constructed in such a way that once started on its journey, it never ends
until it bumps into the furniture of course.-- po, Aug 17 2007 illustration http://imgur.com/a/1NZT8 [xaviergisz, Aug 17 2007, last modified Dec 13 2011] attempting to get your head around the concept. http://www.math.tec.../2/escher-cover.gifEscher [po, Aug 17 2007] Rectangular slinky http://www.webdesig...articles/4151/8.jpg [ldischler, Aug 17 2007] Here's a way to make it work :-) http://www.gtoal.co...y/escher-slinky.jpgThe journey is the reward :-) [gtoal, Aug 20 2007] This would be ideal for Slinky Polo Slinky_20Polo [normzone, Aug 20 2007] ACTUAL REAL Mobius Slinky! (called toroflux or torofluxus) http://www.grand-il...og/Toro_Fluxus.htmltoroflux. this is it. =) it's also sold here: http://www.flowtoys.com/product.php?productid=114 [zzyyfff, Aug 24 2010] Wheel-- the dog's breakfast, Aug 17 2007 "Use other side"-- Ling, Aug 17 2007 If the coil is a single-start helix, what you are making is a toroidal slinky rather than a Moebius strip. The key property of a Moebius strip is that you start with a two- sided surface and twist it so that the two surfaces become one.-- MaxwellBuchanan, Aug 17 2007 oh no, no doughnuts please...
my worry is that it will veer off to the left or right and just go in circles rather than a straight line.
nice pics, xavier but that's not right - the slinky looks like an ordinary slinky but at the end of its slink, it kinda turns backs on itself and moves on.-- po, Aug 17 2007 You need one of those never-ending Escher staircases, too.-- phundug, Aug 17 2007 wow, I'd love a 3-dimensional Escher staircase picture with a moebius slinky moving up and down - it would make a great halfbakery clock.-- po, Aug 17 2007 //nice pics, xavier but that's not right - the slinky looks like an ordinary slinky but at the end of its slink, it kinda turns backs on itself and moves on.//But a half turn of a slinky produces no effect at all.-- ldischler, Aug 17 2007 [po]What time is it?-- Dub, Aug 17 2007 (-) Sorry, this is trying too hard.-- jutta, Aug 17 2007 Is a mobius slinky even possible? [xavier]'s illustrations (accomplished though they are) seem to show a slinky linked to it's own end and twisted in the middle. To make a mobius band you need a strip with two (or more sides) - a slinky approximates to a cylinder and has no sides.-- wagster, Aug 17 2007 I visualise this as comprising a flat strip as opposed to a thin round wire with a twist in it somewhere but I'm not sure where to place the twist.-- po, Aug 17 2007 In which case it would be möbioid - how it would walk I know not.-- wagster, Aug 17 2007 like a crab, I suspect-- po, Aug 17 2007 //I visualise this as comprising a flat strip as opposed to a thin round wire with a twist in it somewhere but I'm not sure where to place the twist.//How about a rectangular spring that, like a paper mobius, is continuous with a single half-twist.-- ldischler, Aug 17 2007 sorry, explain?-- po, Aug 17 2007 The cross-section of the spring is rectangular--like a strip of paper, but thicker.-- ldischler, Aug 17 2007 so?
is that like I said before?-- po, Aug 17 2007 Perhaps. But I thought you were talking about the cross-section of the wire, not the cross-section of the spring.-- ldischler, Aug 17 2007 hmmmm, a more square cross-section...
do we need goldfish?
yes, I was talking about the wire not the cross-section.-- po, Aug 17 2007 Needs more jam and bees...-- wagster, Aug 17 2007 It's just occured to me that a standard slinky is slightly möbioid anyway in that it has only one side. Well, I suppose it has an inside. Perhaps we need to construct a klein bottle slinky given the dimensions we are dealing with. Or a hyperkleinbottle slinky...-- wagster, Aug 17 2007 I've had another crack at illustrating the moebius slinky; see what you think. It's hard to show (with the software I'm using), but I'm pretty sure it has moebius quality (i.e. start drawing a continuous line on one side and end up on the other side).
I've used a helix with a half-twist as the basis of the design (three of these bent together to form a loop).
It might not make a particularly good toy, but I think it would make a pretty good sculpture.
EDIT: oops, I was using a helix with a full twist. I've added three more pictures, this time based on a half-twist helix.-- xaviergisz, Aug 18 2007 I have to congratulate you on your drawings, I wish I could do that.-- po, Aug 18 2007 Me too, what's it done in, 3DMax?
Some interesting topologies going on there - both the rectangular slinky and the normal slinky with a twist in the... wire? I don't have a word for it... exhibit properties of both möbius bands and slinkies, but as you say they work better as shapes than as toys.-- wagster, Aug 18 2007 Could there be a Dance of the Moebius Striptease Veil?-- xenzag, Aug 18 2007 thanks po and wagster.
I use Rhino3d which, in my opinion, is the most user-friendly and easy-to-learn CAD software available. I was motivated to teach myself CAD after I found it was the only way I could communicate my ideas to others.-- xaviergisz, Aug 18 2007 What bounces down stairs, on the bumps of its flairsand makes a mobinkity sound?Kaching kaching, it's all yang and no ying You know that you want a Mobinky.Mobinky, Mobinky,A one sided perplexing ploy.Mobinky Mobinky,Two dimensional construct of joy.-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Aug 18 2007 Rectangular section requires 1/4 twist. Still maintain it is a wheel. Nothing else works.-- the dog's breakfast, Aug 19 2007 [2 fries] awesome, just awesome
[+] to the idea
Would it be possible to force the metal into the shape by using bi-metallic strips of metal, and then heating and cooling the toy respectively?-- evilpenguin, Aug 19 2007 gtoal, silly!-- po, Aug 20 2007 who the feck is zzyyfff? thanks for the link anyway.-- po, Aug 24 2010 random, halfbakery