Puzzles..............................................1 Solutions..........................................14 Pieces & Patterns.............................27 Puzzles 1 A Battle Royal by Sam Loyd The object of this puzzle is to rearrange the pieces in such a way that to form a perfect 8x8 chess board. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 2 Coin Cup by Serhiy Grabarchuk, Jr. Make the cup with eight coins of the same size as shown in the illustration. The object is to move only two of them in a new position to get the cup standing upside-down. You're allowed to move the coins as you wish but at the end the cup has to be exactly of the same shape only rotated at 180 degrees from its start position. July 9, 2004 www.puzzles.com Puzzle concept: Copyright © 2004 Serhiy Grabarchuk, Jr. All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 3 The Good Luck Puzzle by Sam Loyd With two straight cuts divide the horseshoe shown in the illustration into seven pieces, with one nail hole in each piece. Before the second cut you're allowed to pile up the pieces you have got after the first one as you will wish, and then cut 'em all. The cuts must be straight, and you aren't allowed to fold or bend the paper. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 4 Funny Fold by Scott Kim This tiny puzzle was described by Martin Gardner. If you cut some large capital letter of the English alphabet from a sheet of paper and give it a single fold you will get something like shown above. What letter is it, if it's known that this is not an L? July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 5 Spider Ride by Sam Loyd A rectangular box is 30 units long, 12 units wide, and 12 units high. A Spider starting from spot A should reach spot B. Spot A is midway from the sides of the box and 1 unit from its top. Spot B is midway from the sides of the box, 1 unit from the bottom of the box, and on the opposite side from A. The box, its dimensions and the proper locations of spots A and B are shown in the illustration. What is the shortest way for the Spider to reach spot B? During the journey from A to B the Spider can use any side and edge of the box. Hint: the shortest distance between A and B is less than 42 units. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 6 Out of Glass after Martin Gardner The object is to move 2 matches to get the cherry outside the glass. At the finish, the glass may be turned in any direction, but it must be exactly the same shape as before. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 7 Chair Arrangement after Boris A. Kordemsky The objective of this puzzle is to place 10 chairs along the wall in a rectangular dance hall so that there are an equal number of chairs along each wall. How can it be done? July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 8 Divisible By 7 after Sam Loyd Three numbers (6, 3 and 1) are drawn on the sides of three cubes a number per cube, just as shown in the illustration. Can you arrange the three cubes in a line so that to create a 3-digit number divisible by 7? Each cube must be employed. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 9 The Egg of Columbus This classic puzzle dates back to the 19th century. The object is to make the figures shown around the central egg using the whole set of the pieces for each of them. Try to find your own new shapes. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 10 Simple Train Exchange after Sam Loyd Two trains, one of an engine and a car and another - of an engine and two cars, meet at a segment of railroad. There is a switch or side-track on that segment of railroad - just as shown in the illustration. The switch is large enough only to hold one engine or one car at a time. The object is, using only this switch, to exchange the trains in order they can continue their journeys and do that in the most expeditious way. No other outside help, except the switch itself, is allowed. Please, note that a car cannot be connected to the front of an engine. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 11 The Lost Star by Sam Loyd There is a perfect star in the illustration above. Can you discover where this star is hidden? July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 12 What Animal? after Martin Gardner Can you arrange the five pieces with letters on them so that to spell the name of an animal? July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 13 Solutions 14 A Battle Royal (solution) The solution is shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 15 Coin Cup (solution) One of the two symmetric solutions is shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 www.puzzles.com Puzzle concept: Copyright © 2004 Serhiy Grabarchuk, Jr. All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 16 C D A B E F The Good Luck Puzzle (solution) First make the cut AB to get three pieces. Then pile 'em up in such a way that the cuts CD and EF can be done simultaneously. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 17 1 2 Funny Fold (solution) The folded letter is a capital F, that was rotated upside-down and then turned over as shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 18 C 32 24 B 40 A Spider Ride (solution) At first glance it seems that the shortest distance between A and B is the straight way along the sides of the box, i.e. 1 unit up, 30 units along the top side of the box and then 11 units down the opposite side - 42 units in total. But as it was stated in the hint the shortest distance between A and B is less than 42. To find the shortest distance out it is useful to unfold some sides of the box into a 2D model. If to unfold them as shown in the lower right corner of the illustration, we get a right triangle where the hypotenuse AB is the distance 2 2 between the two spots. It equals square root of (AC + BC ). AC is 32 units long (1 + 30 + 1) and BC is 24 units long (6 + 12 + 6). Thus the distance AB equals square root (322 + 242) = square root of 1600 or 40. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 19 Out of Glass (solution) One of the two symmetric solutions is shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 20 Chair Arrangement (solution) The solution pattern for chairs is shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 21 Divisible By 7 (solution) The trick behind this puzzle is to use the cube with number 6 as a cube with number 9 instead. Thus the resulting number is 931 - as shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 22 The Egg of Columbus (solution) The solutions to all the figures are shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 23 1 10 2 11 3 12 4 13 5 14 6 15 7 16 8 17 9 F Simple Train Exchange (solution) To exchange the trains 17 moves are required. The moves are shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 24 The Lost Star (solution) The lost star is shown in the illustration. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 25 What Animal? (solution) Turning the piece with W upside down gives us an M. Now we are able to produce CAMEL from the letters. July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 26 Pieces & Patterns 27 1 8 F A Battle Royal (pieces) To produce the pieces first print them out. Then follow the diagram shown in the left column above - from step 1 to step F (finish). July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 28 1 F Funny Fold (pattern) To produce the pattern first print it out. Then follow the diagram shown in the left column above - from step 1 to step F (finish). July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 29 1 9 F The Egg of Columbus (pieces) To produce the pieces first print them out. Then follow the diagram shown in the left column above - from step 1 to step F (finish). July 9, 2004 Copyright © 2004 ThinkFun Inc. All Rights Reserved. www.puzzles.com [email protected] Permission is granted for personal use only. This puzzle may not be duplicated for personal profit. 30
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