Egg of Columbus (mechanical puzzle)

The names Egg of Columbus and Columbus Egg have been used for several mechanical toys and puzzles inspired on the legend of Columbus balancing an egg on its end to drive a point. Typically, these puzzles are egg-shaped objects with internal mechanisms that make the egg stand up, once the users discovers the secret.

Mechanisms typically used in such toys include moving weights, mercury flowing in sealed tubes or compartments, and steel balls rolling on grooves and pits.

History

A Columbus Egg puzzle using a rolling ball was described in an 1893 book.[1] The Montgomery Ward catalog of 1894 includes a "Columbus Egg" toy.[2]

There are at least 18 United States patents for such devices, starting from 1891.[2]

The German company Pussycat sells a Columbus Egg that can be balanced by holding it upright for 25 seconds, then quickly inverting it. The egg will then stand on its pointed end for 15 seconds, then topple on its side.[2]

gollark: - discourages abstraction
gollark: - drag & drop slow for complex programs
gollark: A noble goal. Hold on.
gollark: it not badit B**E***S*`T`.
gollark: I have a bunch of games which don't run on PotatOS for x86 yet.

References

  1. "Professor Hoffmann" (1993) [1893]. L. E. Hordern (ed.). Puzzles Old and New. London. ISBN 0-947533-04-4.
  2. Martin Gardner (May–June 1996). "The great egg-balancing mystery". The Skeptical Inquirer. 20 (3).

See also

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