Smelling Of Roses was developed by that famous guy from Two Brass Monkeys, Steve Nicholls. Not to be confused with that other famous guy from Two Brass Monkeys that designed Rock-It Burr that we gushed over in a previous post (Drill Baby Drill! – Rock-it Burr). Smelling Of Roses is made using … well that depends on what you use to make it. Steve made the design available on Maker World for anyone to download and make their own copy. My version is 3D printed using a single color of PLA. Not for any aesthetic reason but simply because I was too lazy to change the filament for additional colors.
Smelling of Roses takes a typical 6 piece burr and transmogrifies it using tetrahedronagonyal geometry. This is basically a process of weaponizing the pieces by providing many pointy bits. It also has the advantage of making the pieces difficult to grip since they are no longer rectangular and squeezing them tighter just launches them from you fingers instead of securing them.
Thorny Problem! |
Steve did an excellent job in picking a 6-piece burr that requires multiple moves before any pieces can be removed. No key piece requiring a single move here! In fact the movements are nicely executed in the tetrahedral space that the pieces were developed in. I have to give Steve a lot of credit for using the BurrTools tetrahedral-octahedral space grid. I find it very unintuitive to use.
The copy of Smelling Of Roses that I printed is a bit tight (the description uses the friendlier term - snug). When all the pieces are coming together, they have to be cajoled into position. It also adds a level of difficulty during disassembly since the moves are not obvious and nothing moves with casual prodding. You have to prod with intent. And multi-piece movements require more intent than single piece movements.
This is an awesome take on the 6-piece burr puzzle and kudos to Steve for making it freely available to the community on Maker World! So download Smelling Of Roses and give it a try. But whatever you do, don’t leave this caltrop of a puzzle sitting on a chair! Assuming that you can put it together of course.
Steve sent me a BurrTools file of the puzzle which uses the cubes grid. The reason for this is it can show the disassembly, but the pieces look really weird!
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