If the glue was a good glue then you will damage the wood before the glue lets go. Glue goes into the pores of the wood and holds tight. Usually to separate the two pieces you would need to saw them apart. This would give you a smoother separation.
The best way is to use a hammer to pry off the old siding and then use a nail gun to put the new sheets up. Be careful to use a chalkline, tape measure, and level to keep things looking nice and straight! I added a couple of links if more detail is required. I have had the best luck, being I do siding for a living, that if you take a standard cro bar and duc tape a block of wood 6-8 inches from the pry point, not the curved end, you can pop the siding off easilyObviously you have to start from the top. Kust some advice, if you have corner boards that are mounted to the building and not over the siding, which is better anyway, be sure to pre caulk the corner board to the building before reinstalling new siding, same with window trim. Watch for nail embeded siding on the ground, that really does smart~
a combination of a good rotary girder and a solid Johnson rod, then you pry up on the vulvulary tump to mastificate the gaiter
As a Fire Fighter who faces this problem on many cars with front end damage we normally pry the edge of the hood on the driver's side up gently, look for the black cable which runs from the hood release handle to the hood release and grab and pull. This works about 95 percent of the time. If not, try to look in through the grill in the hood release area and see if you can unbolt the whole hood release.
The cover should is either a pop off, (pry it open by pulling or prying on any edge) or there are screws
take the bolts out and pull the manifold off, if it won't come off you need to pry in one corner with a screwdriver to loosen it up and then it will pull off.
The only way that really works is to immerse them in water for at least a day, then you should be able to pry them apart.
It's glued in with "sticky-pads." Pry it out, carefully and stick the new one in, OR... take it to your auto-glass company.
Depending on the year and model, the wood trim usually just prys out. Take a small flat head screwdriver and GENTLY pry up one corner then use your had to slide along the bottom and pry it off the rest of the way
with a pry bar with a pry bar
The claw hammer can not only hammer a nail into wood but can , by way of the claw , grasp the head of the nail and be used to pry/leverage the nail from wood .
No, woodpeckers do not eat wood. Woodpeckers do eat grubs, ants, and wood-boring insects which they pry from the wood. Tree sap, nuts, berries, and seeds are also popular with these birds as the seasons change and insect availability does as well.
to pare timber for housing joints!
I would try a wood chisel. Try to get the point under an edge of the glue and pry it up.
All species of woodpeckers have strong beaks. They also have a head structure that enables them to constantly and very rapidly to bash their beak into wood in search of grubs - without damage to their brain!
Remove the Subframe. Subframe should be removed but it can be done by lowering Subframe down. I recommend removing the Subframe. Do not pry in oil pan with a screwdriver, get a rubber mallet, it is glued in place.
It makes for a heavy duty storage cabinet, but security wise it is finished. It could not have been a very good one to begin with if you were able to pry it open.
Definition for pry