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Nylon, as well as other synthetic material, can melt at low temperature. If you are wearing nylon shorts and are too close to a fire your shorts have a high chance of melting to you skin causing severe burns to your body.
You cannot melt wood, You cannot burn silver, within the above.
Nylon is a polyamide. There are two: nylon 6.6, which was invented by DuPont, and nylon 6, which was invented by BASF. DuPont had a patent on nylon 6.6 and wouldn't license it; BASF wanted to play in the polyamides market so they created a similar material using a different process. Of the two, nylon 6.6 has a higher melt point and is a little harder than nylon 6. Nylon 6.6 is a polymer of Hexamethylene diamine and Adipic acid (Hexadioic acid) both these compounds contain 6 carbon atoms each. so it is Nylon 6.6. (Which is true for nylon 6.6. Nylon 6 is polymerized caprolactam, so that's called Nylon 6 because caprolactam also has 6 carbon atoms.)
This super hot iron cannot melt because of all the pressure.
Fire. It cannot melt.
NO, you cannot iron a patch onto nylon, the nylon will melt. You will have to sew it on.
Now, you take nylon.Firing it .see that,The nylon melt of very thin at liquid state.And liquid state of nylon adding with the sulphur.It cannot conclussion the solid state.
you melt it
Yes it will.
they melt.
you can tie a knot at the end and if it's nylon you can melt the ends.
Nylon, as well as other synthetic material, can melt at low temperature. If you are wearing nylon shorts and are too close to a fire your shorts have a high chance of melting to you skin causing severe burns to your body.
You cannot melt wood, You cannot burn silver, within the above.
If something splashes, it will melt the nylon into your skin rather than just burning a hole... so it is much harder to remove the clothing and treat the burn.
It cannot melt.
Nylon is a polyamide. There are two: nylon 6.6, which was invented by DuPont, and nylon 6, which was invented by BASF. DuPont had a patent on nylon 6.6 and wouldn't license it; BASF wanted to play in the polyamides market so they created a similar material using a different process. Of the two, nylon 6.6 has a higher melt point and is a little harder than nylon 6. Nylon 6.6 is a polymer of Hexamethylene diamine and Adipic acid (Hexadioic acid) both these compounds contain 6 carbon atoms each. so it is Nylon 6.6. (Which is true for nylon 6.6. Nylon 6 is polymerized caprolactam, so that's called Nylon 6 because caprolactam also has 6 carbon atoms.)
No You Cannot Melt It Becuase I Have Tryed Myself The Snow Drift Or Most Call It (Iceburg) Cannot Be Melted