Almost anything you do WILL take off the top layer of paint and possibly drywall paper so be prepared to recover it with mud and sand it down.
There is no drywall glue. -If you are referring to mud (drywall compound), you scrape the lumps off at the end of each day and then wash your clothes. It always comes off.
If it is glued to the wall and the wall is drywall/sheetrock, then the paper of the drywall will come off with the mirror. Drywall/sheetrock repair will be necessary. Your best bet is to use a glaziers set of suctions cups. Buy pulling with enough pressure, the mirror will eventually break loose. It WILL damage the drywall, so either replace the mirror or the drywall. It is the mastic you are trying to break. Just before it comes loose, you will know it.
Use a dab of cooking oil and rub the glue off then clean the mirror with window cleaner to remove oil. No harm to the mirror, works on any type of glass.
It will, but PL Premium is better
To replace the side mirror of a '96 Honda Civic you will need to remove the two screws on the left and right side. Use a blade to scrape off the remaining glue. After purchasing a new mirror scrape off all remaining glue before applying the glue for the new mirror. Reattach and put the screws back in.
Pull it off! Seriously.... Its on with glue.
Razor blade scraper. That's if it is on the glass side.
Mirror- Quartz
Cut it off with a chainsaw then when finished, glue back on with one piece of gum. What? It's true! (If you want a broken mirror.) Improvement- u can use 2 pieces of gum or alternatively glue
Epoxy will do this .
If it's drywall almost nothing will remove it without marring the wall. Try small bits with different solvents.
Yes, there is a glue that can be used to re-glue a side car mirror. It is not an actual glue but more of an adhesive. That adhesive is construction silicone adhesive that is free of latex.