MJR2 - thanks for remembering my previous post. I wasnt quite sure how to relate the two questions without being extremely wordy or confusing. I'd like to change the scenario a bit though. Same inner cylinder, roughly 12" in diameter and 70-80 magnets attached to the circumferance. But this time only a few, say 4 magnets on the outer cylinder, evenly spaced at 0 degrees, 90, 180, and 270, and instead of spinning the outer cylinder, this time the inner cylinder is spun at a lower speed of say 1000rpm. In this scenario, the inner magnets are only passing through 67 fields per second, while the outer magnets (though not moving) are passing through 1,166-1,333 fields per second (depending on the exact number of magnets attached to the inner cylinder. If I'm understanding inductive heating correctly, this should cause only a slight temperature increase in the inner magnets compared to a considerable temperature increase in the outer magnets, correct?