I'm taking a mechanics of materials class right now, and this would be the greatest factor of engine failure. As the temperature gets closer to the melting point of the material, the material will reach a point where it looses it's elasticity and does not return back to the shape it was before. I believe at this point the mechanical parts will fail because they will be so distorted that they will no longer fit. The pistions ring lands are usually the first to go, due to the heat generated by friction.DaveKillens wrote:The temperature reached by combustion can easily exceed 2,000 F. An aluminum piston would melt. So would an aluminum head. Even iron would lose a lot of it's structural strength.
Also, of course, the oil would've broken down by then too, making the friction astronomically high. Everything would melt in a very short amount of time.