Or...Perpetual Plastic Puzzlement is Positively Propitious
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Ok! Ok! Even I am getting fed up with the P words and it's getting tough to
find new ones that make sense.
I was left after last weeks'
blog post with a bunch of vibrantly red pieces that were supposed to make up a
5x5x5 cube. I had worked out where they all were supposed to go but, for the
life of me, I was unable to find a sequence that would lead to an assembly. No
matter what I did, I always had one or other piece that I could not insert. On
Facebook it was suggested that Burrtools might help but I was loathe to try
that and cheat. Dammit! I wanted to be a good successful puzzler for once and
actually solve something myself. Richard, chimed in to that conversation to
say what I had already worked out - BT would not easily solve the puzzle - it
was a TIC (Turning Interlocking Cube). I had noticed that one pair of pieces
could only be interlocked with a rotation but I was worried that there might
be a whole load of them. Richard said there was only the one rotation - Phew!
I persisted at it. Every evening this week until Thursday, I worked at it. I
tried every possible starting sequence and wasn't getting anywhere. Finally on
Thursday evening whilst watching TV I realised the source of my problem...it
was me! I had got fixated on which piece was going to be the last one to be
inserted and that simple insertion would complete the cube. To be honest, I
don't know where the fixation began. It did seem like a perfect end to the
puzzle as it slid the piece into the cube very nicely but, after days and days
of failure, I forced myself to reset my methods and expectations. I began to
place this piece earlier amongst the others and kept the blue piece out to be
the last one. This still failed me but led to a realisation that there was a
fabulous sequential locking movement involving multiple pieces. I couldn't put
the blue piece in last but this spurred me to find a way to insert it earlier
without blocking the locking sequence. On Thursday evening I thoroughly pissed
off Mrs S with a shout:
AHA!
OMG! It is absolutely incredible! The closing sequence meets the "switch cube" name perfectly |
Sweeney Todd - complete with stand |
The name is spot on - it has been 3D printed to look like a classical barber's
pole and I guess that because it might just kill you to solve it, the
murderous barber of Seville is appropriate. I hadn't properly realised until I
picked it up (yes I bought it without even looking properly) that it has been
designed differently to all the other helical burr type puzzles. Yes, it has 4
pieces like
most of the others
(the
Vapors and
Pole Dancers
have 3 pieces) but instead of 2 inner and 2 outer pieces, it has a single
central pole and 3 outer helical pieces. This monster apparently needs 43
moves to remove the first piece! How could I resist?
Mrs S was not particularly amused when yet another puzzle delivery interfered
with her day - I did reassure her that one of those deliveries was her
birthday present to me but she seemed unmoved by it. Following my enormous
(but slow) success with the Switch cube, I decided I had to jump straight in
with another plastic puzzle. This has been printed by the ThreeBrassMonkeys a
bit differently to the others. The inner pole seems to be a different material
to their usual - it has silver flecks in the grey plastic and is textured as
well. It makes for a surprisingly pleasant tactile experience and something
quite nice to look at. The stand stops any of the outer pieces sliding whilst
stored upright as well as making it stable for storage on a shelf.
The previous puzzle (Polar Burr) was a wonderful sequence with only a few
blind ends and was a very nice discovery puzzle as the correct path needed to
be found. This monster, on the other hand, has multiple blind ends right from
the beginning and several loops in which you miraculously find yourself back
towards the beginning of the puzzle without realising how one achieved
that.
I did my usual to and fro approach and explored the blind ends and
back-tracked each time before advancing further. The "maze" has been printed
on a smaller scale than most of the other puzzles and so you will require
smaller moves each time as part of your exploration. Some of the moves are
unexpected and complex which definitely justifies using the to and fro method
and at times some of the moves are of the central pole and the interactions
with the outer pieces are hidden. At one point about 15 moves in there is a
way to remove a piece using an illegal move. It is quite clearly a cheat so I
resisted the urge and put it back to continue with the proper solution.
On several occasions I got stuck - I could not back-track and I could not
advance. This frightened me to death and really annoyed Mrs S because
apparently when this occurs I start to heavy breathe and mutter to myself
about being lost! There is nothing more annoying to a wife of 27+ years than a
husband who still breathes so I tried my best (unsuccessfully) to do it
quietly. Each time I got stuck, after a frantic 10-20 minutes of trying
everything I could, I managed to get back to a place that I could remember...
Until I couldn't!
Probably about 25 moves in I did something that I couldn't undo! Not because
it got jammed, not because something went wrong with the puzzle. It was my own
stupid fault - I do most of my puzzling in the evenings after dinner whilst
watching TV with Mrs S. Now I am a bloke which means several things:
- I snore sleeping on my back (little clue to all you girls - you do this too! I have a huge experience of sleeping women - it's my job!)
- I enjoy watching violent crap on TV
- I cannot multi-task! Well we sort of can but it doesn't end well (as we will see)
I was watching TV and doing an extremely complex multi move puzzle! This was
one task too many and something happened - I reached yet another place where I
could not backtrack. I spent all Friday evening trying to work my way backwards and a
fair bit of Saturday as well. Nope! That was not happening. Time to try just
to advance only - except I was in a loop. For a couple of hours I went round
and round in a circle getting more and more desperate. Suddenly, whilst
explaining to Mrs S that the heavy breathing was necessary, I was out of the
loop and had no idea how. OMG!
Interestingly, at this point the pieces all had reversed their order on the
pole and started to dance in the opposite direction - I was having fun again.
I had given up all attempts at keeping track of my path - there was no way in
hell that I was going to reassemble this without help. I know Ali had managed
it but it had taken him 6 hours and he is a savant! Apparently these things
can be modeled in BT as well (I have never managed it).
It's very pretty like this which is just as well I suspect it is going to stay like this! |
This is a fabulous addition to the series - I have a lot of these now and I think this plus the Polar burr are the very best yet. The series has been progressing nicely over the years in difficulty and fun factor. You definitely should add one of these to your collection whilst they are available (Polar burr is available whilst you are there). Steve and Ali sell the plastic puzzles via Puzzle Paradise and keep the TwoBrassMonkeys store for their metal marvels. If you are in North America then you may prefer to use PuzzleMaster for purchasing.
Stay safe guys and gals! It is still taking huge measures to keep things under control around the world. As you can tell, in places where mask use and vaccination levels are low the virus is running amok. Even here, where our idiot government won't do what they are advised, our numbers are going through the roof and our hospitals (including mine) are filling up. This is making the work extremely difficult. It is a really simple thing to do - keep socially distanced as much as possible, where a mask when in public places, get your vaccination (and booster if offered and eligible) and this will keep you and your loved ones as safe as they can possibly be. Unfortunately Coronaviruses don't behave the same way as other viruses and transmission can still occur after vaccination but it is decreased and the level of illness suffered is hugely diminished.
Quote: "The inner pole is textured as well."
ReplyDeleteComment: Unlike Sweeney Todd, the lads did not polish it off. LMAO. -Tyler.