Some 20 years ago when I was building my current SP10 MK3 plinth, I spent a lot of time experimenting with glues.
I was using CLD on the acrylic top plate. In this case a 15mm layer of lead was to be adhered to the acrylic.
I initially thought that a lossy type glue, such as ados, would be optimal but listening to the test pieces thru a stethoscope while tapping it gave a "thunk" type sound. This was not what I expected as I was trying to emulate the ideal water fall type plot as we see published in speaker tests.
That is a sharp rise time with very little tail to the sound.
I then started experimenting with epoxy glues and settled on an industrial araldite epoxy. This lead to protracted experimentation with harder and filler ratios. I found that I could further reduce the tail of the tapped sound by optimising the hardness of the glue.
The final result gave a very short sharp "tic" when the workpiece was struck.
The result was a kind of fusing the acrylic to the lead. In this way they behave as a intimate composite structure.
Aiding this was massive clamping pressure while the glue dried. Over one tonne of cast iron billets were stacked on top of the plinth during the curing time.
Epoxy heats up when mixed, so the glue becomes quite runny. The vast majority of it oozed out between the layers. Unwilling to let this excess set, which would have required expensive remachining, I spent almost all night until just before dawn removing the excess as it flowed out.
Fun.