wimms said:
To create a huge electromagnetic field you do not need huge amps, you need number of turns in the electromagnet coil. Wire resistence is then just a thing of efficiency, ie losses. Voltage is needed to just overcome the losses.
I second this motion. Strong electromagnetic fields are created most easily by adding many turns of wire to your electromagnet just making sure you have enough voltage to get through the resistance.
"The simplest electromagnet is a wire through which a current is flowing. If the wire is now wound into a coil or solenoid, the strength of the magnetic field is increased to a very large degree. This increased strength is due to the fact that
the field around each turn of the coil adds its effect to the fields of all the other turns, just as would occur if a number of permanent magnets were tied together. The resultant magnetic field is the sum total of all the individual fields."
-Basic Electrical and Electronic Principles
Maurice Grayle Suffern
McGraw-Hill 1949 3rd edition: 1962
He goes on to cite the following four factors that contribute to the strength of any electromagnet:
"1. The number of turns forming the solenoid.
2.The strength of the current flowing through the solenoid.
3.The material of which the core is made.
4.The size of the core."
Whatever kind of iron based core you use will have a somewhat different ability to be magnetized, depending on what elements have been added to the iron and in what proportions. In general, though, the larger the core the stronger the possible field.
All forms, however have a saturation point beyond which it is no longer possible to increase the strength of the magnetic field by adding more turns.
Putting mega-current through a coil of few turns is not a good solution because of the heating. The best solution is to put a reasonable current through many, many turns of wire with a good sized core.