Electromagnet

MisterBill2

Joined Jan 23, 2018
27,591
The trick to use is to have VERY SHORT pulses of current to move the steel plate.AND a few more turns. The temperature rise is caused by the WATT SECONDS of power (AMPS x Volts x Seconds)
 

drjohsmith

Joined Dec 13, 2021
1,612
Ok, thank you
Depends how complex you want to get,
Solution I've done when need an electromagnet , that needs a big pulse to initially pull , say 1 Amp, but can hold with a lower current , say 100mA , is to use a constant current source and a capacitor .
Charge the capacitor via cc , it stops charging at a given voltage .
When switch closes, coil is powered by the cc source and the capacitor, resulting in big current , lots of pull. But capacitor quickly discharges, current in coil is now just the cc source
When switch opens , capacitor is charged up again .
 

ericgibbs

Joined Jan 29, 2010
21,451
hi Annie,
As I said earlier you have to empirically determine the Ampere-turns required that will provide the 'force' required to actuate the 'blink' operation.

The easiest method I would use is to wind on 100 turns of 32SWG onto the 12.5mm core, then use a variable power supply to determine what voltage and current is required to 'blink'

E
 

drjohsmith

Joined Dec 13, 2021
1,612
hi Annie,
As I said earlier you have to empirically determine the Ampere-turns required that will provide the 'force' required to actuate the 'blink' operation.

The easiest method I would use is to wind on 100 turns of 32SWG onto the 12.5mm core, then use a variable power supply to determine what voltage and current is required to 'blink'

E
I think the op stated that voltage was fixed , all they can change is wire .
 

MisterBill2

Joined Jan 23, 2018
27,591
Even just measuring the actual current of a short pulse is not really simple. An analog meter movement always has inertia , and most digital multi-meters have conversion times and lack a peak-hold function. So " the required actual Ampere-turns should be measured" is not an easy thing to do.
BUT if the actual total circuit resistance can be measured, the math is not so terribly complex.

My guess is that coil heating will be the big problem unless the on-time of the pulses is rather short. The charged capacitor pulse scheme is a good choice, but that brings up a quuestion about what is being used to swiitch the current on and off??
 

Thread Starter

Annie Vaws

Joined May 1, 2026
32
Even just measuring the actual current of a short pulse is not really simple. An analog meter movement always has inertia , and most digital multi-meters have conversion times and lack a peak-hold function. So " the required actual Ampere-turns should be measured" is not an easy thing to do.
BUT if the actual total circuit resistance can be measured, the math is not so terribly complex.

My guess is that coil heating will be the big problem unless the on-time of the pulses is rather short. The charged capacitor pulse scheme is a good choice, but that brings up a quuestion about what is being used to swiitch the current on and off??
AARGH! So this magnet is driving me insane!
We have used an old coil as a blueprint, and created a new one to identical specs. Using identical larger core 15.9mm (5/8”), smaller wire 0.19mm, the damned thing is getting just as hot where as the original doesn’t.

We have wound the coil to the same diameter as the original and same length along the core.

Any suggestions guys? ‍
 

crutschow

Joined Mar 14, 2008
38,532
Can you determine the minimum current the magnet requires to perform its function?
From that you may be able to add a series resistor to lower the current to that level, and reduce the heating.
 
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Thread Starter

Annie Vaws

Joined May 1, 2026
32
Can you determine the minimum current the magnet requires to function.
From that you may be able to add a series resistor to low the current to that level, and reduce the heating.
We don’t have the equipment to do that unfortunately. We are complete novices.

We tried a 12v supply which powered the magnet but it didn’t allow the core to discharge quickly enough and drop the magnetic connection quickly. It didn’t get anywhere near as hot with 12V.
 

Thread Starter

Annie Vaws

Joined May 1, 2026
32
What do you mean "drop the magnetic connection"?
That should be faster than when applying a higher voltage.

So when we quickly hit the switch with 48V - to switch power off - the magnet instantly drops the small bolt it has attracted (as a test).

With 12V it attracts the bolt a fraction slower, but when the supply is switched off, it holds the bolt for a few seconds.
 

ThePanMan

Joined Mar 13, 2020
921
Didn't read EVERY post, got antsy and am jumping in.

A heavier gauge wire will drop the resistance and increase the amperage and wattage (it will be even hotter). You want to use as small a gauge wire as possible. Calculate the resistance of the new coil (or measure it) and divide 48 by the new number. This will give you the amperage. You can also square the voltage and divide by the resistance to get the wattage. In the end you want enough power to move the lip without having to use an overkill of current (amps).
 

Thread Starter

Annie Vaws

Joined May 1, 2026
32
Didn't read EVERY post, got antsy and am jumping in.

A heavier gauge wire will drop the resistance and increase the amperage and wattage (it will be even hotter). You want to use as small a gauge wire as possible. Calculate the resistance of the new coil (or measure it) and divide 48 by the new number. This will give you the amperage. You can also square the voltage and divide by the resistance to get the wattage. In the end you want enough power to move the lip without having to use an overkill of current (amps).
Thank you for the advice. I guess I’ll need to get a multimeter?
 

MrChips

Joined Oct 2, 2009
34,829
So when we quickly hit the switch with 48V - to switch power off - the magnet instantly drops the small bolt it has attracted (as a test).

With 12V it attracts the bolt a fraction slower, but when the supply is switched off, it holds the bolt for a few seconds.
Don't switch off the power supply. Just disconnect the wire between the power supply and the coil.

Also, in order to experiment with different current values, you can put a resistor in series, ideally a variable power resistor of about 100Ω, or use many 1W resistors in various combination of series and parallel to arrive at a desired series resistance and coil current.
 

MisterBill2

Joined Jan 23, 2018
27,591
There is a "cheating trick" sometimes used to get an electromagnet to "release instantly" when required. That uses what is called "an H bridge" to apply a very short burst of reverse current to cancel the magnetic field and rapidly release whatever was attracted. Of course, for that to work you MUST NOT HAVE a reversed DIODE across the coil, which is used to prevent the buzz when an electromagnet is powered with unfiltered rectified AC.
 

MisterBill2

Joined Jan 23, 2018
27,591
What I think it seems like youbare doing is switching off the power supply, BUT NOT disconnecting the electromagnet. SO OF COURSEthe release will be slower!
 
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