The best refridgerator magnet money can't buy

 by pir8p3t3

Step 1: Find an old Hard drive, and take it apart

For this job you'll need some torx drivers of various sizes (5.5, 8, and 10 were what I needed). Just keep taking out screws and peeling back labels until it's all in pieces.
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CrimsonXLR says: Jan 5, 2013. 6:25 AM
Ya, I did this, I had a drive fail on me just a couple months ago. That isn't no lie that magnet is a pain to pull off the fridge. It sure does hold up a heavy calendar with out sliding down.
redsunmtm says: Sep 13, 2011. 3:48 PM
@THeff
you can do it by usin various magnets and making a grid that you can hot glue on some fine plywood an prépare the four holes on it to support you TV =)
tv on fridge.jpg
LJduino in reply to redsunmtmAug 14, 2012. 9:38 PM
you might have trouble with the tv because of magnets
redsunmtm in reply to LJduinoAug 20, 2012. 11:33 AM
you would have if it was a CRT one but with LCD and TFT, why ? for the reception ? normaly, until the magnets don't move around, it will not change too much ! (in case that the TV as an internal antena), but if connected to wall, what problem can you find ? please tell me i am curious ! really !
eygen says: Apr 28, 2009. 12:49 PM
Good idea....but these magnets don't grow on trees you know.
Sir Maverick in reply to eygenJun 10, 2009. 2:39 PM
You're right...they grow in hard drives...lol
K'nexFanatiFreek in reply to Sir MaverickJun 10, 2012. 8:32 PM
And they work at Data Storage Inc!
robjective says: Nov 30, 2006. 8:05 PM
If you have a non-functioning microwave, there is an incredibly strong pair of magnets inside. I think the part is, oddly enough, called a magnetron. If you do decide to harvest them, please be very careful. I'm sure there are electrocution hazards within the microwave.
Ian01 in reply to robjectiveDec 2, 2006. 12:09 PM
Don't touch the pinkish ceramic stuff in the magnetron (especially if it's broken), it's toxic.
Bob7k in reply to Ian01Feb 9, 2007. 6:37 PM
dude, for some reason, that kinda scares me, that a pinkish ceramic solid thats potentially toxic lives inside the one device i use to cook with....
account3r2 in reply to Bob7kApr 11, 2012. 5:46 PM
A good reason for it to scare all of us, too...
account3r2 says: Apr 11, 2012. 5:35 PM
Wait a minute... 800 MEGABYTES?!?!?! THAT'S THE MOST MEMORY I'VE EVER HEARD OF!!! HOW DID YOU ACQUIRE THAT MUCH MEMORY??? I have some old HDDs that have only a tiny bit of memory... (Compared to modern hard drives)
GASSYPOOTS says: Mar 24, 2012. 1:45 PM
i bought a hard drive XD so your wrong
slapoutz says: Feb 11, 2011. 1:59 PM
thanks man i had 8 of these laying around but never put them to use cause i could never get them off without hassling for 10 seconds lol
meeko says: Jul 31, 2009. 11:01 AM
they are called rare earth magnets.watch mr.g summer slow fall on you tube for a cool expiriment with these
timgray in reply to meekoDec 4, 2010. 9:42 PM
Best video ever, Now I have to buy big rare earf magnets
FathomX says: Aug 10, 2010. 12:13 PM
These would be great to magnetize my screwdrivers... thanks for the read.
HEY YOU says: Mar 15, 2010. 3:05 AM
Sometimes the HDD magnets are attached to a base that is screwed to the housing with a M10 cap screw that you can use to force it off the base, but you could also use it to attach a convenient handle.

I would also coat the magnet to avoid damaging the fridge door.

Cheers
killerjackalope says: Aug 5, 2007. 7:13 PM
We used speaker magnets as wall hangers for years as our tyre fitting workshop was mostly a 40ft shipping container most of the magnets I found were glued on but a chisel, flathead screwdriver or some such set at the join and hit with a hammer usually knocked the magnet clean off except for the magnet out of a huge speaker had to be from a guitar amp or something but a sledgehammer and crowbar got it the crowbar was much harder to remove from the magnet. My last one is welding magnets these come in varieties 15lbs to 200lbs don't stick them to the ceiling unless you're fat or want a pretty permanent chinup thing... these need to be slid off an object however they replace the fridge handle nicely sorry for my long reply
Full Frontal Graphic in reply to killerjackalopeMar 25, 2008. 7:41 PM
"the crowbar was much harder to remove from the magnet" That gave me a giggle.
bettbee in reply to Full Frontal GraphicFeb 4, 2010. 10:13 AM
LOL
killerjackalope in reply to Full Frontal GraphicMar 25, 2008. 8:03 PM
not me so much...
FromOnHigh says: Feb 4, 2010. 10:10 AM
I have been using these for years for a whole variety of things, my job has me taking things apart out on golf courses, there are many small screws and such, I simply put one of these in my breast pocket and 'stick' all the small metal pieces to my shirt; real easy to get at with one hand, never lose them.

Also I child-proofed my kitchen with them, our cabinets were already setup with magnetic closure, I simply placed one of these magnets (stripped from its metal backer) on the existing cabinet magnet. That's it. The addition of one of these makes it HARD to open, sufficiently so that my children were NEVER successful in getting a cabinet open on their own.
IW5 Industries says: Oct 9, 2009. 4:40 PM
i am eating a peach.
doughnutguy1 in reply to IW5 IndustriesJan 3, 2010. 9:50 AM
Peaches are actually ALIEN SPIES
How did I get a pc in the loony bin? It was very hard...
brandonparx says: Dec 24, 2009. 1:52 AM
 Oh man, I used to love going to Mordours at 3 in the morning.
yellowtwo says: Aug 25, 2009. 6:14 PM
I have a few metal plates/studs in my apartment. I use these to hang small/light items without nails on my walls :)
knex_mepalm says: Aug 20, 2009. 5:39 AM
i always wanted to hold up a hematite magnet or a fake magenet...lol 5*
adam 101 says: Aug 18, 2009. 7:33 PM
just don't get your fingers pinched between the two magnets. It hurts like crazy!!!
memyselfand1 says: Jun 20, 2009. 9:39 PM
My uncle uses these as magnets. Says they're very useful.
Notbob says: May 28, 2009. 8:32 AM
We've (my family and I) have been doing this for years,but we never thought to put little wire handles on them.
Tigerlily78 says: Apr 2, 2009. 10:38 PM
Just becareful when you pull these magnets off the fridge. I pulled one off my fridge and it slipped out of my hand, bounced on the floor and slid UNDER the fridge and stuck to the bottom of it. I couldn't convince my husband to pull out the fridge and tilt it backward so I could reach underneath and try to get the magnet back. :P
gcrdcn says: Feb 26, 2009. 1:05 PM
One day my son was pounding and pulling his ear. I looked in his ear and saw a hearing aid battery. The harddrive magnet sucked it out with no problem.
porcupinemamma in reply to gcrdcnMar 28, 2009. 3:47 PM
Where where you when i put a safety pin in my ear as a kid? lol
microdot71 says: Dec 2, 2006. 12:21 AM
You could use that do-it-yourself rubber coating dip that they sell at Home Depot to keep from scratching the fridge door.
Antleredguy in reply to microdot71Mar 25, 2009. 5:53 AM
You could of course, just use the magnets from old airplane headphones... They're relatively powerful with totally smooth edges and encasing.
Photo_032509_005.jpg
gomiboy in reply to microdot71Mar 5, 2009. 9:49 AM
I used plasti-dip on mine, and it helped keep them from chipping when they hit each other. Another thing I did that helped me get them off things and/or keep them from scratching is I put a teflon pad on each one - the kind you put on the bottom of furniture legs that let you slide 'em around. Keeps them from scratching, and gives it enough slip to let you get fingers around/under the edge of the magnet to pull it off.
Crash2108 in reply to microdot71Dec 3, 2006. 1:19 AM
Plasti-dip.
pmaist in reply to Crash2108Jun 9, 2007. 8:36 PM
In my area they don't sell plasti dip at home depot. But that could just be because I live in Massachusetts
challahc in reply to Crash2108May 21, 2007. 9:39 AM
or heat shrink tubing
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