By: Heather Pulse | 2012-02-22 | Article Marketing Humans have derived a lot of good from these strong magnets. They enable people to create a variety of electronic devices and amusing entertainments. However, there are also dangers associated with their strength. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2011-04-05 | Business Rare earth magnets are often used in the classroom to teach students about magnetic fields, invisible force, and the way that subatomic particles are attracted to one another. For students who have never learned about these things before, this can be a very eye-opening time. The idea of a magnet to someone who has not seen one or who has, at least, not thought about the properties and forces that are involved is very strange. read more
By: John Cheesman | 2010-03-28 | Advertising Rare Earth Magnets are strong permanent magnets. Rare earth magnets are made from alloys of rare earth elements. Rare earth magnets are much stronger than alnico or ferrite magnets, and the magnetic field produced by rare earth magnets can exceed 1200 milliteslas. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2011-01-13 | Business Neodymium rare Earth magnets are composed of a boron, iron, and neodymium alloy to form the strongest currently known type of permanent magnet. They are also the most affordable type due to a continuous decrease in price over the years since their first construction and are often used in the production of many modern technologies. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2011-02-03 | Business Neodymium rare earth magnets are permanent magnets made from an alloy of iron, boron and neodymium. This compound is also designated as NdFeB. It was created in 1982 in order to provide an alternative to samarium cobalt magnets. Magnets made from this alloy are the strongest type of rare earth magnet. read more
By: Mike Smith | 2012-01-10 | Article Marketing Rare earth magnets are being increasingly used in children's toys as well. As these are much cheaper and less bulky, manufacturing companies prefer using these in children’s products. read more
By: Emily Jackson | 2012-01-06 | Article Marketing Developers overcame this drawback by alloying the elements in the magnet with substances known as terbium or dysprosium. With this weakness corrected, industry and the public have come to buy neodymium magnets in greater quantities than any other. These magnetic materials are found in many everyday devices, such as computers and power tools. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2011-01-19 | Business Rare earth magnets, which were developed in the last half of the 20th century, are considered permanent in nature and extremely strong. These magnets are used for industrial needs such as electro dynamic bearings and in the motors of many cordless drills as a component of the motor, commercially in audio video equipment and even in the making of modern science type toys and puzzles. read more
By: Mosey Gray | 2011-10-20 | Marketing Rare earth magnets have revolutionized industry, medicine and entertainment. Previous to their development, people relied on ferrite and ceramic magnets. These magnets are superior to these other types of magnets because their magnetic fields are much stronger. A rare earth magnets sale has been ongoing ever since their development in the 1970's. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2010-10-18 | Business There is magic in those magnets! An uncontrolled magnet only a few centimeters in diameter contains enough power to fracture bones and possibly cause death. These powerful man-made magnets are created to be super strong and long-lasting metal objects containing exceptional power in a compact package. Magnets rare earth receive their value because of their ability to become magnetized and remain that way. The actual metal that they are created from is rather inexpensive and common. read more
By: Renee Walker | 2011-10-20 | Business They are significantly stronger than regular, ferrite magnets. Industry has put them to use for various tasks, such as in rare earth disc magnets. However, there are some weaknesses in these magnets to which their makers must adapt. The materials used to make them are also, as the name implies, very rare and this causes supply concerns. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2011-04-25 | Business One of the more popular wooden toys has traditionally been the train set. The engine has it's boiler, smoke stack and the room for the engineer. The engine is followed by the coal car, box car, flat bed, passenger cars and kaboos. The connection of one car to the next has traditionally been some form of latch or post locking mechanism. Rare earth magnets offer a new invisible method that is certain to fascinate any child. read more
By: Marie Winston | 2010-11-23 | Business Rare earth magnets are a special type of magnet, first manufactured in the 1970s. They are made from rare earth metals, which are a group of seventeen elements found in the periodic table. These include scandium and yttrium, and despite the name, they are actually found in relative abundance in the earth's crust. Rare earth magnets have the distinction of being the most powerful type of permanent magnet. read more
By: Mark Rembert | 2012-01-11 | Article Marketing Regardless of the dangers posed by rare earth magnets, these materials continue to find use in numerous applications. Modern industry and technology would not have advanced so far without the help of the neodymium magnet and the samarium cobalt variety. They are as ubiquitous as they are useful. read more
By: April Gilbertson | 2012-01-17 | Manufacturing Even with the arrival of inexpensive neodymium on the market, there is still a place for samarium-cobalt plate magnets. Their high Curie temperature makes them necessary in the hottest applications. The older types of magnets now find their primary uses in certain products. read more