So far I have just been buying pre-magnetized magnets but I would like to assure that some are fully magnetized. Other I may want to degauss some. What are the best methods for charging and degaussing alnico bar magnets?
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What is the best method to fully magnetize alnico bar magnets?
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Since you just got here I guess it's understandable that you open with a question. I'm not a pickup maker. I hang out on the amplifier side of this forum. But I've been here long enough to have seen these guys on the pickup forum cover this topic over and over. You need to do a forum search. There are a lot of threads that have already covered this. Different builders have different methods and solutions so you can pick the one that works or sounds best to you."Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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The OP asked the question, the best way to fully charge Alnico bars?
The members gave the best answer for that. A commercial charger.
You can charge with NEOs, but bars are tricky to get evenly charged along the entire edge, with NEOs.
TLast edited by big_teee; 01-02-2020, 04:44 PM."If Hitler invaded Hell, I would make at least a favourable reference of the Devil in the House of Commons." Winston Churchill
Terry
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A few years back I read here of a DIY charger that interested me. Similar to commercial units, it used a bank of capacitors discharging into a large coil. I have a pair of very powerful, large neos that I'd intended to use to charge pickups but I've yet to work out how to use them effectively. The trick is to get the pickup to pass through the field and maintain alignment without sticking to the magnets. Another project for another day.
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You don't need a capacitor bank discharge magnetizer for Alnico (maybe for ceramic magnets). The commercial magnetizers mentioned above are just electromagnets powered by some 10 ADC. The DC voltage necessary depends on the DCR of the coils. But it's all about Ampere-turns (current times turns' number).
I built this: https://music-electronics-forum.com/...l=1#post522567
It produces more than 15.000G between the pole shoes (depending on airgap). Alnico requires up to 3.000G between the poles for saturation. I don't like my bars fully charged, so I only go up to around 2.000G.
Passing an Alnico bar along Neos inevitably causes a a slanted, uneven magnetizing pattern. The problem with neos is that they can't be switched off, so removing the alnico bar from the neo requires the bar to pass the neos fringe field which is likely to change magnetization.
I didn't try myself but I think that it is possible to get satisfying results with a single large neo magnet. The neo needs to be larger than the pole face of the alnico bar. Attach the alnico bar to the neo and separate/remove it along the field direction from the neo without any slanting (that's the tricky part). Then reverse both the neo and the alnico bar and charge the other side/pole the same way.
To control magnetization results you will need a Gauss/Tesla meter.Last edited by Helmholtz; 01-03-2020, 03:30 PM.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by Mick Bailey View PostA few years back I read here of a DIY charger that interested me. Similar to commercial units, it used a bank of capacitors discharging into a large coil. I have a pair of very powerful, large neos that I'd intended to use to charge pickups but I've yet to work out how to use them effectively. The trick is to get the pickup to pass through the field and maintain alignment without sticking to the magnets. Another project for another day.
nosajsoldering stuff that's broken, breaking stuff that works, Yeah!
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Regarding using a neo to charge alnicos, it seems to me that it would be pretty easy to make a jig that would keep things aligned. If you're clever you could probably rig a machine that would bring the neos to a few thousandths of an inch of a pole along the field direction on both ends simultaneously and then distance them evenly the same way. Like a big, levered clamp with stops built in. I don't see that it would be any easier than spending six or eight hundred bucks for a magnetizer (or making your own) but it should work and you might save on your electric bill"Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo
"Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas
"If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz
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The N52 neo magnets I have are 3" diameter and a little over 1 1/4" thick. There's a loading hatch in my workshop 8' off the ground and they live up there, one either side of the sill. They're a real nuisance anywhere else and the pull is 570lb so need to be handled with a lot of respect. I thought they may make a decent magnetizer, though.
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Regarding using a neo to charge alnicos, it seems to me that it would be pretty easy to make a jig that would keep things aligned.
Taping the Neo or using thin spacers/shim will facilitate separation of the magnets. Spacers can also be used to control charge.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by big_teee View PostHere's the Mojo NEO charger.
$60
I generally do not like the neos-in-a-vise method. While the magnetic loop through the steel parts can about double the field strength between the neos, it also means that the PU or alnico magnet has to be removed sideways out of a region of strong field. And this typically more or less spoils the magnetization (especially of isotropic alnico bars like A2, A3, A4, UOA5).Last edited by Helmholtz; 01-03-2020, 04:45 PM.- Own Opinions Only -
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