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metal bracket on hard drive magnets ? - Page 2

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  1. #1
    Insanity is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by PartTimeScrapper View Post
    Well then what I said is right a box full of them wont stick to the delivery truck.
    HAHA... I guess it's a matter of how you organize the parts inside the box.


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  3. #2
    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    Being that the ups and fed-ex trucks are mostly plastic and alum. sidewalls, there isn't much to stick to, otherwise you could just "hang" a box of those magnets on the wall.
    P & M Recycling - Specializing in E-Waste Recycling.
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    Dugong is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    your not wrong about price slump, good 'ole China with its bargain prices, pooping on regular folk trying to make a dollar!

    http://www.ebay.com.au/sch/i.html?_t...4&_sop=3&_sc=1

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    Well, how do you get said magnets off the bracket? Without destroyin the bracket or magnet, of course.

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    Quote Originally Posted by TheHoss View Post
    Well, how do you get said magnets off the bracket? Without destroyin the bracket or magnet, of course.
    The magnet is I think is simply glued to the bracket. So I take two pairs of pliers, hold the bracket with one and with the other I try to bend it. As soon as it bends a little, the magnet can be removed easily.

    I do it this way because I don't have a vice. I think with a vice it's even easier.

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    KR74868 is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheHoss View Post
    Well, how do you get said magnets off the bracket? Without destroyin the bracket or magnet, of course.
    It's a lot of work; but, here's how I do it:
    1) Sort magnets into matching groups. (If you ignore this step, you'll wind up regretting it.)
    2) Have some scrap plexiglass handy, either hanging or leaning against a non-magnetic surface. (I like strips that are about 4 to 6" wide and about 12 to 18" long.)
    3) Have a metal surface, covered with a mat or a piece of plexiglass, handy. (This is extremely important; since, these magnets will bite the daylights out of you, given even half a chance!!! Even with just 1/8" thick magnets, if you get skin trapped between them, about all you can do is grit your teeth and tear the skin off... If they're not on a magnetic surface, they WILL jump several inches to get to another magnet.) Putting them directly onto a metal surface makes them VERY hard to get back off. With a mat or plexiglass, it's possible to slide them to the edge.
    4) I use a metal beam with an end cap, attached to the old "feet" from a scrapped out semi-trailer; but, some folks use a securely mounted vice, to hook one end of the bracket into. I have a pair of vice grips attached to the other.
    5) Bend the bracket just until you hear a quiet "pop."
    6) Slide a break-off blade razor knife into the small gap; and, CAREFULLY work it along the length of the magnet until it comes loose.
    7) Set magnet on the covered metal surface.
    8) Remove vice grips and toss bracket into one of 2 buckets: Clean or needs further cleaning. (I also have a bucket for the ones that aren't nickel plated.)
    9) CAREFULLY pair the magnets on each side of the plexiglass. WARNING: They will try to grab onto the mags you're reaching over; so, I try to work from the far side to the near side, to minimize having to reach over already placed mags. (They're a bear to get apart, if you let them stack!)
    10) Clean all plastic, brass, etc. from the "to be cleaned" brackets.
    11) Find somewhere that's willing to pay decent for the brackets. (I'm still looking...)
    12) Find a project for the magnets. (I'm working on some alternative energy ideas for my own use.)

    OR....
    Blow off all of the above, keep all of your skin on your hands intact, and give me a shout... ;p If the price is right, I'd probably be interested in taking them off your hands; especially if I can find a decent market for the permalloy...

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  13. #7
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    Lol, so basically I have a bunch of brackets/magnets stuck to my tool boxes I can't do anything with now since I don't do E-Bay.

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    Well u could sell (or give) them to me I am in desperate need of a few trusty magnets!
    One man's crap is another man's scrap! And in Texas, there's ALOT of crap!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Scrap Metal Mike View Post
    Well u could sell (or give) them to me I am in desperate need of a few trusty magnets!


    I just sent you some and your asking for more?

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    no i want to buy more it was a joke, btw did u get what i sent back? i sent a small thank you.

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    Permalloy or Mumetal... Not.

    Many people think the brackets are a nickel superalloy called permalloy or MUmetal in fact magnet brackets are low carbon steel. Pure iron is one if the best flux carrying materials to use. Cold rolled low carbon steel is a trade-off for manufacturability. The brackets are plated in a nickel alloy and the unique dual polarity of the magnets allow for one direction magnetic field.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kaffegeek View Post
    Many people think the brackets are a nickel superalloy called permalloy or MUmetal in fact magnet brackets are low carbon steel. Pure iron is one if the best flux carrying materials to use. Cold rolled low carbon steel is a trade-off for manufacturability. The brackets are plated in a nickel alloy and the unique dual polarity of the magnets allow for one direction magnetic field.
    Where's the proof as most "experts" say that it mumetal or permalloy. Not being a smart a$$ but your going against everything being printed and the buyers that are buying them for the alloy.

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    Enoch43 is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    I like to use the holes that are already in the brackets as mounting holes, and I put screws through them and make a row of the magnets on the studs on the wall that my bench sits against. I use them to hold screws in items I am taking apart in order of removal (top to bottom), and also keep the most commonly used bits for my driver their, like phillips and various common sized of torx bits. Keeps them handy, and I can spend more time working and less time looking for the proper bits and tools!

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  22. #14
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    I do the same thing on my work bench. It has tools hanging off magnets all over the place. Sometimes I have to take a sorting session time out! I end up with so many handy easy to reach tools that I can't find anything!
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    eesakiwi is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    I have found it handy to have magnetic screwdrivers
    (once you stick steel to a magnet, it turns magnetic, or just wipe it across the magnet a few times)
    as they keep the screw attached to the screwdriver when you pull it out.

    Sometimes a screw gets cockeyed just at the finish of the thread & jams in there, the magnetic screwdriver (actually its a 'Screwturner') helps to stop that happening.

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  26. #16
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    I have a hard time understanding how magnets can be so scarce in parts of the country. Isn't the 1st time people have asked for some.

    Then again I did bunch a buy off ebay cuz I am always misplacing them.

    I should paint them a neon color so they're easier to see.

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  28. #17
    Bear is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Ha! Thanks for the tips KR

  29. #18
    Mechanic688's Avatar
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    They seem to be popular here, quite a few completed auctions.

    hard drive magnets | eBay

  30. #19
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    they lose alot of the magnetism when you have 20 pounds stuck together, it wont stuck to anything trust me, try sticking a 20 pound ball of these to the side of a fridge, its not gonna happen =) there is too much scrap steel mixed in to cause it to stick to anything when you have that much mass

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    I keep all mine. I had a pretty good size container full, brought them to school last year (for those who don't know i'm an Auto Tech student), and all my classmates got a kick outta how strong they were...well needless to say half my stash was gone...come back for 2nd year and everyones using the magnets to stick their paperwork onto their toolboxes so they don't blow away from the fans blowing...made me feel good knowing i could help my friends out a bit.

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