My torch is a regular torch working with C206 small cartridges. I said plumber torch because it is used by the plumbers on soft soldering of tubes!
like this
http://www.rothenberger.com/en/products/-/38-roflame-piezo-classic-soft-soldering-unit--22-mm/?t=pg
these C206 ones are for small camping stove and I have two type of cartridges 100% butane or butane/propane mix made for camping in the mountains in high altitudes.
No fancy gas MAP or acethylene nor oxygen adding.
But again even 100%butane torches is way ahead a delta of 700°C, that is why the statement from d-nail from the notice made me think the SiC halo was a torch nail.
In fact to benefit to everyone i paste here the dnail CS piece of advice.
"I am unsure where you got the information that our SIC halo is meant to just be torched? The SIC halo is an SIC nail made specifically for our D-nail electronic nail system. Some users liked the material so much that they asked us if it could be torched so we did some tests and it can be but it has to be torched evenly and slowly to achieve this.
When you use the SIC with a flat coil and bring the temperature up to heat clean, it is a steady, constant heat that starts at the bottom of the dish and is equally distributed. When you torch something, its full blast stress on one area. Once you move to another area of the dish you must make sure you revisit the previously torched side and try to match the temps the best you can.
Torching it to remove excess carbon is almost one in the same with cleaning it however depending on how often you clean it, it may have little carbon or alot of carbon. The quartz halos need to be cleaned regularly because if there is too much carbon they risk cracking (just some back ground on how carbon can affect the dish with halos)
If you are torching it to use it as a torch nail, you are at constant full blast usually a little less than a heat clean however, its still 2000F in temp. All three of these things are essentially utilizing the same temp but the longevity on a short heat clean is less than that of a regular heat clean or a heat up cycle but it is still extremely stressful for the nail as it continues to heat up extremely hot then cool down to room temp instead of being run on a heater at a constant temperature, then when the heater is turned off, the nail and heater cool down together slowly and still retain some heat where as with a torch set up it just cools down. I hope I am explaining this in a way that is understood. it can be a bit difficult
All in all, the SIC halo is not meant to be torched, its mean to be used with a coil but it still can be torched. The SIC for the HIVE base is a torch SIC nail and is made differently (wall thickness and the thermal dynamics of SIC and a slightly different grade ceramic as opposed to SIC and TI."
So Halo SiC could be torched but not designed and meant to be, torching it is dangerous business as you have to achieve manually with your torch a gentle gradient of temperatures as with an enail.
The SiC torch Nail is the SiC+HIVE Nail.
D-nail rocks.