Summary
Material: standard, neodymium
Shape: round magnet on wooden knob
Size:
- magnet 30mm X 10mm
- total height including the wooden knob, 50mm
WARNING, amazingly powerful for the size, treat with caution, if you get a finger caught between the magnet and a sheet of metal, it will crush your finger, keep this well away from children.
Strength
How many sheets of paper will this magnet hold securely onto a fridge door?
Answer: 90
The paper was 90g in weight (a good quality paper, not standard copy paper) and was A4 in size.
Uses for testing
Gold and silver are not magnetic. So when you are presented with dozens of items to test, save time by picking out all the items that are magnetic.
This does NOT mean that there are special magnets for testing gold and silver. If an item is NOT magnetic, it could be any one of hundreds of metals (including gold and silver).
Silver is strongly 'diamagnetic'. If you slide an appropriate magnet down a flat silver surface (e.g. a coin) it will move slowly instead of 'falling off'. Copper is slightly diamagnetic. See our 'magnets for silver testing' - a set of 3 magnet, a sample copper coin and instructions.
Copper is not magnetic, neither is brass (a mixture of copper and zinc) or bronze (a mixture of copper and mostly tin). A magnet is useful because many copper / bronze / brass items are really steel that has been plated and will (in most cases) be very magnetic. As with gold and silver: if an item is magnetic it is not solid copper / bronze / brass.
Samples
Not sure which magnet to buy? We have a bargain sample pack of nine different magnets (both neodymium and iron), click here.
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Ask a Question-
How do you separate the magnet from the item being tested, say a valuable coin or piece of jewelry, without damaging the item? This question also applies to the smaller magnets without handles. Thank you
Magnets do not damage jewellery, anything magnetic 'sticks' to the magnet, you lift it off. Though if it's magnetic it's not gold or silver.
The same applies to coins, though if a coin is "proof" you would not want to touch it, not even with your fingers.


