Jump to content

First project - ball run in a box


Recommended Posts

It was an article on Jelle's marble races on the BBC web site that led to several hours looking at YouTube videos of some marvelous creations by Jelle and others of marble runs. I thought I'd love to have a go at that, then went through the negatives:

Limited time

Limited space

Limited tools

Limited engineering skills

Inquisitive cats who will wreck anything

Not wanting to give up I decided that the best solution was to keep it small and keep it contained in a box... A box does limit the size of the run, but scaling down the balls helps. I found a source of 8mm marbles (probably Czech glass designed for crafts rather than games) ordered those and also picked up some steel and brass ball-bearings. I found some reasonably priced birch ply boxes on Amazon and decided to go ahead...

 

The box:

box.jpg

I gave the box (smaller than visualized...) a quick coat of stain and thought about design.

My engineering and woodworking skills aren't the greatest, but I used to make models as a kid and decided that maintaining an aesthetic would be the best option for a small space.

With a bit of spare copper pipe and a few fittings left over from a boiler replacement I decided an industrial feel would work - hopefully the finished project will have a slight 'steampunk'/'mad scientist' feel.

Two holes drilled (one for the inlet pipe and one for the outlet), I'll use the lid to store a removable release gate and capture/finish line piece (having a hinged bridge and using the lid as part of the run was an initial idea).

 

side box.jpg 

The interior has been painted black to increase the illusion of depth and set off the metalwork. The outlet pipe and inlet pipe have now been roughly positioned.

To be continued...

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Neato!

Small is also what I was envisioning for my project .... for when I ever got started.   Because of space and cats!

 

Maybe small enough to fit on a desk.  Putting it in a box is not something I'd thought of.  I have some slightly larger but easily portable salesman type cases.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, Steph said:

Neato!

Small is also what I was envisioning for my project .... for when I ever got started.   Because of space and cats!

 

Maybe small enough to fit on a desk.  Putting it in a box is not something I'd thought of.  I have some slightly larger but easily portable salesman type cases.  

Salesman cases sounds like a good idea.

I've got a few ideas on how to slow the descent down enough to hopefully make the runs interesting but I keep daydreaming ideas that aren't practical when I go back to the box and it's small size! Making the release ramp removable does give me the option of stacking a second self contained box on top with a switchable exit that could be a hole in the floor to this one allowing the combination of two models.

The runs will be a mixture of wood, brass sheeting, copper rails etc. which should add visual interest. 

I'll add a few more photos once I've done more work. It tends to be 15 minutes here and there so it will take a while.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not a lot of progress this weekend. The pipes are all fixed in place, but I hit stumbling blocks...

The size of the balls makes things tricky - I can't hand wind coils from copper tubing that are smooth enough for the balls not to jump off - I can see why most marble runs use 15mm or larger balls, the slightest kink really effects the small diameter balls and making the switches out of plywood using a hand saw seems to be a non-starter. Brass ramps and balsa wood switches will hopefully work...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi ManofKent,

10 hours ago, ManofKent said:

I can't hand wind coils from copper tubing that are smooth enough

Would it be an idea to use cleaned wood scoops of iced-lollies as base to make your switches? Maybe this reduces the effort with the hand-saw? Getting them clean is quite easy, just throw them into the cutlery container of your dishwasher next time.

10 hours ago, ManofKent said:

making the switches out of plywood using a hand saw seems to be a non-starter

Why do you need coils made of copper tubing? Might it be an idea to use copper or brass wire instead of tubing? Solid material is far easier to bend without special equipment. Electrical installation wire (not the flexible kind) you might use with or without its insulation around. I personally prefer 4mm aluminium rods from the DIY store for several reasons - one is that I can bend it on an (old) cooking pot. But I must confess, I never tried to wind a narrow spiral of more than one turn with these rods. It might work with copper wire 1,5² (has roughly 1.2mm in diameter) and a coil former core of appropriate size - when you are ready with the coil it will widen up a little bit and thus let the core out without a hazzle. But I think you have some experience already.

10 hours ago, ManofKent said:

I can see why most marble runs use 15mm or larger balls

To use 16mm balls for me just was natural: All the marbles I already had in those days had this size. The smaller the balls the smaller the tracks need to be, the bigger the balls, the track manufacturing precision is getting less important but the tracks need to get more sturdy.

Hope these lines help you a little bit

Hoody

PS: Some issues might take months to get tracked down to their root cause. Other's are visible at once. So do not despair of work getting stuck. It will only take some time to get a solution.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Hoody.

I tried both 4mm copper pipe and some 3mm copper wire - I could form coils that looked okay, but couldn't get the precision. I might try thinner diameter wire and make some kind of track spacer. I hadn't realised the precision needed for the small balls. I've got some thin brass sheeting that might be an easier option - curved ramps won't need the same level of precision.

Ice-lolly sticks  for the switches is a good idea - they should be shape able by knife (I'm not precise enough with a saw). I was thinking carved balsa wood soaked in superglue to strengthen might work too.  I'll probably use a mixture of switches and simple split paths - I didn't want to just rely on a split path, as my gut-feeling is that the route taken is likely to be far from random - however central I get the split.

I think I'm going to have to with either two or four main paths if I want to evenly split them - 1 switch will give 2 paths, 3 will give 4 paths, but 2 switches would favour 1 path twice as much as the others!

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, ManofKent said:

they should be shape able by knife (I'm not precise enough with a saw)

After you finished sawing you might file / rasp the edge to get it more smooth. I prefer to sandpaper my wood pieces with grain size (correct?) 80 to 240. Sandpaper or abrasive cloth is so wonderfully flexible for these jobs I prefer it over any file.

If you need a precise flat edge, it might be an idea to pin the sandpaper on a tabletop (a small board will just also work) and then rub the piece of material against it as long as necessary. The sanded piece then gets as flat as a pancake.

I am really curious about how your switches will look alike when you finished them.

8 hours ago, ManofKent said:

I didn't want to just rely on a split path, as my gut-feeling is that the route taken is likely to be far from random - however central I get the split

This you need to try out. There is not only the splitter itself, but also its tilt and how the marbles are coming in to it. The marbles themselves are neither perfectly balanced nor a perfect sphere so it really is not predictable if splitting will work well. On the other hand any not so perfect 1:1 ratio is also fine. Just give the rarely used track some more bonus points ;)

A practical use could be a device that is not capable of high throughput to be placed in the sparsely populated track.


I nearly forgot: your downward coil is quite more complicated then it looks later on! The more your marbles descent, the faster they get. The faster they get, the more banking they need to stay on the track. Maybe it is not the kinks alone that throw out your marbles but also just the speed and the tiny radius?

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks. 

I shall continue to experiment. Building it in a box whilst helpful in terms of providing support for the tracks is now presenting the problem that I can't simply build bottom up, I've got to work out accessibility at the rear. It's a fun learning curve!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, ann said:

Interesting to follow from the sidelines, too --

Once there's a bit more to show I'll update the photos. At the moment they'd mainly be of failed attempts to evenly coil copper tubing and copper wiring, and lot's of pieces of distorted brass tooling foil! On the positive side I've filed out the join on a miniature funnel (the sort designed for filling bottles/hipflasks etc.)and found a wooden bowl from a child's tea set that will make a decent spinner. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some marbles arrived today. Still deciding on whether to go with mini-marbles or ball bearings - I might need the weight of steel...

green.jpg

red.jpg

8mm glass - probably Czech and designed for jewelry or crafts rather than true marbles.

The bowl will be drilled, stained and waxed to form a 'spinner'.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Hoody said:

Still :icon_popcorn: while enjoying your progress ...

Why do you need the weight of steel balls? The switches?

Yes (although as I haven't got to the switches yet I may be worrying over nothing).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I managed to cut some brass foil into a spiral ramp but wasn't happy with how it looked and went for a different approach for a descent around the pipe. These are wooden pipe surrounds designed for the base of pipes that feed radiators. I'm attacking them with a set of warding files to make platforms with drop holes:

steps.jpg

You can see the start of my butchery on the one on the left...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, ManofKent said:

Yes (although as I haven't got to the switches yet I may be worrying over nothing).

I see. My estimation gives roughly 0.67g per 8mm glas ball - oops, this is pretty few. 16mm glas balls roughly have 5.3 g which is pretty well enough for a switch. 8mm steel balls roughly give 2g each. Maybe you just build some switch models outside your box to find out which construction works well with 0.67g.

 

23 minutes ago, ManofKent said:

a different approach for a descent around the pipe

You are really creative here.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Playing around with the spinner now I've drilled and stained the bowl, the extra weight of the steel balls work slightly better (I also realised I need to give more thought to the speed the balls enter at - the entrance needs to be at a very shallow angle to get a decent amount of revolutions, but the ball needs to be travelling at a reasonable speed).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A fact is that steel balls will spin longer in bows than glass marbles.

However, glass marbles can have nice colors, but their roundness is not always perfect.

In my marble runs, i also note the irregular roundness of marbles by adding more (or higher) rims and a better slope. However, lightweight switches (made from MDF or light wood, or iron wire) will work quite good with glass marbles.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, YellowMarble said:

A fact is that steel balls will spin longer in bows than glass marbles.

However, glass marbles can have nice colors, but their roundness is not always perfect.

In my marble runs, i also note the irregular roundness of marbles by adding more (or higher) rims and a better slope. However, lightweight switches (made from MDF or light wood, or iron wire) will work quite good with glass marbles.

Thanks - the 8mm marbles have very little weight, but I suppose if I get the pivot smooth enough they should work.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, ManofKent said:

Thanks - the 8mm marbles have very little weight, but I suppose if I get the pivot smooth enough they should work.

Definitely. Friction of the pivot bearing is crucial here. Extremely lightweight constructions even could use paper for the tilting lever device.

Dedicated to your bowl: the entrance needs also to be adjusted so that the ball will not hit it after its first round otherwise it looses much energy (velocity, height) and this reduces the spinning time. The walls of the bowl - their inclination - together with the banking formula give you an estimation on the necessary entry speed. The exit hole could get a sources of issues, too. Having it as small as possible gives the best effect until the ball disappears but causes blocking when two or more balls arrive simultanously. Here the timing of the balls arriving at the bowl needs to get adjusted well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, Hoody said:

Definitely. Friction of the pivot bearing is crucial here. Extremely lightweight constructions even could use paper for the tilting lever device.

Dedicated to your bowl: the entrance needs also to be adjusted so that the ball will not hit it after its first round otherwise it looses much energy (velocity, height) and this reduces the spinning time. The walls of the bowl - their inclination - together with the banking formula give you an estimation on the necessary entry speed. The exit hole could get a sources of issues, too. Having it as small as possible gives the best effect until the ball disappears but causes blocking when two or more balls arrive simultanously. Here the timing of the balls arriving at the bowl needs to get adjusted well.

Thanks. I drilled the exit hole 1mm smaller than the ball, then gradually filed it until the ball just went through. No blocking with a practice set up but it's a possibility - I might try a short 'pinboard' section before the entrance pipe/ramp. I did discover that too much velocity caused the bowl to act as a ramp. There's a ball bearing in the spare room somewhere :) The small ball scale and wood grain gives some friction issues - I might need to varnish/wax the bowl.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...