Can a flywheel lose magnetism?

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asked Sep 1, 2022 in Lawn Mowers/Garden Tractors by Justinfartty (1,650 points)
Can a flywheel lose magnetism?

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answered Sep 21, 2022 by Medlock12334 (8,940 points)
A flywheel magnet can lose magnetism although you can re magnetize the flywheel magnet by using another strong magnet and passing it in front of the flywheel magnet.

You re magnetize a magnet by bringing it into contact with a strong magnet.

So, if you have a weakened magnet, you must carefully bring it to contact with a strong neodymium magnet.

This will make your weakened magnet regain its magnetic force. That was it.

A flywheel magneto is a type of ignition coil that produces electricity to create spark by way of magnetism.

As the flywheel magnet on the flywheel spins across the magneto is produces voltage which in turn creates spark to ignite the fuel to start the engine.

A magneto creates spark by way of the magnet on the flywheel.

The magnet on the flywheel spins and passes in front of the magneto which then creates the electricity.

And as the magnet spins (or the magnet rotor is turned), it generates a strong magnetic force that is “held back” by a primary coil.

Then the moment the contact points open, a rapid magnetic flow generates a high voltage in the secondary coil, which ignites the spark plug, thus firing the engine.

Whereas an electromagnet uses electricity passing through a coil to produce a magnet, a magneto uses a magnetic field in the vicinity of a coil, called the armature, to produce an electric current.

A magneto is an electrical generator that uses permanent magnets to produce periodic pulses of alternating current.

Unlike a dynamo, a magneto does not contain a commutator to produce direct current.

The magneto is a self-contained generator of high voltage that provides ignition to an engine through spark plugs.

A magnet—hence magneto—spins in close proximity to a coil of wire.

As the magnet spins (or the magnet rotor is turned), it generates a strong magnetic force that is “held back” by a primary coil.

An ignition magneto, or high-tension magneto, is a magneto that provides current for the ignition system of a spark-ignition engine, such as a petrol engine.

It produces pulses of high voltage for the spark plugs.

The older term tension means voltage.

A magneto is an electrical generator that uses permanent magnets to produce periodic pulses of alternating current.

Unlike a dynamo, a magneto does not contain a commutator to produce direct current.

The beauty of a magneto is its simplicity.

When one fails, it's not dramatic, and will not result in a catastrophic engine failure unless both mags shoot craps at the same time.

If that happens, the engine will stop running or might run rough (missing on one or more cylinders).

Because it requires no battery or other source of electrical energy, the magneto is a compact and reliable self-contained ignition system, which is why it remains in use in many general aviation applications.

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