It’s dark. It’s foreboding. In fact, it’s downright ApocalypTIC.
Back in the dark ages when the scourge of DIY 3D printing was just getting started, Richard Gain embarked on creating Printable Interlocking Puzzles (PIP). These were interlocking puzzles where the pieces could be printed without supports or assembly of sub-components. At some point, his level 11 PIP #4 was used as the seed of destruction for Andrew Crowell’s phenomenal Turboencabulator that stripped the PIP restrictions and brought a new level 17 challenge to life.
ApocalypTIC is a 5x5x5 Turning Interlocking Cube (TIC) consisting of 6 pieces. Since it was TIC’led (not pink obviously) by Andrew, we know that it is going to be challenging.
The first challenge is to find the assembly. This is not as easy as most TICs since it lacks a large frame piece to use as a starting point. In fact, each piece occupies no more than 3 layers with most of them only occupying 2.
Although some piece relationships seem obvious, there also seems to be many ways to create sub-assemblies. And manipulating those sub-assemblies is a bit fiddly until you manage to get enough pieces to hold each other accountable.
At some point in the process, an assembly materialized from attempts at interweaving the pieces. Swapping pieces in and out converged on a nicely morphing assembly of 4 pieces. All that was needed was to determine how to get the, hopefully last 2 pieces, inserted.
I spent a lot of time on those last 2 pieces. It got to the point where I could add either of them but not both at the same time. After a lot of back and forth, I finally managed to confirm that these were indeed the final 2 pieces to go in and everything came together into a cube.
For a TIC, there are not a lot of rotations but the movements are well done and make a nice challenge.
No comments:
Post a Comment