Pete, in your first reply, did you say that the poles of (I'm assuming) one magnet could reverse? If so, could I end up with the two magnets suddenly being attracted to each other instead of repelled?
Thanks electricpete. This application would only be subject to ambient indoor temperatures, so 32 to 95 degrees fahrenheit (0 to 35 degrees celsius). What is the Curie temperature for Neodimium magnets anyways?
My questions are similar to one in another thread. In my application, I'm using two rare-earth magnets inside a shaft, same poles touching to repel each other (thus moving a rod inside the shaft)and then bringing them together again (no impact), then repelling, over and over...
1)Should I...