Brass Bolt Puzzle

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Intro: Brass Bolt Puzzle

This puzzle you can either 3D print or make using some M16 & M8 Brass nuts and bolts.

The origional idea for this puzzle is based on a puzzle from "homemade puzzles" http://homepage.ntlworld.com/bruce.viney/Bolt%20P...

3D files are available at Thingiverse or GrabCad

How it works

The aim is to get the washer off the bolt. The idea is the magnet is glued into the top section of the main bolt with epoxy. Which will hold the steel rod in place when the assembly is together. To open the puzzle you need to slam the base on a hard surface dislodging the rod and allowing you to remove the other parts of the puzzle so you can remove the washer.

STEP 1: What You Will Need

Materials
  • M16 x 60mm Brass Bolt (ebay)
  • M16 Brass Nut (ebay)
  • M16 Brass Washer (ebay)
  • M8 x 60mm Threaded Rod (ebay)
  • 2 x M8 Nuts (ebay)
  • 3.5mm x 24mm Steel rod (I used a nail that was about 3.5mm)
  • 4mm x 2mm round rare earth magnet (not shown) (ebay)

Tools

  • Drill press or hand drill
  • Center punch
  • 2mm, 4mm, 4.5mm, 8mm drill bits
  • Hand files
  • Hacksaw

STEP 2: The Main Bolt & Nut

Start by drilling through the M16 bolt and nut in one go. This way you hole and the threads will be lined up perfectly.

  1. Screw the nut onto the bolt about 1/3 the way down the shaft.
  2. Using the a centre punch mark the centre of one of the faces of the bolt. I lost my centre punch and my hole ended up being off centre.
  3. Making sure your bolt and nut are securely clamped in a vice.
  4. Drill a 2mm pilot hole all the way through the nut and the bolt.
  5. Drill an 8mm hole in the same place as the pilot hole.

Now that the hole is drilled you can unscrew the nut.

  • Next with just the bolt clamped securely in the vice use a hacksaw to cut right through the whole you just drilled.
  • Tidy up the cuts with a smooth file.
  • Next take the longer piece of the cut bolt and drill a 4mm hole 24mm deep directly down the centre axis of the bolt. this will be where your 3.5mm steel rod will slide.
  • Take the shorter piece of the bolt and drill a 4mm hole 3mm deep directly down the centre axis of the bolt this will be where your magnet will sit. I had to widen mine to 4.5mm because my magnet was slightly larger than the 4mm.

STEP 3: Drill the Cross Piece

Drill straight through the center of the cross piece using a 4mm drill. 
Even though it is difficult you still want to center punch on the threaded area of bolt.
If you don't the hole will be off centre and the steel rod will not slide freely through it.

STEP 4: Magnet and Rod

1. The magnet should fit flush in the whole or be slightly recessed. After checking this, using epoxy or super glue affix the magnet.
2. The metal rod should also be flush with or recessed into its position. The rod should move freely in the hole, if it does not I would suggest getting a slightly smaller rod rather than drilling the hole bigger because you will also need to drill the hole on the cross piece larger as well. (I tried making the hole larger and I ended up snapping the cross piece while I was drilling it) 

STEP 5: Fine Tuning and Finishing

Before putting the puzzle together all the way, it is a good idea to test that everything lines up correctly and moves freely.
I found that I had to tapper the ends of the steel rod slightly because having the ends flat the magnet held on to tight and no matter how hard I hit the bolt on a hard surface the steel rod would not come free. If I had of assembled the puzzle completely I may never have been able to get it apart.
As you can see from my pictures the holes are not all in the centre this came from not using a centre punch and caused me a lot of trouble getting all the holes to line up correctly, I ended up having to do a bit of filing and re-shaping to get it to function correctly.

I am planning on making another one of these hopefully this time without making the same mistakes. A friend of mine also suggested an improvement that I might try. Which is to drill my holes straight through the top of the bolt and not cut it. Then put the steel rod in and braze the hole in the top and file it flat. I may try doing this but I don't have any brazing gear at the moment.

STEP 6:

17 Comments

this would be sooooo cool to get my friend back for his

puzzle a few weeks ago.

very nice. A video would do wonders...

I agree a video would be great at demonstrating this!

This'll be great for giving my friends migranes.

Cut the bolt where the nut goes. Drill the parallel holes in the top and bottom half. Glue the magnet into the top half, put the rod into the bottom part. Put all together and drill the cross hole. Then just put the cross bolts in.

The cut can't be seen when the puzzle is together as it's covered by the bolt.

Regarding your plan to braze the hole after installing the rod and magnet, heating up a rare earth magnet will de-magnitize it. This would also probably melt the epoxy used to secure the magnet. You could put a slight taper on a piece of brass rod and drive that into the hole instead. Or you could probably fill the hole with JB weld if you used galvanized hardware and not have it be noticed.

Greetings, So that is what happened to My pick up tool. I never could even re -magnitize it using My H/F magnitizer - de - magnitizer. Thank You. ~(:-})={

well they could put the steel rod in braze it and using plastic tweezers or something similar to insert the magnet afterwards through the side hole.

That was just what I was thinking.

Isn't JB weld epoxy too? Metal dust suspended in epoxy?

Simply Fantastical good sir.

Tthanks for the encouraging comments guys.

Good instructable and an improvement on the one in the link you have provided.

I've seen this puzzle made as your friend suggested. It is a bit of work, but the finished product looks a bit better. Also the brazed portion is a bit harder than the bolt. It would seem that it would hold up better, and not be dinged or flattened.