There’s a lot going on in this thread.
Best practice is to wear PPE (gloves, safety glasses, lab coat) whenever handling any pure chemicals, regardless of their concentration. Volatile compounds like HCl require good ventilation as well.
Glacial acetic acid is not well-described as a weak acid. “Weak” in a chemical context means that dissociation in solution is incomplete, whereas “strong” means that dissociation is complete. Hydrochloric acid, being a strong acid, is completely dissociated in water:
$$HCl \longrightarrow H^++Cl^-$$
When acetic acid is dissolved in water, some undissociated ##CH_3COOH## remains; hence, it is referred to as a weak acid. Glacial acetic acid has no water (and people don’t generally talk about its self-ionization), so calling it a weak acid is misleading.
A more concentrated acid will undergo reaction at a faster rate than a less concentrated acid. This is true for basically all chemical reagents, not just acids: reaction rate is generally proportional to concentration.
Sulfuric acid is an oxidizer and has an enormous enthalpy of hydration in addition to being an acid, so the reactions it undergoes are more varied. Concentrated sulfuric acid will damage tissue, but not (mainly) because of its acidity.
HCl forms an azeotrope with water at around 6 M, so you can get there with distillation (from either direction). Gaseous HCl can dissolve in water up to a concentration of 12 M or so. Above that, two phases are formed (12 M HCl liquid and HCl vapor). In the solid state, you can get significantly higher HCl concentration via a variety of cocrystal phases.
Pure HCl is a gas and is easily obtained in the lab by adding concentrated sulfuric acid to NaCl, but as
@jim mcnamara noted, it has a low boiling point, and pure liquid HCl isn’t great fun to work with.
Why in the world would moderators remove that?