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Programmable magnets vs. conventional magnets: read the force curves

A normal magnet gives you one behavior. A coded face lets you shape the force curve — and hold up to 4x harder on sheet metal, with almost no stray field.

Polymagnet application engineering · 6 min read

The difference between a conventional magnet and a programmable one isn't strength — it's control. A conventional magnet has exactly one trick, and one force curve. A programmable magnet lets you draw the curve you want.

What a conventional magnet can do

A standard magnet has North on one face and South on the other. Bring two together and you get a single, monotonic behavior: attraction (or repulsion) that simply grows as the gap closes. Useful — but it's the only curve you get, and it reaches out far, grabbing anything ferrous nearby.

What changes with a coded face

A programmable magnet (a "Polymagnet," also called a correlated, coded, or software-defined magnet) prints many small poles — maxels — on one face in an engineered pattern. When two coded faces meet, their fields add where the codes align and cancel where they don't. Now the force is a function of both position and rotation, so you can shape it:

Same magnet material. The behavior lives in the pattern, not the part.

Stronger up close — and shorter reach on purpose

Because the North and South maxels sit next to each other, the flux takes short loops right at the surface instead of arcing out to a far pole. Two consequences matter for design:

When to use which

Reach for a conventional magnet when you just need to hold two things together and cost per part is everything. Reach for a programmable magnet when you need behavior — self-alignment, a latch, a spring, a twist-release, a detent — or when a conventional magnet's long stray field would be a problem. In many designs one programmable part replaces three or four conventional components.

See the behavior for yourself

It's hard to believe until it's in your hand. Order a demo kit, design your pattern, or talk to an application engineer about a custom force curve.

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Sample application note · an example of automated marketing department output · a WholeTech build. Specs are qualitative where public data is limited; confirm force curves with the manufacturer.