Grildon Tundy
Member
I'm working on a project where I'd like for an electromagnet to be able to quickly go from attract to repel at the flip of a switch. So I bought this to tinker with:
It's a DC electromagnet with a DC power source. I thought I could simply take the two wires of the electromagnet, plug them in (e.g., first wire in positive; second in negative) and get "attract". Then if I switched the wires (first wire in negative; second wire in positive), I'd get "repel".
However, the electromagnet seems to attract no matter what from all angles or sides. I've tried coupling it with refrigerator magnets, rare earth magnets, and metal. In some cases it's may be a little stronger one way than the other, but I was looking for a total push/pull switch.
Anybody know what I'm missing or how I could accomplish what I'm trying to do another way? I've tried asking ChatGPT but I still can't wrap my head around why switching the wires doesn't switch the effect.
Amazon.com: uxcell 12V DC 180N Electric Lifting Magnet Electromagnet Solenoid Lift Holding : Industrial & Scientific
Buy uxcell 12V DC 180N Electric Lifting Magnet Electromagnet Solenoid Lift Holding: Solenoids - Amazon.com ✓ FREE DELIVERY possible on eligible purchases
www.amazon.com
It's a DC electromagnet with a DC power source. I thought I could simply take the two wires of the electromagnet, plug them in (e.g., first wire in positive; second in negative) and get "attract". Then if I switched the wires (first wire in negative; second wire in positive), I'd get "repel".
However, the electromagnet seems to attract no matter what from all angles or sides. I've tried coupling it with refrigerator magnets, rare earth magnets, and metal. In some cases it's may be a little stronger one way than the other, but I was looking for a total push/pull switch.
Anybody know what I'm missing or how I could accomplish what I'm trying to do another way? I've tried asking ChatGPT but I still can't wrap my head around why switching the wires doesn't switch the effect.