Added: 3 years ago
From: SuperMagnetMan
Views: 56,801
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  • why do you need a wedge.. just put the magnet on top of the other one.. no need for a wedge.

  • please help!! Will the cube-c1004 be a good magnet for strength and can they break bones or cause bad injuries?

  • How do they work?

  • Will a solid copper wedge slow them enough to work better than wood?

  • 3:30 line the wedge up, in the crack

  • what kind of pleasure one can get playng with bricks?

  • Comment removed

  • well known cubes and the flats are the same material. the matter is that the square they contact each other tight differs from 0.0...1 mm^2 to 10..0 mm^2.

  • schwul!!!

    

  • Thank you, you are providing a valuable service, you should be proud.

  • :05 - :07 thats what she said

  • HOLYSHIT!!!!

  • Hey, you should render your videos in sterio

  • wish i had seen this before i got a part of my finger splatted with 2in x 10mm discs!!!! believe EVERYTHING he tells you as it's true ( as far as neo mags go!!). al least i can separate the next lot safely

  • Thanks for uploading.

  • Since you are very familiar with magnets, what strength would be good to put in a car visor so I can hold sunglasses and cell phones with? I was thinking of a few n35. They are cheap and small.

  • Hi, great video.

    I recently purchased 5 6cm*3cm n45 discs (big guys), and I'm looking for a material that, as thin as possible, could create a barrier between two magnets that might eliminate their magnetism (magnet shielding). Which materials would you recomend?

    Thanks, and keep up the good work!

  • Interesting. How much do the "blood blister" magnets cost? What about the N40's and N50's? I suppose you don't recommend any of these magnets to amateurs. What is a good size to start out with for intermediate-level experimentation?

  • How hard is it to separate 2, 1 inch cubes?

  • OMG, I'm so glad I watched this video. I just ordered 2*2*1 inch brick magnet. Now I'm buying some gloves so my fingers don't have to get amputated.

  • owned him, lol nice epic win

  • Hello. Your cameraman is doing very poor job here. You should fire him and replace him (I hope it's already done, in fact).

  • @becomepostal

    Not sure what you're talking about. I fail to see the problem. Fine videography. Intriguing content. Great video.

  • No safety glasses?

  • If you love magnets, you'll love the NeoCube!

  • i don't have a wedge... i have magnets the size of the ones u showed last on ur video, is their any other way to pull em apart? I already tried the table thing, pushing them off the side, it wont work.

  • Make a wedge...

  • Make a wedge...

  • Can you PLEASE tell me what size of magnet I should get (that is a flat circle type), so that I can play with it without breaking my bones (but still to be strong and fun)? lol I want one really bad that I cacn do magic and stuff with. would a 25mm be the right size?

  • Fizz489 - basically a 1 inch (25.4mm) dia disc is a good size up to the 0.5" thick disc. One of those is an extremely strong magnet but by itself will possibly cause an occasional pinch but certainly not crush fingers. 2 of these would cause serious blood blisters if they came together with skin in between. A 1" dia x 0.25" will pinch but 2 of them would not hurt as much. So, if you get 1 magnet the 1" x 0.5" N50 is OK. I hope this helps. After practice you can handle larger ones safely.

  • Thank You!!!!

  • I like your name "blood blister magnets". I spent a while working those things and I can assure anyone who is thinking of "playing with" NdFeB magnets that they will soon understand how you came up with the name. Those two inch cubes of yours just make me cringe!

    bojonlacic, yes they will crush your fingers. And you won't be able to separate them with one hand, so you might be feeling the pain for a while!

  • can those really crush your fingers?

    and what in the name of god do you use the cubes for???

  • Bojanlacic

    Yes they will crush fingers. The large magnets are extremely useful interestingly enough in treating pain and cancer on the medical side and for various forms of electricity production on the energy side. Many new windmill designs use these larger super magnets to increase generator efficiency. Of course there are hundreds of other uses too - like changing traffic lights and repelling sharks.

  • i know the traffic light changing trick, but how can they repel sharks???

  • sharks sense eltromagnetic energy, and if you had some on you, then you would get a response from sharks.

    i dont know about the repel part, but i know you will get a response from them

    i think its supposed to cause a overload in the eletromagnetic sensors

  • would it actually crush your fingers

  • are there any bigger more powerful magnets then the cubes

  • Yes I have lots of large magnets - 8 inch dia x 0.5 inch thick and 6 inch x 4 inch x 0.75 inch thick. In the disc area I have the 5 inch dia x 1 inch thick N50. Probably the 5 inch x 1 inch disc is the most powerful that I have.

  • u should post a vid on separating them or are they nearly inseperable

  • @SuperMagnetMan do u think that can brake your finger if u put in between the magnets ? lol

  • I would love to hear about your patent wanna be and how the system works (in the usa) i know it's really corrupted but do you really need that much money just to patent somethings ?? is itthat it cost a fortune in lawers or something ? well in any case i would love to hear more about you (i've subscribe) ...see you

  • Patent costs come from several areas and depend on several factors. A qualified patent search is recommended if the item has big time potential. If it is not going to make much money then no one will waste time telling you to stop making it. If it makes $100M then everyone with patents that are distantly related to your concept will try to steal from your success. So if it has potential you need to spend at least $25K to get a good search that shows it can stand up in court.

  • Two very nice videos. These should help me alot when I start handling some Neo magnets.

  • Super Magnet Man, you're awesome! Your videos are cool. I subscribed :D

  • I use neoprene coated aluminum bars, tubes and etc to make frames (coated with neoprene where the magnets rest or are gripped) and teflon where the magnets slide, but it essentially is a wedge and leverage system, only fancier and more expensive :P Oh, gloves are always good because slivers of metal from the magnets *hurt* and can get wedged deep into you if pulled by the really big magnets D:

  • Powerful magnets!!

  • I have certainly thought about it, but it is about #232 on the list of items I want to patent when I get rich:). It takes a lot of time to accurately define what is patentable and it takes a lot of money to make sure the patent is defensible. If I was "retired" and had about $20 million I could probably submit 50 patents a year for the rest of my life. Alas, I dream on:).

  • Why not patent a device to do this. I am sure one could sell them.

  • Eye protection is always a good thing too. I haven't ever had a magnet chip such that a piece flies away from the magnet but there is always a first time. I should have remembered to put it on:). Thanks

  • Eye protection !

  • Thanks - I am really glad to hear that. Hopefully I can increase the basic knowledge of magnets for everyone.

  • love the videos super magnet man

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