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I've been making some coils with wires and I find out that sometimes they work and sometimes they don't work at all, the inside of those that don't work are some what more "silver-ish", more "metal-ish" like iron. While the coils that do work do look more thin like copper. Does the conductive material used for the coil matter? (If it does I'm -greatly- interested in why)

Voltage Spike
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Harry Svensson
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    Assuming you are talking more about electromagnets than about inductors "not work" probably means either a failure to connect to the wire (such as residual enamel insulation) or a break somewhere in the wire, or having most of the turns bypassed by a short between wires or to a conductive core. – Chris Stratton Jun 28 '12 at 21:26
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    Anything that conducts wrapped around a core makes a coil. Some materials conduct better than others, some some insulations are thinner than others, which is useful for making coils. Pictures of your specific "coils" would help a lot, and a description of what you are trying to use them for. – Olin Lathrop Jun 28 '12 at 21:29
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    You need to define "work". – markrages Jun 28 '12 at 22:10
  • I'm talking about electromagnets. Sorry for not making that clear. Work as in "functional" at all. Throwing off any noticeable flux. – Harry Svensson Jun 29 '12 at 01:23
  • Can you show us a picture of the used wire? Preferably on the thingy with the label it came on? Also an image of the **inside of those that don't work are somewhat more "silver-ish"** and **more "metal-ish" like iron.** – jippie Jun 29 '12 at 06:58
  • You are using insulated wire, right? – markrages Jun 29 '12 at 20:55
  • Coils? the electromagnetic coils are insulated with a thin layer of vernish or polymer. the vernish and some polymer looks red, so as-a whole the wire looks coppery . If they were not insulated, the whole thing will act as a metallic cyllinder, and not act like a helix. The turn-numbers will be zero. – Always Confused Jul 19 '16 at 13:30
  • Search web about "magnet wires" and "transformer vernish coating" – Always Confused Jul 19 '16 at 13:32
  • similar: http://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/34040/why-arent-solenoid-electromagnet-windings-insulated – Always Confused Jul 19 '16 at 13:32
  • You've wrote, uninsulated wires look silvery (and not look like copper). Usually the solderable silvery(not-red)-coloured wires are made up of copper, with a thin layer of tin (tinned wire) or some-other metal is given to prevent chemical reaction (tarnishing of copper). See also http://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/238044/what-is-the-metallic-coating-on-these-stranded-copper-wires – Always Confused Jul 19 '16 at 13:46

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The core is very important in making a successful inductor, as a good core massively increases permeability (the ability for magnetic currents to flow effectively in the core - a lot like inverse electrical resistance (conductance.)) However, adding a core introduces a saturation characteristic; if the current approaches or exceeds the saturation point, the core will loose permeability and the inductor behaves more like a piece of wire.

The actual wire is less important. Generally low resistance and high temperature resistance are desirable factors. Copper is good.

Thomas O
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Definitely the conductive material itself will matter - different materials will have different resistance and so for the electrically equivalent circuits you will need different wire cross-sections and that will significantly affect winding size.

Now to "silverish" vs "copperish". The deal is you need the winding turns being insulated from each other, otherwise the winding just gets shorted.

"Copperish" wires have their looks because they are either coated in enamel (lacquer) or covered with copper oxide and both are insulating materials (however you need to check whether their insulating properties are actually enough for the specific application).

"Silverish" wires don't happen to have insulating coating and so when winding turns touch each other the winding gets shorted. The solution could be to leave gaps between turns and then cover the winding with lacquer so that turns don't move. Again, different layers of winding should be separated by an insulator and you have to check whether the lacquer and the insulator and the distance will suit the actual application.

sharptooth
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  • +1. related photos: [Why aren't solenoid/electromagnet windings insulated?](http://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/34040/why-arent-solenoid-electromagnet-windings-insulated). – davidcary Jun 29 '12 at 23:02