:lol:
Fair enough, I can accept the convention in terminology (its an idiotic convention, though; if a magnet were actually isotropic, it would just be a dumb metal - for it to generate a magnetic field...the physics isnt the simplest around, we'll just say that certain properties of neighbouring atoms must be aligned, therefore non isotropic, but its not the dumbest name for anything I've ever seen). Isotropic magnets seem to be magnets where they are weakly aligned and realigneable or few are aligned, and in both cases 'isotropic' is wrong; its not. Anything that has or creates a magnetic field is definitionally not isotropic, in the proper sense of the word (like, how sciencey types use it :lol:)
I chuckled though, because tim just called that effect an "Aged magnet" - weakened artificially to take boom out of the low end.
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