My refrigerator appears to be an enamel finish, light tan in color. I first tried COMET on a wet wash rag, that seem to help some, but did not really come close to removing the magnet stains totally. Then I used an old toothbrush, wet with water and toothpaste. A feeling of optimism came over me as I saw the stains begin to dissappear. It seems to work best with a good lather, so keep it wet. Most dentists recommend brushing for at least 2 minutes! May not be 100%, but you'd have to look pretty close to find them. Since I used the COMET first, I don't know if that step is necessary, or if the toothpaste alone is sufficient.
The magnet is losing its magnetic connection to the fridge.
if a refrigerator magnet cant hold a piece of paper against a refrigerator, the forces acting on the magnet must be what?
the refrigerator is iron or steel, therefore the magnet sticks to it.
yes
try a mr clean eraser
The term "refrigerator magnet" is ambiguous and may refer to any number of types of magnets. However, typically a refrigerator magnet is going to be relatively weak and made of the most inexpensive materials available. Hard refrigerator magnets are likely iron. Flexible refrigerator magnets are made of bonded ferrite powders; barium ferrite is among the most common. In general classification, a refrigerator magnet is a permanent magnet.
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
The refrigerator isn't actually a magnet, it it simply made of metal which magnets can then stick to.
A refrigerator magnet is magnetic because it is a "permanent" magnet. An electromagnet is a magnetic field caused by a current flowing through a wire.
its not useful for the refrigerator its useful for humans only....
its not useful for the refrigerator its useful for humans only....