@@JustinKPrim It seems a step backward from the original quadrant don't you think? It seems more difficult to control Deepth and angle in this way instead of having It on a mast, what di you think?
@@zzMAXz Possibly but I think it must be faster and once you get the hang of it they know exactly how to control it. Check out the video for the Angoora. Similar technique with only the back feet touching the table. The handpiece in Thailand and Burma works the same way with only 2 back feet.
@@zzMAXz I am not scantly sure. I know there is one man in the czech republic that makes them by hand for the school. My best advice is to contact the school and see if you can get his contact. He only speaks czech though which is why I haven't tried yet. The school is here: www.sups.info/index.php/kontakty
🤝🤝🤝Thank you for the video, for the informative history of stone processing.👍👍👍👍👍
Many thanks, Justin, for creating and sharing yet another highly interesting video!
Wow that’s really fascinating!
Thanks for making this videos it has helped me a lot
Thanks Justin, I like those stacked indexes.
excellent Justin!
Thank you. I was just going to send you a link but I guess you found it first :) Come visit us in Bangkok sometime!
Excellent. Very interesting indeed.
Hi Justin, thanks for the video, very interesting as usual.
So wile faceting the handpiece sit on the rear foot only?
Legal!
how many hours cutting a small 4 mm garnet!?
I think its more like minutes! I would guess under 10 minutes per stone.
@@nitroall Check out my video about the Korean Melee cutting style from Sri Lanka. Every stone takes about 4 minutes to cut!!
why did it go out of fashion? the modern russian one seems like you could achieve decent precision?
@@Spuce_Doofus in the Czech Republic they still use this one.
Hi Justin, thanks for the video, very interesting as usual.
So wile faceting the handpiece sit on the rear foot only?
Yes it balances between the back feet and the stone on the lap
@@JustinKPrim It seems a step backward from the original quadrant don't you think?
It seems more difficult to control Deepth and angle in this way instead of having It on a mast, what di you think?
@@zzMAXz Possibly but I think it must be faster and once you get the hang of it they know exactly how to control it. Check out the video for the Angoora. Similar technique with only the back feet touching the table. The handpiece in Thailand and Burma works the same way with only 2 back feet.
@@JustinKPrim can you please share were to buy one of the modern handpiece?
Thanks.
@@zzMAXz I am not scantly sure. I know there is one man in the czech republic that makes them by hand for the school. My best advice is to contact the school and see if you can get his contact. He only speaks czech though which is why I haven't tried yet. The school is here: www.sups.info/index.php/kontakty