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I'm putting this in Product Discussion because of the results of my experiments.I recently bought a small electronic scale, mostly for weighing mail, and decided to try it on some of my Pasco, WA, sand. I've known since grade school, in the 60s, that the sand has magnetic material in it. A large part of the sand is basalt, the rest Rocky Mountain rocks, all crushed and delivered by Ice Age floods.To my surprise, by weight, Pasco sand is 1/4 magnetic material, probably magnetite, which is a common mineral in basalt. I've been using it for over 50 years as scenery material, and have always glued it very solidly, but it could certainly be a problem if left loose, or poorly glued.Just to be sure, I tried my magnet on Arizona Rock & Mineral Basalt ballast, #115. To my surprise, it was ALL magnetic. After picking out the magnetic portion, there was a very small amount of dust left. I didn't weigh it, but suspect that it was at least 99% magnetic!AR&M C&NW Pink Granite ballast, on the other hand, had no magnetic material. That isn't surprising, as most granite doesn't have much iron.
I'd be interested to know what would happen if Pasco sand was examined with a Geiger counter.
Danger - DANGERI would never get magnetic sand any where near a model railroad. No matter how well you clean it, you will never get all the magnetic particles out. The magnetic particles will eventually find their way into motors, gears, switch machines etc.
Over how long though? And how long do we expect our layouts to last?I've always wondered about that.