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This has been bugging me for a long time. Take this video for example.

I have always thought that electricity will take the shortest path. When the electromagnet's windings are uninsulated, it seems that the electricity would flow straight through the "mass of metal" created by the wire, not in the circular path needed for the electromagnet to work. I have also seen solenoids that work like this. How does this design work?

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3 Answers

up vote 30 down vote accepted

It is insulated. Have you ever noticed that sometimes solenoids are made from copper wire that seems distinctly non copper coloured?

Red solenoid

This is called enamelled copper wire, and it available in a whole range of colours.

enamelled copper wire

The insulation is just a very thin coating of polyurethane, polyamide or polyester. It shouldn't be confused with vitreous enamel, which is glass. The good thing about it is that you can easily remove the insulation by rubbing hot solder on the wire.

Tinning enamelled copper wire

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6  
Some enamels can be easily removed at molten-solder temperature. But some are more robust and mechanical removal is more effective. – mlp Jun 18 '12 at 1:45
1  
Coated in glass? – ObscureRobot Jun 18 '12 at 3:33
It's certainly not glass - every example I have seen is a polymer layer (or several). – Cybergibbons Jun 19 '12 at 4:24
@Cybergibbons - Sorry yes. You're right. I was getting confused with Vitreous Enamel, which is glass. – Rocketmagnet Jun 19 '12 at 8:29
2  
@Sean87 - How do you know they are non-isolated ? – Rocketmagnet Jun 19 '12 at 18:57
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The wire is actually insulated. Most solenoids I've seen are wrapped with magnet wire or something similar. The wire is coated in a small amount of an insulating material. To create an electrical connection, you have to scrape off (or otherwise remove) this coating.

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This insulation is thin and more windings are placed on the solenoid core than would fit with other insulations, it is also usually fairly indifferent to high temps. The goal is a high magnetic field in a small space. Often called magnet wire, transformer wire....

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