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I always struggle with abstract shots!! This is a magnet with some little screws caught up and then I edited the original via Pixelmator and played around with various distortions but ended up with the Circle Splash!! Not so sure but anyway for today's theme I have gone with the magnet which is Atomic Symbol Co and Atomic Number 27 for Cobalt.
7 Days of Shooting Week #4 - The Periodic Table Thoroughly Abstract Thursday .....
Thanks, in advance, to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... thanks to you all.
Photographer: Heiko Roemisch
Laboratory: DESY
This image of two quadrupole magnets won third place in the global jury competition and second place in DESY's local competition. The global jury noted the photo's sense of humor, and the DESY jury’s association with this image was “monstrous force.” The image manages to combine seemingly contradictory things – there is no doubt that its subject is something technical, mechanic, scientific, but at the time the coils of the quadrupole magnets seem organic, like two greedy mouths. A well crafted visualisation of technical processes that captures the beholder’s attention.
these are the gorgeous little magnets I received from - susan (chickenfoot) - aren't they just the cutest ! love the tape ribbon as well :)
The sun is shining and temps have risen above freezing admittedly not much but any improvement over real feel temps in the -20s is a good thing :)
Chocolate candy magnets that work great as needle holders as well! The magnet on the back helps find that needle/pin you dropped... and then holds it while you select your next thread color!
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I try to collect two crappy souvenir type items from every city i visit. One magnet and one keychain. These are about half of the magnets ive collected.
YouTube Video showing it in action:
Thingiverse:
www.thingiverse.com/thing:3665886
This is a design for a automatic magnet cleaner. Usually, Zen Magnets should be cleaned often so that ferric and other magnetic particles do not accumulate on the poles of the magnets, destroying their coating. However, done manually this process is tedious and time consuming, especially when you have over 7,000 of them. By making a robot that does it for me, I can sit back and do other things while it cleans.
This specific design cleans 216 magnets at a time (one complete set). It uses and arduino uno, standard 180 degree servo, and a 28BYJ stepper motor and driver. Also, the part that actually cleans the magnets is a piece of steel sheet metal (so the magnets being cleaned will stick to it) and a cut-up piece of microfiber cloth provided by Zen Magnets. On their website you can get 100 of these cloths for 20$ so it is very cheap.
Stats of the machine:
Cycle: 406 seconds
Per Mag: 1.88 seconds for each magnet
Capacity: 216 magnets
input voltage: 5V
The 3D printed parts were designed in Autodesk Fusion 360/Inventor and were printed on a Creality Ender 3.
street art signed magnet, which is apropos as they put up these fences in surrey and immediately spray paint is attracted to it. this fenced area is now bare dirt truck parking where at one time i could wander with my dog and look at open land with birds and rabbits, grass, small trees and such.
Day 27 of 365. "where will I put this one?" I started collecting magnets several years ago. It has gotten out of hand!
Magnet cross stitched to original design: black cotton thread on antique cream linen.
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