This is the fastest way I have found to clean welding magnets and other magnets in the shop. I also cover safety concerns and talk about the specific tools I use and recommend.
https://youtu.be/W5yv_pDrZI8
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This is the fastest way I have found to clean welding magnets and other magnets in the shop. I also cover safety concerns and talk about the specific tools I use and recommend.
https://youtu.be/W5yv_pDrZI8
My favorite technique is using hot glue…but this is cheaper! Where does all that stuff go, though?
Normally I'm plasma cutting so pieces come off the cnc table, dross is knocked off, and pieces are ground. I'll blow off the magnets so things can be welded and then ground further. At the end of the day I have a shop cleaning sweep routine followed up by vacuuming in the crevices. It is not really the cleaning of the magnets that get little metal pieces everywhere, they are already there from every other process and that is how they get on the magnets. The only way to really avoid that would be to have a shop with separate rooms for dirty and clean processes but I have a one room setup.
My comment was really for swarf in general.
You're definitely right, pieces get tracked everywhere even when you are careful. I've had to pull slivers from my socks several times even though they were just worn in the house.
Compressed air works; but I start with masking tape...usually pulls enough to clear the surfaces for use.
I hope everyone wears safety goggles or a face shield for protection.
I just use a rag to wipe all the dross to one of the pointy bits and just wipe it off into the bin.
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I usually use a wire brush and aim the swarf at my bin. I have always been rather wary of compressed air. It is inclined to have unpredictable results. Magnets are so handy in the workshop, but that always comes at a price.
The worst are the thin slithers of metal that attach to clothing and work their way through and your forever suddenly being stuck (even pierced if unlucky) a sharp painful something.
This is not a great idea within a shop.
With regards to getting pieces stuck in clothing, what has made the biggest difference was starting to wear a leather apron while in the shop. And wearing long pants under them so nothing gets in my socks/shoes. It also saves my shirts from grinding sparks so they now last years. For splinters, "Uncle Bill's Sliver Grippers" are great USA made tweezers. Those along with a good 10x jeweler's loupe make short work of splinters. Belomo makes a nice one.
Tweezers are common go-to. Even cheap ones can be lapped into a very tight parallel grip with fine wet or dry paper.
Finish sides first to point desired with tips lightly closed to prepare a clean corner (think of vise jaws).
Close jaws on on the paper (1 thickness) and draw out slowly and 'flat'. Do other side in same manner.
There won't be anything too small to grip.
But digging splinters is tedious; I nip them and shallow surrounding skin out with a nail clipper if below surface. Those that protrude slightly, extract with a sharp knife in a light shaving motion. Burrs have burrs and the edge catches them.
It will soon attract swarf. I use switchable/ on-off switch magnet, though more expensive, but gives me peace of mind.
Do beware vacuuming the metal causes electrostatic effects. If combined with cellulose, Al, or Mg there'd be a fire hazard, no?