Question:
How are iron magnets made?
what is the life cycle from an iron ore to a magnetpleaase help!
Answer:
I play mine just a hair in farther than i would with my driver. I also tee the ball low to the ground.
1. tee the ball really low, almost to the ground. 2. Take good practice swings, making sure you touch the grass when you do. 3. Swing easy, with a short backswing. Hit 'em straight:-)
I think you mean 'how to magnetize an iron?' They are ways, but really depends on how strong of a magnet you want to create. If you only want to magnetize a screw driver tip, the easiest way would be just to rub the tip on a piece of magnet. If you want it a bit stronger, you could use 2 pieces of magnet with the like charges facing each other. The magnets would repel, but you should holding them together and pass your iron core between the magnets several times. If you want your magnet even stronger, you would have to use an insulated wire to wrap around your iron core, with a lots of turns. Apply and increase voltage slowly across the coil, then decrease the voltage very slowly. Your iron core would be magnetized.
Actually, most of the magnets you will run into are not just iron. Barium ferrite is common, and the magnets in headphones are samarium pentacobalt, containing no iron at all. Alnico used to be common, it was ALuminum NIckel CObalt. Any way, you would smelt the metals and alloy them for a metallic magnet [eg, alnico or SmCo5], then form them into their final shape. Then you apply a strong magnetic field using an electromagnet. Similarly for a ceramic magnet, except you make the ceramic, not a metal alloy.
I play mine just a hair in farther than i would with my driver. I also tee the ball low to the ground.
1. tee the ball really low, almost to the ground. 2. Take good practice swings, making sure you touch the grass when you do. 3. Swing easy, with a short backswing. Hit 'em straight:-)
Hittig a tee shot with an Iron is just like every other shotit requires good ball contact and a good swing. Not sure what you are looking for in an answer here.
I think you mean 'how to magnetize an iron?' They are ways, but really depends on how strong of a magnet you want to create. If you only want to magnetize a screw driver tip, the easiest way would be just to rub the tip on a piece of magnet. If you want it a bit stronger, you could use 2 pieces of magnet with the like charges facing each other. The magnets would repel, but you should holding them together and pass your iron core between the magnets several times. If you want your magnet even stronger, you would have to use an insulated wire to wrap around your iron core, with a lots of turns. Apply and increase voltage slowly across the coil, then decrease the voltage very slowly. Your iron core would be magnetized.
Actually, most of the magnets you will run into are not just iron. Barium ferrite is common, and the magnets in headphones are samarium pentacobalt, containing no iron at all. Alnico used to be common, it was ALuminum NIckel CObalt. Any way, you would smelt the metals and alloy them for a metallic magnet [eg, alnico or SmCo5], then form them into their final shape. Then you apply a strong magnetic field using an electromagnet. Similarly for a ceramic magnet, except you make the ceramic, not a metal alloy.