There is a little problem with the video.
With Infra-red Thermography, you have to be careful of a thing called emissivity.
"The emissivity of the surface of a material is its effectiveness in emitting energy as thermal radiation. "
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EmissivityThe highly polished shiney pipes won't radiate Infra-red as well as the black painted pipes. At 185 °F they are probably reading the temperature of teh engine block reflected off the pipes.
If you were to paint a small part of the shiney pipes with matt black paint, you would be able to see the real temperature. We did an experiment in a Thermography class where we had a shiney coffee tin in which boiling water had been poured, yet the Infra-red thermometer only indicated about 25 °C. Once we stuck a bit of black electrical tape to the side it indicated 99 °C (the water had cooled a little and a thermometer in the water also read 99 °C)
Emissivity is one of the reasons Infra-red cameras can't see through glass, and the glass acts like a mirror to Infra-red and I've seen my own thermal image reflected in a window.
I'm not dismissing Ceramics at all, just pointing out their figures (in Farenheit) are possibly in error.
Depending on the ceramic and its thickness it can act as a heat barrier (Space Shuttle) and the surface can lose its heat rapidly to air keeping the surface of the ceramic cooler while the inside is still very hot.
Check this video