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A Guide to Magnetizing N48 Magnets in Ansys Maxwell

blog.ozeninc.com

55 points by peter_d_sherman a month ago · 10 comments

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rdtsc a month ago

In case you're wondering Maxwell is a Finite Element Analysis package from Ansys for low frequency EM fields [1]. It looks quite neat. I never used it, but I worked for a competitor and we had something similar.

[1] https://www.ansys.com/products/electronics/ansys-maxwell

tiazumdove a month ago

I really wish AI could help with learning open source FEM software so far having grok or gemini write elmer/fenics code has been a very bumpy ride my only saving grace is the fact that I can ask my colleagues for guidance and have them provide a working base to expand from. It would do wonders for the hobbyists scientists as well I can't count the times I had a idea for a product but it failed because I couldn't simulate the problem to see if it could work out.

15155 a month ago

Was this not posted five days ago with the same comments? Why are the times shifted?

  • rcxdude a month ago

    HN has a 'second chance' mechanism where the mods will essentially bump up an article that didn't get much attention the first time around, but one if the side ffects is that all the timestamps get reset.

amluto a month ago

Interestingly, a few weeks ago I fed Claude a curve from a datasheet (actually a screenshot from the web) via its UI with some of its internal tools enabled, and, with minimal prompting, it turned that plot into an interactive tool that analyzed it. (Good results took four attempts, all in the same conversation. Try 1 had JS errors and did not work at all. Tries 2 and 3 had problems with the visualization. Try 4 was usable.) Oddly, Claude corrupted some of the text in the sheet.

I would not trust this for real work — a real tool like SheetScan is likely much more reliable and is unlikely to hallucinate data.

flancian a month ago

File under "unexpectedly interesting and cool". I'd never seen such good visualizations of magnetic fields before, or of the magnetization process.

ktallett a month ago

Ansys is such a powerful range of software but the guides on all features are basically non existent. (The tutorials do not count).

  • auxym a month ago

    Ansys also costs 5 digits per seat per year.

    My experience working at large size company that paid those sort of sums for a different FEA software is that we got an "application engineer" assigned to us to answer any questions we had and provide needed documentation if anything was needed. He actually sat and worked from our own offices one day per week.

    • areoform a month ago

      How do you learn it then?

      • auxym 19 days ago

        Typically, company would pay for a week or so of training if you don't have previous experience with the software.

        Once again, this isn't a huge expense compared to the license cost + the engineer's salary.

        Then for ongoing support/questions you get the support I mentioned including the onsite support engineer.

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