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Try putting the mag at the bottom of the hump where the track is level ?
That could work if it was before the hump.
You definitely need slack to make the couplers disengage, due to the lips on the knuckles. The usual technique is to push the cars over the magnet to disengage the couplers, reverse the loco a short distance to allow the couplers to swing wide to each side so that they will not recouple when pushed back together, then push the uncoupled car off the magnet and to the location where you want to spot it. You then should be able to back away from the uncoupled car.But, my experience with the slinky effect with some MTL couplers (some have springs that slinky in forward, and some in reverse) has been spotty at best - too often the cars recouple when being pushed if there is the slightest bit of jerkiness.One thing I have found is that those between-the-tracks magnets are too narrow to be 100% reliable in uncoupling. But, the wider and more powerful under-the-track magnets that Bachmann provides are really reliable at getting slack cars uncoupled. Those magnets work fine when placed in the plastic roadbed part of Bachmann and Kato sectional track, as well as putting them in pockets cut out of cork roadbed under flex track.I am not sure what effect you are trying to achieve for our hump operation, but I am suspecting that you want to be able to push a car over a magnet and have it roll away once it is uncoupled by the magnet, without the stop, back-up, then push process. I think that might be possible with a long enough magnet located at exactly the right place with respect to the beginning of the down-grade. You need to make sure that the cars uncouple before there is any tendency of the lead car to start down-grade, and then keep pushing while still over a magnet until the car does roll away. If I was going to try to do that, I would get several of the Bachmann magnets to be able to make a long-enough uncoupling section by placing them in series. I would test position those magnet by moving them along the track until I saw the lead car just roll away cleanly. Not sure how many it will take to do that.One thing that will completely kill your ability to do that is steel axles or steel weights in the car that needs to roll away by force of gravity. The problem is that the steel will be so strongly attracted to the uncoupling magnet that gravity will not make it roll away until it is so far past the uncoupling magnet that it has recoupled. The only way to deal with that is the original push-stop-reverse-push off the magnet with the couplers not engaged because the magnet has them pulled far to the sides. The Bachmann magnets will do that reliably with steel in the cars.Too often, the Bachmann magnets have actually pulled a car with steel in it in a manner that causes uncoupling when I do not want it. What happens is that the loco is pulling the cars with no slack, and the magnet pulls the car with steel in it toward the magnet faster than the loco is pulling the car string, and that creates slack over the magnet and the cars uncouple, allowing the car with steel to stay at the magnet while the loco pulls the more forward cars in the string away. That is why I don't use those magnets on my layout, and use a pick to uncouple. But, that should not be a problem in a hump yard unless you intend to pull the cars out of the yard back over the hump after they are classified. If you do want to pull over the hump, then maybe use an electomagnet uncoupler that is as long as what you find you need using the Bachmann magnets for trial and error testing.