PicoRiveraTele
New member
Re: Source for double thick A8 mags?
If you attach the magnet such that it attracts, then you're doing it wrong, and that's the problem.
I don't need to experiment. What I'm telling you about magnets is well established fact. What is not apparent to people is that magnets are always fighting themselves internally. If you drop a magnet and it breaks, that pressure is released and it sort of "explodes" and then turns into a clump of magnet shards. The degree to which their own magnetism is reduced by this "self fighting" is referred to as their coercive force. AlNiCo actually has a low coercivity, and that's what makes it weaker than other magnet types, such as ceramic or neodymium. If it weren't for the "self fighting" aspect of AlNiCo, it would actually be stronger than ceramic.
When you properly stack two bar magnets for this purpose, such that the poles are in parallel, and they're attempting to repel eachother, what you end up with is no different than if the magnet were solid. All you're lacking is a mechanical connection that prevents them from separating, which can be compensated for with clamping or adhesive.
If you want to experiment you can simply attach the second magnet to the baseplate so that it attracts. After you test this out you can do the same thing by taping it down so that it stays in position when it repels the other magnet. There are also plenty of other threads on this forum talking about the same subject.
If you attach the magnet such that it attracts, then you're doing it wrong, and that's the problem.
I don't need to experiment. What I'm telling you about magnets is well established fact. What is not apparent to people is that magnets are always fighting themselves internally. If you drop a magnet and it breaks, that pressure is released and it sort of "explodes" and then turns into a clump of magnet shards. The degree to which their own magnetism is reduced by this "self fighting" is referred to as their coercive force. AlNiCo actually has a low coercivity, and that's what makes it weaker than other magnet types, such as ceramic or neodymium. If it weren't for the "self fighting" aspect of AlNiCo, it would actually be stronger than ceramic.
When you properly stack two bar magnets for this purpose, such that the poles are in parallel, and they're attempting to repel eachother, what you end up with is no different than if the magnet were solid. All you're lacking is a mechanical connection that prevents them from separating, which can be compensated for with clamping or adhesive.
Last edited: