Frog-Bot, Fields & Fibonacci: A Pocket-Sized Magnet-Art Experiment 🐸⚡️

“Art is how we decorate space; science is how we explain it. What happens when you mash them together?”

This morning’s workbench session turned into an accidental gallery piece—and a surprisingly vivid demo of invisible magnetic fields. Below is a quick show-and-tell of what I cobbled together with ferrite ring magnets, twisted-copper coils cut to the ancient cubit (≈ 20.62″), and a sheet of olive-green magnetic viewing film. Feel free to riff on the design or post your own magnetic masterpieces in the comments!


1 | Meet the cast 🔍

PartSpecs“Why I grabbed it”
Ferrite toroid4″ OD • 1.3″ IDBig, donut-shaped flux playground.
Two ferrite disks1.2″ Ø • center holePerfect “eyes”/pole markers.
Copper coils (3×)14-AWG solid • exactly 1 cubit long (20.62″)Spiral makes a compact pickup; the cubit keeps geometry poetic.
Inner & outer ringsSame wire, but twisted triplet; inner ring = ½ cubitHolds shape, references Tesla’s 3-6-9 numerology.
Mag-view filmGreen-gold sheetMakes flux patterns pop like mood-rings.

2 | Assembly: 2-minute “Frog-Bot”

  1. Stack the tiny ferrite disks on the toroid—Mickey-ears style.
  2. Drop a copper spiral inside the toroid’s hole (that’s our “frog tongue”).
  3. Form two concentric twisted rings; tack them with a tiny copper twist so they float together.
  4. Drape the magnetic film over the disks and toroid.
  5. Tilt the light—watch concentric green ripples bloom around each pole. Voilà! You just made a cyber-Zen frog staring into a magnetic pond.

(Swipe through the photo gallery above—Pic #4 & #5 show the field ripples like bull’s-eyes.)


3 | What the film actually reveals

  • Bright rings = flux cliffs. Those glowing circles are where field lines dive into (or erupt out of) the ferrite faces.
  • Dark nulls between the “eyes.” Flip one disk upside-down and you’ll create a cancellation valley. Try sliding the copper spiral through that null—any induced voltage?
  • Toroid rim fade. The outside of the donut is quieter; inner rim is the party zone. That matters if you ever wind it for a toroidal energy harvester.

4 | Spin-off experiment ideas

Quick hackWhat to look forDifficulty
LED blip testWind 50 turns of fine magnet-wire on the outer ring, hook an LED, then tap the toroid with another magnet. Flash = induced EMF.★☆☆
Resonant “ribbit.”Sweep an audio signal (1–20 kHz) through the copper spiral; scope the toroid for peaks. You’ll map the coil’s natural frequency.★★☆
Art-to-Go.Epoxy the whole frog face to a wood tile, leave the film loose so guests can slide it and “see” flux.★☆☆

5 | Why the cubit & the twist?

The ancients loved whole-number harmonics; Tesla loved 3-6-9. A single cubit of 14-AWG = ~0.25 µH when coiled tight—handy for audio-range play. Twisting three wires keeps the inductance of each conductor similar, which makes for a balanced tri-filar if you ever want to pulse it.


Your turn—show us your magnet-art!

Got fridge magnets, scrap wire, or that lonely piezo buzzer lying around? Build a micro-sculpture, snap a pic, and drop it in the comments (or tag us on IG: @WooWooHunters). Bonus kudos if you record a scope trace or LED flash.

Remember:
Safety first—ferrite chips can be sharp, and neodymiums will pinch!
Happy field-surfing, fellow Woo-Woo tinkers. The universe is weirder (and prettier) than our eyeballs admit—until we give it copper spectacles. 🐸✨

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