The heads on a car are usually made of steel and require very high temperatures to melt. However they may become cracked if the car overheats.
A dool will not melt.
After eating 99,999 cans of beans then scream "ARGHHHHHH" and melt the car.
Yes it can 'melt' metals.
Pure water will freeze below 32 and water tends to expand as it freezes. It could damage the engine block, heads and radiator among other things. If you could get the car to run the engine block will melt the water in the engine but the parts that don't melt will trap the water as it becomes super heated. Head gaskets, the heads themselves and the engine block can be damaged. The superheated water will be like a bomb and will eventually get out somewhere in the system.
There is a likely chance that it can melt.
there is a acid in it and it just melts from the heat it contracts with it an mix together and it melts
What do you mean build a real one? Build your own car, a Salvage yard for cars otherwise known as a junk yard has lots of NICE cars, its a true gear heads paradise, I saw a new Dodge Neon in a salvage yard once that made me melt, it had a flawless paint job and everything, it had the engine block but no heads or anything... maybe the car ended up at the salvage yard because the previous owner couldn't afford to get it fixed but it was a nice car.
One, the cylinder head.
it`s best that he wouldn't do this but if he does the battery will melt or explode or the wrench will melt the car can even burst in to flames.
In the winter? Probably not. In a hot car in the summer sunshine? Very likely!
It heats the windshield to melt the ice.
Yes, heat melts snow