Meffert also produces a similar puzzle called the Tetraminx, which is the same as the Pyraminx except that the trivial tips are removed, turning the puzzle into a truncated tetrahedron. The trivial tips are so called because they can be twisted independently of all other pieces, making them trivial to place in solved position. The 6 edge pieces can be freely permuted. The axial pieces are octahedral in shape, although this is not immediately obvious, and can only rotate around the axis they are attached to. It can be twisted along its cuts to permute its pieces. The Pyraminx is a puzzle in the shape of a regular tetrahedron, divided into 4 axial pieces, 6 edge pieces, and 4 trivial tips. Somewhat earlier (for 40 days) in the Soviet Union, the chief technologist of the Kishinev Tractor Plant, Alexander Alexandrovich Ordynets, filed his application for an invention (patent SU980739 dated, with the filing date 02/18/81), because of that, in Russia many people call puzzle "Молдавская пирамидка" (moldavian pyramid). Uwe is fond of saying had it not been for Ernő Rubik's invention of the cube, his Pyraminx would have never been produced. He did nothing with his design until 1981 when he applied for a patent on 27/03 ( EP0042695 on 12/30/81) and brought it to Hong Kong for production. The Pyraminx was first conceived by Mèffert in 1970.
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