![]() Upon coming out of the repressing, the whole surface was this opaque, milky yellow color of the poly glue. I once had to apply poly glue on almost the entire surface of a poorly applied veneer (I was trying something and suffice it to say, it did not work) once. Here is the next best part: when you sand the poly glue off the veneer, it takes finishes with no issues. The poly glue will soak through the veneer and reattach it-you don't need to slit the bubble and shove glue in there! It doesn't even matter why the veneer bubbled.the poly glue will stick it back down. If you press a veneer and it doesn't come out so well (bubbles and such), you can just smear poly glue over the offending area, add some wax paper, and clamp it. One of the best things I found out about poly glues is with veneering. Last edited by Chris Padilla 03-08-2017 at 12:11 PM. I'm sure the Gorilla product is just fine as my experience with the products has generally been good.except for their poly glue on ipe. I would hold the GG WOOD glue in one hand and the TB-III in the other and compare them and see what you think. I'll have to remake the parts again but I'll try TB-III-my standard wood glue.Īs to Gorilla WOOD Glue, I have never used it. These parts were outside and exposed to the weather but I don't think they even made it 6 months before failing. Some of the pieces I glued failed and came apart at the glue joint. I sandwiched together a few ipe deck boards to make something thicker and decided to use poly glue as I'd heard that it handled oily woods well. I will mention a failure I had and that was with gluing ipe. That veneered panel is in my master bathroom and doing fine although I would not be able to tell you which panel it is!! I applied my usual finish and the result were simply spectacular and made me a believer. This was a commercial veneer so really thin. Frankly, I was amazed I did not sand through the veneer. So I just continued hoping and sanded the glue off. ![]() Below are some of my experiences with the Gorilla POLY glue: I'm not sure about the strength issue but they do have the ability to bond almost anything to almost anything. Polyurethane glues (Gorilla Glue's original product when they first entered the market) have their places.
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