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HIGH-AMPERE MAGNETISM DEMONSTRATION
(c)1989 William J. Beaty


There are a number of science museum exhibits which require many tens of
amperes of electric current in a thick cable to generate strong magnetism. 
One example is a raft of compasses with a 200-amp cable running through
the center of the raft.  Or, three 100-amp cables with three-phase AC
powering them, where the resulting field rotates and can spin a conductive
object by induction. 

Rather than trying to build a 2-volt, 200 ampere supply, there is an
easier way.  Think: 

  In stranded cable, the DC electric current divides equally among all 
  the strands.  

If a 200-amp cable has 200 strands, then each strand actually has only 1.0
ampere.  So instead of using a length of thick cable, why not wind a
hoop-coil of very large diameter?  (e.g. a hoop that's 3ft in diameter.)  
Wrap the coil with black electrical tape so that it resembles a circle of
heavy black cable.  Send 1.0 amperes into the coil's connections, and you
have a circular "cable" which has one ampere within each "strand", and 200
amperes within the cable as a whole. There is no difference between a
segment of this "coil" and a segment of a thick electrical cable with an
enormous current inside.



NO EXPENSIVE DC POWER SUPPLY NEEDED

Depending on the number of turns and the thickness of the wire you use,
you can then power your coil with a 20-volt, 10-amp supply, (or a
200-volt, 1-amp supply if you used thin wire.)  Even alkaline 9V battery
might give interesting effects.  If the resistance of your coil is high
enough, it may be possible to plug your coil directly into 120VAC with no
gigantic power-supply box needed, just use a diode!  (Make sure the total
wattage isn't too high.  Your coil can be warm, but you don't want the
insulation in the center to melt!  And better use a fullwave bridge
rectifier to get smoother DC.)



DOH!

When I saw that the above could be done, I felt really stupid for not
realizing it earlier.  But then I began noticing that no other science
museum was already using this idea.  Can it really be that novel?  Those
neat Exploratorium magnetism exhibits with thousand-amp conductors are
within reach of anyone, simply by using one hundred strands of 10-amp
conductors! Huge power supplies can be replaced with a tiny FW-bridge
rectifier, and the whole thing plugged directly into 120vac!


BUT *ANY* 100-AMP CABLE IS A "COIL"

But isn't this a form of "cheating"?  An electromagnet coil is not a
single cable after all.  WRONG!  If we connect a thick cable to a power
supply and send 200 amperes through it, then we have created a 1-turn
electromagnet coil.  Whenever there is direct current in a cable, there is
ALWAYS a 1-turn coil present.  And whether you send 100 amps through one
wire, or 1.0 amps through each of 100 strands of wire, the magnetism is
the same.  Power supplies are charge pumps after all, not charge sources.
The path for current is continuous through the power supply as well as
through the cable, so even if you use a single thick wire, result is a
long, flexible, hoop-shaped electromagnet.  But if we instead wind a
100-turn coil and send 1.0 amperes through it, the end result is the same:
the "cable" still has 100 amperes within, and has a very strong, circular
magnetic field outside.  A hoop-coil is the same as a cable, both are
electromagnet coils, the only difference is in the number of turns used.


MORE TRICKS

Speaking of cables, here is an additional trick.  Obtain many feet of some
thick multi-strand telephone cable; the sort used in older office
telephone systems.  A "100-pair" telephone cable contains 200 conductors.  
Place the ends of the long cable near each other to form a loop, and then
solder the strands in a very special manner to electrically convert the
cable into a coil. (e.g.  solder the red to the green, the green to the
blue, the blue to the orange, etc., until only two ends are left.)  The
path for current in each strand should repeatedly come out of one end of
the cable and dive back into the other end, so the loop of cable now forms
a coil.  The result is a loop of thick plastic cable (of any length you
wish!), with two little wires sticking out.  Send a current through them,
and it will seemingly multiply the applied current by 200 times.

If you only want a short "100-amp cable", it's proably easier to wind
yourself a hoop-coil using thin insulated wire.  The above "phone cable" 
idea requires a lot of soldering, and it's easy to make mistakes.  The
"phone cable" is best when you need to make a very long "magnetic cable." 
Eg., when you want to wrap a coil around your house, apply a few hundred 
watts of 5KHz, then run your toys with little 5KHz resonator coils (no 
batteries needed.)  Courtesy of Nikola Tesla, no?


SCIENCE EXHIBIT USES

   - Compasses surrounding a 'single' thick conductor to display the 
     circular shape of the magnetic field

   - Pairs of flexible cables held near each other will magnetically
     attract or repel other depending on the direction of current.

   - A powerful AC magnetic field around a 'single' 100-ampere cable can
     light a coil/lamp assembly held nearby.

   - A spiral of thick cable wound through holes in a compasses-table
     makes a dipole field pattern.

   - Ring-core halves with polished faces, held around the conductor,
     become impossible to separate once touched together.  When the core
     halves form a complete ring with no air gaps, the magnetic field
     becomes incredibly strong.  This also demonstrates that magnetism is
     NOT based on individual "poles" (where are the magnet poles in a 
     closed ringlike magnet?)  It also demonstrates that extremely high 
     flux can seemingly arise from nowhere (after all, before the ring 
     was closed, the magnetic field around the cable was relatively weak.)

   - Drive three hi-amp cables with audio power amplifiers driven by tiny
     oscillators with 60Hz square waves in 3-phase relationship.  Hold the 
     three cables near each other, and it creates Nikola Tesla's spinning 
     magnetic field.  If a conductive object is suspended by a thread and 
     held near the cable, it will rotate, which demonstrates how induction 
     motors work.

What would you do with your own thousand-amp magnetism cable?








From  Mon May 18 12:00:56 1998
Date: Mon, 18 May 1998 12:00:18 -0700 (PDT)
From: William Beaty <>
To: tap-l@listserv.appstate.edu
Subject: Re: magnetism cable


I was playing with a 700-amp DC welder and finding that its cable would
cause the iron filings on the machine-shop floor beneath the cable to
align.  I tried it with the above 200-conductor phone-cable coil powered
by several 9v batteries in series, and I obtained nearly similar results.
Pretty impressive, considering that the power supply on the welder was the
size of a small desk.  The phone cable heated up quickly though. 
Conductive cooling doesn't work well through all that PVC insulation. 

I smirkingly though that an educational supply company could sell this as
a "magical current multiplier" device.  Supply a black box which has a
loop of heavy cable permanently attached, and which has a compartment for
a couple of 9V batteries.  When switched on, hundreds of amperes flow in
the thick cable.  Just what sort of incredibly-efficient solid-state
switching circuitry must be inside?!  Heh heh.  The box is empty.  The
thick cable is actually a coil.

One cool demo:  I had some iron half-rings (two c-shaped iron cores) 
which I found in an electronics surplus store (Radar Electric in Seattle.) 
They had been part of a clamp-on meter which measures alternating current. 
The two rings would fit face to face perfectly, forming a solid ring.  The
faces had been ground very flat.  When either of these iron objects was
held near the "hundred-amp cable", the attraction force was too small to
notice.  But if the two c-cores were placed together to form a ring around
the cable, something impressive happened.  Just before the faces of the
cores were about to make contact, there was a "snap" sound as they came
together.  Once touched together, the attraction between them was
incredible.  I could not use my bare hands to get them apart. I couldn't
even slide them, the friction on the smooth iron faces under the enormous
force was too high!

When current was switched off, the core halves remained stuck (there was
still considerable remanent magnetization, and they formed a ring-shaped
permanent magnet.)  But this was soft iron transformer core material, an
alloy which is designed to be nearly unmagnetizable.  When pulled apart
and then stuck together again (still with no current) the two c-cores did
NOT stick together anymore.  That significant remanent magnetization had
vanished.  Briefly separating them caused them to demagnetize!   (I think
this happens because opening the ring is moving the operating point on the
hysterisis curve, and once the magnetization is lost, it doesn't return.)

I also found that if I included a piece of Saran wrap (tm) plastic film
between the faces of the c-cores, the attractive force was greatly
diminished.  Clamp the two c-cores around the hi-ampere cable with .0001"  
plastic film in the way, and they can easily be separated by hand.  Tiny
gaps in the iron flux-path have enormous effects.

From what I understand of the reluctance of flux paths and the motion
along the BH curve of soft iron, all of the above phenomena are expected
and explainable.  Weird though, yes?

Besides demonstrating some magnetic phenomena, I found that this demo
upset some of my incorrect magnetism concepts and rubbed my nose in the
fact that magnetism is not based on "poles."  It is actually Special
Relativity mixed with moving charge.  I COULD NOT use my "north pole" and
"south pole" concepts to explain these phenomena to myself, and this made
me realize that both conventional bar magnets and electromagnet coils have
the illusory "north/south pole" concept built into them.  Playing with
circular fields and c-cores gave me a gut-level feel for the TRUE nature
of magnetism: there are no poles, the lines of flux are circles, and net
flux can vary enormously.  This is quite different than the concepts
accidentally communicated by playing with bar magnets, where misleading
"poles"  seemingly appear, and where the net flux extending from these
"poles" is fairly constant. Bar magnets cause magnetism to seem akin to
electrostatics, while the above demonstrations with the c-cores shows the
spots where it is quite different.

P.S.  For those who haven't stumbled across it, see my Phys Demo page:

  http://amasci.com/scied.html
  (includes a large section on electrostatics)

((((((((((((((((((((( ( (  (   (    (O)    )   )  ) ) )))))))))))))))))))))
William J. Beaty                                  SCIENCE HOBBYIST website
                                  amasci.com
EE/programmer/sci-exhibits          science projects, tesla, weird science
Seattle, WA   206-789-0775          freenrg-L taoshum-L vortex-L webhead-L





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