Gorilla Glue seems to form a great bond between many surfaces that regular glues cannot. Surfaces you may choose to use Gorilla Glue on include metal, stone, wood, foam, ceramics, and glass.
It depends on what type of glue it is. If it is a petroleum based glue, then it will thin it out. If it is a water based glue, you probably won't get a good mix. Regardless of the type of glue, the dilution will make the mixture unusable for its intended purpose.
There are now about 7-9 different kinds of Elmer's glue. The original white glue, epoxy glue, a type of super glue, spray glue and contact cement among them.
Depends on the type of glue. Name your glue - there are hundreds
Any wood glue will work great for hardwood floors, but make sure it's compatible with your wood type.
It is a type of glue used for gluing pipes together... (not the type of cement in concrete).
Epoxy is the best type of glue to use for wood.
That would depend on what type of glue you have. To make a silver dollar less removable from a money clip i would suggest gorilla glue. If you want it to be removable try sticky tack! Or a wallet!
Gorilla glueANS 2 - Epoxy will work and silicone will work.
You can try "super glue".ANS 2 - There is an excellent clear 'Porcelain adhesive' -available in hardware stores.
Types of gorilla include Mountain Gorilla, Lowland Gorilla.
Silicone would work for that.
Epoxy would be best for this.
hot glue and epoxy
Any glue should work, the solvent would still evaporate.
The question has to be more specific as to the type of glue.Normally a glue would be described as an adhestive
I would use a two part epoxy.
The question has to be more specific as to the type of glue.Normally a glue would be described as an adhestive