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crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Jacob Mehnert

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So the easiest way of fixing this issue would be to replace the actual magnets within the case.
-However there is a way to fix these magnets, but it is more difficult. Magnets work when the electrons surrounding a proton line up (Think of each atom as a smaller magnet). When a large group of these magnetic atoms lines up they generate a larger magnetic field. So to answer the question of fixing the magnetic field for the case's magnet, you would need to align those atoms, which could be done by using a significantly stronger magnet to realign these atoms.
+However, there is a way to fix the magnets themselves. Magnets work when the electrons surrounding a proton line up (Think of each atom as a smaller magnet). When a large group of these magnetic atoms lines up they generate a larger magnetic field. So to answer the question of fixing the magnetic field for the case's magnet, you would need to align those atoms, which could be done by using a significantly stronger magnet to realign these atoms.
+
+The problem is that these earbuds are much harder to repair due to how they are built, and they make them close to impossible to fix.

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crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Jacob Mehnert

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

So the easiest way of fixing this issue would be to replace the actual magnets within the case.

However there is a way to fix these magnets, but it is more difficult. Magnets work when the electrons surrounding a proton line up (Think of each atom as a smaller magnet). When a large group of these magnetic atoms lines up they generate a larger magnetic field. So to answer the question of fixing the magnetic field for the case's magnet, you would need to align those atoms, which could be done by using a significantly stronger magnet to realign these atoms.

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