My friend Shane fools me regularly… he’ll quite often rock
up at an MPP, shove something in my paws and silence me for absolute ages while
I try and solve his latest creation.
His main series of puzzles are absolutely
terrific, but his recent adventures into “Interval” puzzles has been pretty
darn good too… and I know that I haven’t been the only person to suggest to him
that his interval puzzles would go down rather well if he ever decided to make
some for sale – heck, there was virtually a queue forming at MPP already!
At the last MPP Shane had a slightly modified padlock that
he was challenging us to unlock with the key provided… and then he wanted our
feedback as he was considering possibly making some up for sale… I think I can
safely say that the feedback was pretty unanimous with several of us wanting to
throw money at him there and then…
Over the course of the next few weeks he teased us with pics
of a shed-load of German locks arriving in his workshop, and then the odd pics
of various levels of abuse being meted out to the assembled (innocent!) locks.
Toward the end of that process he put a pic or two of the
final product up on his website and posted an email around inviting folks to
express an interest… and he was probably hoping to shift most of his stock
before passing some onto a couple of potential re-sellers… except that within a
couple of hours he’d had more takers than he had made locks – which would have
left him in a bit of a pickle, so he ended up having to ration his sales on a
sort of lottery basis before reducing the volumes that he was planning to pass
on to the re-sellers… it’s a good problem to have, as problems go, but it did
up the pressure on the poor lad to finish them off rather a bit!
A short while later I received my copy of Haleslock 1
courtesy of the Royal Mail… and Shane, who refused to take any of my money!
(Thanks mate!)
There’s a key attached to some sort of key ring around the
shackle, but that’s not the really interesting bit – at least not to my mind…
there’s some pretty serious modifications going on down in one corner of the
lock, albeit with no apparent way of doing anything with it… apart from that,
the lock appears(!) to be unmolested apart from a serial number on the top of
the lock and Mister Hales’ customary signature on the side, just above all that
weird modification I was going on about… all-in-all a rather professionally
produced puzzle… nice job that man!
In a word: GREAT!
If you haven’t seen one of Shane’s locks before, you’re in
for a treat… there’s several layers to solving this one… starting from the
little set of instructions that tells you not to damage the key ring securing
the key to the shackle… "key ring" might be a bit misleading here – the key is
attached to a very strong device that seems to be rather well locked onto that
shackle… but call it a key ring and challenge the puzzler to extract the key
might just sound like a cruel joke for a while…
(Shane’s used those key rings on some of his previous
(short-run!) puzzle locks and heard that some people found the key ring almost
as challenging as the locks – so they were duly incorporated into his first
production puzzle…)
Find a way to release the key and you can at least pop it in
the lock and see if the lock just magically opens – err, NOPE.
Prepare to spend a while navigating through a few layers of
sequential discovery before you can finally stand a chance at opening the lock
– and even then it’s anything but simple… the test model he was trying out on
us at MPP was just the last bit – and that’s what we were all prepared to pay
for and sign up for on the spot… Haleslock 1 has that and a sequential
discovery problem or two to solve along the way.
Shane has done a great job of producing a really
great-looking puzzle in his workshop… he’s virtually giving them away at the
prices he’s charging – I really cannot recommend them highly enough if you like
puzzle locks… but I’m afraid you will struggle to find any more for sale –
Shane doesn’t have any left and I think there are only one or two re-sellers who
may have a few copies – they’re definitely worth tracking down though…