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Home Repairs/HoneyDo List/Advice & Tips/etc.

Anybody have any suggestions for a specific adhesive to glue some LEGO baseplates to a painted wooden table?

KRAGLE!

lord-business-and-the-kragle.jpg
 
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I'd just use construction adhesive like liquid nails

I went with some Loc-Tite all-purpose construction adhesive, and it worked great. I figured Gorilla Glue would work but didn't want to deal with any problems from it expanding... Kragle did of course come to mind too, but I only found really small containers of it and wanted to really fill in the back of the baseplates. I was surprised how few color options there are for LEGO baseplates--and of course my girls prefer girly colors--so I used these off-brand baseplates, and they fit with all our LEGO pieces perfectly.
 
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So evidently a baby frog got in through the gap at the bottom corner of the sliding glass door tonight. How it got onto our screened in balcony I don't know (no breaks in the screen, must have crawled up the building when it was small enough to squeeze through the screen), but the gap in the corner of the door is as big as I thought it may be. Any suggestions on how to block the gap without blocking the door from being used? The brush "seal" seems to be properly in place the entire length, but it's just a bit short on each end, contributing to the gap.
 
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Oy, here's a honey you stupid asshole don't:

de07be9d1e7c11914dac729a52c0c83b.jpg


Yeah, I fucking did.

Did that once in college.

One of my vivid memories of dormitory life: We did that (on purpose) once on the 9th floor of Smith Hall (back in 1968). The floor was flooded with water and laundry soap. Some students (including a couple members of the 1968 championship football team) were body sliding the length of one end of the floor. Guys on lower floors said when their elevator door(s) opened there was a waterfall in the elevator shafts.
 
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