I believe what makes a glue strong or weak is the ingredients it's made of. However, I also know that there are glues for almost every purpose and most will be very good at the exact purpose they are made for, but may appear weak when used in unsuitable conditions. I work at repairing many things and consequently I carry a box of over 30 different glues in my work truck and even more at home.
I have rigid fast setting glues, pliable glues, silicon adhesives, glues that will work in extreme heat, glues that adhere underwater and glues that melt substances together. Each has a purpose but few are good for everything. The trick is using the right glue for the material you are gluing.
Mixing Clorox with glue merely makes weak,watery slime.
They are actually two glues. The names of them are the Strong Interaction and the Weak Interaction.
A strong acid or base completely breaks into ions when mixed with water.
Inbetween, rather strong, not very weak
Sodium bicarbonae is a strong electrolyte.
The opposite of a strong glue.One example of a weak glue is the glue on Post-it Notesand similar products.
Mixing Clorox with glue merely makes weak,watery slime.
A strong acid dissociates more completely than a weak acid.
They are actually two glues. The names of them are the Strong Interaction and the Weak Interaction.
Damping makes a sound weak and amplifying makes it strong.
Weak glue.
Vascular tissue is the tissue which makes steam strong . As their are no such tissue in steam of aquatic plant it makes them weak.
You get weak, useless glue.
Dilution of a strong acid will create a weaker acid.
weak weak
A strong acid or base completely breaks into ions when mixed with water.
That will only make weak glue.