I used to work in a cabinet shop and we used that type of glue because it has less annoying fumes than the cheaper glues. The folks in the space next to us couldn't deal with the fumes. The stuff's not cheap but it has a great bond and is my choice for using on the jobsite.
Hello Jeff. I just have a question for an expert such as you.
I will be gluing rubber/linoleum type of floor material to plywood in a bus. The temperature is going to be around 45F rather then 65F as suggested. Am I going to have issues at 45 and/or are there any special things you would suggest I do for proper bonding.
I do have a kerosene heater. But I am not sure I should be using it as it may be pretty dangerous with the vapors coming out of the cement.
I used to work in a cabinet shop and we used that type of glue because it has less annoying fumes than the cheaper glues. The folks in the space next to us couldn't deal with the fumes. The stuff's not cheap but it has a great bond and is my choice for using on the jobsite.
jerami101 2 years ago
Hello Jeff. I just have a question for an expert such as you.
I will be gluing rubber/linoleum type of floor material to plywood in a bus. The temperature is going to be around 45F rather then 65F as suggested. Am I going to have issues at 45 and/or are there any special things you would suggest I do for proper bonding.
I do have a kerosene heater. But I am not sure I should be using it as it may be pretty dangerous with the vapors coming out of the cement.
Thanks a lot in advance.
KarenchikJan 3 years ago