Hi all,
I've got some narrow alnico magnets 3/8" x 1/8" x 4" that are magnetized along the length that I'd like to re-align and magnetize across the width for use in some pickup experiments.
I have tried putting them in between pretty powerful and large 1-1/4" square by 5" long in a vise, and they do seem to at least partly re-align, although when I open the vise the ends tend to stick to opposite sides of the magnets on the jaws which I assume indicates the magnets are only partially re-oriented magnetically.
So does that mean I probably need to heat them up to the curie temperature and put them in a magnetic field oriented across the width as they cool down? Or will getting them hot enough alone make them non-grain-oriented and I can just magnetize them with my vise and magnets after they cool down?
My wife is a potter so I have access to a kiln. Is that the way to go, or just use a propane or map gas torch?
Will the alnico surface oxidize enough to cause a problem. I suppose I could put them in clay if that would be a problem.
I think the magnets are alnico 2 or 3, but they might be 5. I got them surplus and really don't have a way I know of to determine what they the composition is. (Maybe somebody knows a way to tell?)
As you can probably tell, I'm a babe in the woods about this, so any help and education, experience you may have, etc., would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
mr coffee
I've got some narrow alnico magnets 3/8" x 1/8" x 4" that are magnetized along the length that I'd like to re-align and magnetize across the width for use in some pickup experiments.
I have tried putting them in between pretty powerful and large 1-1/4" square by 5" long in a vise, and they do seem to at least partly re-align, although when I open the vise the ends tend to stick to opposite sides of the magnets on the jaws which I assume indicates the magnets are only partially re-oriented magnetically.
So does that mean I probably need to heat them up to the curie temperature and put them in a magnetic field oriented across the width as they cool down? Or will getting them hot enough alone make them non-grain-oriented and I can just magnetize them with my vise and magnets after they cool down?
My wife is a potter so I have access to a kiln. Is that the way to go, or just use a propane or map gas torch?
Will the alnico surface oxidize enough to cause a problem. I suppose I could put them in clay if that would be a problem.
I think the magnets are alnico 2 or 3, but they might be 5. I got them surplus and really don't have a way I know of to determine what they the composition is. (Maybe somebody knows a way to tell?)
As you can probably tell, I'm a babe in the woods about this, so any help and education, experience you may have, etc., would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
mr coffee
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