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I mean, a gasoline explosion could melt aluminum. Gasoline and wood both burn at ~1800 degrees Fahrenheit, and most Aluminum alloys melt past 1000 degrees (afaik).

There are a lot of situations a car can get in where aluminum melts; I don't have 40 minutes to watch the video so I'll need a CliffNotes of the more damning evidence.

CLIFF ; The engine block melted and there is no other super fuels around the car, and it was a grass fir in front - its super weird. just watch on 2x speed and watch the first few minutes to grasp how weird. Build more Pylons.
Why do we need a conspiracy to explain this? The car exploded next to a flaming drainage ditch on a hot day; if the car was leaking oil, that was a fuse just waiting to be lit. Google "gasoline explosion aftermath" and it will look roughly the same as the car in the video. No specialized weaponry is required to do this.

Sure it could have been an energy weapon. It could have also been grey aliens playing with a box of matches or Chinese quantum micro-nukes. Or the fire could have ignited it, but I guess that's too disappointing of a conclusion to present to YouTube.

You can melt aluminum in a camp fire. Go outside more often.