After having assisted Wil Strijbos in the Edward Hordern
Puzzle Exchange at my first IPP, I’d pretty much made up my mind that I wanted
to participate in the exchange myself, so on the bus on the way to the National
Cryptographic Museum I asked Wil for some advice and his first suggestion was
that I chat to our friend Louis Coolen about possibly designing a puzzle…
Shortly after getting back home, I floated the idea to Louis
and he was pretty keen and said that he had a couple of ideas he wanted to work
on… and that he might be able to do something.
On his next MPP-visit he arrived with a prototype of what would turn out
to be the main locking mechanism built into a small aluminium briefcase. Fairly early on in the process we’d settled on
using the aluminium briefcases as the vehicle for these puzzles knowing that we
could source them reasonably cheaply from the Far East and knowing that would
take a lot of pressure off the manufacturing process (i.e. we wouldn’t have to
make up a hundred boxes!).
The first prototype had the guts of the mechanism mocked up
in wood using a rubber band, some Geomag bits and a drinking straw! Heath
Robinson it might be, but it worked and showed us that the main concept would
be feasible… in short the case would open a bit and let you see some of the
insides, but it would not be able to open fully, until you defeated the locking
mechanism.
Noticing that there was a reasonable amount of space still
available in the case, I made some suggestions for a fabulously complicated
lock that would prevent the case from being opened at all – Louis duly mocked
one of those up and built it into a prototype and brought it over on his next
visit – but we soon abandoned it as there was so little feedback and the
mechanism was too hard to fathom…
Having settled on the basic design of the locking mechanism,
Louis then taught himself to use Google SketchUp and set about producing a
three dimensional model of it suitable for printing by Shapeways. He’d sensibly
tried a couple of variations in the print run so he was able to try various
alternatives in a single batch … and over the next couple of months the designs
were tweaked until the mechanism itself had just enough strength where it was
needed and not much additional material – then he made it look good by adding
some wording into (and onto) some of the bits and it started to look rather
jolly professional.
Somewhere during that refinement process, I came up with a
means of adding another little layer to the puzzle by putting something inside
the case to provide an extra little challenge (some laser-cut shapes to make up
a target, unspecified, shape). True to form, my first idea was so darn
complicated that we abandoned it after I tried it out on Louis and even though
he knew what he was trying to do, he couldn’t make it work… so we reverted to a
far simpler challenge and this time Louis not only found the intended solution,
he also came up with some interesting alternative constructions … and some
suggestions for tweaking the pieces a bit to add a soupçon more subterfuge.
In the interim we’d sourced some clear tubing to house the
wands and came up with a reasonably efficient way of turning large quantities
of Neodymium magnets into magic wands – my least favourite part of the jobs I
ended up doing on the project – although I still think I got the easier parts
of the project!
Having an open mechanism inside the case meant that the
mechanism would need to be shielded from the laser-cut bits somehow, lest they
wander into the mechanism and either jam it entirely, or more worryingly for
us, assist the puzzler in opening the lock!
And so it came to pass that Gill got roped in to provide 150 tiny
drawstring bags, with the tiniest Neodymium magnets you’ve ever seen carefully
sewn into their seams. [Don’t ask…]
Once we’d finalised the laser-cut shapes for the secondary
puzzle, Louis lined up Peter Knoppers of Buttonius to do all of our
laser-cutting. Peter provided a small sample run and once we’d confirmed the
sizing and shapes he duly produced the rest of the run – including putting each
set of pieces individually into plastic bags – which made my life heaps simpler
– thanks Peter!
Louis sourced a supplier for some black mini-briefcases via
eBay and once they’d arrived he noticed that the spacing on some of the
features of the case was ever so slightly different so he made some final
adjustments to the printed bits before placing the main order with Shapeways…
who by this stage have got to know Louis and have been asking how the various
prototypes have worked out – awesome customer service for a company that must deal
with thousands of customers!
Around this time we go through an important rite of passage
for any potential exchange puzzle: review by the committee to ensure that the
puzzle is “good enough” (my words, not theirs) and hasn’t been commercially
available previously… I write up some stuff and attach some pics that Louis has
taken, being careful not to spoil any of the puzzle-elements as I’m pretty sure
that more of the committee will be in the exchange and I don’t want to give
them any clues… you know, so as not to spoil their fun! The committee lets me know that the puzzle is
approved in pretty short order so we’re off…
With a couple of months to go until IPP33, Louis has a pile
of black mini-briefcases, a box of clear tubes
and a few bags of printed bits from Shapeways and I have piles of magic
wands, stacks of bags of acrylic bits and a steadily growing pile of little
drawstring bags.
Louis and Mieke spend many a late night over the next few
months selectively cutting the lining out of the cases and gluing in bits of
locking mechanism and the clear tubes – with the last of the IPP-bound batch
literally being finished on their UK holiday just before I leave for IPP.
I become reasonably adept at putting the acrylic bits in
their drawstring bags (they need to be packed in carefully to get them into two
layers or they’ll get in the way…), testing the glue joints, affixing stickers
to the case and box and then packing them all up in their original bags and
boxes… until I have a hundred of them to take along to Japan – mostly for the
exchange, but also as gifts for some old friends and some new IPPers (I blame
Peter & Ginda! ;-) ).
The puzzle goes down really well during the exchange and
folks all say kind things about the puzzle (so we know it looks good!). Later
on I spot a couple of folks trying to open them and doing exactly what we
wanted them to – all of it useless! At dinner the next evening I spot some
people puzzling away on them and I don’t spot anyone opening one… this is going
well…
I’d agreed with Wil Strijbos up front that he was going to
get a bunch of them to flog and I give him the first few of those on Sunday for
the puzzle party – and while he doesn’t get rid of them all, he’s still keen
for some more…
After IPP Louis takes charge of the entire manufacturing process
and assembles the remaining 35 puzzles and passes them onto Wil … so if you
want one, he’s the man to speak to, as I literally only have my own copy left
now… (not counting a set of prototypes that lead up to the final design).
What’s it like as a puzzle? Well we’ve had some good
feedback, and Wil says he likes it … we tried various incarnations on the
patient folks at various MPPs, and they mostly liked it. My own description at
IPP was that it was a puzzle of two halves – Louis designed one half (and it’s
awesome!) and I designed one half (and it’s naff!) and once you’ve finished the
puzzle, you’ll know which bit Louis designed! :-)
…if you do have a bash at one and you manage to come up with
some interesting constructions for the second bit, please let me have a pic of
the results – I’ve started collecting pics of almost- or indeed
not-solutions - so far Peter’s is the
best not-a-solution although George’s were pretty ingenious in their
interpretation of the challenge!
Thanks Louis for all your hard work on this – I really
appreciate it!! And to our better halves, Mieke and Gill, who got dragged in as
well – thank you too… :-)
Now, about next year…