The Heptagon 48 is one of the most beautifully made puzzles I have come across. The marble (yes marble!) version of this tray packing puzzle was Japanese designer Koshi Arai's competition entry at the IPP 32 Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition held in Washington, USA this August. It was also one of three entries that won a Jury Honourable Mention at the competition.
When I first saw the marble Heptagon 48, I immediately contact Koshi-san for price and availability but the quoted price was a bit too high for me so I decided to settle for his wooden (less expensive) version instead. And I have no regrets buying the latter.
And now to the scientific bits. A heptagon is a polygon with seven sides. Together four heptagons can be joined together at the edges to form a "tetrahept", which in turn become the individual packing pieces of this puzzle. 12 "tetrahepts" consisting of six different designs (making a total of 48 heptagons) make up the pieces required to fill the tray. If you are confused like I am about all this technical stuff, check out Koshi-san's website where he has loads more information about his puzzle and Heptagons.
This puzzle is made of two different woods. Both the individual pieces and tray are made of dark rosewood for the top surfaces and light coloured birdseye maple for the bottom. The tray measures about 17cm x 13cm x 2cm. Quality of construction is excellent with incredible finishing. All the individual pieces have been (laser?) cut to very tight tolerances and fit just nicely with each other into the tray. This puzzle even comes in a nice beige gift box.
The object of the puzzle of course is to fit the 12 tetrahepts into the tray with all the pieces dark side up. The puzzle comes to you partially solved with 2 tetrahepts wrong side up (ie light pieces facing up). The tetrahepts do not cover the entire tray, even when correctly packed in, but will leave "pentagonal" spaces in between, which is intended.
According to Koshi-san, there are an unknown possible number of solutions, of which he has discovered 57 to-date; all with a combination of dark and light pieces facing up but only two that have all pieces dark (correct) side up. So far all my attempts have yielded only one solution; ie one remaining piece that can only be inserted but wrong side up. I only managed to solve the puzzle properly when Koshi-san sent me his 57 solutions in PDF.
The Heptagon 48 is very challenging. There are no straight edges; all the 4 sides of the parallelogram-shaped tray cavity are "jagged" to fit the tetrahepts. You have to grapple with pieces that not only look geometrically similar, but work with the same dark coloured woods for both the pieces and tray, which provide no contrasting reference points to aid in solving. And because the pieces fit so well and closely together, inserting and removing the pieces from the tray is not an easy task either, which makes it all the more difficult.
If you are into tray packing puzzles and want serious quality, well, the Heptagon 48 definitely should not be missed. It is available directly from Koshi Arai via email.
It looks beautiful Jerry, BUT with my packing puzzle skills, I suspect I should avoid it! I have still not managed to solve my Lean 2 and Quintet in F puzzles after a month of trying!!!
ReplyDeleteI am impressed that the marble one was too expensive for you - after what you have put down for some of your metal puzzles, I thought that nothing was out of your price range! One day I expect you to blog about having one of Berrocal's Goliath puzzle sculptures!!
Kevin
PuzzleMad
Kevin
DeleteHa ha, I don't have such deep pockets as you think! Well, as to how much I am prepared to spend, it really depends on what genre of puzzles I am considering and of course the material its made from...
Out of curiosity, could I ask how much the marble version was?
ReplyDeleteOli, I have PM you about the price.
DeleteDo you know if this puzzle and the marble one were made using a laser-cutter? I've never heard of laser-cut marble!
ReplyDeleteGeorge, I am not sure how the marble version was made....got to ask the designer about this one!
ReplyDeleteIt must be laser-cut. I found places on the web that will laser-cut marble. Personally, I would rather have the wood version. Marble looks nice but it is easy to break. I am always dropping pieces on the floor, I have even broken acrylic pieces.
ReplyDeleteGeorge,
ReplyDeleteAccording to Koshi Arai, the marble is cut using a waterjet cutter, not laser.
Thanks for the info, Jerry! Amazing what water can do!
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