spLeenfuL
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It is based on proportions, yes, but like i mentioned, it is based on his opinion because of the way the weightage is assigned. It is weighted to the look he likes and not all elements are given equal weightage, and this is a fact. Once within the 0-2 range, different numbers have different characteristics.
On the HCA page it self, it says this in bold...
"A score below 2 (Excellent) means you have eliminated known poor performers (more than 95% of all diamonds). Your own personal preference may be for a diamond with an HCA score of 1.5 more rather than one with a lower score of say 0.5.""
On both the HCA site and his own personal website he says...
"Most people prefer stones that rate 1-2 on a scale where: 0-2 Excellent, 2-4 Very Good, 4-6 Good, 6-8 Fair, and 8-10 Poor. Zero is almost impossible since many of the factors conflict."
These seem to obviously indicate that not lower is better, else he would simply say lower is better and not use the ranges/examples he used. Using it in a lower is better method is using it as a selection tool, not the use it was intended for.
With regards to the EX/EX/EX/VG and EX/EX/VG/VG, it is the same misuse of the HCA as a selection tool. Gary confirmed that this is NOT the case as recently as last month . And says once again that the HCA is a rejection tool, not a selection tool (people misuse it in this manner VERY often). He also goes on to say that ranges up to 2.5 or 3.0 could also be acceptable (i believe this is to accommodate his penalization of steeper and deeper cuts based on his opinion during the creation of the HCA). Most people normally accepts what the creator of the tool says...
Not sure what having stones under 1.5 proves... given the number of ACAs of course there are stones under 1.5, just as there are stones with 2 and above... Check out the Whiteflash ACA page... once again, the white flash ACA favors the 34.9/40.9 cut as i have mentioned before. Over half their stones have numbers close to this, even up to numbers like 35/41. Enter 34.9 and 40.9 in the HCA and tell me what you get. I get 1.7. Is my browser screwed up ? If it is not, then over half of their stone scores over 1.5... Some of the ones with higher numbers even score 2 or 2.1... an example of HCA's penalization of slightly steeper/deeper cuts. So does their super ideal looks worse ? It does NOT. It is simply the look they are going for, and also a number within the range of both the Tolk Ideal and Morse Ideal (sadly ignored by most consumers).
PS: After your last posts about the lower halves i also checked with Jon and he verified that there IS more contrast due to the lower girdle halves, the angles play a part, and the stars while not affecting the hotspots will affect other parts of the diamond which may affect contrast. And the increased contrast is not a visual illusion...
O_O Duno, who said that. I thought the 0.55 looks better then the 0.53, did i miss something ? Hahaha. To me for the 0.53 the obvious issues are the number of uneven V and the difference in sizes of some of the hearts, like how small the 7th heart is compared to the 8th. The 0.55 definitely looks alot better to me.
But i agree, if its just an alignment issue, I would prefer the 0.55.
I think we can all agree that the HCA should only be used to reject bad diamonds and not to make your final decision.
If you are choosing between a diamond that has a HCA 1.1 and HCA 3, you can don't waste your time on the HCA 3 diamond. It's confirm bad.
If you are choosing between a diamond that has a HCA 1.1 and HCA 0.7, you cannot assume that the HCA 0.7 is confirm better.
Don't forget, the HCA does not measure symmetry at all. To make a final decision, the scopes are needed. HCA is just one of the many factors you need to use to analyze your stone.
. The problem here is, most people don't get to view their diamonds in every lighting environment. Since proposal ring thread 1, mingj recommended below 1.5 to keep people away from having the chance of buying steep/deeps. I'm just pointing out, these ranges keep people from "chancing" over worse looking diamonds that they can't analyze.