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sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.components, rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,
"Greysky" wrote: ever since I was a child, magnets have held a fascination for me. I've been collecting them ever since. It used to be that you could always scrounge loudspeakers for Alnico magnets. Then when the newer ceramic magnets began to be incorporated into loudspeakers, it became a challenge to remove them from their enclosures without breaking them. Now, I have to admit, I am having a ball collecting the new 'super magnets' - like the ones inside hard drives. There are also cool cylindrical magnets that you can get from inside the heads of VHS machines. My question is does anyone know of other sources either for Neodymium 'duper magnets', or strong ceramic magnets that I may be missing out on? Like other posters, I've gotten some good ones out of some 5" full-heght 30MB hard drives, and the ceramic donut magnets inside microwave ovens. There are also some small, moderately strong (apparently a step below Neodymium) magnets in many small earphones/headphones (the kind for Walkman type portable stereos with the 1/8" plug), that I've bought surplus for a dollar each. But some of these have a little ceramic ring/donut magnet that's about next to useless. Magnets like these come closest to being perpetual motion machines we have yet to make, and I'd hate to have some just wind up into the trash because I didn't know they were there :-) There's this fun link that was posted a few months ago. http://www.houseofscience.com/ouch/ouch.html Thanks.! |
#2
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On Sat, 26 Jun 2004 17:56:26 -0400, Ben Bradley
wrote: There's this fun link that was posted a few months ago. http://www.houseofscience.com/ouch/ouch.html Love it. This has been a very interesting thread but now I have even more reason (than my other unfinished projects or ideas) to not order some of these cool magnets. |
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