On 3/2/06, Gilles Roux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> I'm 1 second faster when using my own colors (fluo orange/dark red,
> fluo green/dark blue).
>
> The question is rarely discussed. It's surprising, because speedcubing
> is based on anticipation, and color perception in fundamental.
>
> We'd need some expert in color discrimination by the human eye to tell
> the perfect set of colors for speed-cubing. Black may be one of them.
>
> Gilles.


It would depend on the method.  For most CFOP solvers, I would imagine they
would want the most distinct possible colors for each face separately, with
a possible exception for a pair of opposite faces  (to make opposite color
solving easier).

For Roux solving, it would probably work best to try for the maximum amount
of color distinction while still retaining some similarity between opposite
faces, because opposite colors are so important for the method.

It's all down to method preference, really.

-Mike


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