Date: 16 Feb 1982 0931-PST From: ISAACS at SRI-KL Subject: MAGIC OCTAHEDRON To: CUBE-LOVERS at MIT-MC The Magic Octahedron (Octahedron Cube?) is out. A friend got one for me over the weekend. Each face is 9 triangles; it works sort of like two tetrahedrons base to base, except each tetra is really a 4-sided pyramid. The solution is not too hard, and not too different from the tetrahedron. Like the tetra, the corner and next-to-corner pieces don't travel-they only twist. The remaining edges are isomorphic to the edges of a cube. In fact, if you corner-center a Cubes coloring (ie each face has 4 colors, each corner has one; see the Scientific American article), and then peel off the labels from the corners, you have an exact isomorphism of the Octahedron. By the way, this version twists around the corners, using the same type mechanism as the original Cube (I think). It should be possible to use the mechanism of the Tetrahedron (with its 4 axes of rotation) to build an Octahetron whose faces twist. Any mechanical engineers out there to do so? --- Stan -------