Read a chapter in the PDF, then watch a video of that exact technique. This dual-coding approach will cut your learning curve in half.
After cutting the 8 pavilion mains (indexes 96, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72, 84) at 43°, you lower the angle to 76° to cut the breaks. The break facets must just touch the points of the mains. The PDF teaches you to "sneak up" on the meet—cut a little, inspect, adjust, cut more. Introduction To Meetpoint Faceting Pdf Free 11
Elias was not a jeweler. He was a restorer of forgotten things. Six months ago, a client had brought him a broken decahedron—a crystalline puzzle box from the late 21st century, before the digital collapse. Its facets were meant to align at perfect meetpoints, vertices where three or more planes converged exactly. But two of the facets had been chipped, and without them, the box would not open. It would remain a mute, beautiful paperweight. Read a chapter in the PDF, then watch
Most meetpoint faceting uses a 96-index gear. This section explains why 96 is used (divisible by 1,2,3,4,6,8,12,16,24,32,48,96) and how to calculate index offsets for complex cuts. The break facets must just touch the points of the mains
Coarse diamond laps (260 or 600 grit) are used to quickly remove material and rough out the shape. Fine laps (1,200 to 3,000 grit) are used to pre-polish and establish the final exact meetpoints.