Through careful study with a flashlight as I worked the mechanism I could see and understand how it worked, but not how it was made. So I used my small band saw to make three cuts, liberating one end. What I discovered surprised me.The mechanism is quite simple and should present no great challenge to a skilled box maker. The sides, rather than being made from solid wood, were laminated in three layers including the veneered pattern on the outside.
In addition to cutting one open, I began making veneered sides based on what was revealed about how it is made. One challenging part of making it is that it requires very small channels for the parts to slide, which I'll cut on the router table using a solid carbide 1/16 in. diameter bit.
On the academic side of human reality, you can look inside between the cracks and use your power of imagination to postulate
veneered sides for boxes... |
Make, fix, and create... teach others to do likewise.
I've been desperate to do similar, but I do not have a puzzle box to break apart and retrace the steps to make my own. I have made my own childish ones, but the Japanese are a world apart. If you are ever generous in your teaching, plans or ideas on mechanisms is something I would learn from immensely. I wish you continued fortunes!
ReplyDeleteI published a chapter on making Japanese puzzle boxes in my book Tiny Boxes available on Amazon or from Taunton Press.
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