Just mix SBR and Water 1:1 ratio then add cement so it becomes a thick slurry paste then use a paint brush to smother both the main part and the loose piece it will hold like you won't believe in 24 to 48 hrs, just prop some heavy blocks in front to jam it in place, that pole was fine, the glue will fail in time where as SBR won't, be stuck on there forever, use the slurry on the voids on the sides too
Thanks for the idea , I've a piece of pillar to fix , have the broken piece and it fits perfect , didn't know what to use , I'll try Gorilla glue... thanks.
I suspect you’ve lost the compressive strength (the load supporting strength) by using glue. It would have been fairly simple to use wet concrete to fix that minor collapse. I’d be interested to know if that glue would stick granite facing to an exterior outdoors brick wall and how fast it cures?
Just discovered that my bird bath fell over and the top of the stem broke apart. The bowl part is fine. Thought maybe I could use E-6000 glue 🤷🏼♀️. What do y’all think? TIA 😊
Did you try that? Same thing happened to me.. it's more of a light fiberglass material though some parts might be concrete... I'm wondering if that would be a quick fix, because i have e6000 on hand... i saw someone use liquid nails, but i can't really go out and buy stuff.
@@kitchenboy69 She likely won't get her feelings hurt by these comments bc if she actually watched diy home improvement videos she would've known GG has no business in her head! 🤷🏾♀️🤣
Question: How is it now, after a year? Still in place or you're pulling hairs again? Then I seriously think you didn't answer the basic reason why it failed. As I see your rain drain has a junction here that when in heavy use, might leak big time and thus water erosion under the supporting wall concrete... May be you should answer that as well for future sake. Great effort, well paid. I guess!
I’m using this gorilla heavy duty construction adhesive in the caulking tube for Mexican tiles. They’re beautiful glaze tiles in there our house numbers so I have four of them and I was going to adhesive them to the top step on concrete.
I do tile, that will probably hold it down but if tile is not cemented in properly with the proper trowel more than likely they're going to crack and break as soon as something is dropped on top of it.
Hi would this work for granite tombstones ..I bought a headstone online and now trying to figure out if this...have would work to glue a headstone to the base
You should have used PU adhesive foam. Used for stone and bricks. Would have been 10x easier, would have cured in 15 minutes and you would have used 100x less adhesive. Tip for next time, just saying ...
@@staffy4389 I have it available from multiple suppliers and hardware stores in Norway so I see no reason why you wouldn't be able to get hold of it in Ireland.