On 11/12/2014 11:31 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Wednesday 12 November 2014 10:56:50 Dave Cole did opine
> And Gene did reply:
>> Magnets like that were used on a waterjet I was working on to keep
>> parts from falling in the tank as the machine cut them out.
>>
>> I used paper towel to wipe off fillings from the cutting process. I
>> think a rag might work better.
>>
>> Dave
> These are VERY seriously strong.  Jim had one stuck to the light gauge
> steel of a filing cabinet, and it took both hands & a brace his knee
> against the cabinet to slide it sideways off the edge of the cabinet. A
> straight pull?  No way `Jose.  Stuck to the top, it could have easily
> picked up the cabinet without unloading the several hundred pounds of its
> contents.

These magnets are the same way.    They are about an inch in diameter 
and they put them over the cut line to keep plate steel (like 3/8"-1/2" 
plate) from falling in the tank.

You don't pull them off, you slide them off an edge.

I've never seen a stronger magnet.

Dave


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