Epoxy or silicone would be best
Afraid not. Vinyl liner pools are built using "concrete receptor coping" into which the deck is poured. It also contains the "bead receptor" that the vinyl liner attaches to. Actually YES it can. You would want to do this during a liner replacement but it can be done. You would have to remove the concrete from around the perimeter of the pool, remove/ replace the "concrete receptor coping" with bead receiver, aluminum extrusion, form/pour a bond beam, then lay your stone. Not really an easy do it yourself job but it can be done.
"Rolled Steel joist", often referred to as an "I Beam" A metal beam used in constriction of buildings.
Usually vinyl from what I've heard
Laser Beam
Metal honeycomb board is made of high-quality fluorocarbon lacquer rolling aluminum panel ,with models of various specifications aluminum alloy honeycomb core sandwich,with high quality medium temperature curing SY-24B aviation film adhesive ,finally selected by oxidation or paint metal plate as base plate.Honeycomb structure design idea source beam structure:board table corresponds to the I-beam wing plates,mainly under normal stress;intermediate cellular layer is equivalent to H beam web,mainly bear shearing stress.
with a triple beam scale
beam
A beam has a metal frame, then there is a layer of foam and finally it is covered in leather.
A flush beam is a beam that is flush the the surrounding floor or ceiling joists. Often held in place with metal connectors. It could be a steel 'I' beam, lvl, built up wood. It is used when ceiling height is needed to be maintained.
There are basically two methods, firstly you could use a very strong form of adhesive, but for obvious reasons this is not recommended, secondly, fasteners are generally used like bolts or another piece of metal strapping the wood that gets bolted on. Keep in mind that wood absorbs moisture and metal rusts, so make sure you seal both materials well.
A laser.
Everywhere. You can make them by bouncing an electron beam off a metal plate.