Vermeer
Mechanical
- Jun 27, 2001
- 8
I am at a loss for the answer to something i feel I should already know. I am a machinist and regularly use switchable magnetic bases to hold indicators in place. How do they work? Here are a few questions I have had:
1. What is the the composition of the material which rotates inside the assembly?
2. How do the constituent parts of the magnet operate to create a magnetic field that can esentially be turned "on" and "off"?
3. This is the crux of why I am writing -ahem- Once disassembled why is the previously strong magnetism totaly lost?
4. I know the assemblies can be re-magnetized; can this easily be done? What can be experimented with to do this on a small scale? (Using a mag-paricle inspection yoke maybe, or is more power needed?) Does anyone know of a good practical reference book on this subject?
Thanks--I'm real interested in any replies.
1. What is the the composition of the material which rotates inside the assembly?
2. How do the constituent parts of the magnet operate to create a magnetic field that can esentially be turned "on" and "off"?
3. This is the crux of why I am writing -ahem- Once disassembled why is the previously strong magnetism totaly lost?
4. I know the assemblies can be re-magnetized; can this easily be done? What can be experimented with to do this on a small scale? (Using a mag-paricle inspection yoke maybe, or is more power needed?) Does anyone know of a good practical reference book on this subject?
Thanks--I'm real interested in any replies.