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Jetboot t1_ja6cy10 wrote

Melting temperature and burning temperature are different. Wood actually does have a melting temperature, but it's way past the melting temperature.

Similarly, metals generally have a burning temperature that is well past the melting temperature.

In the middle are plastics with melting and burning temperatures that are close together.

And then there are ceramics. It is technically possible to melt them, but technically they are already burnt... ceramics are weird.

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