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Want to know something super interesting to boot? Let’s talk about bar magnets! Rich has a great repo for these incredible utilities (that probably are useful in so many ways). Every workshop would benefit from a bar magnet. It will let you perform a variety of operations to streamline + improve your development tasks!
So, whether you are an experienced car mechanic, or simply a weekend home tinkerer in the garage with gizmos and gadgets; this is a bar magnet that you must own. Bar magnets can have various shapes, sizes and designs; however they serve a common purpose that is to keep some sort of metal objects attached through magnetic force. Isn’t that neat?
The bar magnet is a well known inclusion in many toolboxes due to the fact that this type of lab magnet works as an extremely high tech freezer where you rest your tools and parts when working! Now you can keep them on hand where they're handy and out of the floor. Mounted on your workbenchoystick/controller holder for simulation racing fansfan shroud/duct. So this shortens the reach when you are in action and need to fumble your hands onto a tool. A hard-arranged locking vise with a bar magnet to keep the sheets from sliding is another option when cutting or drilling in a metal sheet.
One of the coolest use cases for a simple bar magnet is to act as a sweeper over your floor, to pick up any little screws or metal bolts that may fall. Great because then when you drop a screw or some shit, slap that magnet on end of your scrappy or a piece of wood and ghetto-fab it back up without diving underneath! It serves you better since you do not have to dedicate time to cleaning up a flat workspace.
Below are a few key safety guidelines to consider whenever you are looking for suggestions on how to safely and properly use a bar magnet. Choose the right size and strength of magnet for the job at hand. A more powerful magnet is required though for larger and heavier metal objects think like heavy metal gates etc. Now, if we are talking about holding a tiny screw or some metal pieces together, a smaller magnet will do the trick.
On the surface, selecting a suitable bar magnet may be slightly perplexing because there are different shapes and sizes available. Ergo, another way to look at this is by how strong, big or misshaped the magnet. If you are planning on using hard (crystalline quartz) stones, then neodymium magnets will be required. Most of you will be just fine with it and it wont break the bank.
Something else to take into account is the form you are going to need. The most common type of the bar magnet, is a simple bar. Other types include disc or ring magnets. The shape you pick will depend on what you will where and the type of work you are doing with the magnet. For this, you can use a bar magnet, but it would be much better for you.