The temperature is 1050 oC.
Greenware is typically fired at a lower temperature known as a bisque firing before glazing. For cone 04 clay, it is fired to around cone 04 temperature, which is approximately 1945°F (1063°C).
Because petrol's ignition temperature is higher than the room temperature...
Very very hot...
The temperature of fire varies greatly based on the source of fuel and atmospheric conditions. Gasoline for example burns at a temperature of between 500 and 1000 degrees.
The flash point is the lowest temperature at which a substance gives off enough vapors to ignite briefly but not sustain combustion. The fire point is the temperature at which a substance gives off enough vapors to sustain combustion once ignited. In simple terms, the flash point is the temperature at which a substance can momentarily ignite, while the fire point is the temperature at which it can continue to burn.
No, the color of a flame is determined by the temperature at which a material burns. Blue flames are typically hotter than orange flames because they burn at a higher temperature.
Greenware is usually fired at cone 06 for bisque firing. The glaze firing depends on the maturation temperature of the clay and the glaze.
You obtain "greenware" tiles, which have not been fired. Then, you transfer the printing (probably a specialty item) and fire the tile.
greenware
A general term for unfired clay products is "greenware." The exact designation of unfired clay, however, depends on the stage of dryness. In order by increasing dryness, clay can become soft leatherhard, firm leatherhard, velvet and bone dry.
During the greenware stage water has evaporated from the clay body and the clay is very stiff. It cannot be bent without cracking but can still be carved or added upon.
The removal of the seam left by the mould in greenware, by fettling knife and/or sponge.
Unfired pottery. Usually dry unfired things but it could be leather hard and not yet dry as well.
Maybe. It is lower than regular fire
Any solid whose melting point is lower than that of the fire. The question is ambiguous because the temperature of the fire it not stated. The sun is form of a fire but its surface temperature is several million Kelvins, nothing including steel is solid at that temperature. A candle light is around 900 degrees steel is solid at this temperature.
we burned a tree doow3n and the temperature was -675C
high temperature
~1400 C