For over a decade my friend Jay and I have exchange trapped presents at Christmas. When I say trapped I mean it in the classic Circle of Death game style — if you open the present carelessly a buzzer will sound or explosive cap will trigger. It all started when we were designing traps for live-action role-playing games, but quickly became a challenge to one-up each other each year. These days we open all the other presents first and then settle down with our flashlights, dentist tools and wire clippers to work on opening each other's presents while the rest of the family eats pie and enjoy themselves making unhelpful comments.
Jay and I each have our own style of trap-making. Jay has become a master of secreting traps in places that you'd think he couldn't access. His high-point is probably the time he gave me a deck of gaming cards that he had somehow unsealed, hollowed out, rigged with a cap-popper trap, then resealed and reshrinkwrapped such that it looked like new again. (That's rivaled by two years ago, when he managed to plant an explosive inside a cut-then-resealed chocolate egg.) I'm always trying a new angle on things — my favorite is still the time I gave him a "special" version of Looking Glass' PC game System Shock, which included a specially-included candy red button in the second room of the game that when pressed would berate him for not checking closely for traps as it dropped powerful monsters on his head. (It always helps to know the programmers...)
This past Christmas I wanted to try a trap where the mechanism was plain to see but a puzzle to disarm. The result is the magnet trap shown bottom left. The metal plates at the bottom are sold in joke shops as Exploding Toilet Seat gags. They're spring-loaded to lift up and set off a cap, but in this case the magnets attached to the top of the popper are being pressed down by the magnets attached to the top of the lid. On one side is a north-polarity magnet being pushed down by another north-polarity magnet, on the other side is a south-polarity magnet pushed down by another south-polarity magnet. The whole system is quite stable — until you try to turn the lid to open the jar. Then the north and south magnets on the lid switch positions and pull the poppers up, setting off the caps. You can see the whole thing in action by clicking on the picture below. Jay tried using magnets underneath the jar to counteract the ones on the lid, but that wasn't enough force to fight both the magnets and the mechanical spring. I'll leave the right way to disarm the trap (and the way I originally set it) as an exercise to the reader (and will probably eventually put it in an update).
Jay had two traps this year — the first was a buzzer trap held down by a Borg Teddy Bear that he had gotten at the Star Trek Experience in Los Vegas. It was rigged so if I moved the bear or pulled the wrong wire first it would go off. Remembering my MacGyver lore, I pulled the red one (or was it black?) and disarmed it. The main trap, however, was the bear itself — he had taken it to a teddy-bear factory and had them sew in a voicebox that played his own message. I didn't set it off (I learned long ago never to press something from jay that says "press me" on it), but am still impressed. You can see it in action from the other movie linked below.
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| Magnet trap explained (Quicktime, 3.1M) |
Borg Teddy-bear trap (Quicktime, 750K) |
Update (7/24/05): explanation of how to disarm below the fold.
Honestly, leaving this as a riddle without giving everyone the benefit of being able to play with the trap itself is a little unfair. The key is that the magnets pushing down from the metal lid were not actually glued on, but were just stuck on using their own magnetic force. (They consisted of a magnet stuck to the lid, a bunch of steel nuts to give them the right length, and then another magnet at the end.)
To disarm the trap, you open the lid just a bit, then use a strong magnet to slide the magnet towers back to their original position through the lid. Keep opening it a little and sliding the towers back until the lid can be opened enough to stick a (nonmetallic) chopstick into the jar to hold down the poppers.
To set the trap, just reverse the procedure.
Posted by bug to Hacks at June 3, 2005 11:09 PM | TrackBackOh, for crying out loud, Bug.
Okay, how about this: You filled the jar about 1/2 full with water, froze it, melted it enough to take the cylindrical ice cube out, and set it aside. You put the bottom part of the trap in, put the ice cube on top to pin it down, then screwed the top on. You put the jar in the oven to melt and boil away the evidence (the jar top has a little hole for this). And he can disarm it the opposite way - fill it with water through the hole and freeze it all.
I don't seriously expect this is how you did it, but it's all I can think of.
I assume tha answer is not simply "extreme magnetic force". My father-in-law has a U-shaped magnet that weighs about 50 pounds. When it's stuck directly to a large metal object, you can pull it off, but only if you're determined and in good health.
Posted by: Rebar at June 5, 2005 4:58 AMThat wasn't it, but I gotta try something like that for next year! ;-)
I suspect "extreme magnetic force" would work, but neither he nor I had enough magnetic force to make it work (and I deliberately dinked with the distances between the top magnets and the poppers to make it difficult).
Posted by: bug at June 6, 2005 9:09 PM>>I'll leave the right way to disarm the trap (and the way I originally set it) as an exercise to the reader (and will probably eventually put it in an update).
So how about that update? I had come up with a similar thing to rebar's -- either wet or dry ice would do it to keep the springs down while you turned the top. Could probably use N(l) to speed up the process. But (above) you suggest that's not it? And now you've posted a new trap isn't it time to finish up this one?
j
Posted by: josakana at July 23, 2005 11:55 PMuh... N2(l) that is to say.
Posted by: josakana at July 23, 2005 11:56 PMOK, the solution (well, my solution) is posted.
Posted by: Bug at July 26, 2005 2:48 PMThe simplest and most expedient way to 'disarm' this is to hand it to an pesky halfling with especially hairy feet. Tell the halfling there is grue repellant in the jar. Then throw the aforementioned halfling (with jar) into a dark room and wait. Clean the gore of the jar and collect the valuable (abet charred) contents.
Sure you can mess around with magnets and sticks, but who has time for such things.
Ah yes, the classic Let's let Mikey disarm it! technique.
(Post-9/11 that could possibly be renamed the Let's let the postal inspector disarm it technique, but we won't go there.)