Yes, PVA is excellent for sticking to chipboard.
Put pva glue over it and let it dry!
Essentially, you fit floor boards to the ceiling joists. The more common option is to use 4' by 2' chipboard tongue and groove floorboards, using screws and wood glue on the joints. This will stop creaking.
About a quarter of it.
If you are referring to Mapei Unibond then you put tiles on within 15 minutes. However, 'Unibond' is a different product in Britain and north America, and in fact I'm sure neither one is a PVA glue. -Check carefully on your container.
People do not generally put PVA glue onto walls. We can't ask questions , so you must figure out why you did that, and how you are going to get around the problem it's now causing.
some people told me to put pva glue to the mix
mix borax and pva glue and green food colouring the more borax you put in the thicker itt gets borax:pva 1:6
I am just trying to find out the same thing. I know it's produced by reacting the monomer vinyl alcohol (CH2-CHOH) with acetic acid.You can make PVA gl ue by adding flour water and mix it together and and put it in the fridge when you need it take it out of the fridge and add little water to it so it looks like it's running.Yoo can also make pva glue by mixing flour and milk to make a thicker paste :D
you will needborax (half a cup)PVA glue (half a cup)food colouring (if you want)stick or skewer (to stir)small cup or bowl (to mix in)first put half a cup of pva glue in a cup or small bowl , see throgh PVA glue works best because it becomes glittery but if you dont have see through PVA glue then just use normal PVA glue.then add 3 drops of food colouring of what ever colour you want , if you want to mix 2 colours together then add 2 drops of one colour and 1 drop of the othe colourmix with a skeweradd the borax a bit by bit and mixkeep mixingtake it out of the cupenjoy
Use Flour and milk add tiny bit of sugar and 1 egg then add Mix until ready then put it in the fridgeANS 2 - You can NOT make PVA glue at home (unless you have a secret chemistry lab that your mother doesn't know about) !
Yes. But what is on back of bookshelves now? If you can remove the shelves, glue fabric directly to shelf back, reinstall the shelves and save the extra work and expense. If shelves not removable, cut fabric to fit and do the same thing. I don't see the value of chipboard simply as something to first attach the fabric to.
You could use duct tape to put it together, or hot glue it.