glue, an improvement of white glue, is the best for wood to wood .I use Titebond ll and it's extremely good.
Most glue is an adhesive such as Elmers school glue, puzzle glue, and wood glue
Elmer's glue or any white glue will do this.
White glue is strongest at room temperature when applied to moderately porous wood surfaces. It does not adhere well on shiny wood surfaces.
Many companies make "wood glue", specifically to be used on wood projects. Buy a good brand, such as Elmer's Wood Glue.
I only use white glue for paper or lightweight wood 'fixes'. - Heavier wood repairs need yellow carpenter's glue and possibly 'biscuit' joints. - Metals and plastics of any kind are NOT at all suitable for white glue.
Only if the medium to be glued is wood or paper.