NEED MAGNETS!!!!!!

G

Guest

Guest
Anyone have spare neodimuim magnets circular r= about 6"
width= about 1"

maybe 6 of them

willing to buy

pm me for price
 
A magnet is any object that has a magnetic field. It attracts ferrous objects like pieces of iron, steel, nickel and cobalt. In the early days, the Greeks observed that the naturally occurring 'lodestone' attracted iron pieces. From that day onwards began the journey into the discovery of magnets.These days magnets are made artificially in various shapes and sizes depending on their use. One of the most common magnets - the bar magnet - is a long, rectangular bar of uniform cross-section that attracts pieces of ferrous objects. The magnetic compass needle is also commonly used. The compass needle is a tiny magnet which is free to move horizontally on a pivot. One end of the compass needle points in the North direction and the other end points in the South direction.

lol
 
geno whirl said:
A magnet is any object that has a magnetic field. It attracts ferrous objects like pieces of iron, steel, nickel and cobalt. In the early days, the Greeks observed that the naturally occurring 'lodestone' attracted iron pieces. From that day onwards began the journey into the discovery of magnets.These days magnets are made artificially in various shapes and sizes depending on their use. One of the most common magnets - the bar magnet - is a long, rectangular bar of uniform cross-section that attracts pieces of ferrous objects. The magnetic compass needle is also commonly used. The compass needle is a tiny magnet which is free to move horizontally on a pivot. One end of the compass needle points in the North direction and the other end points in the South direction.

lol
I DON WANNA ASK A SCIENTIST

Y'ALL MOTHA*Can'tSayThisOnTV*AS LYIN, AND GETTING ME PISSED


as for what you need, i have no idea where (or even if, biggest ive seen is like 2"x1") you could get neodymium magnets that big. you could make some electromagnets though.
 
A 1-inch thick, foot wide Neodymium would be MASSIVE, and incredibly powerful.

We're talking "Cannot send through the US Mail" powerful.
"Need a license to own" powerful.

You're not going to find magnets that big dude.
Not under any normal circumstances, or for sale for any reasonable price.
 
1" thick, 12" across disc-shaped Neodymium magnets would pull at just over half a *Can'tSayThisOnTV*ing ton of force.

Two of these could lift my car.
 
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