Just got a little time for a quick review today. As the second wave takes hold
I am finding less and less time to play - there is a lot of work to be done as
we try to get the urgent cases done (trauma, limb or mobility threatening
surgery and cancer surgery) alongside the increasing burden of Covid work.
During the first wave the NHS' response was to empty the hospitals of nearly
everything except the most sick, urgent or infected but now we are desperately
trying to keep other stuff going at the same time - I know that my hospitals
are absolutely full with over 1500 beds being used at 105% capacity. Things
are made all the harder with up to 10% of our workforce either off sick or
isolating forcing the remainder to try and fill in the gaps. This is meaning
unexpected changes of duties/days of work and often very long days. Morale is
surprisingly good, considering but fatigue is definitely setting in. Please
please stay safe, stay home, stay in your home/family bubbles and try to slow
the spread to prevent hospitals being overwhelmed - plus the added bonus for
you of not getting sick.
After that diatribe, back to the puzzle - I can read your minds...I know
that you are thinking "I'm sure he's written about this puzzle before" and
you are completely wrong...alright partially wrong. I personally have never
written about this puzzle but it has appeared on this blog in the form of a guest post
by the incredibly talented and prolific PuzzleMad foreign correspondent,
Mike Desilets. I had bought the original stainless steel version direct from
Jerry and had been very happy with it and solved it with difficulty way back
in July 2018. For some reason I never got around to writing about it and
then Mike managed a full analysis in his great article. Way back in May, I
couldn't resist buying a whole bunch of PuzzleMaster's new range of anodised metal puzzles and a nice bunch of them arrived just as I had to go back onto
the on call rota. This meant that I never got around to solving or writing
about any after the first one, the
Chiasma
by Yavuz Demirrhan. So, in desperation this morning, I went to my pile of
unsolved puzzles and couldn't resist this - it is VERY shiny and VERY gorgeous! This new series from PuzzleMaster is extremely high quality and
extremely well presented:
| Nice box!
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| Very well held in foam
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The puzzle is an extremely bright orange and the anodisation is stunning - it is a very tactile thing that is wonderful to fiddle with. It deforms a lot as you play but will not fall apart.
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A LOT of movement in it
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Ordinarily a board burr with this number of pieces would be a truly fearsome thing to attempt to dismantle but in a way it is not a normal burr. I spent a while playing with it before realising that this was not a simple sequence of moves that would allow disassembly. It was more like a lock where a particular configuration needed to be found before pieces could be removed. In fact, I managed the disassembly in a similar manner to picking a lock - moving pieces into certain shapes with tension (provided by gravity) until something clicked and a piece had engaged partially and then doing it again in another direction until it happened again.
When picking a lock, it can take quite a few movements before the pins sequentially are all released and sometimes they need to be restarted and done in a different order. A very similar approach is required with this puzzle. I needed quite a few attempts before a piece was removed. Repeating this process in multiple directions and orientations allowed me, over a period of about a ½ hour, to sequentially create a pile of bright orange metal:
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Yay! It's not actually that tough once you have worked out a technique!
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Having done that, the challenge is obviously to leave a pile of metal with instructions to the wife to put it back together again and put it back in the box........
Whack! Ouch! No, of course she was not going to go along with that plan and she was not going to allow me to leave the pieces lying around for days/weeks/months until I could reassemble them. She has begun to threaten throwing things away if they are not placed out of the way tidily. Oh the stress! Now, when I disassembled the puzzle, I did it in a very haphazard way without really learning the order, orientation or position of each of the pieces as they were removed. I did sort of try to do my usual "back and forth" technique as I do with most other burrs but, as I have mentioned before, this didn't really solve as a burr and I have an appalling memory. I was going to have to solve this by logic or (more likely) luck!
In my favour, this should be solvable as a logic problem - all the pieces are identical and there is a partial symmetry to them as you can see here:
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12 identical pieces
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It should be logical. It should be possible with thought©. So far I have not managed it. I might have to go back to Mike's blog post for a clue using his very in depth analysis because thought© is not one of my strong points. Listen out around the world and you might just hear my shout of success - or, more likely, my swearing about my abject failure. Looking closely at the pieces, I think it can be entered into Burrtools which will also be a fun challenge. Wish me luck!
Should you
buy this? I have to say yes - it is very pretty and will look lovely on display, it's a fun challenge in both directions and decidedly different from your standard burr puzzle, plus it's very affordable at $25 CAD which in this day of ever increasing puzzle prices is a real bonus.
Quick edit - after writing the post and setting it to publish after about 30 minutes - I borrowed some of Allard's brain - it's amazing! He is capable of thinking© really quite hard! When I used his brain, it took me about 30 minutes of analysis and I had the puzzle reassembled. I was not sure that I was going to give his brain back to him but then I wandered around in there and you wouldn't believe what goes on in his head! I have decided that I don't want that around here for any length of time so back it heads to Birmingham - I really don't know how Gill puts up with it! Shudder! 🤣🤣
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