I cannot figure out how to void igneous rock and/or avoid the need to.
UPDATE: With the latest version, I have a similar problem with bramblite and with panglia fabric. They don't recycle.
== Why ==
I am having trouble making rocket fuel on Panglia in order to transfer datacells back to Moshine for research. My cosmic incubator makes igneous rock, solid fuel, and uranium, and the igneous is backed way up. This has caused my rocket fuel production to stall out.
== Things I tried ==
The rocks cannot be recycled. Is that an oversight? I figured it was to make the player do something else to void them, but I am not doing great at finding alternatives.
The items cannot be tossed into the panderoot holes nor into water.
It can be converted to lava, and the lava converted to molten iron, steel beams, steel boxes, then recycled. This somewhat works, but: (1) it is slow, even with 8 foundries with speed beacons doing the conversion, and (2) it eats through gobs of calcite for the molten iron step.
The hypercrusher will consume them, but I see no way to void the resulting dust. In the latest version, it creates high-entropy dust which cannot be recycled. The dust can be made into a mini-universe, but that takes some extra ingredients so is a problem for voiding.
For those with Miraxsis loaded, the hyrdo plant can void lava. This way only works if you have Miraxsis loaded, though.
Rocket fuel can simply be imported. This is very practical but rather sad given there is a rocket fuel recipe on the planet.
Manual stuff. I could void the lava tank or put rocks in boxes to shoot them.
== Favored solutions ==
Let rocks be recycled. That's pretty simple and would be intuitive.
Let items be thrown in the panderoot holes, perhaps with root growth as a side effect. It is really fun on Vulkanus to throw items back in the lava. It could be a neat touch for Panglia to have a similar thing.
Let dust be recyled.
Let dust by hyper-crushed into something smaller, similar to recycling. Right now, it seems to be convert 1 dust to 1 dust. I don't love this answer but mention it for completeness. It would be intuitive that a hypercrusher can also do a similar job to a recycler.