A while back I mentioned I’d
found a couple of delightful little puzzles bound to look like books, on
Bernhard Schweitzer’s stand at the Dutch Cube Day. I’d picked up a copy of Coffin’s Few Tiles and had really enjoyed the puzzle and rather liked the presentation …
and shortly after I put up the blog post, Peter Gal, whose fine handiwork had
produced the books, got in touch. A little while later I’d sent him some Paypal
and he’d popped some books in the post … a few weeks after that, the books arrived,
having been caught up in the Christmas post black hole, none the worse for
wear.
Peter has a great range of
books, including a bunch of more educational rather than puzzling ones, e.g.
there’s a great representation of Pythagoras’ Theorem that physically
demonstrates the formula by having a dissection of the pieces of the square
sitting on the hypotenuse form two squares that each sit on the other two sides
of the triangle – well worth looking at.
Selfishly, I was more interested
in the puzzles and acquired a handful of them, including a copy of Peter’s
IPP31 exchange puzzle – TriPenTile, but I'll leave that one for later.
3*4T is a variation on the old 4 T’s puzzle…my earlier version of
the puzzle came from Thinkfun but I suspect there are probably a few versions
out there – it has a double sided tray and the challenge is to pack the four
T’s into each side … one of which is trivial, and the other requires a bit of
lateral thinking.
Peter’s version takes that idea
and develops it even further, providing three challenges instead of two. The starting
position (Challenge 1, technically) has all of the T’s orthogonally arranged in
the tray-space and then a series of extra pieces is added to restrict the size
of the tray and each time your goal is to place the 4 T’s back into the ever
smaller tray… it’s not hugely difficult, but the extensions are great and make
for a neat couple of challenges in a handsome package.
A nice little puzzle for
introducing new puzzlers to the art of packing puzzles.
Five + 1 Tiles is a pentagon dissection puzzle – at first I thought
it looked a bit like Markus Goetz’s puzzle over here
– but a quick look at the pieces show it’s a totally different puzzle … there’s
a pentagon-shaped tray for you to pack the six pieces into, and a space below
it for one of the pieces so you can store it unsolved ready for the next
victim.
This one’s an intriguing little
puzzle because effectively all you have is a 6-piece jigsaw puzzle where
someone has given you the outside edge already, except if your brain is
anything like mine, it’s hard-wired to think in right-angles and these 108
degree corners just don’t compute… add to that a few false starts (some of the
internal angles mimic the ones you’re expecting to find on the outside – crafty
sod!) and it actually turns out to be quite a decent little challenge … I found
myself running round in circles for a while and then finding several ways of
almost solving it where I’d have one piece left that wouldn’t fit in the space
I’d left behind…
Five Easy Pieces is another classic Coffin packing puzzle. Objective:
five simple little pentomino pieces to pack inside a square tray that’s just a
little bit shy of 6 units square. There seems to be so much spare space in that tray when the Z-pentomino is sitting in
the spare hole down below that this can’t possibly be much of a challenge ...
except, this is a Coffin puzzle – so of course it is! Stewart C has used all of
his keen observations on how people set about solving puzzles to pick just the
right combination of pentominoes to totally snooker most puzzlers.
Some experimentation
will almost certainly have you convinced that this thing isn’t possible – even trying
the usual sorts of tricks doesn’t seem to solve this one ... it is very sneaky
... and Peter’s implementation is very sweet!
[It might be worth mentioning at
this point something I hadn’t noticed until it was “too late”: Peter has kindly
provided the solutions to his puzzles on the reverse side of the printed pages
describing the puzzles on the inside cover ... just in case you find yourself
totally clueless ... although I’ve been considering printing off my own
versions of those pages without the solutions on the reverse ... just to help
others avoid temptation, you understand.]
The last of the little books I
got from Peter is a cute little packing problem based on Roger Penrose’s Polyamonds. The twelve
identical pieces are all order 18 polyamonds, i.e. they are each made up of 18
equilateral triangles. Those twelve pieces then pack into a polygon that looks
a bit like a hexagon if you squint at it, and that polygon will in turn tile the
whole plane ... so starting from a pretty unusually shaped basic piece, you can
effectively tile the plane – yeah, I know, mathematicians are weird! This
puzzle asks you to find that tiling and it’s a neat little challenge ... it’s
made a bit simpler by having the outside edge given to you and that cuts down
on a lot of the possible starting points, but it’s an interesting construction
that my brain was telling me is unlikely to actually work – and yet it does,
rather neatly.
I’m very chuffed with my little
collection of Peter’s puzzle books – they look great and each provide a neat
little self-contained challenge. Peter’s handiwork is terrific and the
laser-cut wooden bits ensure the puzzle works exactly as intended (!). I highly
recommend these little books as travel puzzles or unintimidating puzzles to
introduce folks to packing puzzles. Peter’s great to deal with directly and his
prices are jolly reasonable too ... drop me a note if you want to get in touch
with him.
A very nice set of puzzles Allard, I really like the format of this set.
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