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Yes you can if you first rough up the ceramic by sanding it. Use a vinyl mastic like Mapei Unibond.
A propriatory epoxy resin. Check out your hardware/do it yourself store.
Depends on the surface you are sticking it to. I would start with a tile mastic glue.
All the answers I see refer to the newer 'vinyl windows' not the older lanai windows that held vinyl fabric instead of glass. I also need info on this...
Not directly as the ceramic tiles will soon show through the vinyl flooring. If the ceramics are laid on a wooden floor, you must take up the tiles and overboard with 6mm plywood. If the tiles are on a concrete floor, you can leave them down and lay a latex screed on top to provide you with a smooth floor for your vinyl
I wouldn't it might damage your records I would use alcohol instead it won't harm your vinyl records.
When any material is welded it is melted. To join two pieces the edges are melted and allowed to fuse together or a filler is added, usually of the same material.
No, vinyl is unaffected by moisture as it does not retain or is generally affected by moisture. If this is occurring to you, it may be that the subfloor underneath the solid vinyl plank (or whatever is underneath the plank) is peaking instead.
It depends where the lino is. If it is a trailer, yes, use glue. Lots of glue.If its in your house, I think gluing around the edges is a good idea, if not the whole thing.ANS 2 -The location doesn't matter. If it's good quality thick lino it will not need gluing . If it's cheap thin lino then it must be glued with a good vinyl glue.
Vinyl seats? Vinyl roof? Vinyl dash pad? Vinyl door panel?
All day long. Concrete pools have real tile instead of the fake liner tile look. You can update a concrete pool later on as styles change: with vinyl it's final.
Unlike many vinyl polymers, PVA is not prepared by polymerization of the corresponding monomer. The monomer, vinyl alcohol, almost exclusively exists as the tautomeric form, acetaldehyde. PVA instead is prepared by partial or complete hydrolysis (sometimes referred to in this case as saponification) of polyvinyl acetate to remove acetate groups.