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fits back together nice and tight.
That one statement by possibly the only person on this forum that has actually seen the part in question is why I would lean towards super glue.
Super glue bonds extremely well when it is applied in a very thin coating. I would be looking at a drop of super glue on some hard disposable surface and then using either a pointed toothpick or a very-very fine tipped pencil brush to dip into that drop and apply a thin sparse coat of super glue to each of the two halves. You will basically get one chance to piece the two parts together, hold for a moment or two and you are done. After the repair is complete, the glued joint will just be maintaining its own position, there should not be any added loading applied as it is a tail light lense, perhaps mounted in a housing.
My concern with a solvent glue is; enough glue for the solvent to react with and soften the plastic is necessary for that process to work. With a tight joint, glue beyond the space available in the joint when to two parts are set together will be forced out. That could make the repair noticeable. Unless the repaired part is self stabilizing, one should also have a clamp-support-fixture to keep the parts in alignment until the solvent glue sets.
and
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will not yellow over time
keep the glue inside the joint and you should just see the edge view of the crack, you should not see the glue.
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