Many magnetic transducers can be found in electronic applications functioning as sensors. Basically they are formed by a coil that can be used to pick up any change in the magnetic field produced by a magnet under certain conditions, or a coil that produces a magnetic field from a current.

Loudspeakers and headphones are magnetic transducers, as explained in other articles, but are treated as a separate item because of their importance in electronics. Microphones and diskettes that read heads and position sensors are other examples of magnetic transducers used as sensors. The writing heads of a Winchester disk or disk drive are magnetic transducers operating in the inverse mode.

 

Symbols and Types

The symbols and types of some magnetic transducers are shown in Figure 1.

 

Figure 1 – Magnetic transducers
Figure 1 – Magnetic transducers

 

 

Specifications

Depending on the application, the transducer can show specifications as current, voltage, type of signal, or a part number. The most common is a part number specification.

 

Where they are found

Pickup coils, sensors, microphones, Winchester disk, and disk drives are all examples of magnetic sensors.

 

Testing

A multimeter can be used to test the continuity of the coil. Magnetic transducers in general must present resistances ranging from less than 1 ohm to more than 1000 Ω based on the application. This test doesn't reveal other problems such as shorts or mechanical failures.

 

 

Datasheets


N° of component