Gorilla Glue Adhesive, 2-Ounces
- Pure polyurethane
- 100% waterproof
- Perfect for speaker building
- Non-toxic
- Bonds just about everything
Product Description
This polyurethane glue is the finest available for bonding wood, stone, metal, ceramics, plastics and more. Gorilla Glue® is waterproof and features an open working time of 20 minutes or more, better coverage than other adhesives, a usable temperature range of 40° – 130° and a 1 – 4 hour cure time….
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I bought a small bottle to try on a difficult chair repair. I am a reasonably experienced woodworker and prepared and clamped the joint carefully. The glue joint failed almost immediately. I repeated the process and the joint failed a few days later. I then used plain old Elmers and the joint is sound months later.
Rating: 1 / 5
Store superglue (regular, not gel) in the refrigerator and it will last forever. But, when you remove it from the refrigerator, be prepared for it to expand. That means you must be even more skillful when using it, like to keep the superglue in the tip from running up and out of the tip. Keeping the tip clean, inside and outside is always a good idea. The Gorilla glue nozzle appears to be a good one for keeping clean. Would be nice if they made a nozzle that was easy to keep superglue out of (after use), like by somehow sucking the glue down into the bottle. I usually try squeezing the sides, and tapping the bottle down on a hard surface (with the tip covered).
Rating: 5 / 5
This stuff works well for some repairs, if the hardened foam is not a problem, (i.e. don’t use on fine items, china, instruments, antiques etc.) But it is very expensive and will not keep at all, so buy the smallest container possible and use as much as you can right away. I have $30 worth of 2 oz bottles that are a total loss after less than two months on the shelf-even after ensuring all the air was squeezed out after use. Epoxy is better choice.
Rating: 2 / 5
“Gorilla Glue” has become one of the most used “tools” in our house. We have used it to repair wooden chairs, fix a wooden medicine chest, glue soles back on to sneekers, fill cracks in a wall, and at least half a dozen other fixes in the past month.
Here are my observations:
* You must read the directions!

* Surface needs to be damp for the glue to work
* Use clamps when possible
* It expands a *LOT*, use with caution or you might accidently glue your project to the table as it expands overnight! This happend to me
* This is strong glue and hard to get off once it is on a surface
Highly recommended!
Rating: 4 / 5
I have used it in various applications and so far it has worked well.
I have used it for wood cabinets, clamped them and they are still holding up well months later.
I used with some plastic pieces and it worked fine.
(for most plastic repairs I use the plastic repair kits from Urethane supply company, like the 2-part powder/liquid, plasti-fix kit).
I was going to try Loctite’s SUMO glue, until a reviewer mentioned it’s shelf life wasn’t very good (and it would crystalize after several month’s time).
The only thing I didn’t know about Gorilla glue is that it gets a little bit foamy after applying it to a joint.
Rating: 5 / 5