A pipeclay triangle.
PIPECLAY TRIANGLE
Pots are not usually made to withstand large pressures. In any case, it would depend on the thickness of the pot.
No, but pot metal may contain aluminum. The term pot metal names an alloy of various metals, typically of low melting point, but does not define the content or percentages. Pot metal today will be mostly zinc but will contain other metals such as lead, copper, aluminum, tin, magnesium, or others.
My pot is made out off stainless steel. steel is a metal! there is a sentence that has the word steel in it
No, after a strongly and repeatedly washing.
You will have heat transfer to the pot by radiation from the hot coals and by a combination of conduction and convection as the hot gasses of the fire rise to the pot. You might also have some slight heating by conduction from the metal grill to the pot; the grill gets heated the same way as the pot by radiation and flames but may be slightly warmer than the pot since it is closer to the coals and lies between the flames and parts of the pot resting on it. The total heat transfer from the grill to the pot is probably minimal. We would hope that the contents of the pot get heated by the walls of the pot - by conduction and, if they are fluid, convection.
Pipeclay triangle
Pots are made from metal alloys, ceramics or glass.
Zinc or pot metal
Yes
Zinc or pot metal
Usually "pot metal," or low-grade steel.
A cauldron.
The handle made of metal will be hotter, since metal conducts heat very well, and wood conducts heat very poorly.
Aluminum
Usually "pot metal," or low-grade steel.
So that they don't get hot and you can pick them up.
The handles are plastic because people don't want to use pot holders to move pans around/on/off the stove. Metal handles get too hot to hold, plastic ones don't.