Magnets - looking for help with school project

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a school project involving the construction of a magnetic gate to propel a steel ball. The project initially utilized a Hallbach array, but the setup failed to generate sufficient force to push the ball forward. Participants suggest exploring alternative configurations, such as a tri-gate system, and experimenting with smaller bearing balls for better results. The team acknowledges their learning curve and expresses a willingness to experiment further. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the challenges and potential solutions in using magnets for this project.
Tom821
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Hi everyone,

I have a little magnets project for school i need to accomplish and I'm a little stuck.. hoping someone with the right knowledge of magnets could assist me here :)

I need to build a small magnetic gate which can push forward a steel ball (but not too far away). the idea is to roll the ball on a desk and when it enters the gate it will shot it out forward. I'm trying to do that either with hallbach array or other setup of neodymium magnets.

So I've built the Hallbach array but couldn't get the correct setup to make it ball push forward with force.
- should i try a different set up? maybe a tri gate will be better for this experiment? or maybe I'm trying to do something which is impossible.. ?

any help will be great!
thanks in advance, tom.
 
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Tom821 said:
So I've built the Hallbach array but couldn't get the correct setup to make it ball push forward with force.

do you really understand how a Halbach array is constructed and works ?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halbach_array
 
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i did build it from wiki, was not easy but i could do that.
I'ts all fairly new to us (the team in school) but were here to experiment :) so were learning all the time..
it is complicated so we thought maybe we should try with tri gate & 2 small bearing balls (like shown on few youtube videos)
 
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