https://www.thecooldown.com/green-business/us-nuclear-test-r...
Still, temperature is quite important, you want the core of the reactor to run as hot as possible. You are limited by the fact that you don't want the core to disintegrate. The NERVA project [1] achieved temperatures in excess of 2200 K.
Molten salt reactors are designed to reach about 1000 K. That gives up most of the benefit of using a nuclear reactor. You would still beat chemical rockets, but only by 25%, not by a factor of 2. Why would you do that? If you build on the NERVA project and use TRISO fuel (which was not available at the time) you can end up with a specific impulse of more than 1000 s, which is 2.2 times higher than what the best chemical rockets can deliver, and 2.85 times higher than SpaceX Starship.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NERVA#Reactor_and_engine_test_...
PV in space can be made very thin. The absorption length for photons in CdTe, for example, is just 0.1 microns. Without having to be mechanically robust against wind and rain, great gossamer PV arrays could have very high power/mass ratios. These could drive plasma engines with high Isp.
That's like replying to someone saying it takes too long to drive from New York to Seattle, by saying that we could build an efficient 1000 mile per gallon car, that travels at .01 miles per hour. How efficient the vehicle is isn't the slightest bit useful to solve their complaint.
A high thrust to weight ratio when the weight is a couple of pounds isn't useful. What's useful is having a huge amount of thrust that's large enough to shove multiple tons of mass at high accelerations.
What about micro meteorids?