PL 200 will do this best, but does need to be supported somehow till it sets.
Depends on the type of plastic. Many plastics have glue made from their solutions. Some can be partially dissolved and joined together by the right chemical, some needs to be prepped with an etching agent to get a glue to stick to them.
Any super glue will bind hard plastic.
A good epoxy .
I would think plastic cement.ANS 2 - Epoxy or silicone.
On the most bottles of Super Glue it says under the Directions label "Do not use on Fabric" so I would think that wouldn't work too well.
Gorilla glueANS 2 - Epoxy will work and silicone will work.
That's a very vague question -'plastic' covers over a hundred different materials !In most cases if it's a rigid plastic, epoxy will cover most repairs. If it's flexible as many plastics are then you have to be more specific about which plastic.
In my personal opinion I use a glue called "Zap-a-gap" it works well on both pewter and plastic models, and unlike plastic glue it doesn't melt the plastic together in case you wanted to take it apart for another model. Most people however will use a plastic glue (for plastic models of course) and a super glue (for pewter models). For basing the model, once I put the larger things like rocks etc. I use a weaker glue like Elmer's school glue on an old paint brush and coat whatever I wanted based in the glue. Then I put the model in the basing material (modeling grass, dirt, sand, etc) and gently blow the extra off. Hope that helps
Gauze tape is not meant to be glued. Most sensible people use medical adhesive tape to secure it.
Yes, gum is type of glue.
If you feel your ceiling is not properly braced then certainly be careful of anything you put up there. No matter what kind of lighting you put up, be sure to secure it to studs or rafters above the ceiling. If you don't, you risk any type of lighting falling to the floor.
There is a type of glue for every repair.