Now down the right hand side.
This has three parts. The first is a spiral racetrack, the second is a xylophone and the third is a zigzag course, with a bell at the top.
I think its not as hard as the left side, so I won't post quite so many pictures.
So, first, the spiral racetrack.
The marble from the top splitter is routed down a chute into a spiral. This is made from a thick sandwich of play wood, that is stretched vertically, by pressing it down onto a stepped shape.
Here is how it looks from behind, and the sideways view, where you can see how the opposite sides slant in opposite directions.
Quite easy to make, as long as you only progressively stretch down the ply. I screwed each level down first with steel then with brass screwes, and let the wood relax for a while between each layer, before stretching it to the next level.
The marbles drop out of a hole at the back, and have to be redirected onto the xylophone.
This was a cheap kids one, bought on ebay (from China probably - quite how this is done, I don't understand).
So, a simple one, metal strips, on a plastic base. The notes are good, but helped by the fact that there is a thin rubber band around the support pegs, which keep the metal off the plastic, so they can 'ring' properly.
I tried a number of ways of mounting the strips. The first attempt was a block of wood, and using cut off screws to create metal polls onto which the sounding strips are restrained, and reusing the rubber band to keep the metal in the air.
Trouble was, the marble ran down it way too quickly, and didn't really make a noise.
So I decided it would be better as a series of steps.
Tricky to make something to hold the sounding bars, the screws didn't work well. I didn't have dowels small enough. In the end I managed to get tooth picks to work !
I've used long toothpicks at top and bottom, and stuck them into a thin 'beam' that acts as a side guide for the marble. This is a push fit into the top and bottom holes. For all the others, I've stuck the toothpick into the step, so the metal bars just sit in place.
At the top, there is a redirection block, so the marbles, when they exit the race, run down the xylophone. Turned out I needed to stop the marbles jumping sideways, so a couple of extenders at the top help.
Nearly there for today.
Some additional guides at the bottom, and a catcher which redirects the marble backwards (its on a screw, so pivots when the weight of the marble lands on it) and its onto the next part.
That's all for now.
Hopefully finish within a month, and a link to a youtube video in the last posting.