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What are you trying to achieve..?Do you get a clamp that can clamp from the sides, and from the front? If that makes sense, something like this?
View attachment 794305
What are you trying to achieve..?
If you are looking to clamp temporarily, to glue something etc, yes:
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You mean the strips on the edge of the doors and cupboards to cover up the chipboard..?That's exactly what I'm looking for.
The shitty kitchen we put in has the front strips of the cupboards coming off, so looking for some way to glue, and hold them on.
You mean the strips on the edge of the doors and cupboards to cover up the chipboard..?
If so, some contact adhesive and masking tape to hold the strips while the glue dries, is going to be best.. you can glue an entire strip at a time and use the masking tape every cm or so to keep the strips in place..
The glue may stick to the tape but, the glue won't stick to the brilliant white of the cupboard and you would be able to run it off no problem.. obviously, try and avoid unnecessary squeeze out as far as possible..That might work to - how would you not get the masking tape to stick down with the glue though? Cupboards are brilliant white so anything off white will show.
It's mostly on the bottom - where floor meets cupboard - I think it was from them forcing the cupboards into position. Their measurements were off in a few places.
The glue may stick to the tape but, the glue won't stick to the brilliant white of the cupboard and you would be able to run it off no problem.. obviously, try and avoid unnecessary squeeze out as far as possible..

Our bathroom tiles are on a wooden floor that's got a bit of "give" and two of them have lifted. It seems as though the tiler used ordinary adhesive instead of the one that's been recommended, which is a bit springy.
1. Is the springy adhesive worth getting or is it just a gimmick?
2. Would relaying one full tile (left) and relaying the piece that broke off the second tile (right) be OK (i.e. not replacing the whole right tile?
Happy to do an acceptable but less than perfect job because we don't want to invest more in the house, situation in ZA being what it is.
If things ever settle down here we'd probably replace the entire tiled floor.
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you should use stuff called Flex to tile on that.
Our bathroom tiles are on a wooden floor that's got a bit of "give" and two of them have lifted. It seems as though the tiler used ordinary adhesive instead of the one that's been recommended, which is a bit springy.
1. Is the springy adhesive worth getting or is it just a gimmick?
2. Would relaying one full tile (left) and relaying the piece that broke off the second tile (right) be OK (i.e. not replacing the whole right tile?
Happy to do an acceptable but less than perfect job because we don't want to invest more in the house, situation in ZA being what it is.
If things ever settle down here we'd probably replace the entire tiled floor.
View attachment 794417
@maumau Feel free to contact me if you need advice. I will PM you my number.
That's exactly what I'm looking for.
The shitty kitchen we put in has the front strips of the cupboards coming off, so looking for some way to glue, and hold them on.
Those things never stick for longer than a month..go to a hardware store and ask for iron on edging. As name suggests, you simply iron on the edging with no need for masking tape or messy glue.
I am looking into replacing rather old carpets in 3 bedrooms with either Vinyl or Laminate flooring. Anyone here have any experience regarding vinyl flooring and it's installation cost, longevity etc?
I do have limited DIY experience when it comes to floor installation, I do have decent woodworking experience so cutting and planning won't be a big issue, but my worry is that there's small details/tips that I can miss as part of the planning and install process.
If you can afford lose lay tiles then you are good to go, it is very easy. Just watch a few examples on YouTube and it will all make sense. But for sure the advice before me was good: prep, prep, prep, prep that subfloor!I am looking into replacing rather old carpets in 3 bedrooms with either Vinyl or Laminate flooring. Anyone here have any experience regarding vinyl flooring and it's installation cost, longevity etc?
I do have limited DIY experience when it comes to floor installation, I do have decent woodworking experience so cutting and planning won't be a big issue, but my worry is that there's small details/tips that I can miss as part of the planning and install process.