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Only corrosive chemicals can burn through steel and wood.
Yes. stainless steel screws are safe with any metal.
The zinc coating which is using for galvanizing emits toxic gas when burned.
Galvanized steel is most often used in pipes, roofs, support beams, wall braces, and residential framing. It is mostly used in building construction because it has no shrinking, warping, twisting or deforming like wood framing and other sources.
Initially, they were actually made of wood (even the ridges). Later on, they made the 'scrubbing' portion of the washboard with zinc. This was the main metal used up until the tail end of the 20th century. At that point, galvanized steel was the metal of choice. There are some washboards made with brass as the ridges, but they're not quite as common as the galvanized steel.
Under normal circumstances, wood will burn first because it has a lower temperature of combustion than metal. That means a stick will catch fire and burn faster than a piece of steel pipe the same size. In fact, under those normal circumstances mentioned, the stick will burn and be reduced to ash while the steel pipe will not be affected. Many times structures will burn and the steel water pipes will be left only blackened after all the wood has been consumed by the blaze.
Clothes hangers are usually steel, but some are made of aluminum. Construction hangers can be steel, galvanized steel, copper, or other metals.
wood would break so steel
for wood to burn you need fire
No it is not safe to burn it.
Both. Heated wood gives off gasses that burn. Charcoal (carbon) will also burn.
Technically, but not really. You have to get wood for stone and stone for iron, which you need 3 iron ingots for 1 bucket.