The seed for the BrayScore idea came from the inventor’s
days in diamond cutting school in 1974. Having already graduated
college, he was accustomed to studying for a test, taking the test
and getting a score. Instantly he would know how well he did and
how he compared to the rest of the class. In the diamond cutting
school, at one time there were forty cutters enrolled, and while
most knew who were the “better” cutters were, performance
wasn’t really graded. After a cutter finished a stone, it
was more or less a “pass/fail” system. If you were handed
a new piece of rough then you passed. If you were told to go back
to your cutting wheel and fix something it was a “fail”.
After finishing a diamond which often took days or weeks, the inventor
always felt an empty feeling as to how well he had just done on
this very tedious job. Twenty years later, the process of writing
the formulas and testing diamonds began. The W.R.Bray Diamond Cut Scoring System (BrayScore) was issued a US Patent No.7,136,154 B2 on November 14, 2006.
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