No, when the rubber cement cures it will separate from the glass.
PL Premium is very good for that .
Yes, glue can stick to rubber, but the effectiveness depends on the type of glue used. Some adhesives, like contact cement or specific rubber adhesives, are designed for bonding rubber materials effectively. However, general-purpose glues may not provide a strong bond. It's important to check the manufacturer's recommendations for the best results with rubber surfaces.
Have You Tryed Super Glue?ANS 2 - Super glue will NOT stretch when the rubber does, don't waste your time on it for this joint. -Liquid rubber glue as comes in bicycle tire patch kits is far better !
cement is the binder for concrete like glue with out it you have mud with rocks
Many 'industrial' adhesives available in 'caulk' tubes will glue plywood to cement. PL Premium is one of the best.
No, rubber cement will stretch, super glue won't.
A suitable substitute for tire patch glue is rubber cement or contact cement.
Rubber cement is a type of glue. It is made from elastic polymers such as latex that are then mixed in a acetone solution.
first of rubber cement is a type of glue you can buy almost any where and well rubber cement thinner is like glue remover it makes it so you can pull apart what you glued and its good clean up for a mess you make with it.
You should use a special type of glue called acrylic cement or solvent cement for bonding acrylic plastic.
Maybe rubber cement?
No, it's not flexible enough.
metal steel alu plastic fiberglass glass rubber leather cloth fabric oil water glue
PL Premium is very good for that .
You can glue it back on, but don't use rubber cement. Most model glues will work fine and even better is super glue!
rubber cement, tacky glue, duct tape
From my experience rubber cement works best.