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Gorilla Max Strength Construction Adhesive is a 9-ounce cartridge of heavy-duty, waterproof glue that is 2x stronger than standard Gorilla adhesives. It is designed for a variety of projects, providing a crystal clear finish and the ability to fill gaps, making it perfect for both indoor and outdoor use. Additionally, it is paintable, allowing for seamless integration into any project.
W**Y
Versatile with no odor and fast, strong tack. Works well in our kitchen and dries clear.
This is a very good and strong adhesive, with a high tack level and excellent durability. Application with a caulking gun went well, there was no percievable odor, and the hold is great. So far, as a sealent is it working well on our walls in our kitchen. While it is advertised to hold and dry quickly, I personally gave it 24 hours to dry...and it was glued! It is a versatile glue and I'm glad we chose it!
K**.
HOLDS!!!
This glue is great. I’ve used it on all sorts of materials. It even held rocks. It dries clear and is great for all kinds of projects. Stick with the clear (as the white doesn’t hold up as well). I get it for my caulk gun but the same product comes in a tube. Try it and I’m guessing you will be just as hooked. Has some odor; but, that is to be expected for such a strong adhesive. I no longer waste my money trying other products, and save money because of it.Best part was, I needed this one in the middle of a project and didn’t have to drive to get it. Thanks Amazon!!!
O**1
Gorilla tuff.....but tuffer
This stuff holds strong, even with weighted items. I had some decrative bricks that fell off my exterior, probably from the heat. I used this, taped it over night. It is never coming off. A couple drops fell onto the concrete, I used a steel brush to remove the glue. This stuff is no joke.
A**X
Very good clear, flexible, watertight glue
I've used this glue to adhere vinyl to steel in an underwater environment, vinyl to vinyl for a convertible top requiring a flexible bond, and numerous other situations. It has worked perfectly for the first situation, and has had minor issues with the "convertible top" repair, but has [largely] worked great. Adhering vinyl to sanded, clean, dry steel for a moisture barrier is a perfect use-case for this glue (used on evaporative coolers). UV radiation and heat seems to be its biggest enemy.For the convertible top I used this to glue a vinyl patch to the vinyl top and, while it worked well for a while, ended up starting to fail after about a year. The top didn't leak, nor did the patch separate, but much of the visible glue began to yellow, crack, and even flake off. I assume this had to do with the exposure to UV and the elements. While it did still seal, I'm not sure for how long the glue would have remained flexible enough to seal. The cracking/flaking is due to the glue becoming more stiff over time or with exposure, and would have eventually caused it to fail. Still, only one glue (HH-66) out of about 8 performed better than this one in terms of flexibility and grip, however, this variation of Gorilla Glue came close enough in performance while at a fraction of the price, leading me to repair my car with it not once, but twice, and not regret doing so.Grip = phenomenalFlexibility = Great, until agedClarity = OK, until agedDurability = On a convertible top? It's OK. Elsewhere? Fantastic.This stuff is worth a few extra $ if you need clear, flexible, AND strong.
B**Y
WORKS IN MANY situations cheeper than small tubes, careful sealing back.
I started using this and realized it smells like a brand of shoe glue, so I have saved a bunch of money on glue for Hiking boots that are still water proof and hard to find cycling shoes as well as average sneekers, during "Covid" whatever that was this worked great to save hundreds of bucks, it works in many applications and stays clear in most situations. Might even work to glue heavy rocks or stone which I have not done yet, just used for sealant caulk and glue. When using smaller amounts don't pierce or cut the OUTER tip, use it as a cap. cut the inner tip and you will have to push dried sealant back in to unplug but this allows for the tube to be used over many weeks without drying out . WEAR GLOVES< if it gets on your skin try rubbing alcohol, then dish soap, lightly rubbing and rolling it up of the skin and hair. Don't know how safe the fumes are so use with ventilation or out of doors where possible. California says everything is a cancer risk so who knows about this or other fume-y glues, smell does not bother me much.
A**S
Works very well on mist thinks
Perfect item
A**R
glue to metal
worked goood
U**6
Perfect for the job.
Was perfect to fix my 16 year old synthetic garage doors that were separating. Fluid enough to get down behind the panels. Not too fluid to run out the bottom. No drips. Where I could not clamp a leaning ladder created enough pressure to hold it tight. After a couple hours was solid tight. Then 7 hours later found another small panel that needed repair. Still had an 1 to 2 inches glue. After easily clearing the application tip. This glue still flowed perfectly. But if your gonna save for longer would get Caulk Sealer Saver Caps.And oh yeah, I think it's obvious but you do need a Caulking Tool Gun for application.
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