- Joined
- Mar 11, 2013
- Messages
- 1,959
A couple of things to keep in mind:
One, an AGS0 (Ideal) light performance grade is the result of sophisticated ray tracing analysis of a 3D model of the actual diamond mathematically calculating the contribution of every facet and assessing brightness, leakage,dispersion (fire), and contrast. Even though there is not an assessment for optical precision (H&A), you can be confident that the diamond has the right ingredients to be a high performer. You can think of the AGS0 as the light performance "engine' and the facet precision as being the "tuning" of that engine.
Two, it is important to recognize that light performance can be affected by other factors such as clarity features. So an AGS0 grade (or GIA Ex) can only deliver the performance that the material allows. For this reason it is important to pay attention to clarity aspects , particularly in the Si range.
I’d like to ask a question about what Bryan says in his post.
Is Bryan saying that the AGS 0 designation is based on the existing angles of the stone, but things that are characteristic of the rough, like inclusions or graining are not modeled into that AGS 0 designation? And for this reason you need to inspect (esp SI stones) to insure excellent light return rather than using the AGS 0 designation as the final arbiter of light return.
So my question is: does WF, in branding an ACA branded stone, examine other factors than AGS 0 like how the stone’s clarity impacts light return? Such that if you pick an ACA SI2 or SI1 you would be assured that the inclusions and any other factors have already been examined for how they affect light return? And so it’s safe to conclude the stone has been already vetted?
I’m curious about things like inclusions in superideal brands because I personally feel you can have a visible inclusion in a stone that doesn’t affect light return. But I wonder if that is left up to the customer to determine, or if superideal companies are vetting stones for things like clarity, and only accepting stones that have inclusions that don’t impact light return.