Two of my mates – Big
Steve and Ali (who’s also quite big, but we don’t have a wee-Ali
problem) have recently begun selling some rather nicely made brass
puzzles. Some of them have been sold through Puzzle Paradise,
and then more recently, they’ve opened an Etsy shop for their wares.
Shortly after IPP,
Big-Steve gave me a prototype of a standard design burr made of some
rather weighty brass rods, and asked me what I thought of it… as it
turned out, I thought some really good things, and duly
gushed a little – and told him he owed it to puzzlers everywhere to get
them made, in quantities – and he has.
It turns out that Steve and Ali have some ideas for a series of these little guys that all look identical, but aren’t at all…
The first one in the
series – Brass Monkey One - that prototype I mentioned – has a key piece with a sprung ball
bearing that helps lock the last piece in place, assuming you build it
right and put the corresponding little dent
in the right place. Remove the key piece and it sort-of auto-dismantles
unless you’re holding the remaining bits carefully.
Reassembly is a trifle
tricky but once you work out the best way to grip the pieces as you
build it all up, and put that dent in the right spot, it becomes fairly
straight-forward. So much for Brass Monkey One –
how about Brass Monkey Two?
Number two in the series
arrived at the last MPP… I forked over some cash and received what
looked like a carbon-copy (brass, actually!) of the one I already had…
same size, weight, same finishing on the ends –
everything looks the same. It does not however work the same. I tried
for quite a while to find the key piece – I did not have much success.
It took me quite a long
time of playing and trying various little strategies before I chanced
upon something that was actually of any use at all – and that discovery
put a large grin on my face: if this is the
second in the series, then I can’t wait to see where they are going to
be taking it.
Brass Monkey Two looks
identical to its older brother – which, by the way, is an achievement.
The machining on these puzzles is really first class and there are no
clues to be found to the solution at all.
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The lads have also been
busy creating a stunning brass version of the six baseball bats puzzle which they've dubbed the Heavy Hitter.
They’ve come up with their own notching for the pieces and made it in
six inch baseball bats – once again the machining
is excellent and the sprung ball bearing secures the whole thing in
spite of the length of the pieces.
It’s a nice big statement of a puzzle that makes one almighty racket when it collapses on the desk – which it will do rather neatly if you twist the key piece and allow gravity to take over – please don’t try that on a glass table!
If you like your puzzles heavy and gorgeous, take a look at the lads’ Etsy store. It’s a nice big statement of a puzzle that makes one almighty racket when it collapses on the desk – which it will do rather neatly if you twist the key piece and allow gravity to take over – please don’t try that on a glass table!
I love brass. I gave Steve and Ali some money last month for these same three puzzles. This doubled the number of metal cylindrical burrs I now own, but it more than trebled the weight of the same. Like you, I found Brass Monkey Two to be rather tricky -- so tricky that I have not yet stumbled upon the opening sequence. I will let you know when I solve it...
ReplyDelete...guarantee you laugh when you get it! :-)
ReplyDeleteI did chuckle a bit when I realized the key, no, not a full laugh tho'. What did make me giggle for hours was the bag it came in: the banana motif was outrageously funny. Steve also sent me a personal note on a couple of tongue depressors -- I suppose he has to use them up somehow.
DeleteOH yes, there is that as well... I'm trying not to encourage it, but it is rather darn amusing! - On that topic - a message to the internet: Big Steve is running low on tongue depressors - please get the word out.
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