What the...... Where have you been all my life ImbaPixel?? Randomly popping up on my feed like this.. and possibly the most beautiful artwork I've ever seen in my life.. Nice. :)
After the old wasted tetris blocks are thrown away, they are sent to the grinder, where they will be grinded down into small debris. To us it doesn't matter which color goes where just yet. The debris gets moved via conveyor belt to the next grinding process which will turn them from small debris to miniscule grains. After which they get mixed into the mix-tank to keep their fluidity. After this they will be sent off to another plant and recycled into new tetris blocks.
@@aktchungrabanio6467 Sadly no. The texture is more of smooth plastic with a nice shine to it. And from what my boss told me: 35 years ago, all Tetris blocks were made out a rough metiral that many customers complained about until they had no choice but to switch to the current said material I mentioned earlier. But since you brought up marshmallows into the conversation, that might be an idea for my boss may to invest time and money in. :)
Interesting how the receiving tank before the mixer starts to fill up, but never overflows, staying just below the conveyor belt. Guess the throughput of the mixer is dependent on the level in the tank, and when the level rises, the particles pass through the mixer quicker, thus self-regulating.
@@samuels1123 yes, but I was thinking that having rotating blades would even that out by interrupting the stream. Like a building with rotating doors - no matter how many people are in the hall and how hard they push, the doors can transport only a fixed amount of them to the other side in one rotation.
It would be really cool to see a continuation on this idea where new bricks are formed from random colors and placed back on the conveyor. Then dropped back into the playing field, and starting the process over.
Instead of collecting in a bulb, I'd have poured the tiny squares out at the bottom into 4 very long, but very thin, rows, in the hope of getting the worlds longest thinnest tetris.
This machine recycles the old blocks to make new ones, doesn't it? At first I was thinking "nuuuu don't shred the jiggly jelly Tetris blocks they're so cute and happy D:" but then I thought the comments might be right that they were being recycled. It LOOKS like a machine that recycles paper IIRC, so I thought it'd make sense.
It's so funny to me that we look at random colors moving around a circle and our brains go "yeah, I'm satisfied" we really are just a bunch of dumb animals mashing keys pretending to know what we're doing
this is the recycling room, do not go in the grinder, and no you cannot sue us if someone does fall in the grinder because of the contract you signed, again, everything is strict in the Tetris factory.
Why does this only have 1 million views bruh do you literally see the effort put into this? You can see that the parts are destroying each other, meanwhile a short/tiktok made by uwucutesingle can have the worst editing and have more than a million likes