(No, not the honourable actress)
Recently I got quite lucky when
I was offered a couple of original Marcel Gillen puzzles –a Fire Plug, Dumbbell
and a #6 Bolt - neither of which tend to appear for sale very often.
Fire Plug was first available
back in 1999 and Bits & Pieces produced a version for a while, but these
days your only means of getting one is through an auction or privately. I’d
seen and fiddled around with a copy of the Bits & Pieces Fire Plug at one
of our MPP gatherings, but hadn’t got very far on solving it.
I picked up my copy of Fire Plug at
IPP and managed to get some time to play with it about a week or so later.
First thing you notice is that the original version is quite a bit larger than
the Bits & Pieces version – it’s a big lump of metal!
It’s an aluminium cylinder in
two parts locked together by a pair of sturdy brass rods that clearly interfere
with one another inside the cylinder…your goal is to open the cylinder and, at
least in the Bits & Pieces version, release the firehouse mutt inside.
Fiddling around with the brass
rods seems to be the obvious place to start as there’s precious little else to
play with on this puzzle. There’s a great sense of progression as you work out
what you’re trying to do with the rods and all-too-often it will dump you right
back at the start again. Find your way all the way through, and you’ll be
rewarded with removing the rods and opening the cylinder.
A nice little bit of puzzling
history…
Next up is the Dumbbell – I’d
been offered one of these a while back but my puzzle budget was a little tapped
out at that stage, so it ended up going to a mate of mine who’s rather chuffed
with it… when the second one came along I was in a position so say yes please
and grabbed it.
This one might be a little
smaller than the Fire Plug, but it’s virtually solid brass, so it’s a heavy
little brute. It looks a bit like a dumbbell inasmuch as it has wider bits at
each end, but there’s also a brass collar trapped between the two ends that
seems to have pretty free movement in one half of the available space – and
won’t travel into the second half at all.
Your goal is to get the puzzle
into a configuration where the collar is able to travel freely (very freely!)
across the entire central span of the dumbbell. (I had to check this with
one-who-knows-all myself as I managed to get it to that point, but wasn’t sure
that that was the end goal or whether I should be able to totally dismantle it
as well after that…no you don’t! Don’t try…)
Playing with this puzzle is a
lovely series of subtle discoveries – it’ll be totally predictable almost all
of the time, then all of a sardine it’ll do something you weren’t expecting –
and as a puzzler you recognise those as the tiny little clues to where to
investigate next – sometimes with no idea how to investigate them or indeed how
they might be useful.
Ultimately it only requires a
small number of “moves” but they are beautifully hidden in unexpected places
and in some brilliant craftsmanship – the last “move” had me doubting whether I
was seeing things when something unexpected happened – the machining is that
good!
The last in my latest little
Gillen-haul is another of Marcel’s Bolt Puzzles. I’ve previously written about
the other three I managed to find a while back – and I wasn’t going to pass up
on the opportunity to add another to my little set.
Bolt #6 looks a lot like the
other bolts – it’s a big machined brass creation that might pass for being a
massive industrial-sized bolt if it had any thread at all on the shaft – but
none of them do… and the nut is more of a large, heavy brass collar… but we’ll
call them bolts, shall we?
Having solved my few, and played
with most of the rest of them down on a visit to James’ collection, I knew that
while they might look alike on the outside, they are all rather different
puzzles… and they build on the tricks of the earlier puzzles.
Bolt #6 starts with the collar
in a particular orbit and without a huge amount of trouble you can get it into
a higher (partial) orbit – but that doesn’t seem spectacularly useful – and the
nut is nowhere near coming off at this point. Working out how this might be
useful, and how to use it is the guts of this puzzle… I found that thinking
about it “the right way” was the key to solving it – but even then it’s not a
trivial solve, requiring a reasonably precise execution of your plans… make an
error along the way and you’ll find yourself right back at square one.
Hello, Mr Allard;
ReplyDeleteI've stumbled into possession of a Gillen Fire Plug and I've no idea what to do with it beyond selling it. I'm not much of a puzzler so it holds no particular meaning to me and from your post above and other Google results I gather this is a somewhat significant piece a collector would like. Might you have any advice how to best get this into hands that would appreciate it fully?
Many thanks for your time and attention.
You could try eBay or putting it on a free specialist puzzle auction site like Puzzle Paradise (https://puzzleparadise.net/) ...
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