epoxy
An epoxy will bond glass to metal.
Wood glue is not typically effective for bonding to metal surfaces. Metal surfaces require specialized adhesives designed specifically for metal bonding.
Wood glue is not typically effective for adhering to metal surfaces because it is designed to bond with porous materials like wood. For metal surfaces, it is recommended to use a specialized metal adhesive for a stronger and more durable bond.
Wood glue is not effective for bonding metal materials together. Metal requires a specialized adhesive designed for metal-to-metal bonding for a strong and durable bond.
Wood glue is not typically effective for bonding metal materials together. Metal requires a specialized adhesive designed for metal-to-metal bonding for a strong and lasting bond.
No, it is not recommended to use wood glue on metal surfaces as it is designed to bond wood materials together and may not adhere well to metal. It is better to use a specialized metal adhesive for bonding metal surfaces.
In such a situation the bond has three potential points of failure:The paint could peel off metal piece 1.The paint could peel off metal piece 2.The bond between paint 1 and paint 2 (the glue you just used) could fail.If any of those three goes, the bond fails, so it's only as strong as the weakest of the three.That said ... sure, you can do it.
Gorilla glue is a foamy like glue that can bond anything and you will not get it apart. Super glue is a clear glue that does bond some things but nothing like Gorilla glue can.
No, the receptacle needs the screws in place to complete the bond between the metal component of the receptacle to the metal component in the receptacle's junction box. This bond is entirely separate from the grounding of the receptacle.
A metal epoxy adhesive or a cyanoacrylate super glue designed for metal surfaces are good options for bonding metal to metal. Make sure to clean and roughen the surfaces before applying the glue for a strong bond. Follow the manufacturer's instructions for best results.
It's possible, but their is little use. Even if you managed to get it onto the shaft of a nail as it sank into the wood, it would achieve little due to super glue's inability to make a bond to raw wood.