T max of phases is in general not the issue. The phase may bleed off, but the column surface should still be inert. Many columns can be heated to much higher temperatures, as long as the deactivation stands. You only pay in life time (and bleed).
There is a bigger concern at higher temperatures and that is development of reactivity. For those interested, we did a study on the activity of FID flame tip and it was amazing how active FID liners can be.
http://www.sepscience.com/emails/sepsci1211eu.pdf
Question is: how is this activity developed? Not very strange if systems are opened at high temp and there is direct contact with air and metal surfaces.
Note this can also happen inside the column, for instance if a water peak elute in a 300C FID, what will happen to the phase? Probably hydrolysis, but we won't see it because adsorption at 300C will not show itself, until we get an extreme situation like in the flame tip. For sensitive components at low levels this should be a concern.
At the injection side: If phase is stripped from first 5 cm, there is a good chance it will be partly deposited below the injection port. I have seen this many times with TCEP. The challenge is, when phase is accumulating in the first part of the column, you get a "phase-droplet" which reduces efficiency immediate 50-80%. In wax columns you see this oft an appearance of droplets via dark spots on the inlet side. Cutting off a section fully restores the column efficiency, but it can happen again. a short guard column, PDMS deactivated solves that issue.
jaap