- Joined
- Nov 21, 2022
TL;DR I have a commercial grade 1500LB 12/24 DC electromagnet. It has no COM/NO/NC only power supplied/denied. It holds beautifully strong when powered. It's operating power is 12/24VDC controlled by jumpers, it is currently set to 12VDC. The power running to the unit is simple low voltage copper wire approximately 15 feet if that makes difference. Voltage at the unit is roughly 13.5 VDC not miles away from 12VDC.
When power is cut to the magnet, emphasis on CUT, 0 volts it still holds with a large amount of force maybe 100-200lbs or so, this is not acceptable this magnet needs to simply release as it's designed. I have two separate units I have tried both produce the same results. As a redneck engineer I'm running out ideas here. The relay I installed cuts all power to this thing and it's still holding very strong, I've tested this 3 different ways including just disconnecting the entire controller and power and obviously checking with a volt meter. bridging the power supplied to the magnet seems to have no effect on reducing it's residual hold. Time seems to be a factor, I give it 3 seconds of power and cut and it releases just as it should I leave it engaged for hours and it holds for dear life without any source of power.
Whats the solution? Do I shim the surfaces with something that reduces hold?
Picture of very similar unit for reference. Once again the units I am working with have only 2 wires for power only. The unit pictured appears to have extra wires a closed sensor alerting the controller unit when/open closed.

When power is cut to the magnet, emphasis on CUT, 0 volts it still holds with a large amount of force maybe 100-200lbs or so, this is not acceptable this magnet needs to simply release as it's designed. I have two separate units I have tried both produce the same results. As a redneck engineer I'm running out ideas here. The relay I installed cuts all power to this thing and it's still holding very strong, I've tested this 3 different ways including just disconnecting the entire controller and power and obviously checking with a volt meter. bridging the power supplied to the magnet seems to have no effect on reducing it's residual hold. Time seems to be a factor, I give it 3 seconds of power and cut and it releases just as it should I leave it engaged for hours and it holds for dear life without any source of power.
Whats the solution? Do I shim the surfaces with something that reduces hold?
Picture of very similar unit for reference. Once again the units I am working with have only 2 wires for power only. The unit pictured appears to have extra wires a closed sensor alerting the controller unit when/open closed.
