During the April magnet contest I saw a couple magnetic gearbox designs and started watching videos that gave me some ideas.
A bunch of variations later, after realizing I had to double the magnets I was using, I have a… thing… that works pretty well and is fun to fidget with.
I designed the main rings to print without supports as long as they print top-down, and I hope the tolerances aren't too tight for some printers. The gap between each ring is only 1mm at the thinnest, and none of my prints with my Mini and .4mm nozzle have had any rubbing.
The original thin version of Ring 4 bottom outer dial doesn't need supports, but the new one has to print upside-down due to the teeth, so the new “bottom” needs supports all around the outer ring. The smaller screw holes for a couple of the bottom dials and bases also need supports, and organic is best for all.
The bottom dials and bases do need to screw into rings 2, 3, and 4 to sandwich the bearings in between, and I found that once I inevitably stripped out a couple tiny screw holes by assembling and disassembling it over and over that putting a drop of krazy glue in the holes and putting the screws alone half-way in until it dried returned them to usefulness.
Here's the list of extra parts needed to make this thing work.
Magnets x 96
Bearings x 4 (or just the 2 largest ones for a 3-ring version instead of 5-ring)
Grub and Mounting Screws
I can't wait to see other people's prints of this weird thing!
Updates:
I made a small knob for the bottom center post, vaguely crown-like, so that I could more easily hold the whole thing using just the center ring between my thumb and middle finger. That ended up letting me turn the whole thing into a spinning top of sorts, and I discovered that if I spin the 4th ring and 5th outer ring with some force in opposite directions I can send the whole thing spinning across a table where it will stop itself abruptly while sitting at an angle.
The author marked this model as their own original creation.